Progression of association football caps Oceania record

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This is a progressive list of men's association footballers who have held or co-held the Oceania record for international caps since 1922.

Criteria[]

The criteria used by national FAs in considering a match as a full international were not historically fixed. Particularly for the early decades, and until more recently for FAs outside UEFA and CONMEBOL, counts of caps were often considered unreliable. RSSSF have spent much effort trying to produce definitive lists of full international matches, and corresponding data on players' international caps and goals. Australia and New Zealand's FAs have their own official caps and goals database, however other OFC members' FA's do not have their own caps and goals database. Using the data by the FA, NZF, RSSSF, NFT, the following records can be retrospectively produced. Note that, at the time, these records may not have been recognised.

Although Australia played in the OFC, they were moved to the AFC confederation in 2006. This affects Mark Schwarzer, who made 36 caps during OFC affiliation and 73 caps during AFC affiliation totalling a seemed record of 109 international caps. Australia's player caps in the AFC years have been removed for consistency and only count their players' caps from 1922 to 2005.

Oceania record[]

Player Country Cap Date Venue Opponent Score Notes
George Cartwright  Australia 7 23-06-1924 Sydney  Canada 4–1 [1]
8 28-06-1924 Newcastle  Canada 0–0 [1]
9 12-07-1924 Adelaide  Canada 1–4 [1]
10 26-07-1924 Sydney  Canada 1–0 [1]
 Australia 10 24-09-1938 Sydney  India 5–4 [1]
 Australia 10 24-09-1938 Sydney  India 5–4 [1]
 Australia 11 01-10-1938 Melbourne  India 3–1 [1]
Cec Drummond  Australia 11 24-06-1950 Durban  South Africa 2–3 [1]
12 01-07-1950 Johannesburg  South Africa 1–2 [1]
13 08-07-1950 Port Elizabeth  South Africa 2–1 [1]
14 23-07-1950 Cape Town  South Africa 2–0 [1]
Stan Ackerley  Australia 14 30-03-1968 Sydney  Japan 2–2 [1]
15 31-03-1968 Melbourne  Japan 3–1 [1]
16 04-04-1968 Adelaide  Japan 1–3 [1]
17 20-07-1969 Sydney  Greece 1–0 [1]
18 23-07-1969 Brisbane  Greece 2–2 [1]
19 26-07-1969 Melbourne  Greece 0–2 [1]
20 10-10-1969 Seoul  Japan 3–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
21 14-10-1969 Seoul  South Korea 2–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
22 16-10-1969 Seoul  Japan 1–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
23 20-10-1969 Seoul  South Korea 1–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
24 23-11-1969 Laurenco Marques  Rhodesia 1–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
25 27-11-1969 Laurenco Marques  Rhodesia 0–0 World Cup qualifying[1]
26 04-12-1969 Tel Aviv  Israel 0–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
27 14-12-1969 Sydney  Israel 1–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
Manfred Schaefer  Australia 27 07-10-1972 Jakarta  Indonesia 4–1 [1]
28 09-10-1972 Jakarta  New Zealand 3–1 [1]
29 15-10-1972 Saigon  South Vietnam 1–0 [1]
30 22-10-1972 Seoul  South Korea 1–1 [1]
31 24-10-1972 Seoul  South Korea 2–0 [1]
32 29-10-1972 Manila  Philippines 6–0 [1]
33 14-02-1973 Sydney  Bulgaria 2–2 [1]
34 16-02-1973 Adelaide  Bulgaria 1–3 [1]
35 18-02-1973 Melbourne  Bulgaria 0–2 [1]
36 04-03-1973 Auckland  New Zealand 1–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
37 04-03-1973 Sydney  Iraq 3–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
38 13-03-1973 Sydney  Indonesia 2–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
39 16-03-1973 Sydney  New Zealand 3–3 World Cup qualifying[1]
40 18-03-1973 Melbourne  Iraq 0–0 World Cup qualifying[1]
41 24-03-1973 Sydney  Indonesia 6–0 World Cup qualifying[1]
42 11-11-1973 Seoul  South Korea 2–2 World Cup qualifying[1]
43 13-11-1973 Hong Kong  South Korea 1–0 World Cup qualifying[1]
44 25-04-1974 Melbourne  Uruguay 0–0 [1]
45 21-05-1974 Jakarta  Indonesia 2–1 [1]
46 28-05-1974 Jaffa  Israel 1–2 [1]
47 14-06-1974 Hamburg  East Germany 0–2 World Cup[1]
48 18-06-1974 Hamburg  West Germany 0–3 World Cup[1]
49 22-06-1974 Berlin  Chile 0–0 World Cup[1]
Peter Wilson  Australia 49 29-10-1976 Canton  China PR 2–0 [1]
50 03-11-1976 Tel Aviv  Israel 1–1 [1]
51 12-02-1977 Melbourne  Israel 1–1 [1]
52 16-02-1977 Sydney  Israel 1–1 [1]
53 13-03-1977 Suva  Chinese Taipei 3–0 World Cup qualifying[1]
54 16-03-1977 Suva  Chinese Taipei 2–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
55 19-03-1977 Suva  Fiji 0–1 [1]
56 27-03-1977 Sydney  New Zealand 3–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
57 30-03-1977 Auckland  New Zealand 1–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
58 10-07-1977 Auckland  Hong Kong 3–0 World Cup qualifying[1]
59 14-08-1977 Melbourne  Iran 0–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
60 28-08-1977 Sydney  South Korea 2–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
61 16-10-1977 Sydney  Kuwait 1–2 World Cup qualifying[1]
62 23-10-1977 Seoul  South Korea 0–0 World Cup qualifying[1]
63 30-10-1977 Hong Kong  Hong Kong 5–2 World Cup qualifying[1]
64 25-11-1977 Tehran  Iran 0–1 World Cup qualifying[1]
65 13-06-1979 Auckland  New Zealand 0–1 [1]
Alex Tobin  Australia 65 25-01-1997 Sydney  Norway 1–0 [2]
66 11-06-1997 Sydney  Solomon Islands 13–0 World Cup qualifying[2]
67 17-06-1997 Sydney  Solomon Islands 6–2 World Cup qualifying[2]
68 19-06-1997 Sydney  Tahiti 2–0 World Cup qualifying[2]
69 28-06-1997 Auckland  New Zealand 3–0 World Cup qualifying[2]
70 06-07-1997 Sydney  New Zealand 2–0 World Cup qualifying[2]
71 01-10-1997 Tunis  Tunisia 3–0 [2]
72 22-11-1997 Tehran  Iran 1–1 World Cup qualifying[2]
73 29-11-1997 Melbourne  Iran 2–2 World Cup qualifying[2]
74 12-12-1997 Riyadh  Mexico 3–1 Confederations Cup[2]
75 14-12-1997 Riyadh  Brazil 0–0 Confederations Cup[2]
76 16-12-1997 Riyadh  Saudi Arabia 0–1 Confederations Cup[2]
77 19-12-1997 Riyadh  Uruguay 1–0 Confederations Cup[2]
78 21-12-1997 Riyadh  Brazil 0–6 Confederations Cup[2]
79 07-02-1998 Melbourne  Chile 0–1 [2]
80 11-02-1998 Sydney  South Korea 1–0 [2]
81 15-02-1998 Adelaide  Japan 0–3 [2]
82 06-06-1998 Zagreb  Croatia 0–7 [2]
83 25-09-1998 Brisbane  Fiji 3–1 Nations Cup[2]
84 28-09-1998 Brisbane  Cook Islands 16–0 Nations Cup[2]
85 02-10-1998 Brisbane  Tahiti 4–1 Nations Cup[2]
86 04-10-1998 Brisbane  New Zealand 0–1 Nations Cup[2]
87 06-11-1998 San Jose  United States 0–0 [2]
Ivan Vicelich  New Zealand 87 09-09-2013 Riyadh  United Arab Emirates 0–0 [3]
88 14-11-2013 Mexico City  Mexico 1–5 [3]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm Howe, Andrew (12 October 2006). "The Australian National Men's Football Team: Caps and Captains" (PDF). ozfootball.net. Football Federation Australia.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Alex Tobin – International Appearances RSSSF
  3. ^ a b Ivan Robert Vicelich – International Appearances RSSSF
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