Originally Posted by
liaml
An excellent analogy, since you refuse to a straight answer to a straight question. :D
I refuse to answer, only because I really don't see what relevance it has to my support for NI what Passport I have. For the record, I know of NI fans who have UK Passports, some with Irish Passports (including one or two who are Unionists!) and some with both. The same goes for the players, afaik.
LOL 'Footballing Nationality'! Hmm - how many 'Nationalities' do you actually have? A basketball 'Nationality'? A Golf 'Nationality'? Tiddlywinks?
It's quite simple, really. In football, I support the NI team. In rugby, I support the Ireland team. In Cricket, I follow England (except for 1-day inernationals involving Ireland) and at the Olympics, I follow the GB and NI team. And I guess when it comes to golf, I cheer for Europe in the Ryder Cup.
The key to these allegiances are that I do not allow my personal political feelings to determine my sporting feelings, since I feel the two should be separated wherever possible.
Consequently, I follow the international team which most closely represents my own patch i.e. with competitors who come from the same place as I do, however defined by the individual sports. (I imagine this also explains why, for example, Ed Joyce can happily play for England in the cricket, or Brian Carney could play for the GB Rugby League team - they had no professional alternative closer to home)
The NI fanbase, which derives the vast majority of it's support from the Unionist community would be totally opposed to it on nationalistic or political grounds. TBH only a Southern politician with no concept of the realities of the North would even have suggested it.
Liam, I think I am somewhat closer to the NI fanbase than you. Of course many NI fans are opposed to a single team for nationalistic/political grounds. Others, like myself, are opposed because NI is my team and I simply don't wish to lose it, regardless of wherther any new team was genuinely "all-Ireland", or more successful. And many will be opposed for both those reasons.
[Indeed, there is evidence that a small part of the NI support even now is from a Nationalist background - 7% according to a Cain Study = 980 in a 14,000 crowd at Windsor. I have actually met a few of these myself. I've never asked them if they would prefer a single team over an NI team, but even if they answered "Yes", it wouldn't change my opinion of them. In fact, quite the contrary, since I greatly admire those who can subjugate their political feelings to the sporting ones, especially if they live in a community where their support for NI makes them a "minority within a minority"]
Anyhow, do not make the mistake of believing that "all NI fans are the same"!
However. If or when it comes I believe there should be many more concessions made to the Unionist community than is currently in place for Rugby. Some suggestions I'd like to see would be
1. The IFA to take contol of Irish football, North and South. Headquarters in Belfast.
2. Both National anthems played before every game, same with flags and emblems.
3. Matches played in the North and in Dublin. On an equal basis.
As I said earlier though. Even with these changes it's still a no-goer.
-Liam