Pedant alert - Ryan Giggs couldn't have represented any other country than Wales, given that he was born there to Welsh parents
As a youngster, Giggs captained England Schoolboys, but contrary to popular belief, he was never eligible for the full England team (eligibility at the schoolboy level depends solely upon the location of the school, in Giggs' case Moorside High School in Salford).[113] In October 2009, new rules were introduced for the Home Nations' associations that would have enabled Giggs to represent England had he not already represented Wales in an official competition,[114] but Giggs has always maintained that he would have chosen to play for Wales anyway; he stated in 2002, "I'd rather go through my career without qualifying for a major championship than play for a country where I wasn't born or which my parents didn't have anything to do with".[115]
Quote from: Chico Hamilton III on December 18, 2014, 02:58:54 PMPedant alert - Ryan Giggs couldn't have represented any other country than Wales, given that he was born there to Welsh parentsCould he have represented Sierra Leone, via his grandfather?
Quote from: brontebilly on December 18, 2014, 11:36:06 AMQuote from: OCD on December 15, 2014, 09:45:10 PMI was speaking to someone who spoke to Jack Grealish's uncle this morning. As many won't be surprised by, Keane has been trying to pressure Jack into choosing to play for Ireland and it all came to a head with Keane giving abuse to some of Jack's family. Jack doesn't want to select Ireland and then go onto have the sort of career where he would have been an England player and regularly going to tournaments. So he's hedging his bets until he gets an idea of where his career might take him. Nobody will be shocked here that Jack's uncle said what a nasty bloke Keane is either.Far from a fan of Keane but if that is the kind of nonsense going through the head of Grealish and his entourage when he has achieved the square root of f*ck all as a player then I would truly worry about "our" JackWhat's nonsense about it?He's an 18 year old to whom a country is desperate to give an international cap in order to commit him to them for life. If he's as inconsequential as you make out, why are Ireland so bothered about capping him when he's so young?I think it's fair enough that he might think he could be good enough to play for England instead and wants to keep his options open.Should he just meekly accept playing for Ireland as they were the first ones to show an interest?
Quote from: OCD on December 15, 2014, 09:45:10 PMI was speaking to someone who spoke to Jack Grealish's uncle this morning. As many won't be surprised by, Keane has been trying to pressure Jack into choosing to play for Ireland and it all came to a head with Keane giving abuse to some of Jack's family. Jack doesn't want to select Ireland and then go onto have the sort of career where he would have been an England player and regularly going to tournaments. So he's hedging his bets until he gets an idea of where his career might take him. Nobody will be shocked here that Jack's uncle said what a nasty bloke Keane is either.Far from a fan of Keane but if that is the kind of nonsense going through the head of Grealish and his entourage when he has achieved the square root of f*ck all as a player then I would truly worry about "our" Jack
I was speaking to someone who spoke to Jack Grealish's uncle this morning. As many won't be surprised by, Keane has been trying to pressure Jack into choosing to play for Ireland and it all came to a head with Keane giving abuse to some of Jack's family. Jack doesn't want to select Ireland and then go onto have the sort of career where he would have been an England player and regularly going to tournaments. So he's hedging his bets until he gets an idea of where his career might take him. Nobody will be shocked here that Jack's uncle said what a nasty bloke Keane is either.
As for Ryan Giggs having regrets, I severely doubt it. Maybe exiting tournaments at the group or quarter final stages isnt all its cracked up to be, revenue maximising opportunities notwithstanding.
Quote from: Chico Hamilton III on December 18, 2014, 02:58:54 PMPedant alert - Ryan Giggs couldn't have represented any other country than Wales, given that he was born there to Welsh parentsThat's not quite correct but him (or any other player in that situation) attempting to play for a 'home nation' would be near impossible. The issue resides in residency and nationality laws, basically none of the home nations exist as legal nationalities so we're all British but British doesn't exist in a sporting context so they are treated as countries. Where that becomes a bit messy is that laws around nationality and freedom of movement allow you to become nationalised when you move between countries (so Januzaj could've played for England if he'd chosen to, for example) but because England and Wales are just regions within a single country those rules don't apply.Take an example of how this could be made really messy a scottish couple live and work in London but want to be with their family in Glasgow for the birth of a their child before returning to London. under the agreement which means Giggs can only play for Wales that child would only be eligible to play for Scotland despite living all but the first few days of their life in England. If England selected him but Scotland then appealed that he was actually scottish the end result would put the separate FAs at huge risk of no longer being recognised. That makes it in the best interests of all involved for there to never be any arguments, so in something like the Giggs case regardless of what the press may have said England were probably never interested because they knew Wales were, if that makes sense.