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Teacher scores dream goal for Auckland City, holding Boca Juniors to draw

Teacher scores dream goal for Auckland City, holding Boca Juniors to draw

RNZ News25-06-2025
Auckland City's New Zealander defender Christian Gray (L) celebrates scoring his team's first goal next to Boca Juniors' Uruguayan forward Edinson Cavani in Nashville.
Photo:
AFP / Federico Parra
Christian Gray, a 28-year-old physical education teacher from New Zealand, scored against Argentine powerhouse Boca Juniors at the Club World Cup, offering the amateur side a fleeting moment of jubilation to make their participation in the elite tournament worthwhile.
Gray's strike
secured a 1-1 draw
that sparkled like gold amid the rubble of Auckland City's tournament, a campaign that had seen the amateur side brutally exposed by a 10-0 hammering from Bayern Munich and a 6-0 defeat to Benfica.
"I'm from a small town, a long way from here and a lot different to this environment. So it is somewhat of a dream," Gray, an Auckland Grammar teacher, said after the match.
Auckland City's squad - comprising teachers, delivery drivers and tradesmen - had paid a heavy price for their footballing ambitions, quite literally.
Many fund their own participation while juggling day jobs, a stark contrast to the millionaire professionals they faced on the pitch.
The New Zealand club finished bottom of their group with just one point, but for coach Paul Posa, that single point represented a victory against overwhelming odds.
"You can't begin to explain the odds that we're up against," Posa said.
Auckland City FC's Christian Gray scores and celebrates his goal against Boca Juniors at the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup.
Photo:
www.photosport.nz
"Our club is tiny with the hugest heart. We got something today from the tournament, which was a just reward for everybody that's been working behind the scenes."
The manager never lost faith despite the lopsided scorelines earlier in the tournament.
"I always thought we had to score a goal. We've just worked so hard. Got a bit lucky in the first half, but I just knew we had to score."
For Gray, the tournament caps what he described as "a long four years" of preparation with a club that relies primarily on volunteers.
"That's been a tough trip. We've had some tough results, but I'm just happy for the team and the boys. I think we deserve it," he said.
Now, Gray must swap the international spotlight for a pile of unmarked assignments accumulated during his school holidays, perhaps the most extraordinary ordinary transition in world football after the greatest tie in the history of the amateur club.
- Reuters
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