First editions (1973–1980) This tournament began in 1973 as the "Oceania Cup". This first edition was staged without a qualifying round and was won by the host in
Auckland, New Zealand, that defeated Tahiti, 2–0. The tournament was characterised by the absence of the Australian team and the presence of some teams not members of FIFA, such as
New Hebrides, which later became
Vanuatu after gaining independence in 1980. The second edition of the Oceania Cup took place in 1980 in New Caledonia, at that time not a FIFA member. Australia played the final match in
Nouméa and defeated Tahiti, 4–2. The tournament was characterised by a poor result for New Zealand: out in the group stage losing against Tahiti (3–1) and Fiji (4–0). Two years later they qualified for the
1982 FIFA World Cup. These two editions were the only without qualifying rounds. After this edition the tournament was discontinued. So Australia maintained the Oceania Champion title for 16 years without playing in any tournaments. Between the years of absence (1981–1995) the most important Oceanian region tournament was the
Trans-Tasman Cup played only between Australia and New Zealand.
Return, every two years (1996–2004) In 1996, when OFC reached the official status of Confederation for FIFA, the tournament reappeared as the "Oceania Nations Cup" and served as a qualifier for the Confederations Cup. The 1996 edition lacked a host nation but had its inaugural qualifying round, contested with four teams playing semifinals and final match on two legs both: Australia and New Zealand, who played the semifinal also for the
Trans-Tasman Cup, and the second semifinal match between Tahiti as
Polynesia Cup holders and Solomon Islands as
Melanesia Cup holders. Australia defended its title of The Cup winning easily in the final match, on two legs, against Tahiti (6–0 and 5–0). The topscorer of this tournament,
Kris Trajanovski, scored all his seven goals in the final tie: four in the first leg in
Papeete (Tahiti) and three in the second leg in
Canberra (Australia). Thanks to this result, this Australian team, managed by the English
Terry Venables and not by the Scottish Oceania Champion
Eddie Thomson, took part to the
1997 FIFA Confederations Cup in Saudi Arabia. In the 1998 edition six teams participated, hosted by Australia and dominated by Australia and New Zealand. In the final match, played in
Brisbane, New Zealand beat the host Australia 1–0 with a goal by
Mark Burton. In this edition the Australian player
Damian Mori scored 10 goals, the standing record. He is also the overall Oceania Nations Cup top scorer with 14 goals, scored in three editions: one in 1996, ten in 1998 and three in 2002. The fifth edition was hosted by Tahiti in 2000. The tournament structure was confirmed and again the tournament was dominated by Australia and New Zealand who reached the final match in
Papeete. Australia won their third title by a score of 2–0, qualifying for the 2001 FIFA Confederations Cup. Fiji, who qualified for this edition, was forced to withdraw due to civil war and was replaced by Vanuatu, who impressed in the semifinal against Australia: the
Socceroos, managed by
Frank Farina, won 1–0 thanks only to a penalty kick by
Kevin Muscat. Two years later the Australian team finished third in the
2001 FIFA Confederations Cup in South Korea and Japan. For the 2002 edition, hosted by New Zealand, eight teams participated, divided into two groups won by Australia and New Zealand. This was their third consecutive final match. The Australian side won the semifinal against a brave Tahiti only after extra time. Soccer Australia was involved in financial problems: the non-existent financial contribution meant that the Australian players had to pay their own way to get to New Zealand, so
Scott Chipperfield became the only one of Australia's large European contingent to answer the call and perform for his country in their time of need, resulting in a weak team for the tournament. So the final was won for the third time by the
All Whites beating their historical rivals 1–0 in
Auckland with a late
Ryan Nelsen goal. In the 2004 edition, which served also as the
2006 FIFA World Cup qualification and was played in Australia, six nations took part playing each other in a unique group, with the first two playing a final match in two legs. During the group stage Vanuatu surprisingly beat New Zealand 4–2, but lost all their remaining matches. This and a draw with Australia (2–2) allowed Solomon Islands to claim second place and a berth in the final match against Australia. In the final, the Solomon Islands were beaten 5–1 on their home ground
Honiara and 6–0 in
Sydney. Moreover, this was the first, and until today the only time that a coach,
Frank Farina, has won the Oceania Nations Cup trophy twice. Two years later, managed by Dutchman
Guus Hiddink and composed of many 2004 Oceania Nations Cup scorers such as
Tim Cahill,
Harry Kewell,
Mark Bresciano,
Brett Emerton,
John Aloisi, Australia reached the second round of the
2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany. However, this was the fourth and last OFC title for Australia: in 2006 they decided to join
AFC, changing considerably the Oceania football scene.
A new era (2006–present) Australia joined the
Asian Football Confederation on 1 January 2006, ceasing to be a member of
OFC, leaving New Zealand as the only major power in the OFC. The
2007 South Pacific Games, won by New Caledonia, served as a qualifying round for the three lowest ranked teams in the OFC, with the winners qualifying for the
2008 OFC Nations Cup. The 2008 OFC Nations Cup was played without a fixed venue and with four teams playing each other at home and away in one group. The tournament also served as part of the OFC's
qualifying competition for the
2010 FIFA World Cup. New Zealand emerged easily as winners for the fourth time ahead of New Caledonia, winning five matches of six. Surprisingly, Fiji won the last match against New Zealand in
Lautoka (Fiji) for 2–0 with two goals of
Roy Krishna. The top-scorer
Shane Smeltz (New Zealand) scored eight goals: four against the runners up New Caledonia beaten 3–1 away and 3–0 at home. The
2012 edition of the tournament was originally meant to be played in Fiji, but they were stripped from hosting due to the ongoing legal dispute involving OFC general secretary
Tai Nicholas and Fijian authorities. Hosting rights was moved to the Solomon Islands as they were joined by New Zealand, New Caledonia, Vanuatu, Tahiti, Fiji, Papua New Guinea and Samoa (winner of the
qualifying tournament). The draw which was similar to the 2012 edition with them competing in two groups of four teams, with the top two in each group qualifying for the semi-finals. After 9 days, Tahiti and New Caledonia reached the final in
Lawson Tama Stadium with Tahiti winning 1–0 with a goal from
Steevy Chong Hue. With this, Tahiti became the first team other than Australia (no longer part of OFC) and New Zealand to be crowned Oceania champions. The tournament also served as part of the OFC's
qualifying competition for the
2014 FIFA World Cup. After the cancellation of the
2020 OFC Nations Cup, the tournament was confirmed for 2024 as the
2024 OFC Men's Nations Cup. The tournament would not serve as World Cup qualifiers. ==Format==