Wayne Pivac needs Wales to "centre around the great stuff" that rose out of their last Guinness Six Nations crusade as they plan to handle title holders South Africa.
Grains have been discounted in many quarters in front of Tests against the Springboks in Pretoria, Bloemfontein and Cape Town.
They finished the last Six Nations with a first home loss against Italy, completing fifth, with just the Azzurri underneath them.
In any case, the 2021 Six Nations champions lost barely to England at Twickenham and seemingly gave possible heroes France their most challenging test before going down 13-9 in Cardiff.
"On the off chance that we can hold South Africa to one attempt, as we did against France, then we would be delighted," Wales lead trainer Pivac said.
"There was mind-blowing that emerged from that Six Nations; we should not fail to remember that.
"What we desire to do according to a group viewpoint is centre around the great stuff we put out there, expand on it and ensure we have that consistently north of 80 minutes week in, week out.
"That is the best test for us. We realize how well we can play when we set it up.
"We must ensure we do that from the primary moment to the 80th to have a potential for success in these Test matches. It is something we are discussing.
"In addition to the fact that we must be arranged truly, yet intellectually too. The right outlook to have the option to adhere to task for the full 80 minutes will be a major test."
Grains have lost every 10 Tests against the Springboks in South Africa, which stands out obviously from their new home record in the apparatus.
Four successes from the last five beginnings in Cardiff ought to create certainty among a 34-man crew entrusted with testing world rugby's leading positioned country.
However, Wales will likewise be utterly mindful of South Africa's predominance in this season's United Rugby Championship, which finished with the Cape Town-based Stormers being delegated champions in the wake of beating the Bulls from Pretoria.
The two groups, alongside individual South African URC sides the Lions and Sharks, created some thrilling going after rugby. Even though Pivac doesn't figure it will mean the Springboks are getting away from their conventional power game.
"I think you must place it in context by seeing what works at club and test levels," he added.
"When you are the title holders playing the best groups on the planet and finding success in an arrangement that works for you, it would be distraught to go excessively far away from that.
"I don't anticipate that there should be an excess of progress, yet we are emerging from South Africa at the club level. It is energizing to watch, frankly.
"There is a ton of ball development, and a ton of offloading with a ton of extraordinary takes a stab at being scored.
"Among now and the Rugby World Cup, we must watch out for things since potentially anything they will have in their collection.
"The clubs have been energizing to watch, yet that doesn't typically move up."
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