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thanks for being one of the few people on here capable of tackling the issue itself
No thanks for being so patronising, Steve. I think everyone else here realises what the issue is for you- that Britain shouldn't have multiple international football teams. Or, slightly more crudely, [the] Northern Ireland [team] shouldn't exist.
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I'm surprised by the level of snobbery towards these countries on this thread. The UN is happy to accept these states as genuine countries, yet some people on here think they know better
It's you who are snobbish, as above. I and others mentioned the Faroes because quite obviously it is not an independent country, and it self-defines thus. So, Denmark has two teams in international competitions. To use your own favourite quip, 'end of'- though actually it could start a fascinating discussion elsewhere.
Incidentally, I don't follow the parallel in your UN Security Council allegory. Pakistan or Indonesia's worries about global security are hardly comparable to whether Jim Boyce gets to determine the width of goal lines, or whatever, indefinitely. So the latter may not be quite the hot potato you suggest.
I- and I think most other foot.ie readers, since few have said otherwise- are quite happy for the Faroes, and the other tiny countries, to play international football. It's a false argument to imply otherwise.
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Your personal thoughts on their monetary arrangements don't change that [San Marino is independent]
Cheeky. I only offered an opinion (that SM uses the Euro because it would be inconvenient, indeed silly to do otherwise), because YOU threw in that they chose to do so as some sort of favour to the Italians who surround them. I'm surprised you mentioned this, as it hardly makes a case for Sammarinese autonomy. In practice, they're like a smaller version of the Channel Islands, continuing to use British pounds.
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It will be interesting to see if the leading Catalan nationalist parties, buoyed by their positive referendum vote on ascending to 'nation' status within Spain, decide to push the concept of a separate team. I don't think they will, as that really would be a massive political can of worms in Spain
I agree the Catalan (football) politicians may stop short of a breakaway. But the thing is, I don't think it has any more implication for NI than for Norway. If Spain, Italy or whoever fragment into three or four teams apiece, welcome to the party. Pre-qualifying groups for Euro 2525 may need to be rejigged, but we'll deal with that when it happens. Essentially you're saying 'it might be significant if it happens, but I'm not sure how, and anyway it won't happen'...
FIFA might get tough and say 'no you can't, and nor can the British any more'. But this just isn't realistic. They have a lot less to gain than we to lose; we can refer back to our long separate football histories; both the entry of the village teams, and the break-up of the ex-Soviet countries in the 1990s arguably strengthen our position vis a vis 20 years ago.
The Africans and Asians may revive their challenge to get rid of our teams? Maybe. Why is it such a big issue for them- in crude number terms, the Africans have as many votes at FIFA as Europe does. Can we see some evidence of their past initiatives?
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The government wants a Team GB, as does the GB Olympic Committee. The English and Norn Irish FA's are keen on the idea - the Scottish and Welsh are not. There can be no doubt that any combined UK team would soner or later be used to threaten the Home Nation's position within FIFA. Scotland and Wales clearly understand that
I'll admit NI and the Irish FA's position looks odd here. Clearly an Olympic team including one token U-21 player from NI would be silly. On the other hand, if that's what happens, I doubt FIFA would kick out England and NI unilaterally. There'd still be three British teams even if they did...
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If the positon of the Home Nations in world football is indeed as cast-iron and concrete-safe as you suggest, then why are the Scots and Welsh so worried about a proposed UK Olympics Team ? This is very telling
It's rather simpler than you suggest. Their positions are cast-iron BECAUSE they're predictably shunning a UK team!
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But there is a discrepancy in FIFA/UEFA's rules here that is under constant degrees of pressure to be addressed. Pressure of the kind that forced the FAW to go to the effort of introducing its first ever national league as a defensive measure. This is not a legal issue - but one of the politics of world football
Evidence? (This isn't a dig, but a fair question- who's doing the pressing?). The thing is, the makeup of the FIFA lawmaking committee is pretty small beer. If there was a genuine lobby against it, wouldn't the British sinecures have disappeared years ago?