Last edited by Not Brazil; 24/05/2012 at 8:21 AM.
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...
There were 2 compromises offered by FIFA way back in 2007. The first compromise contained restrictions similar to article 18, the FAI rejected that.
The 2nd compromise was the 2 way open eligibility with the requirement that the 2 associations work out the details. The FAI accepted that compromise offer by FIFA but there is no indication what criteria for eligibility the FAI would accept. Based on their blank rejection of the first compromise, the FAI most probably would not have agreed to the eligibility restrictions contained in article 16 or article 18, being contained in the 2nd compromise.
We can only speculate what eligibility criteria the FAI would have accepted for the 2nd compromise but I suspect nothing less than a fundamental born on the island of Ireland eligibility and it follows that there most probably would have to be a new eligibility statute.
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 have no defined opinion on what the proposal is. There is a degree of discrimination in it but I have not claimed that that discrimination is unjust or prejudicial.
My first point made a few days ago in relation to this proposal was that the IFA would be very likely to balls it up for the reasons I have repeated.
But ....
Why would this be acceptable? Is this not a case of players being dishonest with themselves and not true to their beliefs? If they are willingness to play for the Northern Ireland FA after to failing to make the grade with the association that is true to their beliefs, is this not simply a case of career enhancing in the same manner as a player that agrees to your proposal but decides to switch at a later date?
And he still hasn't mastered 'Multi-quote'...
Not to mention inventing a storm in a teacup.
As I wrote I have no defined opinion on this proposal.
Some time ago I wrote on how such a proposal could be perceived if it were put into practice.
'This pledging your allegiance to NI plan at the age of 18 could well be regarded as ethnic cleansing, cleaning out the players who are not yet decided as to where their first choice lies. A meritocracy being trumped by an exhibition of servility.'
A speculation about a possible perception based on a conditional is not a defined opinion. However, judging by your tendency to personalise your replies in a self righteous haughty manner, I suspect the chances of that happening with the IFA are high.
Ha ha, classic last sentence there geysir.
For all your other 'faults'. As defined by our mutual friend.
It coould only be construed as "ethnic cleansing" by idiotic people.
Having a preference to select and develop players, at aged 18 and upwards, who have expressed a clear ambition to represent the Association at Senior International level is not, by any rational stretch of even the most vivid of imaginations, "ethnic cleansing".
Seriously, have you problems with reading?
Of course it's acceptable - the player will have chased his boyhood dream with the south, before commiting to the Irish Football Association.
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...
Ah, the dreams thing. Though the atlas is still desperately needed.
It has been a while I suppose.
Seriously ....
But by switching to Ireland, the player makes his honourable choice by seeking to represent the association true to his beliefs. By subsequently returning to the Northern Ireland FA fold after failing to make the grade, is the player not "dishonest" to himself? Should the player not continue to endeavour for the rest of his playing career to make the Ireland team, rather than falling back on the Northern Ireland FA who are not true to his beliefs?
Whilst not breaching any of the specific eligibility statutes, what you say is probably true. However, as you highlight, actually proving discrimination would be nigh impossible, especially if the association's strategy was informal and confidential. Then, would NB's proposal actually be discriminatory? Certainly, to use the word in its most neutral sense, selecting players and not selecting others is, by definition, discriminatory. But associations are entitled to select who they wish, or to engage in that form of discrimination, if you will. How does one prove they're engaging in the malign or proscribed form of discrimination where the players' (non-)selections are based on something beyond just the abilities of the players concerned? Could NB's proposal be interpreted as engaging in this malign form of discrimination?
There are many people in Derry who perceive an anti-Derry bias within the IFA. That's a bit unfair on the IFA, however; what they're also failing to highlight are the other anti-Derry biases within the FAI, UEFA, FIFA, the Stormont government, the UK government and the EU.Are there not claims that the IFA ignored the merits of some Derry kids?![]()
Here's an idea: The football association of the north east of Ireland could accept the situation, shut up and get on with things. Is it possible that the IFA would face a significant political and social backlash as a result of the pursuit of what NB has described? You'd have to think so.
End Apartheid Now! One Team in Ireland!
Neither in theory nor in practice. They are allocated independently of one another by two separate, distinct and sovereign bodies of nationality law. One is not dependent on the other and one need not necessarily be held simultaneously with the other. A NI-born dual British and Irish citizen can renounce his British citizenship but that has no bearing on his Irish citizenship, for example.
In what sense do you mean? Every nationality is treated as distinct by FIFA in that respective nationalities confer eligibility for the various member associations.Why should Republic of Ireland Nationals be treated any differently to anyone else?
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