View Full Version : Dan Crowley M MK Dons b.1997
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Kingdom
07/10/2014, 1:24 PM
I think its, if a donkey is born in a stable does it make him a horse, more similar genetic makeup, attributes and characteristics to a horse than a dog.
If you read that author from Limerick who by all accounts sounded like a bit of knob you would have read the quote in there. :P
You can be wherever you want to be from. Who won the All-Ireland this year?! oh ya the Kingdom....
It was hard to be a supporter during the late 80's and early 90's, living in Dublin, supporting Kerry. Damn bloody hard.
DannyInvincible
07/10/2014, 5:54 PM
I think its, if a donkey is born in a stable does it make him a horse, more similar genetic makeup, attributes and characteristics to a horse than a dog.
If you read that author from Limerick who by all accounts sounded like a bit of knob you would have read the quote in there. :P
Which author from Limerick? That phrase is often misattributed to Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington, who was born in Dublin. It is assumed that he denied any possible Irish identity whilst instead favouring to identify solely as British. It was actually Daniel O'Connell who first used it though in order to mock Wellesley and deny his right to claim himself a true Irishman simply by virtue of having been born in Dublin.
Charlie Darwin
07/10/2014, 5:59 PM
I assume he means Frank McCourt.
DannyInvincible
08/10/2014, 1:27 AM
I assume he means Frank McCourt.
Indeed, I'd made a post earlier having initially forgotten McCourt was born in New York, but I guess he may well have used the phrase to assert his Irishness, although it certainly wouldn't have been his originally.
paul_oshea
08/10/2014, 8:14 AM
No it wasn't attributed to him either, but he quoted it in his book from a Professor in New York. Born in New York and returned to New York, but grew up in Limerick.
Interesting that I said he sounded like a knob that CD knew from that I was on about him :P
DannyInvincible
08/10/2014, 10:42 AM
Interesting that I said he sounded like a knob that CD knew from that I was on about him :P
'Tis.
Charlie Darwin
21/10/2014, 5:27 PM
2 in the opening 29 minutes for Crowley at Anderlecht in the Youth League - it's 2-2 now.
DannyInvincible
22/10/2014, 9:34 PM
He ended up with a hat-trick after winning and converting a penalty for his third, although Arsenal lost 4-3. Highlights here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGUtvE_zkk8
Just Crowley's goals here: https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=594007660705382&fref=nf
Some lovely stuff.
Kingdom
23/10/2014, 10:37 AM
He ended up with a hat-trick after winning and converting a penalty for his third, although Arsenal lost 4-3. Highlights here:
Some lovely stuff.
Defending definitely is the lost art then.....
tetsujin1979
23/10/2014, 1:31 PM
FWIW Crowley wasn't named in the England squad for their recent U19 qualifiers. The FAI are hosting Ireland's U19 games in Waterford in a few weeks: http://www.uefa.com/under19/season=2015/teams/team=300064/matches/index.html
I'd imagine the squad will be named around the 1st November.
As with all other dual-nationality players, you can read whatever you want into it.
Closed Account
23/10/2014, 1:55 PM
As with all other dual-nationality players, you can read whatever you want into it.
He retweeted a Celtic FC Vines tweet a couple of weeks ago and follows Derrick Williams and Jerry Flannery. I think it's pretty obvious where his intentions lie.......
tetsujin1979
23/10/2014, 2:08 PM
He retweeted a Celtic FC Vines tweet a couple of weeks ago and follows Derrick Williams and Jerry Flannery. I think it's pretty obvious where his intentions lie.......
Munster?
paul_oshea
23/10/2014, 3:56 PM
Lunster?
Stuttgart88
23/10/2014, 4:06 PM
I presume Crowley knows Flannery from Arsenal.
Wrt BOD's thing about Lunster, I know quite a few Lunster fans. But I think BOD was a bit OTT in his "it's where you're born, where you're from". Personally I have always self-identified as Irish and as a Dub, but being a Leinsterman had barely ever entered my thinking until the rugby teams became European participants - and I had been at more inter pro rugby games in the 80s than was wise (my dad liked to go).
For me, Wexford, Tipp and Galway etc. are all just "the country". Their inhabitants are culchies, not Leinster, Munster or Connacht-men!
I suppose I usually cheer for a Leinster team in the hurling final though, but I'd cheer anybody over Meath in the football.
tetsujin1979
23/10/2014, 4:18 PM
I presume Crowley knows Flannery from Arsenal.
Wrt BOD's thing about Lunster, I know quite a few Lunster fans. But I think BOD was a bit OTT in his "it's where you're born, where you're from". Personally I have always self-identified as Irish and as a Dub, but being a Leinsterman had barely ever entered my thinking until the rugby teams became European participants - and I had been at more inter pro rugby games in the 80s than was wise (my dad liked to go).
For me, Wexford, Tipp and Galway etc. are all just "the country". Their inhabitants are culchies, not Leinster, Munster or Connacht-men!
I suppose I usually cheer for a Leinster team in the hurling final though, but I'd cheer anybody over Meath in the football.
I thought it was a pretty ironic comment, considering he's a Man United fan!
Olé Olé
25/10/2014, 1:27 AM
I presume Crowley knows Flannery from Arsenal.
Yeah, he knows him well, in fact. There's a lot of twitter banter between the pair. I posted it earlier in this thread, along the lines of Crowley posted a pic with Flannery and Flannery was queried about whether he had Crowley lined up to switch over and Flannery responded by saying yeah, he had taught him Irish or the national anthem. I'm not sure which.
Deckydee
15/11/2014, 7:27 AM
https://twitter.com/danielcrowley24/status/533345610746040320
Ditto :D
boysingreen
15/11/2014, 4:00 PM
https://twitter.com/danielcrowley24/status/533345610746040320
Ditto :D
Good man, Dan!
Although, maybe he felt a bit different about playing for us after 90 minutes of garbage!
liamoo11
15/11/2014, 4:41 PM
whatever it means in the real world he didnt tweet about england today yet!
DannyInvincible
07/01/2015, 12:07 PM
Lovely free-kick scored by Crowley against Wolves under-21s last night: https://vine.co/v/OdlrjHi5HBV
Olé Olé
31/07/2015, 6:06 PM
http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/33733627
Daniel Crowley to Barnsley until January before he even turns 18. Prodigious. And not our's.
The Fly
31/07/2015, 6:40 PM
I'm a bit old now to be getting overly interested in which players may or may not declare for us, but I have to admit I'd be pretty ecstatic if Crowley declared for us. I'm certain he'll make it at the highest level. He's just too good not to.
liamoo11
31/07/2015, 7:09 PM
http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/33733627
Daniel Crowley to Barnsley until January before he even turns 18. Prodigious. And not our's.
to put it in context robbie brady spent a season at derby in the championship as a first team player for the entire season at the same age(i.e. his last season as an under 19 player) and still could not make paul doolins under 19 squad so that shows the talent we obviously regularly have at Crowleys age.
tetsujin1979
31/07/2015, 7:31 PM
to put it in context robbie brady spent a season at derby in the championship as a first team player for the entire season at the same age(i.e. his last season as an under 19 player) and still could not make paul doolins under 19 squad so that shows the talent we obviously regularly have at Crowleys age.
you sure about that? According to his wiki - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robbie_Brady - he's only played for United, Hull and now Norwich
TrapAPony
10/09/2015, 11:29 PM
"Meanwhile, it’s understood the FAI are on the verge of securing the allegiance of highly-rated Arsenal teenager Danny Crowley.
The 18-year-old, currently impressing on loan at League One outfit Barnsley, is in a similar situation to his former Villa colleague Grealish insofar as he is eligible for England and Ireland, and he’s in demand by both.
The midfielder has represented England at under-19 level but is believed to be close to switching to Noel King’s Ireland under-21 squad for their European Championship qualification campaign."
http://www.irishtimes.com/sport/soccer/international/jack-grealish-may-still-go-green-despite-reports-1.2347941
The Fly
10/09/2015, 11:38 PM
If that turns out to be true then it's great news.
Crowley and Grealish in the same month perhaps? ;)
DannyInvincible
11/09/2015, 1:54 AM
That would indeed be great news. Representing Ireland in a competitive fixture at any level would tie Crowley to the FAI as he has already represented England competitively at under-17 level: http://www.uefa.com/under17/season=2013/teams/player=250058214/index.html
DannyInvincible
11/09/2015, 2:13 AM
Maybe Jack is just waiting for his mate, Crowley, to lead the way.
Am I right in thinking that Nathan Redmond is another player who is pretty friendly with Cyrus Christie, Grealish and Crowley, as they're all from around the same area? Crowley may unleash a domino effect!
if he doesn't commit to us soon we won't be allowed to mention him anymore...
I posted on the "potentially eligible" thread that there's some speculation on certain sites like balls.ie that JG has made his decision and that it won't be us.
Great news about Daniel Crowley - would this be his final switch for sure?
Olé Olé
11/09/2015, 8:48 AM
Awesome stuff re Crowley, but there's been a lot of false dawns on that front, has there? If I remember correctly, he was left out of a couple of England under 19 squads and I'm sure he would have been good enough. The delay would be explained by the 3-6 month time it takes for FIFA to process a switch.
I was gonna say it's consolation for the blow of potentially losing another young, English-born prospect. However, am I correct in saying that Crowley could be a more important player for us than his counterpart and has more potential? As far as I know, Crowley is a more central attacking midfielder, whilst we are well stocked with wingers at present (and Robbie Brady might move back there in the future). Hoolahan's career won't go on forever so Crowley could be a ready-made replacement.
Furthermore, it would demonstrate a serious amount of conviction by Crowley if he committed to us (which he would, in effect, be doing) at the age of 18. SkStu, he has played competitively for England so once he entered the field for us then he's tied.
It's great to be able to discuss someone like freely this without being shot down immediately... Hope and optimism aren't such negative things anymore.
tetsujin1979
11/09/2015, 9:59 AM
He played for Ireland U17s in 2013 - http://www.fai.ie/ireland/news/u17-head-coach-tom-mohan-names-squad-to-face-croatia - so if he does switch associations again will he be tied to Ireland, regardless of whether or not he plays a competitive game?
Kingdom
11/09/2015, 10:30 AM
I was gonna say it's consolation for the blow of potentially losing another young, English-born prospect. However, am I correct in saying that Crowley could be a more important player for us than his counterpart and has more potential? As far as I know, Crowley is a more central attacking midfielder, whilst we are well stocked with wingers at present (and Robbie Brady might move back there in the future). Hoolahan's career won't go on forever so Crowley could be a ready-made replacement..
I'm on record saying that I think Grealish is going to be a clone of Steve McManaman. He'd be wasted on the wings.
Charlie Darwin
11/09/2015, 10:37 AM
He played for Ireland U17s in 2013 - http://www.fai.ie/ireland/news/u17-head-coach-tom-mohan-names-squad-to-face-croatia - so if he does switch associations again will he be tied to Ireland, regardless of whether or not he plays a competitive game?
This is my understanding of it. It's certainly the way the rules are written anyway.
Olé Olé
11/09/2015, 10:56 AM
This is my understanding of it. It's certainly the way the rules are written anyway.
Have I got the same interpretation as you lads here: He played his friendlies for us at under 17. He went and played competitively underage for England. His switch hasn't been used when going from Ireland to England because he didn't play competitively for Ireland in the first place. Now, when having played for England competitively he has to use his one switch to Ireland in order to play for us and he's tied to us then, even if he never plays a competitive minute?
Closed Account
11/09/2015, 11:12 AM
Have I got the same interpretation as you lads here: He played his friendlies for us at under 17. He went and played competitively underage for England. His switch hasn't been used when going from Ireland to England because he didn't play competitively for Ireland in the first place. Now, when having played for England competitively he has to use his one switch to Ireland in order to play for us and he's tied to us then, even if he never plays a competitive minute?
I believe there was some confusion over this before, Bobby Zamora springs to mind. He played for England U-21, was named in a Trinidad squad but pulled out through injury, and went on to play for England seniors. The assumption being that if he was named in a Jamaican squad, he must have gone through the necessary paperwork. His wiki mentions that he got a passport but that doesn't mean he got clearance with FIFA.
Sorry Danny may have cleared this up way back when:
I asked Yann about a few other matters of interest...
He agrees with the interpretation that FIFA most likely consider having a grandparent born north of the border to be sufficient enough to render a player eligible for Ireland under the condition of article 7(c), as such an approach would be consistent with the fact that people born in the north can claim Irish nationality by law.
He is also of the opinion that it is probably the first competitive international appearance after a switch that ties a player to his new association and not the request to switch itself. Interestingly, though, he claims that our "test case", Bobby Zamora, never requested a change of association (even though media articles quite clearly state he had a request approved and was all ready to play for Trinidad & Tobago after having played for England competitively at under-age level) as he does not feature on a FIFA database to which Yann has access.
He will try and seek official clarification on these matters when he next meets the head of the PSC in April and is also going to try and find out from his contacts if there are others within the FIFA administration who might agree with his opinion on the suggested nexus between articles 8.2 and 7.
DannyInvincible
11/09/2015, 11:41 AM
Just seeing your post now, Joe. I was in the middle of composing a post which I now see regurgitates some of the info you've mentioned, but I'll just re-post what I've written for fluidity rather than go through it again deleting bits. We weren't able to clear it up though, unfortunately.
Great news about Daniel Crowley - would this be his final switch for sure?
Definitely. He hasn't actually used his solitary switch yet because, as far as FIFA/UEFA are concerned, he has only represented England. That's because he has represented them in official FIFA/UEFA competition. Friendly appearances are not taken into account by FIFA/UEFA for the purposes of determining when a switch has been or can be utilised.
He played for Ireland U17s in 2013 - http://www.fai.ie/ireland/news/u17-head-coach-tom-mohan-names-squad-to-face-croatia - so if he does switch associations again will he be tied to Ireland, regardless of whether or not he plays a competitive game?
As Charlie says, the literal wording of the regulation would suggest that merely requesting the switch is what effects it, but there is doubt as to whether this is the case in practice: http://www.fifa.com/mm/Document/AFFederation/Generic/02/58/14/48/2015FIFAStatutesEN_Neutral.pdf
http://i218.photobucket.com/albums/cc12/poguemahone85/Capture_zpsoag4gdm6.png
When I'd emailed Yann, you might recall I asked him (http://foot.ie/threads/147164-Eligibility-Rules-Okay?p=1806009&viewfull=1#post1806009) about what actually effects a switch, in his opinion. I wondered if it was the request alone or if it was the representing of a new association in a competitive fixture at any level (we know non-competitive fixtures have no bearing for eligibility purposes), as we in the eligibility thread were aware of the case of Bobby Zamora, where we believed Zamora had represented England competitively before requesting a switch to Trinidad & Tobago (and was seemingly all ready to play for them, according to media reports, until injury put a spanner in the works) and then returning to play for England (competitively) again. This was the information I got from Yann:
He is also of the opinion that it is probably the first competitive international appearance after a switch that ties a player to his new association and not the request to switch itself. Interestingly, though, he claims that our "test case", Bobby Zamora, never requested a change of association (even though media articles quite clearly state he had a request approved and was all ready to play for Trinidad & Tobago after having played for England competitively at under-age level) as he does not feature on a FIFA database to which Yann has access.
Just looking back at the email, here's what was said:
Me: Also, what formally effects a player's solitary switch from one association to another? The regulations (if read literally; they say a player is permitted one request) would seem to suggest it is his request to switch that effects and finalises it, but is this the case in practice? My own feeling is that it is a competitive cap (after having been competitively capped by a previous association at a level other than full 'A') is what effects the switch. Bobby Zamora, for example, as far as I can make out from information in the public domain, played for England at under-21 (competitively, importantly) before requesting to switch to Trinidad & Tobago. His request was approved, as far as I can make out (http://web.archive.org/web/20090812012900/http://www.ttgapers.com/News/2009/8/8/zamora-and-samuel-get-trinidad-passports/), and he was all ready to play for T&T with passport issued before injury saw him pull out. The FA of England later took interest in him again and he then represented England competitively at senior/full 'A' level. If he had already used up his one request to switch to T&T, how was he able to use another request to switch back to and represent England again? Unless it isn't the request itself that effects the switch, but, rather, the competitive capping?
Yann: I concur with you opinion – it is probably the first international appearance after the switch which ties definitely a player with its new association and not the request itself. It appears that Bobby Zamora never requested a change of association.
Me: What makes you say Zamora never requested a change? There are a few reports in the media explicitly stating his request was FIFA-approved and he was all set to play for T&T.
Yann: Zamora does not appear in the FIFA database I have access to.
Me: Is the database of players who have requested switches or is it of players who have effected switches? Is it possible Zamora might have requested a switch and had it granted but he is not on the database because he never effected it with a cap for T&T? Are you aware of any players who have requested a switch and had it granted, but who have then been accommodated with a "switch" back or cancellation of said request before representing their new association competitively?
Yann: The database contains the name of the player and the association requesting the change of allegiance and the name of the association he represented so far. Then, the database contains the date where the change has been approved/denied by the FIFA Player’s Status Committee. Article 8.3 is clear – the player is no longer deemed eligible until he has been cleared by FIFA. If Zamora had requested a change, he would have appeared in the database at some point. The only exception being (in my opinion) – if he only had played in friendlies, which is not the case. I am not aware of the case of players who have been allowed to switch back.
Me: We had thought of Zamora as somewhat of a "test case" proving that a simple request alone was not enough to effect the switch, thinking he'd requested a switch but was allowed to play for England again on the basis of not having effected it, but you say this is not so. Why do you think that playing in a competitive game is what effects a change then, even though this wouldn't be in line with a literal reading of the regulation concerned? Are you of the opinion then that a player might be permitted to return if he's not represented his new association competitively after having already had his request formally approved? Can an association losing a player hold up or stall a switch by any means, refusing to comply or dragging their heels until threatened with penalty?
Yann: This issue refers to the election a sporting nationality. This is done solely by entering the field in a competitive match (article 5.2). In my opinion (and it is solely my opinion), one must distinguish the substantive conditions (art. 8.1(a) or 8.2) to change national affiliation from the formal process to do so (art. 8.3). Being allowed to change national affiliation only once is a substantive condition, ie the player must not have undergone another switch before, and not a formal one. Thus, a player can be deemed tied to his new association and the process to switch association complete only if he meet the stipulation of article 5.2.
The former association could refuse to deliver relevant documents but it has no power to veto the change in association. The process will take a little bit longer.
He was to look into it for confirmation with the head of the PSC and I did email him again a few weeks ago, but I don't think he had yet received any confirmation. Even though he is not aware of any players who have requested a switch, had it processed and then "switched" back, he doesn't appear to rule out the possibility in principle.
back of the net
11/09/2015, 12:10 PM
I posted on the "potentially eligible" thread that there's some speculation on certain sites like balls.ie that JG has made his decision and that it won't be us.
Great news about Daniel Crowley - would this be his final switch for sure?
Balls and times now saying that THE UNDECIDED ONE ...could still choose Ireland.
As for Dan Crowley. .just Fantastic news ...if true.
Jesus. ...after watching our performance against georgia on Monday. .....this has really cheered me up....please be true
tetsujin1979
11/09/2015, 12:47 PM
FWIW, right now there's as much evidence to suggest that Crowley will switch to Ireland as there is that Grealish will declare for England.
back of the net
11/09/2015, 12:55 PM
FWIW, right now there's as much to suggest that Crowley will switch to Ireland as there is that Grealish will declare for England.
Completely agree
I'm just so dillussioned with Mondays first half performance. ...I'll believe anything at the moment for emotional gain
Closed Account
11/09/2015, 12:57 PM
It could quite simply boil down to players only being allowed to make one request to change nationality. Whether its accepted or denied of if he's goes onto play for that country or stay with his current one, his request is used up. Even it is accepted he can still stay with his current country, he is simply reset back to the default position he was in before he played for any country.
Deckydee
11/09/2015, 1:31 PM
Dont forget we have this 'up and comer'
http://www.balls.ie/football/ireland-niall-keown-2312332/249780
Him, grealish and Crowley......Mmmmmm
DannyInvincible
11/09/2015, 1:36 PM
It could quite simply boil down to players only being allowed to make one request to change nationality. Whether its accepted or denied of if he's goes onto play for that country or stay with his current one, his request is used up. Even it is accepted he can still stay with his current country, he is simply reset back to the default position he was in before he played for any country.
Hmm, possibly. I'm trying to think of reasons why that wouldn't or couldn't be the case. I may be overlooking something, but I'm thinking (and it's pure speculation) that that would have an unintended and disproportionately hampering effect on, say, a player with multiple nationalities (let's say this example/player has Irish, French and Spanish for sake of argument) who might have played with Ireland competitively at under-age level, before requesting to switch to France and having that switch processed, before then seeking to play for Spain instead, having never received any caps with France. If he was limited to one request in practice, it would prevent him from switching to Spain despite him never having played for France. Not saying you're wrong (and I do think your interpretation would seem to be in accordance with the text, or at least doesn't contradict it), but that would just seem rather unconscionable to me.
According to 8.3:
http://i218.photobucket.com/albums/cc12/poguemahone85/Capture_zpshm84i8sl.png
Not sure if it's instructive, but I take it to imply that players are registered with one association and can play for only that association in competitive fixtures. If they have submitted a request, they cannot play for anybody whilst that request is being processed. Once the request is processed, is it fair to assume the player would be eligible for only the association for whom he is now newly registered, or am I reading a meaning into the wording that isn't there?
nigel-harps1954
11/09/2015, 1:53 PM
You know what's great? The ever so knowledgeable world of Facebook are delighted that we've got the far better player.
Just a few select comments:
"Dan Crowley is twice the player Jack Grealish is"
"As a united agree with david he'd stop Grealish in his tracks great at tackling."
"Dan Crowley has immense potential! Will **** all over Grealish and that's a fact"
" This will cost him millions."
People are amazing.
Closed Account
11/09/2015, 2:18 PM
Interesting
http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/affederation/footballgovernance/01/70/80/04/faq_change_of_association_en.pdf
ii.
A recently issued statement dated and signed by the player in which he confirms
that he understands the impact of such a change and that he is aware that such
a change, if granted, is of a definite nature and irreversible;
All of this should probably be in the other thread although it does specifically apply to Crowley based on speculation.
DeLorean
11/09/2015, 2:35 PM
You know what's great? The ever so knowledgeable world of Facebook are delighted that we've got the far better player.
Just a few select comments:
"Dan Crowley is twice the player Jack Grealish is"
"As a united agree with david he'd stop Grealish in his tracks great at tackling."
"Dan Crowley has immense potential! Will **** all over Grealish and that's a fact"
" This will cost him millions."
People are amazing.
Social media has destroyed my faith in humanity, it may have even destoyed humanity itself. Thankfully I rarely meet these types of people in real life, but it's shuddering to know they're out there. Ignorance was bliss.
back of the net
11/09/2015, 5:01 PM
Dont forget we have this 'up and comer'
http://www.balls.ie/football/ireland-niall-keown-2312332/249780
Him, grealish and Crowley......Mmmmmm
We are pretty much guaranteed to win euro 2020 at this rate
TrapAPony
12/09/2015, 10:16 AM
Roy Keane going to the Barnsley v Swindon match today to watch him according to a small piece in the Irish Examiner by John Fallon
edit : Crowley is injured for today. Hope Roy didn't go all the way to Barnsley.
Stuttgart88
12/09/2015, 10:33 AM
The Aston Villa one's new agent is also Bale's agent and at the annual Soccerex conference in Manchester during the week he said that Bale "declaring" for Wales over England has cost him millions. This was widely reported. My own guess is that Sam Wallace put 2 and 2 together and went public with his "scoop" about the Villa one choosing England. Clearly his agent will prefer if he chooses England.
I have to say I doubt it matters that much whether a Real Madrid superstar with a 100 million transfer tag is out of pocket by millions for being Welsh. But I'm not an agent.
DannyInvincible
12/09/2015, 12:47 PM
I have to say I doubt it matters that much whether a Real Madrid superstar with a 100 million transfer tag is out of pocket by millions for being Welsh. But I'm not an agent.
He'd be a Real Madrid superstar with a 500 million transfer tag if he'd chosen England.
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