Three days after the Oly Whites were spectacularly dumped from their Olympic Qualifying tournament by Oceania Football Confederation for fielding an ineligible player, there are still more questions than answers.
As the lawyers prepare for a long and complicated appeals process, we look at some of the possible holes in the New Zealand Football argument.
What's the appeal?
New Zealand Football are fighting OFC's decision on two fronts. They are arguing that South African born Deklan Wynne is in fact eligible to represent New Zealand and they are also arguing against the process by which OFC reached their decision.
Have NZF said why they think Deklan Wynne was eligible?
No, and that was the great un-answered question from yesterday's press conference. When Andy Martin was asked to explain on what grounds Wynne was eligible to represent New Zealand he said: "I'd love to be able to do that but I'm waiting for the lawyers to give me confidence in terms of the decision we have taken."
What do we know for certain about Wynne's citizenship?
Wynne emigrated to NZ and acquired citizenship by residency, having arrived in NZ aged 14 years, 10 months in January 2010. For the Olympic qualifiers he used a New Zealand passport issued in January 2015.