PREVIEW: Plenty at stake on final day of OFC U-16 Men’s Championship

The OFC U-16 Men’s Championship title is on the line and a third Oceania representative for the 2025 FIFA U-17 World Cup will be decided in the final games played on Sunday (NZT).

Hosts Tahiti face New Caledonia in the 3rd/4th place play-off at Stade Pater in Papeete with the winner to join New Zealand and Fiji in qualifying for the FIFA showpiece in Qatar.

It will be the first time at any OFC tournament that three teams have progressed to a FIFA World Cup which is being expanded to 48 teams from next year.

The OFC U-16 Men’s Championship tournament decider between New Zealand and Fiji follows the play-off, with both teams having booked their tickets to Qatar with their semi-final victories.

Main photo: From left, New Zealand’s Alex Lienard, coach Martin Bullock, Fiji’s coach Sunil Kumar and Maikah Dau … ready for Sunday’s final. Photo credit: OFC Media / DJ Mills / Phototek.

New Zealand have already qualified for next year’s FIFA U-17 Men’s World Cup. Photo credit: OFC Media / DJ Mills / Phototek.

Coach Martin Bullock’s New Zealand side are firm favourites after coming from a goal down to thump Fiji 7-1 in group play.

New Zealand have scored 28 goals and conceded one in four matches.

“We have played Fiji. We obviously won that game. It probably makes us favourites. I think we performed incredibly well,” Bullock said.

“We obviously take things from the group game when we played Fiji. We know how they are going to play.

“Vice versa, they will probably know how we are going to play. We will work out how we can take advantage of that, playing our game.

“A final, despite whatever competition it is, club football, international football or whatever. If you are in a tournament and you get to a final, you want to win. We are looking forward to the game.”

Fiji coach Sunil Kumar acknowledged it would be difficult against a New Zealand side with no obvious weaknesses, but he believes his side can cause an upset.

“When we came to this tournament, we said we wanted to create history. Fiji has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup. We managed to create it. But we also wanted to win the championship,” Kumar said

Now we have a dream in front of us to achieve. I think going into the match, playing with a free mind. We want to give our best shot. There can never be a better or bigger opportunity than this for the boys and for the team.”

There is ultimately more at stake in the 3rd/4th place playoff with a trip to the 2025 FIFA U-17 World Cup for the winner and heartbreak for the loser.

The last media conference of the tournament … Photo credit: OFC Media / DJ Mills / Phototek.

New Caledonia coach Leo Lopez praised their Tahitian opponents, who scored late to deny Samoa a place in the semis ahead of New Caledonia in Group play.

“Now, unfortunately, we are here to play this third-place match, and we experienced the same situation last year when we beat Tahiti to make the final and qualify, where they deserved as much as we did to qualify. We have all these images of fair play from this Tahiti team, who congratulated us after the match, despite the disappointment of not getting their ticket.

“And of course, if Tahiti deserves to win, we will be the first to applaud them, to support them, to encourage them to go and represent the Oceanian region with Fiji and New Zealand.”

The pressure and expectations are on the tournament host nation Tahiti.

The players were visibly shattered after Fiji’s 2-1 semi-final defeat, and coach Raiarii Golhen has had the task of lifting their morale.

“The post-match was difficult for the players. We discussed with them individually, until midnight. We discussed to re-mobilize them. I think they have become aware of the match that awaits them. It’s going to be a difficult match against our Caledonian brothers. But we’re going to do everything to qualify,” Golhen said.

Captain Tiahiti Colombani who has joined French Ligue 1 side AJ Auxerre, says this is the biggest match he’s ever played.

“It’s the match that makes me dream. It wakes me up in the morning. That’s all I think about. I’m focused. I’m going to give it my all. The team is going to give it their all.”

Acknowledgement

We are grateful for the help of OFC Media in providing information for this story.

Fixtures

Games to be played on Sunday August 11, 2024 (NZT)

Play-off for third place

New Caledonia v Tahiti
Stade Pater, Papeete, Tahiti, 1pm (NZT)

Final

New Zealand v Fiji
Stade Pater, Pirae, Tahiti, 4pm (NZT)

This story was first published on August 10, 2024.

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