The fall-out from the second Bledisloe Cup Test continued on Sunday, with the Wallabies accusing the All Blacks of playing cynically to ''kill the ball'' after the referee calls penalty advantage.

Australia conceded twice the number of penalties as the All Blacks in their 27-16 loss in Wellington on Saturday but coach Ewen McKenzie believes New Zealand made a habit of infringing repeatedly after referee Jaco Peyper called advantage to the Wallabies.

Not happy: Ewen McKenzie will seek clarification. Credit:Getty Images

''Once you conceded a penalty and the referee plays advantage then it just seems to me to be open slather to concede another one and another one because he has already conceded the first one so you already know it's going back,'' McKenzie said. ''Ostensibly, the game is about scoring tries. When the game goes to advantage everyone knows it's already a penalty so they go hard. I'm going to be asking the question about how it's dealt with.''

Will Genia was the target on a couple of occasions, at one stage lobbing a wide panic pass to No.6 Scott Fardy after All Blacks centre Conrad Smith came off the line to shut down the Wallabies' attack.