All Whites vice-captain Chris Wood is proud of helping broker a pay parity deal for the New Zealand Football Ferns women's team.

Burnley striker Chris Wood has opened up about helping the Football Ferns national New Zealand women's team achieve pay parity with the All Whites.

Wood and his partner, Liverpool striker Kirsty Linnett talked to The Guardian about the inequities in the women's game with Wood hailing the Football Ferns' deal as "massive step in the history" of New Zealand football.

The Football Ferns achieved parity in May when they were awarded equal pay and conditions as the All Whites - including business class air travel.

They had the backing of New Zealand's Professional Footballers Association, including Wood, a NZPFA board member.

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Another great example of solidarity among footballers: how @BurnleyOfficial top goal scorer Chris Wood @officialcwood helped broker an unprecedented equal deal for New Zealand national women's team. #FootballFerns #allwhites 👏🇳🇿https://t.co/BVyn5TN4Nw pic.twitter.com/OyZhNf3zmz — FIFPro (@FIFPro) May 23, 2018

For Wood, whose older sister Chelsey was a New Zealand age-group football international, supporting the Ferns was a matter of fairness.

"Once my eyes were opened it was a no-brainer," he told The Guardian.

"It wasn't about having a girlfriend who plays football or a sister who plays football, it was about doing what is right. These people are professional athletes. They give up just as much time and effort, if not more, than we do as men.

"In New Zealand if you want to be in the national team you have to give up your lifestyle and move to Auckland. If you live in Christchurch or Wellington you have to move to Auckland to train and play, and off your own bat. You weren't subsidised, you weren't given anything to start with, you just had to move.

"The coaches and the head of New Zealand football are based in Auckland. They want them to train together as a team regularly to improve and I am all for that, but they were not getting the help they needed to set up in new jobs or new housing or anything like that to help with the transition.

"They have given up their livelihoods to train three or four times a week and play at the weekend in Auckland. Once my eyes were opened to that I saw the way it should be and that it should change around."

Wood said his All Whites teammates soon rallied behind the Ferns' cause.

"As soon as I opened their eyes to what the Football Ferns are going through their reaction was the same as mine: what can we do to help? It was perfect timing because the negotiations for the next four-year campaign were coming up.

"It was a case of, 'Look boys, we take what we are on and don't push for any more but we ask for the Ferns to be on exactly the same as us.'

"It was a massive step in history but it was the right thing to do. They should be on exactly the same as us. It's the same life."