Eh, since he was born.
DID YOU NOTICE A SIGN OUTSIDE MY HOUSE...?
Whether he was called a fenian xxxx or a rebel xxxx, is splitting hairs.
The operative word is xxxx.
all that twitters is not gold
Maybe it's just small minority as usual giving the rest a bad name, but I really don't see the sense or logic in professional footballers using twitter accounts; it just seems like more trouble than its worth and invariably opens themselves up for the kind of abuse McClean found himself suffering. Why give the extreme fans what amounts to a personal hotline to the player himself? Seems like madness to me, just asking for trouble ...
pretty much agree with that. i think my last post sums it up pretty succinctly!!
It always has been. Any nationalist if they wished to play for us in years gone by could have chosen to do so. I'm not sure the Gentleman's Agreement would have made any difference. The main thing that's changed over the years is that more young players are now aware of the option to play for the Republic and we are currently a more attractive proposition than we perhaps were in previous decades.
It's not a question of interests; it's the fact they're in a career that inevitably attracts negative (and positive of course) feedback from their ... well, customers. The public anyway. I'd point to teachers as a useful comparison here: nearly every teacher with any common sense & a social networking account blocks off their account because otherwise it just attracts problems. Footballers should do the same; it might mean a few less tabloid stories but hey-ho. Now, I know next to nothing of Twitter so perhaps it's unavoidable.
I don't think the criticism affects them as much as you think. All the articles about the criticism he's been getting are probably making it seem like a bigger deal than it is. He's laughed most of off and shamed a couple of people publicly.
To be fair, NB advocates an approach for the IFA that is mature, progressive and reasonable. He doesn't seek to impinge upon the rights of the FAI or Irish nationals in the slightest. He has come to terms with the reality of those rights, if ever he had difficulty with them in the first place. He merely wishes for the IFA to gauge players' ultimate ambitions before any potential selection for NI. That doesn't bother me in the slightest because whatever selection policy the IFA might wish to employ is none of my business.
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...
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