Weekend Herald

Hay confident injured Wood will be available for playoff

- with Michael Burgess

No deja vu with Wood

New Zealand coach Danny Hay has no concerns about Chris Wood’s fitness, despite the key striker missing his latest club game due to an unspecifie­d hip injury.

“When I spoke to him, he wasn’t overly concerned about it,” Hay told the Weekend Herald. “You need to take his comments at face value — he is always really honest and up front. I have no qualms that by the time he joins us [on May 30], he will be fine and good to go.”

Newcastle manager Eddie Howe indicated on Thursday that Wood was even a chance to play the final game of the season against Burnley on Monday (NZT).

With his unrivalled scoring ability, Wood is New Zealand’s most irreplacea­ble player and nobody wants to entertain a repeat of the 2017 scenario against Peru, where an untimely hamstring strain saw him come off the bench at halftime in Lima, after being restricted to 16 minutes in the first leg in Wellington.

“From what I have got from him, there isn’t anything to be worried about at this stage,” said Hay. “Our medical team is talking to their medical team and it’s nothing major.”

Plan B for second warm-up match

The All Whites’ second preparatio­n game should be confirmed during the next week.

New Zealand Football had lined up a team ranked inside Fifa’s top 40, but that plan was scuppered when those opponents wanted to play on June 10, just four days out from the Costa Rica clash in Doha.

NZF are unwilling to risk the All Whites any later than June 9 for the final preparatio­n game, after the Peru encounter in Barcelona on June 5. They remain confident they can secure a quality opponent.

All Whites now Euro-centric

From the extended 26-man All Whites squad named this week, there are only four survivors from the 2013 interconti­nental playoff against Mexico: Wood, Bill Tuiloma, Kosta Barbarouse­s and Marco Rojas (Winston Reid was a late injury withdrawal).

The latest incarnatio­n is also testament to the changing profile of the Kiwi footballer. Back then, the bulk of Ricki Herbert’s squad was drawn from Australia and New Zealand, with 10 from the A-League and four from domestic football. Less than one-third of the group (seven) were based in Europe.

This time around, there are seven players based in Australasi­a and 15 in Europe. And that’s not including Joey Champness, who recently cut ties with his Turkish club over an unpaid contract, and Reid, who would have no shortage of suitors on the continent but is prioritisi­ng his All Whites build-up rather than risking injury by returning to a weekly grind.

Hay’s Danish mission

Ahead of the All Whites’ camp in Marbella, Hay will spend four days in Denmark as he continues to build networks in the Scandinavi­an nation.

After their 34-hour trip from Auckland — via Sydney and Doha — Hay and assistant coach Darren Bazeley watched Marko Stamenic feature in a 2-0 win for HB Koge over Jammerbugt in the Danish second tier yesterday.

The duo will also take in a training session at Brondby — where midfielder Joe Bell has been based since January — before attending their match tomorrow. They also have meetings scheduled with another Danish club.

“The more I see and talk to the players in Scandinavi­a, the more I believe it’s a fantastic place for them to land out of New Zealand and evolve and develop,” said Hay.

“It’s important we are constantly trying to build those connection­s and networks for the next generation, the next cycle of players.”

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