According to Stephen McGarrigle's 'The Complete Who's Who of Irish International Football: 1945- 1996', Ray's father was Irish. I met his mother in Glasgow before the 1987 Scotland game and I remember her having a Scottish accent.
Other's qualifying through their grannies upto 1996 are John Aldridge, Tony Cascarino, Tommy Coyne, Tony Galvin, Alan Kernaghan, Jason McAteer, Eamonn O'Keefe, Bernie Slaven, Andy Townsend
Michael Robinson qualified through a great grandparent before pre-natal Irish citizenship was required for someone of fourth generation to qualify for Irish citizenship.
Since 1996, I can think of Clinton Morrison and Lee Carsley. You could get a team out of the above if you can find a keeper. Peter Thomas was English through and through, but played for Ireland as he was living in Waterford at the time.
Exactly, that is the reason. Elsewhere outside the EU you can avail of any EU embassy or Consulate, if you are ever in the sh*te. It might not be a problem for someone of British citizenship where Conulates are abundant, but if you're Irish, that peice of information could be priceless.
Don't know. It used to state on the old Irish passport those of dual-nationality cannot get consular assistance in the country of the other nationality. I can only presume its because you are a citizen of that country, and no other country can intefere with what happens because you are a citizen of that country (obvious exceptions being cases like Nelson Mandela, Mordechai Vanunu, Andrei Sakharov...even the Birmingham Six, Guildford Four, Maguire Seven, who would count as dual citizens of Britain and Ireland)
Correct. But if you were not born in the Ireland, then a passport is usually the best piece of proof of Irish citizenship there is, because my birth certificate does not mention the nationality or birth place of my parents.
Playing for Ireland has always required Irish citizenship. I remember Michael Robinson being pictured with his passport, as proof of this (His mother also had to get Irish citizenship for him to qualify). It was only in 1997 that FIFA demanded players of dual nationality to present a passport of the country they were playing for (i.e. The Macedonia fiasco of Trigger 'forgetting' his passport).