
Twenty-one times he has laced up his boots for a test match against the All Blacks and 16 times he has come off the field on the wrong side of the scoreline.
He's experienced four wins and a draw - which probably felt as a good as a victory given his record - but there's one number he is edging towards he will be desperate to avoid.
Ashley-Cooper's 16 losses to the All Blacks put him fifth-equal alongside former South African lock Victor Matfield on the list of players who have copped the most defeats at the hands of New Zealand.
Nathan Sharpe was on a losing side 20 times to the All Blacks, with David Campese next on 18, while Matt Giteau and George Smith were both dealt 17 losses.
The common themes with the 'top four' are they're all Australian and none are likely to add to their tally in the future given they're either retired or their international playing days are behind them.
Ashley-Cooper will line up at centre for the Wallabies when they meet the All Blacks in the second Bledisloe Cup test of the year in Wellington tomorrow night and the 29-year-old is keen to add to his side of the ledger.
"We certainly aren't lacking motivation. Stats always help and just a win in general [would be great]," Ashley-Cooper said yesterday (Thur).
"A win over here would be very special and wins that you do have with test-match football overseas, against quality opposition, are ones that you certainly don't forget and this could be one of them."
Despite his torrid win-loss record against the All Blacks, Ashley-Cooper, an 81-test veteran, wasn't backing away from the challenge of finding a way to match them this weekend.
"I love playing these guys and I know from personal experience there's no one I enjoy playing better. Even though I haven't got a great success record I know I play my best football against these guys too. So we have a great opportunity this week to turn it around, not only for ourselves, but for the opportunity to reclaim the Bledisloe which we haven't held in over a decade."
The Wallabies haven't won a test in New Zealand since they toppled the All Blacks 23-15 in Dunedin in 2001.
The All Blacks could be perceived to have an air of vulnerability about them this weekend given they are starting debutant Tom Taylor in the No 10 jersey but Ashley-Cooper didn't see it as a major weakness for the home side.
"There's always vulnerability with change but, like I said last week with the injury to Dan Carter with Aaron Cruden stepping in, I don't think it will be a distraction with the depth that New Zealand have in terms of first-fives," Ashley-Cooper said.
"Tom Taylor's a great player, he's played well all year in the Super 15, I'm sure he's going to look back on those performances and get a lot of confidence out of those games leading in to his first test match. It's an exciting time for him, he's got a lot to prove."
Wallabies coach Ewen McKenzie has made only one change to his starting XV for tomorrow's test from the side who were beaten 47-29 by the All Blacks in Sydney last weekend with Scott Fardy coming in at blindside flanker to replace the injured Hugh McMeniman.