The All Blacks’ fortress at Eden Park remains unbreached for another year with the Wallabies having no answer to a more physical and precise opponent.The 40-14 scoreline was an emphatic result after the Wallabies had fought hard and scrambled through a scoreless opening 20 minutes.The eToro Rugby Championship clash became a familiar tide of black-jerseyed dominance over the final hour.So what did we learn?1 JORDAN v JORDANAll Blacks winger Will Jordan was the No.1 Jordan on the field. He clearly outpointed the contribution of the Wallabies own Jordan Petaia although they never directly opposed each other.Jordan’s acceleration and timing when he hit a pass out the back gave him a glimpse of a hole and he scooted by Petaia to score a classy opening try.Petaia had an hour on the field but never really made a mark. Spilling a pass cold at the hour mark was a moment he would rather forget.2 ILL DISCIPLINE, YELLOW CARDS AND A POOR DECISIONThe Wallabies were the most penalised of the four nations in The Rugby Championship.The ill-discipline hurt again with two yellow cards in the first half in Auckland.The Wallabies scrambled stoutly to keep the scores at 0-0 while lock Jed Holloway was off the field early. The unseen toll is how much extra energy is needed to cover being down to 14 men. The Kiwis went on a 17-0 run in just six minutes from the 20-minute mark.When hooker Dave Porecki was yellow carded and a penalty try awarded for a collapsed maul to end that scoring run, the Wallabies were under intense pressure.To their credit, the Australians made inroads in the All Blacks’ quarter with 14 men but the Porecki yellow came with a complication.Flanker Pete Samu had to throw into one lineout and a predictable front-of-lineout play at that. Quick taps had to be taken too.The earlier Tom Wright decision to go for a quick tap from a penalty was a poor one. He quickly realised he’d struck a dead end and kicking the ball away was a sloppy outcome. The All Blacks took it to the other end of the field, scored their penalty try and Porecki was binned. Ouch.3 RENNIE’S TRUTHWallabies coach Dave Rennie is rueing the inconsistency of his team again.Post-match, he said: “We’ve got to be in and around 100 per cent every game or we are going to be hurt by teams like the All Blacks.”It’s the truth.The Wallabies just couldn’t apply any consistent pressure to the All Blacks in this game. When the All Blacks gain this sort of momentum, they are at their best. You have to give rich credit to the All Blacks. That’s three wins on the trot after being under intense scrutiny regarding their coach, form and even elements of game style.Three wins from nine Tests so far in 2022 is a tough ledger to digest for the Wallabies. You can’t go losing Tests to England when a win is there to be had or miss out on wins in Melbourne against the All Blacks.4 PETE SAMUThe Wallabies flanker has stepped up big time as a starter in the two Bledisloe Cup clashes.He’s got a big motor and his inside pass to set up the Folau Fainga’a try was typical of his versatility to contribute in tight or out wide as in that case.Hooker Fainga’a was the best of the bench force in terms of impact although credit again to Nick Frost being urgent enough to deflect a clearing kick to initiate that try.5 MARIKA KOROIBETE’S EVOLUTIONFull credit to winger Marika Koroibete for showing how much he has expanded his game. His kick-and-chase was never kick-and-hope because he waited until the right moment to dink a kick ahead to regain.Click Here: Paris Saint-Germain soccer tracksuit