Gutsy All Whites score famous point

By Dejan Kalinic / Roar Guru

All Whites youngster Winston Reid scored his first international goal in the 93rd minute to secure New Zealand its first point at the World Cup finals in a game to be etched into the history of football in the country.

Just as Australia threw a party in Germany in 2006, 21-year-old Reid would have sent New Zealand into delirium with his last minute equalizer.

It was deserved for the underdog side that played on the back foot for the most part and showed guts its neighbours lacked two days ago.

It looked as though it would be heartbreak.

The side was a goal down when striker Shane Smeltz missed a golden chance with minutes to play.

With time and seconds ticking away and games with group favourites Italy and Paraguay still to come, it appeared the chance of a first ever point at the World Cup was unlikely for the All Whites.

Step in Reid.

Playing on the right hand side of defence, he had rarely ventured forward in a defensive Kiwi unit.

But when he did, he took his chance with expertise as Smeltz redeemed himself with a pinpoint cross.

It was all too impressive from a young man who had made his debut against Australia at the MCG in May.

In even younger days, he’d spent much time applying his trade for Denmark’s youth teams.

His header slid into the corner and into the net off the post.

The final whistle sounded moments later, signalling a proud day in a developing football nation.

It signalled the end of a game the Kiwis will never forget.

Earlier, if Chris Killen’s early header gone either side of Slovak keeper Jan Mucha the Kiwis would have been even more difficult to break down for the remainder of the clash.

It was a huge contrast in playing styles from the get-go.

Slovakia relied on a passing game through the centre of midfield and on the pace of Vladimir Weiss and skill of star playmaker Marek Hamsik in wide areas.

The Kiwis, on the other hand, played a route one style to dangerous strikers Killen and Rory Fallon.

The keeper, Mark Paston, showed plenty of nerves after an error with the ball at his feet almost cost his side the opening goal.

He looked as though he would join the list of keeping blunders in South Africa thus far.

The Slovaks opened the scoring five minutes into the second half when Stanislav Sestak found Robert Vittek in the area.

There were hints of offside about the goal, but so there were about Reid’s late equalizer to provide a dramatic edge to what was a largely uneventful and lacklustre affair.

No one in a celebratory New Zealand would care – and nor should they.

The Crowd Says:

2010-06-17T23:40:09+00:00

Socboy

Guest


Australasia 1 Slovakia 1 I know I'm a bit late here but on a lighter note, ah hello Aussie left Australasia to become part of Asia. Seriously with that being said just makes that headline seem even more ridiculous

2010-06-17T00:31:59+00:00

betty b

Guest


nonsense AA. This is a NZ victory so give them the praise they deserve. They won't give us, or any opponent, an inch, and that holds them in good stead. I was a bit disappointed to see the Phoenix listed as a NZ clubside on the FIFA website, with no acknowledgement to the A League. But that's the small town siege mentality the kiwis have, no one gets an inch or any acknowledgement, and it works in their favour. Good on them.

2010-06-16T21:22:02+00:00

AA

Guest


Well considering that Australia gave them such a good path to the Cup by leaving Oceania and giving the Phoenix a spot in the A-League then yes, we should claim part of the result.

AUTHOR

2010-06-16T02:01:46+00:00

Dejan Kalinic

Roar Guru


We have to claim a victor don't we? It brings back memories doesn't it - 2006 - if you don't know how Kiwis feel - think about how you felt when Tim Cahill equalized and then scored the second. That's how they feel!

2010-06-16T01:58:09+00:00

Al

Guest


Really brilliant considering the game would have started at 11:30 PM over there. Hoping that the Kiwis can get a result against the Italians, somewhat to avenge their theatrics against Australia four years ago.

2010-06-16T00:07:47+00:00

Socboy

Guest


Whoop whoop that was brilliant, reports on Radio live today 744,000 kiwis tuned into watch this match, that's nearly a quarter of the population. Loving the Sydney morning herald headline Australasia 1 - Slovakia 1

2010-06-16T00:02:50+00:00

Al

Guest


Brilliant result for New Zealand and a great result for the A-League, our league might not be technically that good but we can churn out players that can compete at the higher levels as proven last night. Proud of the Kiwi boys, wish we played with as much heart.

2010-06-15T22:49:48+00:00

Mals

Guest


Well done Kiwis - heart, determination & playing till the final whistle got a well deserved World Cup point! Group F is now wide open.

2010-06-15T16:22:29+00:00

James

Guest


Well done to them. A-League quality isn't too bad judging by Smeltz's inch perfect cross.

AUTHOR

2010-06-15T14:31:10+00:00

Dejan Kalinic

Roar Guru


You should still be! Enjoy it! So many Socceroos supporters took it for granted in 2006 but your side shows courage, determination and guts - something lacking from Australia the other night. Support loud! The Wellington Phoenix will benefit even more so now.

2010-06-15T14:28:34+00:00

tui

Guest


Bloody brilliant it was - like we had won the world cup itself! I was as high as a kite!

AUTHOR

2010-06-15T14:22:15+00:00

Dejan Kalinic

Roar Guru


Oh no, you missed the goal? I could only imagine the nerves!! What a wonderful result for the Kiwis.

2010-06-15T14:15:30+00:00

Katipo

Guest


When Smeltzy missed that header I thought that's it. So I went to the bathroom. I couldn't hold on any longer. I could hear the commentary but I couldn't see the pictures. Then yeah. NZ scores! Kiwis rejoice: Alls Whites beat Souvlaki 1-1!!! Obviously they waited until they knew I had left the room before playing out the defining moment. Same thing happens when I watch test cricket...

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