(Reuters) – New Zealand coach Danny Hay has criticised FIFA for scheduling part of Oceania’s World Cup qualifying tournament outside the international window, saying it would not happen to any other region.
The nine-team tournament will be staged in Qatar from March 14-30 to decide which team advances to a playoff against the fourth-placed side from CONCACAF, which features nations from North and Central America, and the Caribbean.
World governing body FIFA have given the Oceania nations a one-day extension to the March 21-29 international window but they will have to haggle with clubs to release players during the first week of the tournament.
New Zealand is disproportionately impacted by the scheduling given it has more players at professional clubs than their Pacific rivals.
“This would happen nowhere else in the world,” Hay told New Zealand media.
“I’m here in Denmark at the moment and trying to explain how this has transpired, nobody can get their head around it.
“I spoke with the Danish Football Federation today, and they were just bamboozled.
“Imagine saying to the Danish national team that you’ve got World Cup qualifying, but you can’t pick your best players?
“For me and our players, it’s highly disappointing.”
New Zealand were the last Oceania team to qualify for the World Cup when they made the 2010 finals in South Africa.
They have been drawn in Group B of the Oceania tournament against New Caledonia, Fiji and Papua New Guinea.
“Every single player that I’ve called up to date is a professional player, they’re operating in professional environments, but clubs aren’t going to be willing to hand over their players in the middle of the season,” said Hay.
“It’s a tough one to swallow, that we are not going to have the opportunity to bring our best players together to give us the best opportunity to qualify.”
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)