Oceania Football Confederation

The Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) is one of the six continental confederations of international association football. The OFC has 13 members, 11 of which are full members and two which are associate members not affiliated with FIFA. It promotes the game in Oceania and allows the member nations to qualify for the FIFA World Cup.

Oceania Football Confederation
AbbreviationOFC
Formation1966; 58 years ago (1966)
TypeSports organisation
HeadquartersAuckland, New Zealand
Region served
Oceania
Membership
13 member associations (11 full)
Official language
English
Lambert Maltock
Vice Presidents
Thierry Ariiotima
Kapi Natto John
Lord Ve'ehala
General Secretary
Franck Castillo
Parent organization
FIFA
Websiteoceaniafootball.com

OFC is predominantly made up of island nations where association football is not the most popular sport, with low GDP and low population meaning very little money is generated by the OFC nations. The OFC has little influence in the wider football world, either in terms of international competition or as a source of players for high-profile club competitions. OFC is the only confederation to have not had at least one international title, the best result being Australia making the final of the 1997 FIFA Confederations Cup.

In 2006, the OFC's then largest and most successful nation, Australia, left for a second time to join the Asian Football Confederation, leaving New Zealand as the largest federation within the OFC.

The President of OFC is Lambert Maltock since April 2018. The Vice Presidents are Thierry Ariiotima, Kapi Natto John and Lord Ve'ehala while Franck Castillo is the General Secretary.[1] The confederation is headquartered in Auckland, New Zealand.

History

The confederation formed in 1966, as a result of Australia and New Zealand's failed attempts to join the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).[2] The founding OFC members were the following:[3]

Australia resigned as an OFC member in 1972 to again pursue membership with the AFC, but rejoined the OFC in 1978.[4][5] Their men's national team (nicknamed the Socceroos) became the first Oceanians to play at a FIFA World Cup in 1974, being drawn in the same group as Chile, East Germany and West Germany. They failed to score a goal, but were still competitive in all three of their matches.[6] New Zealand's national team the All Whites played in their first World Cup eight years later. At the 1982 tournament they suffered heavier defeats than Australia previously had.[7]

Chinese Taipei was an OFC member from 1975 to 1989. In 1996, FIFA confirmed OFC as a full confederation and granted it a seat on the FIFA executive.[8] In 1998 the OFC unveiled a new logo and an official magazine, entitled The Wave. Australia meanwhile lost several inter-confederation World Cup playoffs; first to Scotland in 1985, then Argentina in 1993 and then Iran in 1997.[9]

Australia's national team were long considered the biggest challenge in Oceania.[10] There were many highly uncompetitive matches involving them, particularly in the 1990s and 2000s. Their June 1997 second round qualification games for the 1998 FIFA World Cup included a 13–0 defeat of the Solomon Islands.[11] The following year they defeated the Cook Islands 16–0 at the 1998 OFC Nations Cup, while at the 2000 OFC Nations Cup they defeated them 17–0.[12][13] The uncompetitive results escalated in April 2001, during the first round of OFC qualifiers for the 2002 FIFA World Cup. Australia beat Tonga 22–0, following this result up with a 31–0 win over American Samoa and an 11–0 win over Samoa.[14][15] The American Samoa game became the largest international victory in the history of the sport (breaking the previous record set in the Tonga game),[16] while Archie Thompson also broke the record for most goals in an international match, scoring 13.

Australia's record-breaking form in the early stages of qualifying ultimately couldn't be replicated in their inter-confederation playoff against Uruguay later that year. For the first leg, the Socceroos managed to defeat the South Americans 1–0 in front of a Melbourne crowd of 84,656, but they were overwhelmed 3–0 in the away leg. The away leg was marred by an incident at Montevideo's airport prior to the game itself, where the Australian players were spat on, punched and abused by a mob of Uruguayan fans.[17] On 24 May 2004, New Caledonia became the 12th member of the OFC.

Australia reached another inter-confederation playoff against Uruguay in 2005. Both sides won a game each over the two legs, which led to Australia finally ending their World Cup drought through a dramatic penalty shootout in Sydney. The Socceroos were granted increased security for the first away leg, as a response to the 2001 airport incident, and in the second leg the Uruguayan team were heavily booed while their national anthem played.[18] In the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Australia were eliminated by Italy during the Round of 16.[19] Their 3–1 group stage victory against Japan remains the only time a team representing OFC has won at the tournament. Australia left the OFC again that same year and joined the Asian Football Confederation.

In 2008, an associate member, the Northern Mariana Islands Football Association, also left the OFC and in 2009 joined the AFC as an associate member. In late 2009, the Palau Football Association, geographically a part of Oceania but with no official ties to the OFC, also applied for the same status with the AFC as the Northern Mariana Islands association but was not successful.[20] New Zealand ended their own World Cup drought in 2009 when they defeated Bahrain to qualify for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. The tournament coincidentally also featured Australia, who were now representing the AFC. New Zealand were the only unbeaten team at the tournament, despite failing to advance past the group stage.[21] With Australia's absence, New Zealand now have a regular presence in World Cup inter-confederation playoffs. They were convincingly defeated by Mexico over two legs in 2013, and narrowly missed out to Peru in 2017[22] and Costa Rica in 2022.[23][24]

Criticism

Throughout its history, there have been numerous calls to either merge the OFC and AFC, or dissolve the OFC and have its members join the AFC, in order to form an Asia-Pacific Football Confederation.

The calls grew louder in 2003 when FIFA reversed a decision to grant Oceania an automatic spot at the World Cup.[25] Australia's lack of World Cup participation prior to 2006 has been blamed by many on the OFC qualification process, with football writer Matthew Hall stating in 2003, "For World Cup qualification, the Socceroos will win games by cricket scores and then face a sudden-death play-off against a desperate, battle-hardened opponent given a second, or even third, life."[25]

Presidents

Current leaders

NamePosition
Lambert MaltockPresident
Thierry AriiotimaVice President
Kapi Natto JohnVice President
Lord Ve'ehalaVice President
Franck CastilloGeneral Secretary

Source:[26][27]

Member nations

Current members

OFC is made up of 11 full member associations and 2 associate members. Those two are associate members of the OFC, but are not FIFA members.[28]

CodeAssociationNational teamsFoundedMembershipFIFA
affiliation
OFC
affiliation
IOC
member
Note
ASA  American Samoa(M, W)1984Full19981998Yes[Note 1]
COK  Cook Islands(M, W)1971Full19941994Yes[Note 2]
FIJ  Fiji(M, W)1938Full19641966Yes
KIR  Kiribati(M, W)1980Associate2007Yes
NCL  New Caledonia(M, W)1928Full20041999No[Note 3]
NZL  New Zealand(M, W)1891Full19481966Yes
PNG  Papua New Guinea(M, W)1962Full19661966Yes
SAM  Samoa(M, W)1968Full19861986Yes
SOL  Solomon Islands(M, W)1979Full19881988Yes
TAH  Tahiti(M, W)1989Full19901990No[Note 4]
TGA  Tonga(M, W)1965Full19941994Yes
TUV  Tuvalu(M, W)1979Associate2006Yes
VAN  Vanuatu(M, W)1934Full19881988Yes

Notes

Possible future members

  • Autonomous Region of Bougainville: The Autonomous Region of Bougainville is set to gain full independence from Papua New Guinea by 2027. The president of the Bougainville Football Federation, Justin Helele, expressed the association's desire to join FIFA and, presumably, the OFC.[29] FIFA has already begun funding projects in the territory.[30] The Melanesian region has also participated in OFC projects and has received funding from the confederation since at least 2012. That year the OFC began youth football programs.[31] The next year, the OFC helped fund the creation of a football academy in Bougainville.[32][33]
  • Federated States of Micronesia: The Federated States of Micronesia were announced as new associate members of the OFC following the 2006 Extraordinary Congress. It is unclear when they were removed from the association.[34] In 2010 the Federated States of Micronesia Football Association submitted an application to the East Asian Football Federation in hopes of taking the steps to join FIFA. However, the application was not successful. In 2017 Englishman Paul Watson who was connected to the association said, "I think it's starting to look like Micronesia is best off looking to Oceania rather than Asia. I don't see any reason why they shouldn't get into OFC within the next year or two, but it'll all depend on the people inside the organization."[35] The FSMFA reformed in 2023 and identified gaining membership in the AFC or OFC and FIFA as a main priority.[36] In a July 2023 interview with the Daily Mirror, association President Brian Southwick stated that the goal was to join the OFC because of the level of competition and proximity to other members.[37]
  • Marshall Islands: The Marshall Islands Soccer Association was created in 2020. The organization's goal is to join the regional and world governing bodies "in the coming years."[38] The association has indicated that the nation may field a first-ever Marshall Islands national soccer team at the 2023 Micronesian Games hosted by the country.[39]
  • Nauru: Nauru is one of the few fully-sovereign nations that is not a member of FIFA or a regional confederation.[40] The Nauru Soccer Federation has reportedly applied for membership in both the OFC and FIFA but was denied.[41] In 2009 the Nauruan Minister of Sport Rayong Itsimaera indicated that there were challenges preventing them from joining both bodies, presumably the lack of a league system and a preference for Australian rules football by the population.[42] Nauru has been participating in some OFC initiatives since at least 2020.[43] In 2023 the federation was relaunched under the auspices of the Nauru Olympic Committee with the stated purpose of fielding a national team and joining the OFC and FIFA.[44]
  • Niue: Niue is a former associate member of the OFC. Following the Niue Island Soccer Association's removal from the OFC and its subsequent disbandment in 2021, an OFC official indicated that they were aware of the formation of the new Niue Football Association and encourages its application for associate membership.[45]
  • Palau: The Palau Football Association has been a member of the OFC in the past, being announced as a new member at the organization's 2006 Extraordinary Congress, alongside the Federated States of Micronesia.[34] In 2009 the association asked to join the East Asian Football Federation, a sub-regional body under the Asian Football Confederation.[46]

Several other sovereign states, associated states, dependencies, and territories in Oceania, including members of the United Nations, have no affiliations to confederations. Some play infrequently while others have been inactive for several years. There are also some which do not have a national team at all.

Former members

AssociationMembershipYear
 AustraliaFull1966–1972, 1978–2006[47]
 Chinese TaipeiFull1976–1978, 1982–1989
 MicronesiaAssociate2006–???[34]
NiueAssociate2006–2021[48]
 Northern Mariana IslandsAssociate1998–2009
 PalauAssociate2006–???[34]

Note

Israel entered the FIFA World Cup OFC qualifying tournaments in 1986 and 1990 due to political reasons, though it was never an OFC member.

Non-members

AFC Members

Three associations are geographically in Oceania but not affiliated with the OFC but are instead members of the Asian Football Confederation:

CONIFA Members

Three CONIFA members are geographically in Oceania but not affiliated with the OFC nor FIFA as they do not meet membership requirements:

Competitions

National teams

Men's

Women's

League

The OFC Professional League is a region-wide league currently being planned for an inaugural season in 2025 with support from FIFA.[49]

Clubs

Men's

Women's

Former tournaments

Clubs

Current title holders

CompetitionYearChampionsTitleRunners-upNext edition
National teams
Nations Cup2016 (final)  New Zealand5th  Papua New Guinea2024 (final)
Pacific Games2023  New Caledonia1st  Solomon Islands2027
OFC Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament2023  New Zealand5th  Fiji2027
U-19/U-20 Championship2022  New Zealand8th  Fiji2024
U-18 Youth Development Tournament2019  India1st  TahitiTBD
U-16/U-17 Championship2023  New Zealand9th  New Caledonia2024
U-15 Youth Development Tournament2023  Tahiti1st  FijiTBD
Futsal Nations Cup2023  New Zealand2nd  Tahiti2024
Youth Futsal Tournament2017  Solomon Islands1st  New ZealandTBD
Beach Soccer Nations Cup2023  Tahiti3rd  Solomon Islands2024
National teams (women)
Women's Nations Cup2022 (final)  Papua New Guinea1st  Fiji2026 (final)
Pacific Games2019  Papua New Guinea5th  Samoa2023
U-19/U20 Women's Championship2023  New Zealand8th  Fiji2025
U-16/U17 Women's Championship2023  New Zealand5th  Fiji2025
Youth Futsal women's tournament2017  New Zealand1st  TongaTBD
Club teams
Champions League2023 (final) Auckland City11th Suva2024 (final)
Futsal Champions League2019 (final) Kooline1st AS PTT2024 (final)
Club teams (women)
Women's Champions League2024 Auckand United1st Hekari United2025 (final)

FIFA World Rankings

Overview

FIFA Women's Rankings (as of 15 March 2024) [51]
OFC*FIFA+/-National TeamPoints
128 2  New Zealand1685.75
256  Papua New Guinea1440.64
372  Fiji1343.37
488 21  Solomon Islands1252.55
598 4  Tonga1211.2
6105 10  Samoa1202.69
7108 2  New Caledonia1194.64
8112  Tahiti1160.79
9113  Cook Islands1160.7
10122 5  Vanuatu1126.89
11149 2  American Samoa1010.26
*Local rankings based on FIFA ranking points

Historical leaders

Men's
New Zealand men's national football teamNew Caledonia national football teamNew Zealand men's national football teamNew Caledonia national football teamFiji national football teamNew Zealand men's national football teamAustralia national association football teamNew Zealand men's national football teamAustralia national association football teamNew Zealand men's national football teamAustralia national association football team

Team of the Year

Team ranking in the top four - Men's[50]
YearFirstSecondThirdFourth
2022  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  Papua New Guinea  New Caledonia
2021  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  New Caledonia  Tahiti
2020  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  New Caledonia  Tahiti
2019  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  New Caledonia  Tahiti
2018  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  New Caledonia  Tahiti
2017  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  Tahiti  New Caledonia
2016  New Zealand  Tahiti  New Caledonia  Papua New Guinea
2015  New Zealand  American Samoa  Cook Islands  Samoa
2014  New Zealand  New Caledonia  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
2013  New Zealand  New Caledonia  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
2012  New Zealand  New Caledonia  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
2011  New Zealand  Samoa  Fiji  New Caledonia
2010  New Zealand  Fiji  New Caledonia  Vanuatu
2009  New Zealand  Fiji  New Caledonia  Vanuatu
2008  New Zealand  Fiji  New Caledonia  Vanuatu
2007  New Zealand  New Caledonia  Solomon Islands  Fiji
2006  New Zealand  Fiji  Solomon Islands  Vanuatu
2005  New Zealand  Fiji  Solomon Islands  Tahiti
2004  New Zealand  Tahiti  Solomon Islands  Fiji
2003  New Zealand  Tahiti  Fiji  Solomon Islands
2002  New Zealand  Tahiti  Fiji  Solomon Islands
2001  New Zealand  Fiji  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
2000  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  Tahiti  Fiji
1999  New Zealand  Fiji  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
1998  New Zealand  Tahiti  Fiji  Solomon Islands
1997  New Zealand  Solomon Islands  Fiji  Tahiti
1996  New Zealand  Fiji  Tahiti  Tonga
1995  New Zealand  Fiji  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
1994  New Zealand  Fiji  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
1993  New Zealand  Fiji  Tahiti  Solomon Islands
Team ranking in the top four - Women's[citation needed]
YearFirstSecondThirdFourth
2022  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Fiji  Tonga
2021  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Fiji  Tonga
2020  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Fiji  Tonga
2019  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Fiji  Tonga
2018  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Fiji  Tonga
2017  New Zealand   
2016  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Fiji  Tonga
2015  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Fiji  Tonga
2014  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Tonga  Cook Islands
2013  New Zealand   
2012  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Tonga  Fiji
2011  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Tonga  Fiji
2010  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Tonga  Fiji
2009  New Zealand   
2008  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Tonga  Fiji
2007  New Zealand  Papua New Guinea  Tonga  Fiji
2006  Australia  New Zealand  Tonga  Papua New Guinea
2005  Australia  New Zealand  Tonga  Papua New Guinea
2004  Australia  New Zealand  Tonga  Papua New Guinea
2003  Australia  New Zealand  Tonga  Papua New Guinea

Major tournament records

Legend
  •  1st  – Champion
  •  2nd  – Runner-up
  •  3rd  – Third place
  •  4th  – Fourth place
  • QF – Quarter-finals (1934–1938, 1954–1970, and 1986–present: knockout round of 8)
  • R2 – Round 2 (1974–1978, second group stage, top 8; 1982: second group stage, top 12; 1986–2022: knockout round of 16)
  • R1 – Round 1 (1930, 1950–1970 and 1986–present: group stage; 1934–1938: knockout round of 16; 1974–1982: first group stage)
  •    — Did not qualify
  •  ×  — Did not enter / withdrawn / banned / disqualified
  •     — Hosts

For each tournament, the flag of the host country and the number of teams in each finals tournament (in brackets) are shown.

FIFA World Cup

Oceania has sent representatives to the FIFA World Cup four times: Australia in 1974 and 2006, and New Zealand in 1982 and 2010. Of these, only Australia in 2006 progressed beyond the first round.

The OFC is the only FIFA confederation that does not have a guaranteed spot in the World Cup finals (a major reason for the Australians leaving the confederation in 2006 to join Asia). Between 1966 and 1982, OFC teams joined the Asian zone qualification tournament, while from 1986 onwards, the winners of the Oceanian zone qualification tournament have to enter the intercontinental play-offs against teams from other confederations in order to gain a spot in the FIFA World Cup.

Beginning in 2026, the OFC will have a guaranteed spot in the FIFA World Cup for the first time in history, result of the competition's expansion from 32 to 48 teams.

FIFA World Cup record
Team1930

(13)
1934

(16)
1938

(15)
1950

(13)
1954

(16)
1958

(16)
1962

(16)
1966

(16)
1970

(16)
1974

(16)
1978

(16)
1982

(24)
1986

(24)
1990

(24)
1994

(24)
1998

(32)
2002


(32)
2006

(32)
2010

(32)
2014

(32)
2018

(32)
2022

(32)
2026



(48)
Yearsinclusive
WC Qual.
OFC qualifier[52]1966197019741978198219861990199419982002200620102014201820222026
 AustraliaR1R2Part of AFC211
 New Zealand×××××R1R1214
Total (2 teams)0000000001010000011000TBD4
FIFA World Cup record
YearQualifierRoundPositionPldWD*LGFGAFormat
1930

(13)
No teams from Oceania entered
1934

(16)
1938

(15)
1950

(13)
1954

(16)
1958

(16)
1962

(16)
1966

(16)
No OFC team qualifiedEntered in Africa and Asia
1970

(16)
Entered in Asia
1974

(16)
 AustraliaGroup stage14th301205Entered in Asia
1978

(16)
No OFC team qualifiedEntered in Asia
1982

(24)
 New ZealandGroup stage23rd3003212Entered in Asia
1986

(24)
No OFC team qualifiedRound-robin
Play-off
1990

(24)
First round
Second round
Play-off
1994

(24)
First round
Second round
1st play-off
2nd play-off
1998

(32)
First round
Second round
Third round
Play-off
2002


(32)
First round
Second round
Play-off
2006

(32)
 AustraliaRound of 1616th411256First round
Second round
Third round
Play-off
2010

(32)
 New ZealandGroup stage22nd303022First round
Second round
Play-off
2014

(32)
No OFC team qualifiedFirst round
Second round
Third round
Play-off
2018

(32)
First round
Second round
Third round
Play-off
2022

(32)
2022 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)
Play-off
2026



(48)
To be determined2026 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)
Play-off
Total (2 teams)4/23Round of 1614th13157925

OFC play-off record

1970 AFC–OFC Final Round

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Israel  2–1  Australia1–01–1

1974 AFC–OFC Final Round

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Australia  (A) 2–2  South Korea0–02–2

1986 UEFA–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Scotland  2–0  Australia2–00–0

1990 CONMEBOL–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Colombia  1–0  Israel1–00–0

Israel played in the OFC zone for political reasons.

1994 CONCACAF–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Canada  3–3 (P)  Australia2–11–2

1994 CONMEBOL–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Australia  1–2  Argentina1–10–1

1998 AFC–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Iran  (A) 3–3  Australia1–12–2

2002 CONMEBOL–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Australia  1–3  Uruguay1–00–3

2006 CONMEBOL–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Uruguay  1–1 (P)  Australia1–00–1

2010 AFC–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Bahrain  0–1  New Zealand0–00–1

2014 CONCACAF–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Mexico  9–3  New Zealand5–14–2

2018 CONMEBOL–OFC play-off

Team 1Agg.Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
New Zealand  0–2  Peru0–00–2

2022 CONCACAF–OFC play-off

Team 1 Score Team 2
Costa Rica  1–0  New Zealand

FIFA Women's World Cup

FIFA Women's World Cup record
Team1991

(12)
1995

(12)
1999

(16)
2003

(16)
2007

(16)
2011

(16)
2015

(24)
2019

(24)
2023


(32)
Yearsinclusive
W. WC Qual.
 AustraliaR1R1R1Part of AFC34
 New ZealandR1R1R1R1R1R168
Total (2 teams)111111111912

Olympic Games

Men's tournament

Olympic Games (Men's tournament) record
Team
Total (3 teams)
1900

(3)
1904

(3)
1908

(6)
1912

(11)
1920

(14)
1924

(22)
1928

(17)
1936

(16)
1948

(18)
1952

(25)
1956

(11)
1960

(16)
1964

(14)
1968

(16)
1972

(16)
1976

(13)
1980

(16)
1984

(16)
1988

(16)
1992

(16)
1996

(16)
2000

(16)
2004

(16)
2008

(16)
2012

(16)
2016

(16)
2020

(16)
2024

(16)
Years
 Australia××××××××××QF×××××××QF4thGSGSQFPart of AFC6
 Fiji×××××××××××××××××××GS1
 New Zealand×××××××××××××××××GSGSQFQ4

Women's tournament

Olympic Games (Women's tournament) record
Team
Total (2 teams)
1996

(8)
2000

(8)
2004

(10)
2008

(12)
2012

(12)
2016

(12)
2020

(12)
2024

(12)
Years
 AustraliaGSQFPart of AFC2
 New ZealandGSQFGSGSQ5

OFC Nations Cup

OFC Nations Cup record
Team
(Total 15 teams)
1973

(5)
1980

(8)
1996

(4)
1998

(6)
2000

(6)
2002

(8)
2004

(6)
2008

(4)
2012

(8)
2016

(8)
2024

(8)
Years
 New Zealand1stGSSF1st2nd1st3rd1st3rd1stQ10
 Tahiti2nd2nd2nd4thGS3rd5th1stGSQ9
 Vanuatu[a]4thGSGS4th4th6th4thGSGSQ9
 Fiji5th4th3rd••GS4th3rdGSGSQ8
 Solomon Islands×GSSF3rdGS2nd4thSFQ7
 Australia×1st1st2nd1st2nd1stMember of AFC6
 New Caledonia3rd3rdGS2nd2ndSFQ6
 Papua New Guinea×GSGS×GS2ndQ4
 Cook Islands×××GSGS×2
 Samoa[b]××GSGS2
 American Samoa×××0
 Tonga××0
 Tuvalu××××××××××0
 Kiribati×××××××××××0
 Niue×××××××××××0

OFC Women's Nations Cup

OFC Women's Nations Cup record
Team
(Total 15 teams)
1983

(4)
1986

(4)
1989

(5)
1991

(3)
1994

(3)
1998

(6)
2003

(5)
2007

(4)
2010

(8)
2014

(4)
2018

(8)
2022

(9)
Years
 New Zealand1st3rd2nd1st2nd2nd2nd1st1st1st1st×11
 Papua New Guinea×5th3rd3rd3rd3rd2nd2nd2nd3rdq9
 Australia[a]2nd2nd3rd[b]2nd1st1st1stMember of AFC7
 Cook Islands5th×3rd3rdGSQF5
 Fiji4th4th××GS2ndq4
 Tonga×3rdGS4thGSQF5
 SamoaGS4th×GSq3
 Chinese Taipei[a]1st1stMember of AFC2
 New Caledonia3rd[c]×4thQF3
 Solomon Islands4th4thq2
 Tahiti××GSGSQF3
 American SamoaGS××1
 Australia B[a][d]4th[b]Member of AFC1
 New Zealand B[d]4th1
 Vanuatu××GSGS2

Notes

FIFA U-20 World Cup

FIFA U-20 World Cup record
Team1977

(16)
1979

(16)
1981

(16)
1983

(16)
1985

(16)
1987

(16)
1989

(16)
1991

(16)
1993

(16)
1995

(16)
1997

(24)
1999

(24)
2001

(24)
2003

(24)
2005

(24)
2007

(24)
2009

(24)
2011

(24)
2013

(24)
2015

(24)
2017

(24)
2019

(24)
2023

(24)
Years
 Australia[a]QFR1R1R14th4thQFR2R1R2R2R1Part of AFC12
 FijiR1R12
 New ZealandR1R1R1R2R2R2R27
 TahitiR1R12
 VanuatuR11
Total (5 teams)0011110111111111111222224

FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup

FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup record
Team2002

(12)
2004

(12)
2006

(16)
2008

(16)
2010

(16)
2012

(16)
2014

(16)
2016

(16)
2018

(16)
2022

(16)
2024

(24)
Years
 AustraliaQFQFGSPart of AFC3
 FijiQ1
 New ZealandGSGSGSGSQFGSGSGSQ9
 Papua New GuineaGS1
Total (4 teams)1121111211214

FIFA U-17 World Cup

FIFA U-17 World Cup record
Team1985

(16)
1987

(16)
1989

(16)
1991

(16)
1993

(16)
1995

(16)
1997

(16)
1999

(16)
2001

(16)
2003

(16)
2005

(16)
2007

(24)
2009

(24)
2011

(24)
2013

(24)
2015

(24)
2017

(24)
2019

(24)
2023

(24)
Years
 AustraliaQFQFR1QFQFQF2ndQFR1R1Part of AFC10
 New CaledoniaR1R12
 New ZealandR1R1R1R2R2R1R2R1R1R110
 Solomon IslandsR11
Total (4 teams)111111121111111122223

FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup

FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup record
Team2008

(16)
2010

(16)
2012

(16)
2014

(16)
2016

(16)
2018

(16)
2022

(16)
2024

(16)
Years
 New ZealandR1R1R1GSGS3rdGSq7
Total (1 team)11111117

FIFA Futsal World Cup

FIFA Futsal World Cup record
Team1989

(16)
1992

(16)
1996

(16)
2000

(16)
2004

(16)
2008

(20)
2012

(24)
2016

(24)
2021

(24)
2024

(24)
Years
 AustraliaR1R1R1R1R1Part of AFC5
 New ZealandQ1
 Solomon IslandsR1R1R1R14
Total (3 teams)111111111110

FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup

FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup record
Team2005[†]

(12)
2006

(16)
2007

(16)
2008[†]

(16)
2009

(16)
2011

(16)
2013

(16)
2015[†]

(16)
2017[†]

(16)
2019

(16)
2021

(16)
2024

(16)
2025

(16)
Years
 AustraliaR1Part of AFC1
 Solomon IslandsR1R1R1R1R15
 TahitiR14th2nd2ndR1QFQF7
Total (3 teams)111111211111113
Notes

Former tournaments

FIFA Confederations Cup

FIFA Confederations Cup record
Team1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Years
 Australia[note 1]××2nd3rdGSPart of AFC3
 New Zealand××GSGSGSGS4
 Tahiti××GS1
Total (3 teams)00111111118
Notes

See also

References

External links