WALES have questioned the legitimacy of the Wallabies' breakdown tactics
and want a meeting with the referee before the third and final Test in Sydney on Saturday.
Victories in Brisbane and Melbourne have given Australia an unassailable 2-0 lead against the Six Nations champions. While the Welsh improved from the first Test to the second, defence coach Shaun Edwards highlighted the breakdown as an area his team needed to work on.
"I think the contact area, we'll continue to work on that," Edwards said.
"It's something we've always prided ourselves on and obviously (Australian captain and openside flanker David) Pocock is a threat and I still feel a little bit that legs are being held together when we are trying to present the ball.
"Obviously we'll speak to the referee about that at certain times.
"There's certain aspects from Saturday's game we'd like to be more accurate, probably with our lineout and we'd like to basically win the territory battle.
"It's something we've struggled quite a bit against Australia in past encounters and last weekend was a good example." Edwards said he expected everyone in the squad to be fit and available for the final Test and stressed Wales still had plenty to play for despite losing the series to a last-minute penalty.
"You could just sense obviously a huge disappointment, an opportunity definitely missed," Edwards said.
"If we win the Test on Saturday, it will be the first time in the professional era since 1969 that Wales have won a Test in the southern hemisphere. So that's a big goal to shoot for."
Wales were one of several northern hemisphere teams to suffer narrow losses last weekend against the southern hemisphere leaders.
New Zealand scraped past Ireland, South Africa shaded England and Argentina squeezed past France.
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