The soft centre of a southern hemisphere sandwich. That is how Saturday’s encounter with Australia appeared when England revealed their 2024 autumn fixtures.
Between ever-competitive New Zealand and world champions South Africa, England play an Australia team they have beaten in 10 of their previous 11 meetings - a run that began after England's pool-stage defeat in the 2015 Rugby World Cup.
More recent form doesn't challenge the perception either.
Australia have lost five of their last six matches. They finished bottom of the Rugby Championship. Last year's Rugby World Cup campaign ended in a miserable pool-stage exit. They are ranked ninth in the world, below Italy and a smidge above Fiji.
The current crop of Wallabies are certainly short of bounce. They can, however, still box. Canny coaches, blockbuster talent and a cherished underdog status give the tourists a puncher's chance at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham on Saturday.
And, given their wobbly form, England are certainly not invulnerable to an upset.
Steve Borthwick's side themselves have only one win - a comfortable cruise past Japan - from their last five fixtures. Several times in that run, they have been locked on for the winners' enclosure, only to veer into the rails in the final quarter.
Their ability to fade faster than a boil wash is stark.
Among the top 10 teams in the world this year, none have scored more points than the 77 England have chalked up between 40 minutes and 60 minutes in matches. But, contrastingly, none have scored fewer than the 35 they have managed from the hour mark to full-time.
England have a points difference of 47 from 40-60 minutes in matches this year. They are minus 23 from the final quarter.
The way that an eight-point lead evaporated late on against All Blacks last weekend swung the spotlight onto England’s bench.
Replacement fly-half George Ford missed two potentially match-winning shots. Scrum-half Harry Randall struggled to connect with his team-mates. The rejigged forwards went into retreat.