I wonder if there will be as many pedants at the match as there are around here.
I don't think "Come on you boys in the darker shade of green" rolls off the tongue as well as the current chant.
"Dan dan danana danana Republicofireland!"
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I wonder if there will be as many pedants at the match as there are around here.
I don't think "Come on you boys in the darker shade of green" rolls off the tongue as well as the current chant.
"Dan dan danana danana Republicofireland!"
Can't comment on that game, since I wasn't there.
Can comment on this, since I was there. The simple fact is, all the aggression and provocation etc came from a small hooligan section of the Polish support, as evidenced by the arrests and the Court convictions, and acknowledged by the PSNI and the local Polish Community Association representatives and (by implication) by FIFA, whose match observers took no action against the IFA.
Of course, you might know that, too, had you been there (and had the integrity to acknowledge it, which I doubt).
Anyhow, I, too, hope that the ROI/NI game passes off peacefully, though I am not so confident, since I fear it has the capacity to attract scumbags from both Belfast & Dublin etc, who may attach themselves to "their" respective teams for the day.
Let's hope the Gardai can both identify any troublemakers early and mete out whatever "summary justice" they see fit.
Cliftonville chose the Oval as their choice of venue. Circumstances dictated that Windsor was where the match would/ was played. Again you had a sly little dig about nationalist going to Windsor - whatever. I haven't seen you post on the Irish League forum btw. Again I didn't click on KK's link - I know better ;)
High five.
Was it reasoned to bring Cliftonville into the conversation? Anyways Cliftonville wouldn't be the first club I (and I presume others) think of in Belfast with a nationalist leaning.
No.
I'm no expert EG, hence why I asked questions to learn more. I take it from your failure to answer them that you're no expert either.
I don't always agree with you EG. No.
You have your own forum to play on. If you don't want me commenting on your posts, don't post in the forum(s) I read. You can add me to your ignore list if you so wish. Cheerio.
Cliftonville are the biggest club whose support is predominantly nationalist, so they would be most people's first thought when thinking along those lines.
You're the one who keeps trying to make some point about him having a go at cville, when he clearly isn't.
Hmm. Would almost say Pairc Saxe-Coburg Gotha almost has a central location, given it's around 1 mile? max.from the centre of Beal-feirste?
Been into the S.Beal-feirste N.of I.S.C.(almost incognito) but never ventured into The Village, though I do hear it's full of idiots! ;)
And on my visits there to the ground, have been via the Malone Road which is about as middle-class as it comes (There seems to be no flag fascination there!!)....
As for Cliftonville, if they were seriously going to Linfield then they may as well go to Casement.....
Finally, it's the usual gross hypocrisy of EG & his ilk to moan about their digs at C'ville when they continue to use the 'B' word (& worse) so liberally...... :rolleyes:
You realise you're the only person who calls it Pairc Saxe-Coburg Gotha, right? And nobody will ever follow your lead?
I thought it was quite witty.
Windsor Park is in the heart of South Belfast. It's certainly not "central" Belfast.
The Village is a bit of a kip that has suffered from under-investment. There is some student accomodation in it, but it would be amongst the cheapest, most run down student accomodation available. Windsor backs onto the very edge of it, it's not as if it's right in the middle of it all.
The Malone Road is majority nationalist these days (which shouldn't surprise you as South Belfast is very mixed and the most upper class part of the city), but as you say it's all posh well-to-do families. This road also has a high student population.
Why would Cliftonville choose a GAA stadium over a football one? Seems a bit nuts that. It's on the Andersontown Road anyway, certainly wouldn't be the most welcoming place to bring visitors.
Some people need to wise up and get off the offended bus and stop this "you had a sly dig at us nationalist cliftonville fans". He did nothing of the sort.
OK, Beal-feirste is a smallish city, but a mile from the centre is hardly a vast distance. Surely Malone is S.Beal-feirste proper?
And wasn't P S-CG formerly (if not still?) in the West Beal-feirste constituency??
As for Casement, at least it's in a nationalist area not too far from P S-CG, which is probably preferable to most of the C'ville's fans......
Finally re. the name being 'original', CD, seem to remember it popping up on various fora, going back over the last decade! ;)
Funny how EG is obsessed with ensuring that everyone uses the official FIFA-endorsed name for the football team (Republic of Ireland), yet when he refers to the independent country that it represents, he refuses to use the official, internationally recognised name for that country (Ireland). For example, see his repeated references to the supposed irredentist citizenship policy of "the Republic of Ireland".
The reality is, it's perfectly natural for people to use the same name for their country and the team that represents it. Sadly, FIFA took the unprecedented decision to prevent the FAI from calling its international football team by the same name as the internationally-accepted name for the country that it represents.
Of course, FIFA took that decision because the UK associations abused their (undemocratic) position of power within FIFA to ensure they did so. If there had been a Court of Arbitration for Sport in 1953, when FIFA made that ruling, I'm pretty sure it would have been overturned. If you try to look at it objectively, the situation was as follows:
- Two distinct teams wanted to call themselves "Ireland"
- One of those teams represented an independent country called "Ireland"
- The other represented a region known as "Northern Ireland", which lies within a country called the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
It's pretty obvious that one team was perfectly entitled to call itself "Ireland" and the other was not.
Anyway, if EG wants to use only officially "correct" names all round, then that's up to him. But if he continues to use "ROI" for both the football team and the country, then he's just a hypocrite. Either way, nothing that FIFA or EG say is going to change the terminology I use - as I see it, I come from a country called Ireland, so I will continue to call my national football team "Ireland".
Good shout Nedser...
Though I suspect the IFA name issue will be kicked back into play.
I think the difference may be that most NI and Wales fans (and a fair proportion of the Scots) don't seriously expect to qualify. Which makes a revived four-hander more attractive. Including to the OWC hardhore, however p*ssed off with the FAI they may be at the moment.
Ha ha, top quality whataboutery there ;)Quote:
Originally Posted by Den Perry
If you said that, you'd be wrong. It's about two miles by road.Quote:
Originally Posted by Ardee Bhoy
Let me guess. You were quite content to enjoy your pint and chat to the locals until getting bored and outing yourself as that sh*t-stirrer on the internet?Quote:
Been into the S.Beal-feirste N.of I.S.C.(almost incognito)
Don't believe all you hear. It has- has long had- a largely transient population. Students, nurses from nearby hospitals, refugees and so on.Quote:
but never ventured into The Village, though I do hear it's full of idiots!
Aye, you almost certainly entered from Windsor Ave or one of the parallel streets which run across the Lisburn Road to the ground.Quote:
And on my visits there to the ground, have been via the Malone Road which is about as middle-class as it comes (There seems to be no flag fascination there!!)....
Indeed. The only logical solution is for you to rename the country (don't write in, I'm joking).
When I lived in Dublin as a student (early 80s), many locals referred to the country as the Republic. I realise they don't now, these things can change over time. But as AWEC suggests above, it's not really that big a deal. Many people in NI (mainly but not exclusively unionists) get a bit irritated at 'Ireland' being equated with just the Republic, but we should probably just get over it. Ditto people in the Republic who don't like being referred to as the South. There are similar examples elsewhere- province of Luxembourg in Belgium on the border, for example.Quote:
Sadly, FIFA took the unprecedented decision to prevent the FAI from calling its international football team by the same name as the internationally-accepted name for the country that it represents
Who knows? Maybe the court would have applied that most basic legal principle, to ignore trivia. As you say, pretty much everyone Worldwide now calls the Republic Ireland or the local language equivalent. Even in Britain, even the Daily Telegraph. It's only really a problem if you insist that everyone in Northern Ireland does too, because in practice they won't and we'll all be upsetting ourselves unnecessarily.Quote:
If there had been a Court of Arbitration for Sport in 1953, when FIFA made that ruling, I'm pretty sure it would have been overturned
Ha ha. You're a bad man ;)
Like others above, I don't want to exaggerate the likelihood of trouble at the game. In reality, a match against England or Northern Ireland (or at a pinch, Scotland and nowadays France) in Dublin will have a tenser atmosphere than most, and you'd expect the Gardai to plan and Police accordingly.
BTW Windsor Park had it's name before the British Royal family took the name Windsor.
OK, 2 miles from say City Hall, but a mile as in from the edge of the centre.
Presumably you are being ironic about the sh*t-stirring bot, re. your good self? Lol.Quote:
Let me guess. You were quite content to enjoy your pint and chat to the locals until getting bored and outing yourself as that sh*t-stirrer on the internet?
As for outing myself, that only came about when slagging off David Healy for being useless in club football. And an even more useless individual, known to many on here, crossing himself.....
Hmm. Yeah, right.Quote:
When I lived in Dublin as a student (early 80s), many locals referred to the country as the Republic.
Funny how time plays tricks with the memory!
Barely anyone in Ireland has ever used the phrase the 'Republic', except maybe a few Dubs over the years, in a soccer context. And a few English people perhaps more widely, though now they mainly say Ireland and the North/Northern Ireland.
It goes a bit beyond what "pretty much everyone Worldwide now calls" it ....... the name of the country as defined in it its own constitution is "Ireland", the name recognised by the EU is "Ireland" (see http://europa.eu/about-eu/27-member-...s/index_en.htm), the name recognised by the UN is "Ireland" (see http://www.un.org/en/members/index.shtml#i). It's even the name used by the "British" (sic) embassy in Ireland (http://britishembassyinireland.fco.gov.uk/en/). I could go on. Bottom line - it's not just a colloquialism, it's the internationally recognised official name of the country. Having said that, I have no intention of insisting that unionists from Northern Ireland or anywhere else use the correct name - they can choose to use whatever words they like, and at the end of the day, there are far bigger things to get wound up about.
No? It's South Belfast. The Malone Road is south belfast and the Lisburn Road (which Windsor is just off) runs along side it.
I doubt you'd find many Cliftonville fans who'd prefer to play at Casement than Windsor.
It's named after the area of Belfast.