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All Whites qualify for World Cup with victory over New Caledonia

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March 25, 2025
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All Whites qualify for World Cup with victory over New Caledonia

New Zealand will return to the FIFA World Cup for the first time in 16 years after overcoming early nerves to beat New Caledonia 3-0 and book a place in Canada-Mexico-USA.

The Kiwis were made to work in their Oceania playoff, held goalless in the first half and losing captain Chris Wood to a hip injury early in the second.

New Caledonia provided stern resistance for an hour before Michael Boxall broke through, the 36-year-old scoring his first international goal when New Zealand needed it most.

Kosta Barbarouses doubled New Zealand's lead soon after, allowing for a national exhale, before Eli Just wrapped up the result in the 80th minute.

New Zealand will make their third appearance at the World Cup finals, cashing in on FIFA's decision to offer the tiny Oceania confederation a confirmed place at the 2026 tournament.

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But for an hour at Auckland's Eden Park, it was agony for the Kiwis.

Led by Nottingham Forest striker Wood and with a generationally-talented squad, New Zealand thumped Fiji 7-0 in their semi-final on Friday and were expected to be far too strong for New Caledonia, the world No.152.

But early on, the All Whites played without intensity or fluency, unable to fashion strong chances.

New Caledonia goalkeeper Rocky Nyikeine - also in goal the last time Les Cagous beat New Zealand, in 2012 - was in fine form, denying the Kiwis at set pieces and in general play.

He kept out early efforts from Callum McCowatt and Wood and gratefully received help from defender Joseph Athale, who headed clear off the line twice in one frenzied backs-to-the-wall moment.

Despite his English Premier League pedigree, Wood never looked on song, even mis-volleying one effort backwards.

The All Whites looked flabbergasted at half-time as they walked off the pitch at 0-0, while New Caledonia's XI gathered in a circle - not quite celebrating, but their belief clearly building.

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Johan Sidaner's band of amateurs and semi-professionals, almost entirely made up of either locally-based players or those from the lower tiers of French football, had never been one match from the World Cup before.

The New Zealand players celebrate Eli Just's goal against New Caledonia. (Source: Photosport)

Sydney FC's Jaushua Sotirio, an unused substitute in both their matches, was the sole pro, accepting a call-up to the nation of his parents' birth given the carrot of World Cup qualification.

Adding to their disadvantage, the New Caledonia Super Ligue has been paused since last year owing to major civil unrest which claimed more than a dozen lives and devastated the capital, Noumea.

Their stirring shift in Auckland had its first setback in the 61st minute, when substitute Frances de Vries sent a cross to the back post for Boxall to head home.

New Zealand's oldest player was joined on the scoresheet by the second-oldest, Barbarouses, five minutes later, effectively sealing the contest.

The 35-year-old raced onto a through-ball from Wellington Phoenix teammate Payne and chipped over Nyikeine, then turned provider for Just to thrash home a third.

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New Zealand ran out the match without their captain and vice-captain, with Wood off and Liberato Cacace needing a late substitution, though both were fit enough to revel after the final whistle.

Wood and Tommy Smith are the only current Kiwis to have played at a World Cup, the 2010 tournament in South Africa.

While New Caledonia missed the direct qualification slot, they could still be the smallest and lowest-ranked nation to head to a FIFA World Cup.

They will be Oceania's entrant in an inter-confederation playoff next year, when they will reprise their underdog role as six nations compete for two places.