STAR number 8 Taulupe Faletau believes if Wales concentrate on their own game they can top the pool of death.

Warren Gatland’s men face the Wallabies tomorrow in a game that will decide who tops the group England failed to qualify from.

The winners are likely to face Scotland in the quarter finals and either France or Ireland in the semi whereas the runner-up will face South Africa followed by New Zealand en route to the final.

With Australian flanker Michael Hooper sidelined through suspension, Faletau said: “I think you've got to concentrate on ourselves and our gameplan and hopefully that will prevail.

“George [North] was saying in the changing rooms [after the Fiji game] if we'd have won our first three games, we would've taken it.

“That's what we've done.

“We've just got to look after ourselves and make sure we win our games.”

The Wallabies have broken Welsh hearts with a number of last-gasp wins in recent years to extend their winning streak over Warren Gatland’s men to 10 matches dating back to 2009.

Wales’ last win came in the 21-18 triumph at the Millennium Stadium a year previously, but in the last nine meetings, the Australians have never won by more than eight points.

Warren Gatland’s record against the Wallabies is played 11, won one – discounting the Lions – and Faletau can’t put his finger on why the games keep slipping away.

He said: “I'm not sure what it is, I just think they've been fortunate to get the result on the days - the many days - we've played each other.

“Hopefully next time we play them it'll go our way.”

Despite the scrum firing and the back-row ruling the breakdown, Faletau thinks the Australian strength is out wide.

“Obviously they have a good pack but they're good out wide with their fullbacks and they can go from anywhere,” he said.

“They're dangerous from anywhere and they move the ball efficiently and better than anybody else I think.”

The 24-year-old celebrated his 50th cap against Fiji last Thursday on the same day as his pal Dan Lydiate, and the number 8 was thrilled with the milestone.

He said: “It's an honour to get one cap for your country, so to get 50 is a big honour.

“I'm not sure how quickly it's come, to get one I'm honoured so to get 50 I'm just privileged the opportunity has come to me.”