Michael McGarry (born 17 May 1965) is a former New Zealand association footballer who frequently represented the New Zealand national football team in the 1980s and 1990s.

Club career

His senior career began with Dunedin City and later Mosgiel, before he moved to Australia to join Sydney Olympic in the National Soccer League. He returned to New Zealand after a single season to join Christchurch United where he won back-to-back Jack Batty Memorial Trophies contesting the Chatham Cup final on the winning side in 1989 and the losing side in 1990.

International career

McGarry scored in his full All Whites début in a 4–2 win over Fiji on 17 September 1986 and ended his international playing career having pulled on the all white shirt 87 times, including 54 A-international caps in which he scored 12 goals, earning his final cap in a 0–5 loss to Indonesia on 21 September 1997.

Personal life

He is the father of New Zealand international James McGarry. Since retirement, McGarry has taught at Otago Boys' High School where he has overseen a successful period in the school's footballing history. In 2015 he took leave from the school to coordinate operations for the 2015 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup.

Career statistics

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
New Zealand198641
198744
1988105
199020
199140
199242
199330
199590
199660
199780
Total5412

Scores and results list New Zealand's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each McGarry goal.

List of international goals scored by Michael McGarry
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetitionRef.
117 September 1986Churchill Park, Lautoka, FijiFiji4–24–2Friendly
27 November 1987Apia Park, Apia, SamoaWestern Samoa2–07–01988 Summer Olympics qualification
313 November 1987Western Springs Stadium, Auckland, New ZealandWestern Samoa1–012–01988 Summer Olympics qualification
42–0
56–0
613 March 1988Sydney Football Stadium, Sydney, AustraliaAustralia1–11–31988 Summer Olympics qualification
720 March 1988Queen Elizabeth II Park, Christchurch, New ZealandChinese Taipei1–02–01988 Summer Olympics qualification
823 March 1988Athletic Park, Wellington, New ZealandAustralia1–01–11988 Summer Olympics qualification
921 June 1988Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne, AustraliaSaudi Arabia2–02–0Friendly
1023 June 1988Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne, AustraliaSaudi Arabia3–03–2Friendly
111 July 1992Auckland, New ZealandVanuatu3–08–01994 FIFA World Cup qualification
127–0

External links

  • FIFA competition record (archived)