Quote:
Originally Posted by
SwanVsDalton
One for you here DI:
http://sluggerotoole.com/2011/06/02/...thern-ireland/
I'm very disappointed, Slugger I find a fairly interesting and informed forum of debate but yet more total misunderstanding of eligibility rules. If you had the inclination DI, I think a proper response directed to Mick Fealty might be in order.
I've never posted on Slugger before, but I presume it's just a matter of posting my reply to Mick Fealty in the space provided beneath his entry and all the other comments? I'm not all that savvy to how to amend post lay-outs and such on there either, but I doubt it matters a huge deal. Anyway, I'm going to post the following, unless you think I ought to add something:
@Mick Fealty
I find it both bewildering and inexplicable how such an astounding level of confusion still reigns over player eligibility in spite of the fact that there are clear rules in place to govern it (see articles 15-18 of FIFA’s Regulations Governing the Application of the Statutes: http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/affe...uten2010_e.pdf), over which an independent judicial body, the Court of Arbitration for Sport, has provided ample clarification in a long, thorough and detailed judgment (see here: http://www.tas-cas.org/d2wfiles/docu...ard%202071.pdf).
This issue didn’t arise out of any “rule change”. Players born in the north have been lining out for FAI teams under FIFA rules similar to those in place today even before the Good Friday Agreement. The likes of Ger Crossley, Gerard Doherty, Mark McKeever and Tony Shields - all northern-born - played for FAI teams between 1995 and 1997. There have been countless others to play for Irish teams between the signing of the Good Friday Agreement and the Darron Gibson saga that seemed to implant the issue in the minds of NI football supporters. The Good Friday Agreement has nothing to do with the application of FIFA’s statutes on Irish nationality so it's frustrating to see it continually bandied about in discussions surrounding player eligibility, especially when the eligibility of northern-born Irish nationals to play for Ireland is being attributed to its terms.
Anyway, onto Ian Parsley’s post... You'd think a qualified referee with an interest in the governing rules of the game might have gone to the effort of actually reading and comprehending FIFA's statutes before writing about them. Contrary to your belief, Parsley’s post isn’t the slightest bit “great” at all. In fact, Parsley has as scant and suspect an understanding of FIFA’s rules on eligibility as the IFA he seeks to condemn had when they took their appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Parsley erroneously states:
“In the same way that a British passport does not qualify me to play for Scotland (because I was not born there and nor were any of my parents or grandparents), an Irish passport does not quality me to play for the Republic of Ireland (for the same reason). The 1998 Agreement clearly makes the population of Northern Ireland “British”, “Irish” or both; the qualification requirement remains, however, that the player or parents or grandparents must be born within the jurisdiction.”
Contrary to Parsley’s mistaken belief, a permanent Irish nationality not dependent on residence qualifies anyone in possession of it to play for Ireland, as is outlined in article 15 of FIFA’s Regulations Governing the Application of the Statutes. It states:
“Any person holding a permanent nationality that is not dependent on residence in a certain country is eligible to play for the representative teams of the Association of that country.”
A British passport would not deem Parsley eligible for Scotland for the reason that article 16 ensures that in the case of a single nationality that might normally entitle a player to play for more than one association - id est, British nationality, which would otherwise allow the holder to declare for England, NI, Scotland or Wales - additional criteria will come into effect. Article 16 was specifically included in the FIFA statute book in order to regulate eligibility for the British associations and reads as follows:
“A Player who, under the terms of art. 15, is eligible to represent more than one Association on account of his nationality, may play in an international match for one of these Associations only if, in addition to having the relevant nationality, he fulfils at least one of the following conditions:
a) He was born on the territory of the relevant Association;
b) His biological mother or biological father was born on the territory of the relevant Association;
c) His grandmother or grandfather was born on the territory of the relevant Association;
d) He has lived continuously on the territory of the relevant Association for at least two years.”
This article has no implications for those who possess Irish nationality as Irish nationality permits those who possess it to declare for only one country; Ireland.
If anyone seeks as complete an understanding of this issue as is available, I suggest they have a read of the Court of Arbitration for Sport’s judgment in the case of Daniel Kearns. Indeed, as Parsley says, that case was very straightforward - the IFA were always going to lose it - but the IFA lost it under the same misunderstanding from which Parsley is currently suffering; that the terms and conditions outlined in article 16 applied to northern-born Irish nationals.