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New Zealand

The All Whites — the only team at the 2010 World Cup that didn't lose, back for the first time in 16 years

Drew Iran 2-2 (MD1), lost 1-3 to Egypt (MD2) and 1-5 to Belgium (MD3) — eliminated with 1 point.

Status
Eliminated
Region
OFC
World Cup Appearances
3
Code
NZ

The Story

New Zealand is back at a World Cup after 16 years. It's the gap that feels the most unfair in world football, because the 2010 team — the one that went unbeaten in South Africa and got sent home anyway — had earned something. They just hadn't earned enough points. Since then, four straight Intercontinental Playoff losses at the final hurdle. The pattern broke in 2025: New Zealand beat New Caledonia in the OFC final, then beat Saudi Arabia in the cross-confederation playoff, 1-0, on a late Chris Wood header.

Darren Bazeley, the English-born manager hired in 2023, has built this squad around a European-based spine deeper than any previous All Whites team: Wood up top, Stamenić and Sarpreet Singh in midfield, Cacace at left-back, Michael Boxall and Tim Payne in central defense, Max Crocombe in goal. The A-League fills the rest. It is not a team that will outscore anybody. It is a team that will defend for 90 minutes and hope Wood gets on the end of one cross.

Group K — Austria, Hungary, Chile, and the All Whites — is the most winnable group New Zealand has ever been drawn into, which isn't saying much for a country with three World Cup appearances. A point off any of the three would be the deepest the All Whites have ever been in a tournament.

Week 1 Update: A 2-2 draw with Iran — and if you know anything about New Zealand's World Cup history, you know a draw is a moral victory for the All Whites. They did it in 2010 against Italy and they've done it again. Wood got on the scoresheet, the defense held longer than anyone expected, and New Zealand have a point on the board. The 2010 playbook is officially back in service.

Matchday 2 Update: Lost 1-3 to Egypt. Finn Surman's 15th-minute goal gave the All Whites hope, but Egypt were simply too strong in the second half — Salah and company pulled away and never looked back. One point from two matches. The unbeaten 2010 magic hasn't repeated. The final matchday against Iran is must-win territory, and the math is not kind.

Matchday 3 Update: Lost 1-5 to Belgium. Elijah Just scored the consolation, but it was men against boys by halftime. New Zealand are eliminated with 1 point from 3 matches — the 2010 unbeaten magic didn't repeat, but the All Whites competed and scored goals in every game. Chris Wood's last World Cup ends in the group stage, and the country will have to wait again.

3 Players to Know

Chris Wood

The captain, 34, New Zealand's all-time leading scorer, and Nottingham Forest's Premier League striker. He finished the 2024-25 season as the fifth-top scorer in the Premier League with 20 goals — a top-five finish in the best league in the world, which has, somehow, only partially been processed back home. A left-knee surgery in December 2025 ruled him out for five months; he returned in March 2026 and scored in his first match back, the Europa League quarterfinal. His World Cup fitness is the single biggest story hanging over this squad. If Wood is healthy in June, New Zealand has a striker who can punish any level of opponent. If he isn't, this is a very different team.

Marko Stamenić

The 23-year-old midfielder at Olympiacos in Greece, currently starting in Europa League football — the deepest European club run of any current All White. Born in Wellington to Serbian parents, came up through New Zealand's under-17 system, went to Red Star Belgrade as a teenager, and has now become the central midfielder Darren Bazeley builds around. He's everything Oceania Football hasn't historically produced: a technical, composed No. 8 who can genuinely keep up with top-tier European opponents. If the All Whites are going to nick a point off Austria or Chile in Group K, it goes through Stamenić.

Liberato Cacace

The 25-year-old left-back at Empoli in Serie A — born in Wellington, came up at Wellington Phoenix in the A-League, signed by Sint-Truiden in Belgium, then Empoli in 2023. He's a starter in Italian top-flight football and he's been the All Whites' most reliable defender since the 2022 Intercontinental Playoff. Left-footed, gets forward, capable of the occasional left-wing cross that nobody expects. Another player whose profile at home still hasn't caught up to what he's actually doing in Europe.

The Food

Signature Dish

The Kiwi meat pie is the sacred object — a palm-sized flaky pastry shell with steak-and-cheese or mince filling, eaten one-handed at a petrol station, a rugby match, or on the way into a soccer stadium. Sit-down-wise, roast lamb is the Sunday institution — New Zealand raises the best lamb on earth, and everyone involved knows it. Then the pavlova, a meringue dessert topped with cream and passionfruit or kiwifruit, which New Zealand and Australia will fight about ownership of until the end of time. The coffee, importantly: the flat white was invented here (depending on whom you ask, either in Wellington or Sydney; see the previous argument) and it is still the best in the English-speaking world.

Where to Eat in DFW

DFW does not have a Kiwi restaurant — the diaspora is small — so the move is The Aussie Grind (multiple locations, best is the Frisco flagship on Preston Road, with a second at 4887 Alpha Rd in Farmers Branch). Australian-owned, but the menu fully covers the shared Oceanic culinary space: proper meat pies, sausage rolls, lamingtons, ANZAC biscuits, and flat whites that will make you reconsider everything you thought you knew about coffee. The Frisco location stays open for Friday matches. For the lamb side of the Kiwi experience, any DFW steakhouse with a serious rack-of-lamb on the menu (Bob's, Knife, or Chamberlain's) will get the job done.

The Music

A soundtrack for the matches, the pregame, and the afterparty.

Fan Culture

All Whites support is modest, self-deprecating, and fiercely loyal — a fan base that for most of its history has been small enough that the players knew some of them by name. The "Yellow Fever" supporters group is the traveling contingent; it shows up in matching shirts, sings unreasonably through 90 minutes, and treats every draw as a moral victory. Home matches at Eden Park in Auckland or Sky Stadium in Wellington come with haka-adjacent energy — not the Maori All Blacks version, but a distinctly Aotearoa register of noise that includes every pre-match national anthem being sung in both English and te reo Maori. The smell at a watch party is a meat pie and a bottle of Steinlager, and someone is definitely watching the rugby on the side screen between halves.
Fun Fact

At the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, New Zealand drew all three group-stage matches — 1-1 with Slovakia, 1-1 with Italy (the reigning world champions), and 0-0 with Paraguay — and still got eliminated on points. They were the only team in the entire tournament that didn't lose a match. Italy, the defending champions, lost two and went home. The All Whites went home as the most philosophically confusing team in World Cup history.

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