A World Cup first in Christchurch: a mother and son take the same pitch
Jenny and Tyler Bindon will line up in the same Football Ferns squad at the 2027 Women's World Cup qualifiers, the first mother-son pairing to feature at a senior World Cup in any code.
On 18 June 2026, Football New Zealand confirmed that defender Tyler Bindon and his mother, goalkeeper Jenny Bindon, had both been named in an extended Football Ferns squad preparing for the 2027 FIFA Women's World Cup qualifiers, a selection that places them on a credible path to becoming the first mother-son duo to appear at a senior World Cup in any code, according to BBC Sport.
The pairing is unusual in two directions at once. Jenny Bindon, 51, is in the late stage of a long international career that took her from the 2007 and 2011 Women's World Cups into New Zealand's broader goalkeeping pipeline. Tyler Bindon, 19, has emerged in the Premier League with Nottingham Forest, made his senior Ferns debut in 2025, and is now being groomed as a regular starter in central defence.
How the call-up happened
The Football Ferns' coaching staff had been tracking the mother-son axis quietly for months, but the formal announcement came this week, when the federation published an extended training squad that included both Bindons. Tyler is in line to feature in the qualifying programme that begins in the Pacific confederation later this year; Jenny is in contention for the senior goalkeeping role vacated by the retirement of long-time starter Erin Nayler.
The mechanics of selection are the same as for any other player: form, fitness, and tactical fit. The symbolism is the point. The Football Ferns have spent the last three cycles building depth, and a senior side that can call on a Premier League defender, a 2007 World Cup veteran goalkeeper, and a teenage forward line is, on paper, the deepest squad the country has ever assembled.
Why a mother-son pairing matters
International squads run on a hard age boundary. The window in which a 19-year-old defender and a 51-year-old goalkeeper can occupy the same dressing room is narrow, and historically the federation has not been able to stretch a career that far. Jenny Bindon is the first New Zealand goalkeeper in the modern professional era to keep a senior cap-window open past the age of 45; her son has broken into a Premier League first team at a younger age than any New Zealand centre-back in the post-2000 generation.
The pair's story also reframes a familiar argument. Women's football in the Pacific has long been framed as a holding exercise, a feeder pool for development dollars aimed at the men's game. A roster that fields Jenny Bindon and starts a World Cup qualifying campaign with a teenager who plays at Nottingham Forest collapses that argument on its own terms.
The structural picture
The Bindons are not, on their own, a structural shift. They are the visible edge of one. The Football Ferns finished third at the 2023 Women's World Cup, and the federation's response has been to professionalise contracts, expand the A-League Women pathway, and re-orient the senior squad around overseas-based players. The result is a roster that draws goalkeeping experience from a 51-year-old veteran and defensive athleticism from a 19-year-old Premier League starter. That combination was not structurally possible in New Zealand football a decade ago.
It is also, in the wider context of the Pacific confederation, a deliberate signal. Australia remains the dominant OFC force on paper; the Ferns' third-place finish in 2023 was, in part, the product of an Australian absence. Building a squad that can absorb a generational turnover without losing a qualifying cycle is the more durable test.
Stakes and what to watch
The first concrete data point is the OFC qualifying window later in 2026, where Football New Zealand is expected to confirm a final squad. If both Bindons are included, the World Cup appearance becomes a matter of progression rather than possibility. The wider stake is symbolic: the Football Ferns' case for sustained funding, professional contracts, and a domestic league expansion rests on visible, named talent. A mother and son taking the same pitch is exactly the kind of headline a federation wants in the run-up to a qualifying cycle.
There are limits to the story. Jenny Bindon's selection into the qualifying squad is a confirmation, not a guarantee. The squad includes four goalkeepers, and the federation has indicated that the senior starter role will be settled on form rather than reputation. The pair's World Cup appearance is therefore conditional on the squad's progression through the Pacific qualifying bracket and on Jenny's continued fitness through a long pre-season.
What is not in dispute is the milestone. No senior World Cup, in any of FIFA's recognised codes, has previously named a mother and son in the same tournament squad. The Bindons have already entered the record; whether they are on the field at the 2027 World Cup itself is the next question.
This publication framed the Bindon selection as a structural moment for Pacific women's football rather than a human-interest novelty — a deliberate choice given the federation's three-year push to professionalise the Football Ferns squad.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenny_Bindon
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyler_Bindon
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Zealand_women%27s_national_football_team
