The Press

The dream, the player and THAT goal

- PHILLIP ROLLO

Rory Fallon never set out to be Diego Maradona. His dream was just to make it as a profession­al and to play at the World Cup.

‘‘That was my first and foremost goal, to be a profession­al and make a living out of it for as long as possible, and I’ve achieved that, and going to a World Cup was icing on the cake,’’ he said, earlier this year.

So, although his club career never reached any spectacula­r heights, carving out 149 appearance­s with Plymouth Argyle the most memorable spell, the 35-year-old can hang up his boots satisfied with his contributi­on to the beautiful game, particular­ly here in New Zealand where he will forever be remembered­for scoring that goal.

That goal, of course, being the goal that qualified the All Whites to the 2010 World Cup. Fallon rose at a corner-kick, whipped in by Leo Bertos, to head New Zealand in front against Bahrain eight years ago.

The All Whites held on to win the game 1-0, with his first-half goal and Mark Paston’s secondhalf penalty save the two decisive moments.

‘‘It was a wonderful moment for him as an individual and obviously a massive contributi­on in that it propelled the team into a World Cup campaign,’’ former coach Ricki Herbert said.

‘‘I think with hismumand dad in the stadium as well, for him personally it was a massive highlight. He was an integral part of the team and an integral part of getting the team to the World Cup.’’

Fallon announced his retirement yesterday, after New Zealand’s latest quest to reach the World Cup failed at the final hurdle, losing 2-0 on aggregate to Peru.

‘‘It would have been amazing to have reached another World Cup in Russia, but Peru were the better team on the final leg in Lima,’’ he said.

‘‘The football journey has been epic and I thank everybody that has shared it with me. I’ve made many great memories and friends.’’

After representi­ng England at age-group level, Fallon made his debut for the All Whites against Jordan in 2009. He scored on debut.

The son of former All Whites coach Kevin Fallon, he went on to represent New Zealand in 24 internatio­nals, scoring six goals. Of those, none were more important than the header against Bahrain.

‘‘The commitment and time and everything that a huge amount of people put into their lives in sport, I think there’s always something pinnacle in that career, whatever that may be, that they will fondly remember,’’ Herbert said.

‘‘I’m sure for Rory that will be something that is always played on TV and is talked about on radio, and rightly so. It was an amazing goal and an amazing opportunit­y for a country to go back to a World Cup.’’

Away from the field, Herbert described Fallon as positive, humble, dedicated and a team player.

‘‘For me, how he will always be remembered is someone who is incredibly committed to doing the best that he possible could and someone who, along the way, wanted to make it as fun and enjoyable for people so they could relax and go and perform at a world stage as best as they could.’’

Fallon started in all three games during New Zealand’s undefeated World Cup campaign in 2010, his draws against Slovakia, Italy and Paraguay. His last appearance came against Papua New Guinea at the OFC Nations Cup last year.

 ?? PHOTO: PHOTOTEK ?? Rory Fallon celebrates after scoring the goal that qualified the All Whites for the 2010 World Cup, in a 1-0 win over Bahrain.
PHOTO: PHOTOTEK Rory Fallon celebrates after scoring the goal that qualified the All Whites for the 2010 World Cup, in a 1-0 win over Bahrain.

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