The country vs. country argument. Football's Team GB and the Olympic games.

Another football post which touches upon politics.  The head of the British Olympic Association, Lord Moynihan, is determined to raise the spectre of legal action, in an attempt to pressurise the Irish, Scottish and Welsh FA’s into accepting a genuine UK team for the London 2012 games.

During December O’Neill highlighted his shenanigans.  At that point he envisaged players from Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales, suing the BOA for non-selection.  He’s refined his legal analysis over the past month.  The players should now sue their home associations in order to establish eligibility for a UK side.

Back in 2008 FIFA declared itself happy to endorse a single team for the Olympics, without prejudice to the four existing home nations which currently compete in international football tournaments.

However, the four associations made an agreement between themselves that only English players will participate.  The authorities in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales are still anxious that their independent status could be compromised.

That is the football establishment happy.  Moynihan and the BOA, though, remain dissatisfied with a solution that will see Britain represented by an England U23 XI, supplemented by some over-age players.

I can see both arguments.  As a British citizen, I instinctively like the idea of a properly representative team, picked on merit, for whichever sport.  Fans outside England will not, in general, feel a strong affinity toward an XI selected solely from England.  As a football fan, though, I support the associations’ efforts to protect, at all costs, the separate traditions of their four international teams.

The Olympics are very much a side-show for football and elements within FIFA have campaigned for many years to force the four Home Nations to compete as one.  The FA, SFA, IFA and FAW can’t afford to take any risks with their status.

However you weigh the argument, Moynihan’s spurious legal interventions are entirely unhelpful.  Representative football is by its very nature discriminating.  Players don’t have a right to play for an international team - selection is an hour handed out entirely at the discretion of a governing association.    

O’Neill fairly comprehensively exploded the argument that players could sue Team GB for non-selection.  For any proceedings to arise the BOA would have to select players expressly against the wishes of the three abstaining football associations.  Even in that eventuality, it’s difficult to envisage an effective remedy against an association that decided to stop picking any player who accepted the Olympic call.

The most imaginative solution remains David Cameron's idea that Northern Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales should compete against each other for the honour of representing Britain at London 2012.

Comments

Your having a laugh. Imagine when Scotland win as they will, what the next step would be. "Ok Ok stop stop stop we cannot allow this," and it would end up in court.


England and Scotland have played each other 110 times.

England wins: 45

Scotland wins: 41

Draws: 24



So you see, per capita Scotland is the superior footballing nation. Which is why the Scotland England internationals were cancelled as England were sick at getting gubbed all the time by us Jocks.

Who can forget Scotland at Wembley in 1967, when we gubbed the newly crowned World Cup winners, as Baxter sat on the ball in the centre circle inviting England to take it of him, there was poo all over the pitch.



http://tiny.cc/yjtgx


ENGLAND'S legendary World Cup winning hat-trick hero Sir Geoff Hurst sensationally admitted that the Russian linesman got it wrong by allowing his controversial goal in the 1966 Final to stand.


Sir Geoff the honorary Scotsman, could not live a lie. England much trumpeted 1966 win was a lie, and the result should never have stood. They never repeated it did they? Certainly not in South Africa where they slunk home with their tails between their legs...again. Despite the English commentators managing to mention the 1966 result at the start, at half time, and the final whistle of every match. Get over your selves.

There I feel so much better.
O'Neill said…
The conspiracy theorist would point to the revival of the Home Championships dangled in front of the Scottish, Welsh and IFAs last month.

Timing coincidental?

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