Apologies if it's been raised before.
It seems Ger Crossley is making noises about playing for Northern Ireland - is he not now handcuffed to the FAI?
The Englishmen came over in the year 2005
But little did they know that we'd planned a wee surprise
Sir David scored the winner, and Windsor Park went wild
And this is what we sang...
I see there was some debate of the eligibility 'troubles' on an Australia sports website called Roar.
A short concise accurate piece written by Kevin88 on June 4th 2011
Northern Ireland fail to grasp the reality of the football eligibility issue/
most probably written in response to this article from the day before
Irish eligibility row signals need for change/
No doubt that our Kev has been perusing some of the more informed posts here![]()
That first one was a piece I wrote for One Team in Ireland before embarking on the Big One. A user named 'Pot Hole' (comment: June 4th 2011 @ 8:11am) picked up on that in the comment section of the second one you've linked to. Not sure who 'kevin88' is myself.
Last edited by DannyInvincible; 01/02/2012 at 12:07 PM.
Ah well, it's fortunate for me that I didn't make the comment that it was too concise to be written by Danny
But I did say the content was taken from Footie threads.
Pot Hole ?? surely you mean Pot Hale?A user named 'Pot Hole' (comment: June 4th 2011 @ 8:11am) picked up on that in the comment section of the second one you've linked to. Not sure who 'kevin88' is myself.
However, I don't see that comment posted at that time, in the sections below the June 3rd or June 4th article.
Am I losing my mind?
edit. I clicked on more comments. I see Pot Hale's commenting crediting Danny the Invincible as the author of the said piece and questioning Kevin88's unattributed copy/paste of your article. Kev had the opportunity to apologise but didn't stand up. Poor form indeed, I doubt if even Sam would pull that stroke.
Last edited by geysir; 01/02/2012 at 1:05 PM.
Ha, indeed; 'Pot Hale'.
You've not lost your mind; just lost your bearings. Click on the big orange "More comments" button at the bottom of the page.
Edit: Didn't notice your edit there. Must have appeared in that fraction of a second between me pressing the "Quote" button and the reply box loading up.
Last edited by DannyInvincible; 01/02/2012 at 1:16 PM.
I can just picture it now. The three escapees arrive at the border, hell-bent on defection. The moment of truth begets a barely endurable tension as paperwork is rigorously checked by the stonefaced and intimidating, albeit latently uninformed Mr. Takemura...In recent times Manchester United’s Darron Gibson, Stoke City defender Marc Wilson and Everton youngster Shane Duffy are among several players who have switched allegiances after playing for Northern Ireland at youth level. Admittedly, Duffy did have an Irish grandparent, so he had every right to go across, but the others had no affiliation with the Republic of Ireland.
...
Poignant scenes ensue as only Shane is allowed to pass. Forced to leave his coconspirators behind, he can only stare out from the back of his grandparent's car as it pulls off in a southerly direction and sorrowfully rue their failure to prove affiliation. If only there had been another way. If only.
Such inaccuracies on all fronts. Even putting the more complex nuances to one side; Duffy qualifies through having an Irish parent (his father) and two Irish grandparents on the other side, as well as anything else. I think Wilson has a grandmother born south of the border, but I'm open to correction on that one.
The parents/grandparents thing is a sideshow. They're eligible for Ireland as a right of birth, end of.
Agreed. I was only highlighting the poor research on the part of the author.
More like an infinite loop sideshow.
...and the general ignorance of Australia's understanding of the world and Ireland in general.
Two incidences from my time there speak volumes:
- I was in Sydney YHA getting my YHA card so I could get cheap train fares. When I received my card from the assistant it had my name with (UK) written after it. I inquired what that meant in pure naivety hoping it wasn't what I thought and had another meaning in the YHA movement. She then placed her hands together in a clasping action and said "United Kingdom, Ireland and Britain together". I went "Oh, but I'm not from the UK". "??? What would rather was there then?" I said Ireland. She did not understand. Now in the process of applying for this card I had to fill out a form whereon I filled in the box that said Nationalty with the word IRISH and I handed over my IRISH passport to her which on the back page had ÉIREANNACH/IRISH under the words Náisiúntacht/Nationality/Nationalité.
- I was working in a bar in Lancelin, Western Australia (drugs capital of WA btw) and I was asked by one of the regulars when I started tehre "Where was I from?", I said "Ireland", Her Husband inquired that that was "South of England, isn't it?" I said no, It's to the west and the wife asked "Who owns Ireland?" I said "We do"
This puzzled her. She then asked again, stressing the word "OWNS". I again said, "We do. The people of Ireland. It's a republic." I lost her.
Now I know a lot of Paddys like to think that we are a lot more important to the world than we actually are but we have to understand that even in Britain there is ignorance as to how the "two" Ireland's came about. So it's not surprising that an Australian or German or whoever, don't get it.
What I find frightening is the bizarre loyalist lack of understanding of what "being Irish" actually means and how the debate to explain it to them revolves around them sticking their fingers in their ears.
DID YOU NOTICE A SIGN OUTSIDE MY HOUSE...?
Ha, I encountered a girl from outside Liverpool last year who, upon hearing that my friend (from Derry and also living in Manchester) was off on the bus to Glasgow for the weekend, thought he was going home to Ireland for a few days.
This is a girl who also salted her Pringles, I sh*t you not.
Yes, I meant Ger Doherty...I was having a senior moment.
Was it not 1999 (post GFA) when he first represented the FAI?
I can't find any reference to him having previously represented the IFA either.
I'm just wondering if his utterings about playing for Northern Ireland are futile ie. he can't even if he wanted to.
The Englishmen came over in the year 2005
But little did they know that we'd planned a wee surprise
Sir David scored the winner, and Windsor Park went wild
And this is what we sang...
For some reason, I thought it was before that, but can't find reference to anything at the minute, other than his Wikipedia article which says he played for our under-18s. I understand that would make him quite young to be playing in that category. Did he represent us at an earlier level as well? Maybe somebody could confirm?
He'd need to instigate a switch from the South before he could even be considered for Northern Ireland.
He chose to represent the South - therefore, it's hardly a joke that the IFA haven't picked him.
If he wants to play for Northern Ireland now, he should let the IFA know formally and they can check out his eligibility for future consideration.
The Englishmen came over in the year 2005
But little did they know that we'd planned a wee surprise
Sir David scored the winner, and Windsor Park went wild
And this is what we sang...
The Englishmen came over in the year 2005
But little did they know that we'd planned a wee surprise
Sir David scored the winner, and Windsor Park went wild
And this is what we sang...
He hasn't been capped for the FAI, so all he (or his manager) would have to do, is inform the IFA that he's available for selection.
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