New Zealand at the FIFA World Cup

The New Zealand national football team has participated in 13 FIFA World Cup qualification campaigns between 1970 and 2018, qualifying for two FIFA World Cups; the 1982 FIFA World Cup in Spain and the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

World Cup competition record

FIFA World Cup record Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
1930 to 1966 Did not enter Not applicable
1970 Did not qualify200206–6
19746033512–7
19784211144+10
1982Group stage23rd3003212–100159514410+34
1986Did not qualify6312137+6
19906312138+5
19946312155+10
19986303136+7
20026402207+13
20065302175+12
2010Group stage22nd303022038611155+10
2014Did not qualify118122413+11
201813841246+18
2022To be determinedTo be determined
2026
TotalGroup stage2/216033414–1039452182421794+123

1982 FIFA World Cup

1982 FIFA World Cup Squad

Coach: John Adshead

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Club
1 1GK Richard Wilson (1956-05-08)8 May 1956 (aged 26) Preston Lions
2 2DF Glenn Dods (1957-07-07)7 July 1957 (aged 24) Adelaide City
3 2DF Ricki Herbert (1961-04-10)10 April 1961 (aged 21) Mount Wellington
4 3MF Brian Turner (1949-07-31)31 July 1949 (aged 32) Gisborne City
5 2DF Dave Bright (1949-11-29)29 November 1949 (aged 32) Manurewa AFC
6 2DF Bobby Almond (1951-04-16)16 April 1951 (aged 31) Invercargill Thistle
7 4FW Wynton Rufer (1962-12-29)29 December 1962 (aged 19) Miramar Rangers
8 3MF Duncan Cole (1958-07-12)12 July 1958 (aged 23) North Shore United
9 4FW Steve Wooddin (1955-01-16)16 January 1955 (aged 27) South Melbourne FC
10 3MF Steve Sumner (1955-04-02)2 April 1955 (aged 27) West Adelaide SC
11 3MF Sam Malcolmson (1948-04-02)2 April 1948 (aged 34) East Coast Bays
12 3MF Keith Mackay (1956-12-08)8 December 1956 (aged 25) Gisborne City
13 3MF Kenny Cresswell (1958-06-04)4 June 1958 (aged 24) Gisborne City
14 2DF Adrian Elrick (1949-09-29)29 September 1949 (aged 32) North Shore United
15 2DF John Hill (1950-01-07)7 January 1950 (aged 32) Gisborne City
16 2DF Glen Adam (1959-05-22)22 May 1959 (aged 23) Mount Wellington
17 3MF Allan Boath (1958-02-14)14 February 1958 (aged 24) West Adelaide SC
18 3MF Peter Simonsen (1959-04-17)17 April 1959 (aged 23) Manurewa AFC
19 3MF Billy McClure (1958-01-04)4 January 1958 (aged 24) Mount Wellington
20 4FW Grant Turner (1958-10-07)7 October 1958 (aged 23) Gisborne City
21 1GK Barry Pickering (1956-12-12)12 December 1956 (aged 25) Miramar Rangers
22 1GK Frank van Hattum (1958-11-17)17 November 1958 (aged 23) Manurewa AFC
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Brazil3300102+86
 Soviet Union311164+23
 Scotland31118803
 New Zealand3003212–100

Matches

15 June 1982 Scotland  5–2  New Zealand Málaga, Spain
21:15 CEST

K. Dalglish  18'
J. Wark  30', 33'
J. Robertson  73'
S. Archibald  79'
Report  54' S. Sumner
 65' S. Wooddin
Stadium: Estadio La Rosaleda
Attendance: 36,000
19 June 1982 Soviet Union  3–0  New Zealand Málaga, Spain
21:00 CEST

Y. Gavrilov  24'
O. Blokhin  48'
S. Baltacha  68'
Report Stadium: Estadio La Rosaleda
Attendance: 19,000
23 June 1982 Brazil  4–0  New Zealand Seville, Spain
21:15 CEST

Zico  28', 31'
Falcão  64'
Serginho  70'
Report Stadium: Estadio Benito Villamarín
Attendance: 43,000

2010 FIFA World Cup

2010 FIFA World Cup Squad

Coach: Ricki Herbert

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Club
1 1GK Mark Paston (1976-12-13)13 December 1976 (aged 33) 23 Wellington Phoenix
2 2DF Ben Sigmund (1981-02-03)3 February 1981 (aged 29) 14 Wellington Phoenix
3 2DF Tony Lochhead (1982-01-12)12 January 1982 (aged 28) 30 Wellington Phoenix
4 2DF Winston Reid (1988-07-03)3 July 1988 (aged 21) 3 Midtjylland
5 2DF Ivan Vicelich (1976-09-03)3 September 1976 (aged 33) 66 Auckland City
6 2DF Ryan Nelsen (c) (1977-10-18)18 October 1977 (aged 32) 41 Blackburn Rovers
7 3MF Simon Elliott (1974-06-10)10 June 1974 (aged 36) 63 Unattached
8 3MF Tim Brown (1981-03-06)6 March 1981 (aged 29) 25 Wellington Phoenix
9 4FW Shane Smeltz (1981-09-29)29 September 1981 (aged 28) 30 Gold Coast United
10 4FW Chris Killen (1981-10-08)8 October 1981 (aged 28) 31 Middlesbrough
11 3MF Leo Bertos (1981-12-20)20 December 1981 (aged 28) 34 Wellington Phoenix
12 1GK Glen Moss (1983-01-19)19 January 1983 (aged 27) 15 Melbourne Victory
13 3MF Andy Barron (1980-12-24)24 December 1980 (aged 29) 11 Team Wellington
14 4FW Rory Fallon (1982-03-20)20 March 1982 (aged 28) 7 Plymouth Argyle
15 3MF Michael McGlinchey (1987-01-07)7 January 1987 (aged 23) 5 Motherwell
16 3MF Aaron Clapham (1987-01-01)1 January 1987 (aged 23) 0 Canterbury United
17 3MF David Mulligan (1982-03-24)24 March 1982 (aged 28) 25 Unattached
18 2DF Andrew Boyens (1983-09-18)18 September 1983 (aged 26) 15 New York Red Bulls
19 2DF Tommy Smith (1990-03-31)31 March 1990 (aged 20) 4 Ipswich Town
20 4FW Chris Wood (1991-12-07)7 December 1991 (aged 18) 9 West Bromwich Albion
21 3MF Jeremy Christie (1983-05-22)22 May 1983 (aged 27) 22 Tampa Bay
22 3MF Jeremy Brockie (1987-10-07)7 October 1987 (aged 22) 18 Newcastle Jets
23 1GK James Bannatyne (1975-06-30)30 June 1975 (aged 34) 3 Team Wellington
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Paraguay312031+25
 Slovakia311145−14
 New Zealand30302203
 Italy302145−12

Matches

15 June 2010 New Zealand  1–1  Slovakia Rustenburg, South Africa
13:30 SAST

T. Lochhead  42'
W. Reid  90+3'  90+3'

New Zealand

Man of the Match:
Róbert Vittek
Report
 50' R. Vittek
 55' Z. Štrba

Slovakia
Stadium: Royal Bafokeng Stadium
Attendance: 23,871
20 June 2010 Italy  1–1  New Zealand Nelspruit, South Africa
16:00 SAST

Iaquinta  29' (pen.)




Italy

Man of the Match:
Daniele De Rossi
Report
 7' Smeltz
 14' R. Fallon
 28' T. Smith
 87' R. Nelsen

New Zealand
Stadium: Mbombela Stadium
Attendance: 38,229
24 June 2010 Paraguay  0–0  New Zealand Polokwane, South Africa
16:00 SAST

V. Cáceres  10'
R. Santa Cruz  41'

Paraguay

Man of the Match:
Roque Santa Cruz
Report
 56' R. Nelsen


New Zealand
Stadium: Peter Mokaba Stadium
Attendance: 34,850

Statistics

Goal scorers

Date Player Opposition World Cup
15 June 1982Steve Sumner Scotland 1982
15 June 1982Steve Wooddin Scotland 1982
15 June 2010Winston Reid Slovakia 2010
20 June 2010Shane Smeltz Italy 2010

Discipline

Date Player Opposition World Cup
15 June 2010 Tony Lochhead Slovakia 2010
15 June 2010 Winston Reid Slovakia 2010
20 June 2010 Rory Fallon Italy 2010
20 June 2010 Tommy Smith Italy 2010
20 June 2010 Ryan Nelsen Italy 2010
24 June 2010 Ryan Nelsen Paraguay 2010

Qualification history

1970 FIFA World Cup

Seven teams were involved in the AFC/OFC qualification process; Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, North Korea, South Korea and Rhodesia, however, North Korea withdrew before any matches were played as they refused to play Israel.

Due to North Korea's withdrawal, New Zealand, along with Israel and Rhodesia, received byes and advanced directly to the second round. The remaining three teams played against each other twice in South Korea, with the group winner advancing to the Second Round.

In round 2, the remaining four teams were divided into two groups of two teams, each playing the other twice.

New Zealand was grouped with Israel, and lost 4-0 and 2-0 respectively. Israel progressed to the final round and qualified for the 1970 FIFA World Cup after defeating Australia in the final round.

Matches

28 September 1969 Israel  4–0  New Zealand Tel Aviv, Israel
1 October 1969 Israel  2–0  New Zealand Tel Aviv, Israel

1974 FIFA World Cup

The AFC and OFC regions were divided into two zones; Zone A, consisting of seven teams from East Asia, and Zone B, consisting of eight teams from West Asia and Oceania.

The eight teams of Zone B were divided into two groups of four, with each team playing the other twice. New Zealand were grouped with Australia, Indonesia, and Iraq and managed three draws and three losses, thus failing to qualify for the 1974 FIFA World Cup.

After topping the group and winning the Zone B final, Australia defeated South Korea 1-0 to qualify for their first ever World Cup appearance.

Group 2 (Zone B)

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Australia6330156+99
 Iraq6321116+58
 Indonesia612361374
 New Zealand603351273

Matches

4 March 1973 New Zealand  1–1  Australia Auckland, New Zealand
B. Turner
11 March 1973 Indonesia  1–1  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
A. Vest
13 March 1973 Iraq  2–0  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
16 March 1973 Australia  3–3  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
(2) D. Tindall
A. Vest
18 March 1973 Indonesia  1–0  New Zealand Melbourne, Australia
24 March 1973 Iraq  4–0  New Zealand Sydney, Australia

1978 FIFA World Cup

Qualification for the Asian and Oceanian zones consisted of 21 teams competing in two rounds.

Round 1 saw the teams divided into five groups, each with its own format. New Zealand was drawn into Group 5 and played Chinese Taipei and Australia on a home-and-away basis, eventually finishing second, thus failing to qualify for round 2, and consequently, the 1978 FIFA World Cup

Group 5

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Australia431093+67
 New Zealand4211144+105
 Chinese Taipei4004117160

Matches

23 March 1977 Chinese Taipei  0–6  New Zealand Auckland, New Zealand
(3) S. Sumner
(2) K. Nelson
Own goal
27 March 1977 Australia  3–1  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
K. Nelson
30 March 1977 New Zealand  1–1  Australia Auckland, New Zealand
K. Nelson

1982 FIFA World Cup

The 1982 FIFA World Cup campaign is considered to be one of the most memorable sporting achievements in New Zealand's history, and helped to galvanise the country after the controversial 1981 Springbok Tour had divided the nation and left the popularity of Rugby Union at an all-time low.

The New Zealand squad, made up mostly of amateurs, set several World Cup records on their road to Spain by playing the most matches to qualify (15 in total[1]), travelling further than any other team in a single qualifying campaign[2] (88,000 km), recording the largest margin of victory in a qualifying match (13-0 against Fiji[3] (since surpassed by Australia's 22-0 rout of Tonga in 2002,[4] and then their 31-0 demolition of American Samoa two days later[5])) and the longest period without conceding a goal set by goalkeeper Richard Wilson (921 minutes; a record which still stands today).[6][7]

The 1982 campaign was also the first time that New Zealand wore an all white strip which gave rise to their nickname "All Whites". New Zealand's previous strip featured a white shirt with black shorts, based on the English strip, and it wasn't until their third match against Taiwan that the all white strip was introduced.[8]

Round 1
The 1982 World Cup was the first edition to have 24 spots available (up from 16) and two spots were allocated to the Asian and Oceanian regions. A total of 21 AFC and OFC teams entered the competition, however, Iran withdrew before playing any matches.

The remaining 20 teams were divided into four groups, each with their own formats. New Zealand were drawn into Group 1 along with Australia, Chinese Taipei, Fiji, and Indonesia, where each team would play the other on a home-and-away basis. The winners of each of the four groups–New Zealand, China PR, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia–progressed to Round 2.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 New Zealand8620313+2814
 Australia8422229+1310
 Indonesia8224514–96
 Chinese Taipei813458–35
 Fiji8134635–295

Matches

25 April 1981 New Zealand  3–3  Australia Auckland, New Zealand
Stadium: Mt Smart Stadium
3 May 1981 Fiji  0–4  New Zealand Suva, Fiji
7 May 1981 Chinese Taipei  0–0  New Zealand Taipei, Taiwan
11 May 1981 Indonesia  0–2  New Zealand Jakarta, Indonesia
16 May 1981 Australia  0–2  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
23 May 1981 New Zealand  5–0  Indonesia Auckland, New Zealand
Stadium: Mt Smart Stadium
30 May 1981 New Zealand  2–0  Chinese Taipei Auckland, New Zealand
Stadium: Mt Smart Stadium
16 August 1981 New Zealand  13–0  Fiji Auckland, New Zealand
Stadium: Mt Smart Stadium

Round 2
Round 2 consisted of the top team from each group in Round 1. Each team played each other on a home and away basis in Round 2, with the top two teams qualifying for the World Cup in Spain.

After five matches, New Zealand found themselves in third place, three points and five goals behind China PR. For New Zealand to qualify, they had to beat Saudi Arabia by six goals to finish ahead of China PR on goal difference. Despite scoring five in the first half, New Zealand were unable to add to their tally and the match finished 5-0, thus putting New Zealand level on points and goal difference with China PR, and forcing a play-off.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Kuwait641186+29
 New Zealand6231116+57
 China PR631294+57
 Saudi Arabia6015416–121

Matches

24 September 1981 China PR  0–0  New Zealand Beijing, China
3 October 1981 New Zealand  1–0  China PR Auckland, New Zealand
Stadium: Mt Smart Stadium
10 October 1981 New Zealand  1–2  Kuwait Auckland, New Zealand
Stadium: Mt Smart Stadium
28 November 1981 New Zealand  2–2  Saudi Arabia Auckland, New Zealand
Stadium: Mt Smart Stadium
14 December 1981 Kuwait  2–2  New Zealand Kuwait City, Kuwait
19 December 1981 Saudi Arabia  0–5  New Zealand Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Round 2 play-off

10 January 1982 China PR  1–2  New Zealand Singapore

After defeating China PR in the play-off for the second AFC/OFC spot, New Zealand qualified for their first ever FIFA World Cup, losing all three matches to Scotland (5-2), The Soviet Union (3-0) and Brazil (4-0).

1986 FIFA World Cup

21 September 1985 New Zealand  0–0  Australia Auckland, New Zealand
5 October 1985 New Zealand  5–1  Chinese Taipei Auckland, New Zealand
12 October 1985 Chinese Taipei  0–5  New Zealand Christchurch, New Zealand
26 October 1985 New Zealand  3–1  Israel Auckland, New Zealand
3 November 1985 Australia  2–0  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
10 November 1985 Israel  3–0  New Zealand Tel Aviv, Israel

1990 FIFA World Cup

11 December 1988 New Zealand  4–0  Chinese Taipei Wellington, New Zealand
15 December 1988 New Zealand  4–1  Chinese Taipei Auckland, New Zealand
5 March 1989 Israel  1–0  New Zealand Tel Aviv, Israel
12 March 1989 Australia  4–1  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
2 April 1989 New Zealand  2–0  Australia Auckland, New Zealand
9 April 1989 New Zealand  2–2  Israel Auckland, New Zealand

1994 FIFA World Cup

7 June 1992 New Zealand  3–0  Fiji Auckland, New Zealand
27 June 1992 Vanuatu  1–4  New Zealand Port Vila, Vanuatu
1 July 1992 New Zealand  8–0  Vanuatu Auckland, New Zealand
19 September 1992 Fiji  0–0  New Zealand Nadi, Fiji
30 May 1993 New Zealand  0–1  Australia Auckland, New Zealand
6 June 1993 Australia  3–0  New Zealand Melbourne, Australia

1998 FIFA World Cup

31 May 1997 Papua New Guinea  1–0  New Zealand Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
7 June 1997 Fiji  0–1  New Zealand Ba, Fiji
11 June 1997 New Zealand  7–0  Papua New Guinea Auckland, New Zealand
18 June 1997 New Zealand  5–0  Fiji Auckland, New Zealand
28 June 1997 New Zealand  0–3  Australia Auckland, New Zealand
6 July 1997 Australia  2–0  New Zealand Sydney, Australia

2002 FIFA World Cup

6 June 2001 New Zealand  5–0  Tahiti Auckland, New Zealand
V. Coveny  41', 56', 71'
A. Lines  53'
J. Perry  88'
Report Stadium: North Harbour Stadium
Attendance: 2,052
Referee: Leslie Irvine (Niger)
8 June 2001 New Zealand  2–0  Cook Islands Auckland, New Zealand
N. Hickey  66', 68' Report Stadium: North Harbour Stadium
Attendance: 500
Referee: Brett Hugo (Australia)
11 June 2001 New Zealand  5–1  Solomon Islands Auckland, New Zealand
V. Coveny  27', 50'
C. Jackson  32', 55'
P. Urlovic  67'

Report
 85' B. Suri Stadium: North Harbour Stadium
Attendance: 2,500
Referee: Intaz Shah (Fiji)
13 June 2001 New Zealand  7–0  Vanuatu Auckland, New Zealand
V. Coveny  2', 7', 29'
C. Jackson  24'
A. Lines  27'
M. Burton  61'
I. Vicelich  67'
Report Stadium: North Harbour Stadium
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Leslie Irvine (Niger)
20 June 2001 New Zealand  0–2  Australia Wellington, New Zealand
Report  5', 80' B. Emerton Stadium: Westpac Stadium
Attendance: 19,500
Referee: Masayoshi Okada (Japan)
24 June 2001 Australia  4–1  New Zealand Sydney, Australia
D. Zdrilic  6', 82'
B. Emerton  40'
J. Aloisi  56'
Report  44' (pen.) V. Coveny Stadium: Stadium Australia
Attendance: 41,976
Referee: Jong Chul Kwon (South Korea)

2006 FIFA World Cup

29 May 2004 Australia  1–0  New Zealand Adelaide, Australia
2004 OFC Nations Cup J. Aloisi  14'
M. Bresciano  40'
Report  26' D. Mulligan Stadium: Hindmarsh Stadium
Attendance: 12,130
Referee: Claus Bo Larsen (Denmark)
2 June 2004 New Zealand  2–4  Vanuatu Adelaide, Australia
2004 OFC Nations Cup V. Coveny  61', 75'
I. Vicelich  65'
R. de Gregorio  90+2'
Report  2' M. Poida
 37' S. Chillia
 66' L. Bibi
 67' G. Gete
 72' J. Maleb
 77' D. Chilia
 88' Qorig
Stadium: Hindmarsh Stadium
Attendance: 356
Referee: Stefano Farina (Italy)
4 June 2004 New Zealand  10–0  Tahiti Adelaide, Australia
2004 OFC Nations Cup V. Coveny  6', 38', 45+1'
B. Fisher  16', 22', 63'  44'
N. Jones  72'
D. Oughton  74'
R. Nelsen  82', 87'
Report  60' F. Tagawa
 82' A. Temataua
 87' X. Samin
Stadium: Marden Sports Complex
Attendance: 200
Referee: Mark Shield (Australia)
6 June 2004 Fiji  0–2  New Zealand Adelaide, Australia
2004 OFC Nations Cup Report  8' C. Bunce
 56' V. Coveny
Stadium: Hindmarsh Stadium
Attendance: 300
Referee: Claus Bo Larsen (Denmark)

2010 FIFA World Cup

17 October 2007 Fiji  0–2  New Zealand Lautoka, Fiji
2008 OFC Nations Cup Report  37' I. Vicelich
 86' S. Smeltz
Stadium: Churchill Park
Attendance: 6,000
Referee: Jair Marrufo (United States)
17 November 2007 Vanuatu  1–2  New Zealand Port Vila, Vanuatu
2008 OFC Nations Cup J. Naprapol  32' Report  52' S. Smeltz
 90+3' D. Mulligan
Stadium: Korman Stadium
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Job Minan (Papua New Guinea)
21 November 2007 New Zealand  4–1  Vanuatu Wellington, New Zealand
2008 OFC Nations Cup D. Mulligan  14', 81'
S. Smeltz  29' (pen.), 34'
Report  50' F. Sakama Stadium: Westpac Stadium
Attendance: 2,500
Referee: Averii Jacques (Tahiti)
6 September 2008 New Caledonia  1–3  New Zealand Nouméa, New Caledonia
2008 OFC Nations Cup M. Hmae  55' Report  16' B. Sigmund
 65', 75' S. Smeltz
Stadium: Stade Numa-Daly Magenta
Attendance: 2,589
Referee: Rakesh Varman (Fiji)
10 September 2008 New Zealand  3–0  New Caledonia Auckland, New Zealand
2008 OFC Nations Cup S. Smeltz  49', 76'
J. Christie  69'
Report Stadium: North Harbour Stadium
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Norbert Hauat (Tahiti)
19 November 2008 Fiji  2–0  New Zealand Lautoka, Fiji
2008 OFC Nations Cup R. Krishna  63', 90' Report  60' G. Moss Stadium: Churchill Park
Attendance: 4,500
Referee: Lencie Fred (Vanuatu)
10 October 2009 Bahrain  0–0  New Zealand Manama, Bahrain
Report  76' M. Paston
 90+1' R. Nelsen
Stadium: Bahrain National Stadium
Attendance: 37,000
Referee: Viktor Kassai (Hungary)
14 November 2009 New Zealand  1–0  Bahrain Wellington, New Zealand
B. Sigmund  3'
R. Fallon  45'
Report  27' F. Aaish
 90+3' J. Okwunwanne
Stadium: Westpac Stadium
Attendance: 35,194
Referee: Jorge Larrionda (Uruguay)

After beating Bahrain in the playoffs, New Zealand went on to the finals. They drew three matches in their group against Slovakia (1-1), Italy (1-1) and Paraguay (0-0) but failed to progress. They were the only undefeated side at the 2010 World Cup finals due to Spain's defeat to Switzerland.

2014 FIFA World Cup

As in previous editions, the Oceania region was delegated half a spot at the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. After the qualification rounds within the Oceania Football Confederation, the winner–New Zealand–progresses to an inter-confederation play-off with one of three other confederations that has also been delegated a half spot. On 30 July 2011, it was determined that the OFC team would play the fourth placed CONCACAF team, and the fifth placed Asian team would play the 5th placed CONMEBOL team.

Round 1
The first round consisted of just four Oceania nations in one group with the winner progressing to round 2, where they would join the seven seeded OFC teams.

Round 2
The second stage of Oceania qualifying also doubled as the group stage of the 2012 OFC Nations Cup. The top two teams from each group at the Nations Cup progressed to the third round of World Cup qualifying.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 New Zealand321042+27
 Solomon Islands312021+15
 Fiji302112–12
 Papua New Guinea301224–21

Group matches

2 June 2012 Fiji  0–1  New Zealand Honiara, Solomon Islands
2013 FIFA Confed. Cup Qualifier
2012 OFC Nations Cup
12:00, 2 June SBT
13:00, 2 June NZST
Alvin Singh  48'
O. Vakatalesau  83'
Summary
Report
 8' T. Smith
 80' L. Bertos
 82' R. Fallon
 83' I. Vicelich
Stadium: Lawson Tama Stadium
Attendance: 12,950
Referee: Isidore Assiene-Ambassa (New Caledonia)
FIFA World Rankings:   160th     130th
4 June 2012 Papua New Guinea  1–2  New Zealand Honiara, Solomon Islands
2013 FIFA Confed. Cup Qualifier
2012 OFC Nations Cup
12:00, 4 June SBT
13:00, 4 June NZST
K. Jack  59'
N. Hans  88' (pen.)
Summary
Report
 2' S. Smeltz
 45'  88' T. Lochhead
 53' C. Wood
 76' A. Clapham
Stadium: Lawson Tama Stadium
Attendance: 4,700
Referee: Bruce George (Vanuatu)
FIFA World Rankings:   193rd     130th
6 June 2012 New Zealand  1–1  Solomon Islands Honiara, Solomon Islands
2013 FIFA Confed. Cup Qualifier
2012 OFC Nations Cup
15:00, 6 June SBT
16:00, 6 June NZST
C. Wood  14'
T. Smith  37'
Summary
Report
 57' B. Totori
 79' J. Nawo
Stadium: Lawson Tama Stadium
Attendance: 15,000
Referee: Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
FIFA World Rankings:   130th     183rd

Round 3
The third round saw the four remaining teams play each other on a home-and-away basis to decide who would progress to the inter-confederation play-off. New Zealand won all six of their matches to progress to the home-and-away play-offs to be held in November, 2013.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 New Zealand6600172+1518
 New Caledonia6402176+1112
 Tahiti6105212–103
 Solomon Islands6105521–163

Group matches

7 September 2012 New Caledonia  0–2  New Zealand Nouméa, New Caledonia
18:00, 7 September NCT
19:00 7 September NZST
I. Kabeu  44'
D. Wacalie  90+1'
Summary
Report
 12'  53' S. Smeltz
 40' C. Wood
 44' M. McGlinchey
 73' W. Reid
Stadium: Stade Numa-Daly Magenta
Referee: Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
FIFA World Rankings:   128th     95th
11 September 2012 New Zealand  6–1  Solomon Islands Auckland, New Zealand
19:35, 11 September NZST
18:35, 11 September SBT
S. Smeltz  12'
K. Barbarouses  25'
C. Killen  53'
T. Lochhead  69'
C. Wood  80'  85'
M. Rojas  83'

Summary
Report
 51' H. Fa'arodo Stadium: North Harbour Stadium
Attendance: 7,931
Referee: Bertrand Billon (New Caledonia)
FIFA World Rankings:   95th     153rd
12 October 2012 Tahiti  0–2  New Zealand Papeete, Tahiti
Summary  24' S. Smeltz
 43' T. Payne
 53' T. Lochhead
 82' B. Sigmund
Referee: Bruce George (Vanuatu)
FIFA World Rankings:   127th     92nd
16 October 2012 New Zealand  3–0  Tahiti Christchurch, New Zealand
19:35 NZDT M. McGlinchey  3', 90+4'
B. Sigmund  84'
C. Killen  55'  90'
Summary  25' N. Vallar Stadium: AMI Stadium
Referee: Gerald Oiaka (Solomon Islands)
FIFA World Rankings:   92nd     127th
22 March 2013 New Zealand  2–1  New Caledonia Dunedin, New Zealand
19:30 NZDT C. Killen  10'
T. Smith  90+4'
Summary
Report
 56' C. Lolohea Stadium: Forsyth Barr Stadium
Referee: Strebre Delovski (Australia)
FIFA World Rankings:   88th     103rd
26 March 2013 Solomon Islands  0–2  New Zealand Honiara, Solomon Islands
17:00 NZDT Summary  3', 88' T. Payne Stadium: Lawson Tama Stadium
Referee: Averii Jacques (Tahiti)
FIFA World Rankings:   147th     88th

OFC/CONCACAF play-off
New Zealand played Mexico in the inter-confederation play-off in an attempt to qualify for Brazil. Despite Mexico's poor form throughout their qualifying campaign, the Mexicans won both matches to qualify for the 2014 FIFA World Cup with an aggregate of nine goals to New Zealand's three.[9]

13 November 2013 Mexico  5–1  New Zealand Mexico City, Mexico
13 November 14:30 CST
14 November 09:30 NZDT
P. Aguilar  32'
R. Jiménez  40'
O. Peralta  48', 80'
R. Márquez  84'
Summary
Report
 85' C. James Stadium: Estadio Azteca
Attendance: 99,832
Referee: Viktor Kassai (Hungary)
FIFA World Rankings:   24th 79th
20 November 2013 New Zealand  2–4  Mexico Wellington, New Zealand
19:00 NZDT C. James  80'
R. Fallon  82'
Summary
Report
 14', 29', 33' O. Peralta
 86' C. Peña
Stadium: Westpac Stadium
Attendance: 35,206
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)
FIFA World Rankings:   79th 24th

2018 FIFA World Cup

Second Round

New Zealand joined the OFC qualification tournament at the 2016 OFC Nations Cup, which doubled as the Second Round of the qualification process. The top three teams of each of the two groups would proceed to the Third Round of qualification, while only the top two would advance in the OFC Nations Cup. New Zealand won all three group matches and eventually the tournament.

Group B

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  New Zealand 3 3 0 0 9 1 +8 9 Qualification to Nations Cup knockout stage
and World Cup qualifying third round
2  Solomon Islands 3 1 0 2 1 2 1 3
3  Fiji 3 1 0 2 4 6 2 3 Qualification to World Cup qualifying third round
4  Vanuatu 3 1 0 2 3 8 5 3
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers
28 May 2016 New Zealand  3–1  Fiji Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
16:00 AEST T. Tzimopoulos  16'
R. Fallon  41'
C. Wood  61' (pen)
(2-1)
Report (FIFA)
 45+2' (pen) R. Krishna Stadium: Sir John Guise Stadium
Attendance: 378
Referee: Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
31 May 2016 Vanuatu  0–5  New Zealand Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
16:00 AEST (0-5)
Report (FIFA)
 4', 5' C. Wood
 10' M. McGlinchey
 19' R. Fallon
 45' K. Barbarouses
Stadium: Sir John Guise Stadium
Attendance: 520
Referee: Anio Amos (Papua New Guinea)
4 June 2016 New Zealand  1–0  Solomon Islands Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
19:00 AEST L. Adams  81' Report (FIFA) Stadium: Sir John Guise Stadium
Attendance: 1,925
Referee: Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)

While the semi-finals and the final of the 2016 OFC Nations Cup were irrelevant for the World Cup qualification process, they officially count as qualification matches.

8 June 2016 New Zealand  1–0  New Caledonia Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
16:10 AEST C. Wood  49' Report (FIFA) Stadium: Sir John Guise Stadium
Attendance: 1,379
Referee: Kader Zitouni (Tahiti)

Third Round

The Third Round saw the six remaining teams drawn into two groups of three teams. New Zealand were drawn into Group A with New Caledonia and Fiji. The first-placed teams of each group, New Zealand and the Solomon Islands, would then play a two-legged final to determine a winner.

Group A

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  New Zealand 4 3 1 0 6 0 +6 10 Advance to OFC Final
2  New Caledonia 4 1 2 1 4 5 1 5
3  Fiji 4 0 1 3 3 8 5 1
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers
12 November 2016 New Zealand  2–0  New Caledonia Auckland, New Zealand
15:00 NZDT M. Rojas  42', 72' Report (FIFA) Stadium: QBE Stadium
Attendance: 8,131
Referee: Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
15 November 2016 New Caledonia  0–0  New Zealand Koné, New Caledonia
17:00 AEDT Report (FIFA) Stadium: Stade Yoshida
Attendance: 2,000
Referee: George Time (Solomon Islands)
25 March 2017 Fiji  0–2  New Zealand Lautoka, Fiji
13:00 NZST Report (FIFA)  48' (pen) C. Wood
 55' M. Rojas
Stadium: Churchill Park
Attendance: 7,000
Referee: Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
28 March 2017 New Zealand  2–0  Fiji Wellington, New Zealand
19:35 NZDT R. Thomas  27', 68' Report (FIFA) Stadium: Westpac Stadium
Attendance: 10,133
Referee: Kader Zitouni (Tahiti)

Third Round Final

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
New Zealand  8–3  Solomon Islands 6–1 2–2
1 September 2017 New Zealand  6–1  Solomon Islands Auckland, New Zealand
19:35 NZST
(3-0)
Report (FIFA)
 53' (pen.) H. Fa'arodo Stadium: North Harbour Stadium
Attendance: 10,230
Referee: Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
5 September 2017 Solomon Islands  2–2  New Zealand Honiara, Solomon Islands
14:00 AEDT
Report (FIFA)
Stadium: Lawson Tama Stadium
Attendance: 10,200
Referee: Abdulrahman Al-Jassim (Qatar)

Inter-confederation play-off

The inter-confederation play-off saw New Zealand face Peru, who placed fifth in the CONMEBOL qualification tournament. Peru won 2-0 on aggregate and advanced to the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
New Zealand  0–2  Peru 0–0 0–2
11 November 2017 New Zealand  0–0  Peru Wellington, New Zealand
16:15 NZDT Report Stadium: Westpac Stadium
Attendance: 37,034
Referee: Mark Geiger (United States)
15 November 2017 Peru  2–0  New Zealand Lima, Peru
21:15 PET
Report Stadium: Estadio Nacional
Attendance: 90,125
Referee: Clément Turpin (France)

See also

References

  1. "NZF pay tribute to honoured Adshead". New Zealand Football. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  2. "15 big things about New Zealand football". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  3. "The long road to Spain". New Zealand History Online. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  4. "Tonga–Australia Match Report". FIFA.com. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  5. "Australia–American Samoa Match Report". FIFA.com. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  6. "Who were the '82 All Whites?". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  7. "Quirky Facts". Goalkeepers are Different. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  8. "What's in a name?". New Zealand History Online. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  9. "North, Central America and Caribbean Qualifiers". FIFA.com. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
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