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The All Whites’ World Cup 2026 is over. A 5–1 defeat to Belgium on 26 June confirmed elimination, leaving New Zealand bottom of Group G on a single point. The knockout dream that was still mathematically alive 24 hours earlier closed out the way the group always threatened to — against the two strongest sides in the pool. The numbers tell the campaign story honestly: what went right, what the scorelines exposed, and where a young squad goes from here.

The Campaign Ledger
Three matches, one point. Here is the final line.
| Group G (final) | P | W | D | L | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Belgium | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | +4 | 5 |
| Egypt | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | +2 | 5 |
| Iran | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
| New Zealand | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 | −6 | 1 |
Group G final standings, Wikipedia Group G, as of 27 June 2026.
New Zealand drew with Iran — the only points the All Whites took, and part of an Iran run of three draws — then lost to Egypt and Belgium. A minus-six goal difference is a harsh final figure, but it was earned in a group where Belgium and Egypt were always the favoured pair to advance, and where Iran’s stubborn three draws set the qualifying bar higher than the table order suggested.
What Went Right
The headline is the qualification itself. New Zealand reached this World Cup as Oceania’s direct entrant, and simply being one of 48 teams — in an expanded tournament that finally gave the All Whites a clean route — is the platform the programme has chased for over a decade. On the pitch, Elijah Just’s 84th-minute strike against Belgium mattered more than a consolation: it was a goal against one of Europe’s elite, scored by a forward who is part of the team’s next wave rather than its past.
What the Scorelines Exposed
The cold view: New Zealand conceded ten goals in three games, and the five against Belgium laid bare the gap in squad depth at the very top. Against sides that could rotate and still field Champions League-calibre players, the All Whites could compete in phases but not for ninety minutes. The draw with Iran showed the floor — organised, hard to break down — while the Egypt and Belgium defeats showed the ceiling still sits below the group’s top two.

Where New Zealand Go Next
This squad skews young, and the experience of three World Cup matches — including a 5–1 examination by Belgium — is the kind of education that does not come from Oceania qualifying alone. The proudest chapter in All Whites history remains the unbeaten three-draw run of 2010; this campaign did not match that, but it banked tournament minutes for players who can carry the programme into the next cycle. For the full backstory, see our New Zealand World Cup history and the New Zealand team page.
The Rest of the Tournament From a NZ Lens
With the All Whites out, the neutral’s World Cup begins — and the North American time zones keep it friendly for New Zealand viewers, with knockout matches landing in NZ mornings and afternoons. The round of 32 starts on 29 June NZST; our round of 32 preview maps the bracket, and the daily predictions carry on through the knockouts. Every match remains free-to-air on TVNZ.
- New Zealand are eliminated, finishing 4th in Group G on one point (0 wins, 1 draw, 2 losses, −6 GD).
- The All Whites’ point came in a draw with Iran; they lost to Egypt and Belgium, the group’s qualifying pair.
- Elijah Just’s 84th-minute goal against Belgium was a bright marker for a young squad.
- Conceding ten goals in three games exposed the squad-depth gap against elite opposition.
- The campaign banked valuable tournament experience ahead of the next cycle; coverage continues on TVNZ.
This review is analysis based on the official group tables and match results as of 27 June 2026. For New Zealand support, see Responsible Gambling.