Herald on Sunday

ALL WHITES’ LEGENDS OF 2009

Where are they now?

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Mark Paston

One of the heroes of the night went on to play all three games at the 2010 World Cup, gaining 36 caps for his country. He retired from profession­al football in 2013, having played seven seasons for the Wellington Phoenix, and moved into an IT career with Revera and more recently Computer Concepts Limited, where he is head of service portfolio. He lives in Wellington with wife Amy and their three sons, aged 10, 8 and 7.

Ben Sigmund

The robust defender played the last of his 32 games for New Zealand in 2014 and having spent his entire eight-year profession­al career at the Phoenix, hung up his boots in 2016 after 181 A-League games. He has moved into the sale and supply of sporting equipment and apparel and is a shareholde­r and sales manager for Ultra Football, as well as working as personal developmen­t manager for Wellington Rugby. He lives in Wellington with wife Deanna and their two children and still occasional­ly plays lower league football in the capital.

Ivan Vicelich

The man known as The Godfather holds the appearance record for New Zealand in full internatio­nals with 88 caps, the last of which came in the playoff for the 2014 World Cup against Mexico. He is assistant coach of Auckland City, having also played more than 100 games for the club, featuring at six Club World Cups. He is also the director of Auckland City’s academy and a board member of the Internatio­nal Football Associatio­n Board and New Zealand Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n. In 2015, he was made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to football. He and wife Marisa have two sons, Luka and Ivan.

Ryan Nelsen

Widely regarded as New Zealand’s greatest player of the modern era, Nelsen was hugely influentia­l in the All Whites camp and with his English club Blackburn Rovers, where he played seven seasons before moves to Tottenham Hotspur and Queens Park Rangers. The last of his 49 caps for New Zealand came in 2012 before a brief coaching stint with Toronto FC in the MLS. In 2014, he launched sports marketing and technology company Roar Domains, and in 2017, together with the respective world governing bodies, gained control of domain names .basketball and .rugby, despite competitio­n from some of the world’s richest internet companies.

Leo Bertos

The man who delivered the corner for the game’s decisive goal went on to play 56 times for New Zealand, including all three games at the 2010 World Cup. He also played 127 matches for the Wellington Phoenix before departing the club in 2014. After dabbling briefly in futsal, he moved into football coaching and is now technical adviser at Northern New South Wales Football. He and wife Regan have two young sons, Zeno and Atlas.

Michael McGlinchey

The Bahrain game was just his third in an All Whites shirt and he is the only member of the starting 11 against Bahrain who is still a profession­al footballer, currently in a second stint with the Central Coast Mariners after four seasons with the Wellington Phoenix. The 32-year-old has clocked up 226 A-League games to go with his 53 New Zealand caps and is still in the All Whites frame as part of Danny Hay’s current squad.

Tim Brown

One of the driving forces in the New Zealand and Phoenix midfields, his 2010 World Cup dream was shattered by a shoulder injury suffered on the eve of the tournament which prevented him taking the field in South Africa. He played for two more years, eventually chalking up 112 games for Wellington and 30 for the national side before retiring aged just 31 to pursue a post-playing career which has been spectacula­rly successful. In 2014, he co-founded Allbirds, producing shoes made from Merino wool, and estimates now value the company at more than $2 billion. Brown runs the business from San Francisco.

Tony Lochhead

Despite giving away the penalty which Bahrain couldn’t convert, the night ended well for the reliable left back who went on to play all three games at the 2010 World Cup, earning an eventually unsuccessf­ul trial with English club Middlesbro­ugh. His Phoenix career consisted of 131 games across six seasons before a move to the now defunct Chivas club in the MLS. On his retirement, he began a career in commercial real estate and is now a senior associate with Colliers Internatio­nal in the Orange County

region of Southern California.

Chris Killen

The robust front man was a mainstay in New Zealand sides for more than a decade, earning 48 caps and scoring 16 goals before his retirement in 2013. Following the 2010 World Cup, he played in China for three years, first with Shenzhen Ruby and then Chongqing. Returning to the UK, he set up Pro Sports Financial Ltd in 2014, a concierge service for athletes in the areas of insurance, finance and luxury vehicles. He lives in Adlington near Macclesfie­ld with English-born wife Hannah.

Rory Fallon

The goalscorin­g hero of that magical November night, Fallon wrote his name into New Zealand sporting folklore with a first-half header that sent the All Whites to the World Cup in what was just his third game for New Zealand. He went on to play 24 times for his country and scored again in Wellington four years later in the interconti­nental playoff against Mexico. Something of a lower league journeyman, Fallon played more than 400 profession­al games for several clubs in England and Scotland before finally retiring in 2017. He moved away from football and set up The Cowlick Creamery, a company producing artisan icecream, before being coaxed back into the national fold by Danny Hay as an assistant coach in the current All Whites set-up.

Shane Smeltz

One of New Zealand’s greatest ever scorers, he ensured his place in our football history by netting the goal which earned the All Whites a 1-1 draw against Italy at the 2010 World Cup. Smeltz brought the curtain down on an 18-year, 400-game profession­al career in 2017, leaving the game as New Zealand’s joint-second leading scorer (24 goals in 58 games) and the second most prolific A-League marksman (92 in 190, behind Besart Berisha). He coaches the Sydney FC under-20 side and also does television punditry for Fox

Sports and Optus Sports in Australia. He and wife Nikki have two daughters, Bonnie and Scarlett.

Andy Barron

Unique in the 2009 All Whites squad as an amateur footballer who also had a full-time job, his 12th and final appearance for New Zealand was against Italy at the 2010 World Cup before he moved to Brisbane to focus on his career. Originally in finance, he transition­ed into software and is now a principal consultant with Workday, a Silicon Valley software company, travelling widely to implement Enterprise software. He still turns out in over-35s football and works on his golf game when time allows.

Chris Wood

Just 17 when he came off the bench that night in Wellington, the last 10 years have seen Wood work his way up to the point where he is now a Premier League regular. After time with West Bromwich Albion (including a number of loan spells) and

Leicester City, he found consistent game time at Leeds United before earning a move to Burnley ahead of the 2017-18 season. He’s hit double figures the past two years and is well on the way this season, too, earning himself a two-year contract extension this month. At national level, he is poised to become New Zealand’s greatest scorer; he has 24 goals in 56 All Whites games, just five short of Vaughan Coveny’s record.

Andy Boyens

A dependable central defender who was a late substitute in the game against Bahrain, he was part of the 2010 World Cup squad without taking the field. He earned 19 caps and played for four MLS clubs, winning the title with the LA Galaxy in 2012. Boyens then sat his coaching badges, including the national A coaching licence and joined New Zealand Football in 2017 as youth developmen­t manager. He twice filled the role of interim technical director before gaining that position full-time this year.

 ??  ?? Ryan Nelsen (left) and Rory Fallon played key roles as the All Whites ended their 28-year World Cup drought in Wellington.
Ryan Nelsen (left) and Rory Fallon played key roles as the All Whites ended their 28-year World Cup drought in Wellington.
 ?? Photo / Photosport ??
Photo / Photosport

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