‘Born to score’: Chris Wood’s journey from Hamilton to Premier League ace

‘Born to score’: Chris Wood’s journey from Hamilton to Premier League ace
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‘Born to score’: Chris Wood’s journey from Hamilton to Premier League ace
Author: Ali Martin in Hamilton
Published: Dec, 20 2024 09:31

Ex-All Whites international Mike Groom recalls striker who stunned him with ‘audacity, self-belief, awareness and skill’. In a rugby-infused country such as New Zealand, and with England’s cricketers in town for a Test match this past week, Hamilton on the winding Waikato river could feel every bit the other side of the world from the Premier League that it, well, very much is.

 [Ali Martin]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Ali Martin]

Yet right now English football’s dream factory has never been closer. Chris Wood, their boy and New Zealand’s captain, is leading a stirring rise at Nottingham Forest this season; one that has them fourth in the league, ahead of the champions, Manchester City. Driven by Wood’s 10 goals, and with Anfield and Old Trafford having been conquered, hopes of a first European adventure since 1995-96 have been rekindled at a club with a little bit of history there.

 [Wood signs autographs after winning a friendly against Australia at Eden Park in 2022]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Wood signs autographs after winning a friendly against Australia at Eden Park in 2022]

“The effect [on football in New Zealand] has been awesome,” says Mike Groom, a former All Whites international who witnessed Wood’s formative years in Hamilton. “Chris was born to score goals in a way that cannot be coached. He is a lighthouse, a neon sign, and for all those young kids here the possibilities could be infinite.” Those kids were keen already, in fairness, with football not the niche pursuit in New Zealand some in England could assume. It holds its own against the major team sports participation-wise, sitting among a tight top five at secondary school level. Recreationally, for ages five to 17, it is No 1. The All Whites have appeared at two men’s World Cups – the last an unbeaten group stage exit in 2010 – and the Football Ferns have played on the highest stage of the women’s game an impressive six times.

 [Dylan Groom, Wood and Mike Groom]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Dylan Groom, Wood and Mike Groom]

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