[Albion] Aaron Connolly - joining Hull permanently

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Mustafa II

Well-known member
Oct 14, 2022
1,819
Hove
Agree, I meant more strange on the 20% sell on, if the contract is only 1 year

Surely that's in there in case he is a success and they pen him down to a longer contract.

Suspect if he starts the season well, they'll offer him one early on, unless the club already has an optional extension in with his contract (which is surely the case?).
 








Paulie Gualtieri

Bada Bing
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May 8, 2018
10,623
Surely that's in there in case he is a success and they pen him down to a longer contract.

Suspect if he starts the season well, they'll offer him one early on, unless the club already has an optional extension in with his contract (which is surely the case?).
Most likely I would have thought

It will actually do Connolly the world of good giving a shorter contract as will keep him focused, which no doubt was Liams plan
 


Jolly Red Giant

Well-known member
Jul 11, 2015
2,615
If these players do indeed have Irish passports, my guess is it’s for the same reason Farage’s family have EU passports which is nothing to do with caring about heritage and all to do with being able to take advantage of the astonishing benefits one gives an Englishman now.
Well - let's see - and one of my long and detailed posts

Jack Grealish - from an Irish family born in Birmingham - played gaelic football as a kid in Birmingham and spent a lot of time in Ireland growing up. In 2011 he was selected for the English U-15 squad and he rejected the invitation, joining the Irish U-15s instead. Was selected for the England U-17s three times and turned them down each time. From 2014 Grealish was on the fringes of the Irish senior squad - and he said nothing would make his Dad prouder than playing for the Irish team.

Ireland U-17s - 7 apps
Ireland U-18s - 6 apps
Ireland U-21s - 6 apps

Why did Grealish switch - agents and money - English internationals attract far bigger transfer fees, far bigger contracts and far bigger agent's fees than Irish players. Everything doubled overnight in financial terms. On top of that - his dad was a plasterer until Grealish switched to England - now he has a lucrative job with a sports agency.

Jude Bellingham - His grandparents are Irish - and is another player born in the West Midlands with Irish heritage. His Dad repeatedly talked about how proud he was of his half-Irish, mixed race son.

0_Jude-Bellingham.jpg


Was he ever going to play for Ireland - no - and no one in Ireland expected he would. Why does he have an Irish passport - to circumvent La Liga rules about foreign players.

Harry Kane - family are native Irish speakers from the Connemara Gaelteacht . He played Irish sports and music as a kid - and spent the summer months in Connemara for most of his childhood. Unusually, Kane's Irish heritage was not found by the FAI. In 2014 his agent contacted the FAI and told them that Kane was interested in switching international allegiance from England to Ireland. Then Spurs put pressure on the player not to do so - why? - potential loss of transfer fees if they ever sold him. The pressure counted - Kane stayed with England and Spurs are probably going to get close to £100m for him if they sell him in the next couple of weeks.

Harry Maguire - his grandparents are Irish and he was actually qualified to play for both the Republic and the North. Never appeared on the Irish radar - but apparently does now have an Irish passport.

Declan Rice - now here is the prime example - born in London - his grandparents were from Cork.

Ireland U-16s - 3 apps
Ireland U-17s - 6 apps
Ireland U-19s - 6 apps
Ireland U-21s - 5 apps
Ireland Senior team - 3 caps

Throughout his underage time with Ireland the English FA showed zero interest in Rice. However, in 2018 Rice was offered a new contract by West Ham - and prompted by his agent and the club - knowing the fact that declaring for England would at least double his value to the club (and his agent knowing it would double his fees and commission) the pressure came on Rice to switch to England. It is worth noting that Stuart Pearce, Rice's coach at West Ham at the time, was opposed to allowing Rice to switch to England. Roy Keane possibly had a small role in pushing Rice into the England camp - he can be a bit brash in his comments at times. This is Rice talking after playing for the Irish team against the USA -



By the way - the only one that is an issue for me is Rice - kids don't know what they want to do - but once you play at full international level that should lock in international representation. But it is clear that in the case of both Rice and Grealish - money - which is now the dominant factor in football - was the key reason for both players switching to England. Tom Cannon is now being poached - and the same arguments are being used - except Cannon is unlikely to be at the same standard as the players mentioned above. Indeed it would be a shame for Cannon to switch and end up with a handful of England caps and miss on an opportunity of potentially spending 15 years playing up front with Evan Ferguson with Ireland.

Case in point about money - last year Gavin Bazunu joined Southampton from Man City for £10m - this season James Trafford joined Burnley from Man City for £19m. The difference - Bazunu is an Irish international with 16 caps who played 32 PL games last season - Trafford is an English U-21 international who played in L1 last season. Bazunu is a way better goalkeeper than Trafford - and will be a way better goalkeeper than Trafford. But Trafford is English so more money comes into play.

The one player that switched that I do have a major problem with is Michael Keane of Everton - he has publicly stated in recent times that he only played for the Irish underage teams because he couldn't get into the English teams because the coaches thought he was too small - and that he used the Irish teams to gain experience and help him bulk up. He deprived an Irish player of a place in those squads that could have been the difference to that player of making or breaking a chance at a pro career. Keane's father is Irish - and if he was my son I would have kicked his rear end to high heaven for behaving in that fashion - not for switching - but for using the Irish set-up in the way he did (but hell - different families have different dynamics and outlooks).

There are many other English players that qualified to play for Ireland - of the current batch of English internationals - Kalvin Phillips, Conor Gallagher, James Maddison, Callum Wilson, Conor Coady all could have played for Ireland. Liam Delap's father was an Irish international. Former English internationals who qualified for Ireland - Paul Scholes, Paul Gascoigne, Jimmy Greaves, Martin Keown, Wayne Rooney. One player that should have played for Ireland and didn't despite never playing for England - Steve Bruce. His mother was born in Ireland and Jack Charlton wanted to call him into the Irish squad - Alex Ferguson warned Bruce against declaring for Ireland because at the time he would have been classed as a foreign player under UEFA rules. His son Alex Bruce later played for Ireland (and later the North because he never appeared in a competitive international for the Republic).

While Ireland has and continues to take advantage of a large diaspora - former imperial powers also take advantage of their position. England have used players in the past who have had zero connection with the country. John Barnes was born in Jamaica - his father captained the Jamaican national team - he had no connection with England and moved to London when he was 12 after his father was appointed to the Jamaican High Commission in London. Raheem Sterling is also Jamaican - born there and his mother competed for Jamaica at athletics - like Barnes, had has zero connection with England until he moved there at the age of five. Tony Dorigo was born in Australia to an Italian father and Australian mother - no connection with England until he joined Villa - he was called up to the Australian squad but Villa manager Tony Barton refused to let him travel to Australia. Marc Guehi was born in the Cote d'Ivoire - and again - no connection until he moved to England. Fikayo Tomori was born in Canada of Nigerian parents - before moving to England, and he played for Canada at underage level. Eberechi Eze is of Nigerian decent and trained with the Nigerian team. Saka is also of Nigerian decent, Marcus Rashford is of West Indian decent (Jamaican and Kittitian), Reece James is of Grenadian and Dominican decent, Ivan Toney is of Jamaican decent, Tammy Abraham is of Nigerian decent. And one that got away - Erling Haaland was born in England.

England are far from the worst of the former Empires - The French team that won the 1998 world cup had the following Vieira (born Senegal), Dessailly (Ghana), Thuram (Guadeloupe), Karembeau (New Caledonia), Trezeguet (born in France to Argentinian parents and grew up in Argentina - Spanish is his first language - he started his playing career in Argentina before being signed by Monaco). Along with that - Zidane is of Algerian Kabyle decent, Henry of Guadeloupean decent as is Diomede, Djorkaeff and Boghossian are of Armenian decent and Lizarazu identified as Basque. Only 3 of the French world cup winning squad from 2018 were not of immigrant extraction

Some famous players who played for countries they had zero connection with -

Alfredo Di Stefano - Spain - born in and played for Argentina (and Colombia)
Mauro Camoranesi - Italy - born in Argentina (qualified for Italy because his great-grandfather emigrated to Argentina 150 years ago)
Patrice Evra - France - born in Senegal
Diego Costa - Spain - born in and played for Brazil
Lukas Podolski - Germany - born in Poland (and actually wanted to play for Poland but the then coach refused to select him because he had played a few games at underage for Germany).
Miroslav Klose - Germany - born in Poland
Eusebio - Portugal - born in Mozambique
Aron Winter - Holland - born in Suriname
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink - Holland - born in Suriname
Edgar Davids - Holland - born in Suriname
Clarence Seedorf - Holland - born in Suriname
 






WhingForPresident

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Feb 23, 2009
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Well - let's see - and one of my long and detailed posts

Jack Grealish - from an Irish family born in Birmingham - played gaelic football as a kid in Birmingham and spent a lot of time in Ireland growing up. In 2011 he was selected for the English U-15 squad and he rejected the invitation, joining the Irish U-15s instead. Was selected for the England U-17s three times and turned them down each time. From 2014 Grealish was on the fringes of the Irish senior squad - and he said nothing would make his Dad prouder than playing for the Irish team.

Ireland U-17s - 7 apps
Ireland U-18s - 6 apps
Ireland U-21s - 6 apps

Why did Grealish switch - agents and money - English internationals attract far bigger transfer fees, far bigger contracts and far bigger agent's fees than Irish players. Everything doubled overnight in financial terms. On top of that - his dad was a plasterer until Grealish switched to England - now he has a lucrative job with a sports agency.

Jude Bellingham - His grandparents are Irish - and is another player born in the West Midlands with Irish heritage. His Dad repeatedly talked about how proud he was of his half-Irish, mixed race son.

0_Jude-Bellingham.jpg


Was he ever going to play for Ireland - no - and no one in Ireland expected he would. Why does he have an Irish passport - to circumvent La Liga rules about foreign players.

Harry Kane - family are native Irish speakers from the Connemara Gaelteacht . He played Irish sports and music as a kid - and spent the summer months in Connemara for most of his childhood. Unusually, Kane's Irish heritage was not found by the FAI. In 2014 his agent contacted the FAI and told them that Kane was interested in switching international allegiance from England to Ireland. Then Spurs put pressure on the player not to do so - why? - potential loss of transfer fees if they ever sold him. The pressure counted - Kane stayed with England and Spurs are probably going to get close to £100m for him if they sell him in the next couple of weeks.

Harry Maguire - his grandparents are Irish and he was actually qualified to play for both the Republic and the North. Never appeared on the Irish radar - but apparently does now have an Irish passport.

Declan Rice - now here is the prime example - born in London - his grandparents were from Cork.

Ireland U-16s - 3 apps
Ireland U-17s - 6 apps
Ireland U-19s - 6 apps
Ireland U-21s - 5 apps
Ireland Senior team - 3 caps

Throughout his underage time with Ireland the English FA showed zero interest in Rice. However, in 2018 Rice was offered a new contract by West Ham - and prompted by his agent and the club - knowing the fact that declaring for England would at least double his value to the club (and his agent knowing it would double his fees and commission) the pressure came on Rice to switch to England. It is worth noting that Stuart Pearce, Rice's coach at West Ham at the time, was opposed to allowing Rice to switch to England. Roy Keane possibly had a small role in pushing Rice into the England camp - he can be a bit brash in his comments at times. This is Rice talking after playing for the Irish team against the USA -



By the way - the only one that is an issue for me is Rice - kids don't know what they want to do - but once you play at full international level that should lock in international representation. But it is clear that in the case of both Rice and Grealish - money - which is now the dominant factor in football - was the key reason for both players switching to England. Tom Cannon is now being poached - and the same arguments are being used - except Cannon is unlikely to be at the same standard as the players mentioned above. Indeed it would be a shame for Cannon to switch and end up with a handful of England caps and miss on an opportunity of potentially spending 15 years playing up front with Evan Ferguson with Ireland.

Case in point about money - last year Gavin Bazunu joined Southampton from Man City for £10m - this season James Trafford joined Burnley from Man City for £19m. The difference - Bazunu is an Irish international with 16 caps who played 32 PL games last season - Trafford is an English U-21 international who played in L1 last season. Bazunu is a way better goalkeeper than Trafford - and will be a way better goalkeeper than Trafford. But Trafford is English so more money comes into play.

The one player that switched that I do have a major problem with is Michael Keane of Everton - he has publicly stated in recent times that he only played for the Irish underage teams because he couldn't get into the English teams because the coaches thought he was too small - and that he used the Irish teams to gain experience and help him bulk up. He deprived an Irish player of a place in those squads that could have been the difference to that player of making or breaking a chance at a pro career. Keane's father is Irish - and if he was my son I would have kicked his rear end to high heaven for behaving in that fashion - not for switching - but for using the Irish set-up in the way he did (but hell - different families have different dynamics and outlooks).

There are many other English players that qualified to play for Ireland - of the current batch of English internationals - Kalvin Phillips, Conor Gallagher, James Maddison, Callum Wilson, Conor Coady all could have played for Ireland. Liam Delap's father was an Irish international. Former English internationals who qualified for Ireland - Paul Scholes, Paul Gascoigne, Jimmy Greaves, Martin Keown, Wayne Rooney. One player that should have played for Ireland and didn't despite never playing for England - Steve Bruce. His mother was born in Ireland and Jack Charlton wanted to call him into the Irish squad - Alex Ferguson warned Bruce against declaring for Ireland because at the time he would have been classed as a foreign player under UEFA rules. His son Alex Bruce later played for Ireland (and later the North because he never appeared in a competitive international for the Republic).

While Ireland has and continues to take advantage of a large diaspora - former imperial powers also take advantage of their position. England have used players in the past who have had zero connection with the country. John Barnes was born in Jamaica - his father captained the Jamaican national team - he had no connection with England and moved to London when he was 12 after his father was appointed to the Jamaican High Commission in London. Raheem Sterling is also Jamaican - born there and his mother competed for Jamaica at athletics - like Barnes, had has zero connection with England until he moved there at the age of five. Tony Dorigo was born in Australia to an Italian father and Australian mother - no connection with England until he joined Villa - he was called up to the Australian squad but Villa manager Tony Barton refused to let him travel to Australia. Marc Guehi was born in the Cote d'Ivoire - and again - no connection until he moved to England. Fikayo Tomori was born in Canada of Nigerian parents - before moving to England, and he played for Canada at underage level. Eberechi Eze is of Nigerian decent and trained with the Nigerian team. Saka is also of Nigerian decent, Marcus Rashford is of West Indian decent (Jamaican and Kittitian), Reece James is of Grenadian and Dominican decent, Ivan Toney is of Jamaican decent, Tammy Abraham is of Nigerian decent. And one that got away - Erling Haaland was born in England.

England are far from the worst of the former Empires - The French team that won the 1998 world cup had the following Vieira (born Senegal), Dessailly (Ghana), Thuram (Guadeloupe), Karembeau (New Caledonia), Trezeguet (born in France to Argentinian parents and grew up in Argentina - Spanish is his first language - he started his playing career in Argentina before being signed by Monaco). Along with that - Zidane is of Algerian Kabyle decent, Henry of Guadeloupean decent as is Diomede, Djorkaeff and Boghossian are of Armenian decent and Lizarazu identified as Basque. Only 3 of the French world cup winning squad from 2018 were not of immigrant extraction

Some famous players who played for countries they had zero connection with -

Alfredo Di Stefano - Spain - born in and played for Argentina (and Colombia)
Mauro Camoranesi - Italy - born in Argentina (qualified for Italy because his great-grandfather emigrated to Argentina 150 years ago)
Patrice Evra - France - born in Senegal
Diego Costa - Spain - born in and played for Brazil
Lukas Podolski - Germany - born in Poland (and actually wanted to play for Poland but the then coach refused to select him because he had played a few games at underage for Germany).
Miroslav Klose - Germany - born in Poland
Eusebio - Portugal - born in Mozambique
Aron Winter - Holland - born in Suriname
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink - Holland - born in Suriname
Edgar Davids - Holland - born in Suriname
Clarence Seedorf - Holland - born in Suriname

Do you never think it might be the fact that Kane, Grealish, Rice etc may want to actually go to a major tournament rather than just money?
 


Baldseagull

Well-known member
Jan 26, 2012
11,839
Crawley




Baldseagull

Well-known member
Jan 26, 2012
11,839
Crawley
Why did Grealish switch - agents and money - English internationals attract far bigger transfer fees, far bigger contracts and far bigger agent's fees than Irish players. Everything doubled overnight in financial terms. On top of that - his dad was a plasterer until Grealish switched to England - now he has a lucrative job with a sports agency.
He may have taken a pay cut, giving up his plastering job to work at a sports agency. 😅 https://nortr3nixy.nimpr.uk/threads/does-this-quote-for-plastering-job-sound-reasonable.402607/
 


hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
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Chandlers Ford
Some famous players who played for countries they had zero connection with -


Miroslav Klose - Germany - born in Poland
Aron Winter - Holland - born in Suriname
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink - Holland - born in Suriname
Edgar Davids - Holland - born in Suriname
Clarence Seedorf - Holland - born in Suriname
some good niche knowledge in your whole post - but some real lack of geopolitical history in this part!

Klose is Silesian. The town and region where he was from was German until just two years before Klose’s father was born.quite a stretch to suggest he / his family have ‘no connection’ with Germany.

Suriname was still part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands until the mid 70s. Those players were all literally born in the Netherlands.
 


Jolly Red Giant

Well-known member
Jul 11, 2015
2,615
Do you never think it might be the fact that Kane, Grealish, Rice etc may want to actually go to a major tournament rather than just money?
If you put Grealish and Rice into the current Irish team then they would be going to every major tournament with Ireland (and competing). Midfield is the one weak part of the current Irish team.

Bazunu
Coleman
Egan
Collins
Omobamidele
O'Shea
Cullen
Rice
Grealish
Ferguson
Cannon

That is a very good first 11

And then
Kelleher
Ebosede
Manning
Doherty
Molumby
Smallbone
Johnson
Idah
Parrott

Fill out a decent squad

Furthermore, take Grealish, Rice and Kane out of the current English team - I think it would diminish that team quite a bit.

I don't have a problem with kids switching international allegiance - happens all the time and, as I said above, most teenagers haven't a clue what they want to do. I do have a problem with country associations actively trying to poach players that have played for other countries. If they qualify then pick them in the squad and let them decide without any outside pressure. It is even worse when clubs and agents pressure players to switch country allegiance just to make more money out of them.

To the best of my knowledge the FAI have never gone out an poached any player that had represented another country at underage level and were still actively involved with that country's set-up. I always felt sorry for Steve Froggatt who played for Villa, Wolves and Coventry. Froggatt was eligible for Ireland and when the English FA heard that the FAI had approached Froggatt they got English manager, Graham Taylor (who had signed him at Villa), to persuade him to play for England. Froggatt got 2 U-21 caps and never played for England again. He would have won a couple of dozen caps for Ireland and probable gone to the WC in 1994.

The famous Jack Charlton squads had the following born in England and Scotland - Chris Morris, Mick McCarthy, Paul McGrath, Ray Houghton, John Aldridge, Tony Cascarino, David O'Leary, Andy Townsend, Mark Lawrenson, Chris Hughton, Bernie Slaven, John Sheridan, David Kelly, John Byrne, Alan McLoughlin, Terry Phelan, Phil Babb, Tommy Coyne, Eddie McGoldrick, Jason McAteer, Alan Kelly Jr and Gerry Payton. To the best of my knowledge none of them played a single underage game for England (or Scotland) before declaring for Ireland. Tony Galvin played a couple of games at English schoolboys level - but was 26 before he made his debut for Ireland. Kevin Sheedy spoke about how he was born in Wales (went to school in Hereford) and got a phone call asking if he wanted to play for the Irish U-18s - he had never thought about international football. He phone the Welsh FA and told them Ireland wanted him to play and did they plan on picking him - they basically told him to f-off and that they weren't in the business of telling players before the squads were announced. Sheedy phoned the FAI back and said he'd love to play for Ireland.

Mark Lawrenson's mother was from Waterford and when he was at Preston Alan Kelly Snr was the assistant manager and asked him did he want to play for Ireland - and Lawrenson was delighted because he never thought he would have a chance at playing international football.

The great, and sadly missed, Michael Robinson, told about his decision to declare for Ireland. He was playing for Brighton and fighting relegation and the British media were tipping him to be in the next England squad ahead of Paul Mariner and Peter Withe. When Ron Greenwood announced the squad Robinson was on stand-by for the England B team. Alan Mullery told Robinson that he hadn't been picked and then told him that Eoin Hand, the Irish manager, had also phoned to talk to him. Mullery was apparently furious because he wanted Robinson to play for England, but credit to him, he told Robinson about the call. Robinson spoke to Hand and then went and spoke to his parents and they told him to talk to the coach who Robinson had always said gave him his football career because he always had faith in him - Alan Kelly Snr, Robinson's coach when he was playing for the Preston reserves. Alan Kelly told him 'give 100% in every game you play for Ireland and no matter where you go in the world for the rest of your life every Irish person you meet will treat you as a hero'. Michael Robinson gave 100% in each and every one of the 24 games he played for Ireland and was always an Irish hero where ever he went (ironically Alan Mullery could also have played for Ireland).

Some managers treated potential Irish players like sh*te - Kevin Gallen wanted to play for Ireland (his two brothers played for Irish underage teams) but Gerry Francis, then QPR manager, told him he'd never play for QPR again if he did. Kevin Gallen never played a full international for England. One player I would have loved to see playing for Ireland during the late 60s, 1970s and into the 80s - Joe Corrigan. People in the Republic were always jealous that the North had Pat Jennings.

International football is important - because money is ruining football (and has been doing so since Sky got their claws into English football in 1992). Before long nearly every top team in the world will be owned by the Saudis or an American hedge fund. International football is the one place that should be immune from the money making machine - but it clearly is not - and it is because clubs view players as financial assets and can and will force players to switch international allegiance for financial reasons - and it is going to happen more and more. I guarantee you that if Evan Ferguson didn't have his dad in his corner, his agent would be breaking him in two to switch to play for England. Fortunately, Evan has too mature a head on his shoulders and too solid a support base to lean on.

Bad and all as the Irish team have been in recent years (thank you Stephen Kenny) - I will watch any international match - between any two countries - before I watch a PL game (and yes I do watch PL games). Despite everything - international teams are not a money making racket that will lead to them being bought and sold.
 




Jolly Red Giant

Well-known member
Jul 11, 2015
2,615
some good niche knowledge in your whole post - but some real lack of geopolitical history in this part!

Klose is Silesian. The town and region where he was from was German until just two years before Klose’s father was born.quite a stretch to suggest he / his family have ‘no connection’ with Germany.

Suriname was still part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands until the mid 70s. Those players were all literally born in the Netherlands.
I'll argue with you about Klose - he is from Upper Silesia, historically part of Poland. Yes Klose's father was part of the Aussiedler who remained in Silesia after WW2 - but his mother was Polish and was a Polish handball international. His father left Poland in 1978 to play football in France, leaving his family behind and Klose didn't move to Germany until 1986. At home Klose and his family speak Polish as their first language and he has dual nationality, not getting a German passport until ten years after he moved to the country.

However, Suriname was part of the the Dutch Empire because the Dutch conquered it (it is not like it was organically part of the Netherlands - any more than Senegal or Cote d'Ivoire are part of France or Mozambique was part of Portugal) - and the Dutch continue to rob their best footballers. That one really is quite spurious.
 


hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
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However, Suriname was part of the the Dutch Empire because the Dutch conquered it (it is not like it was organically part of the Netherlands - any more than Senegal or Cote d'Ivoire are part of France or Mozambique was part of Portugal) - and the Dutch continue to rob their best footballers. That one really is quite spurious.
I’m not going to debate the wrongs of imperialism with you.

irrespective of the background to it, Suriname until the mid 70s was not simply part of the Dutch Empire - it was literally a constituent part of The Kingdom of the Netherlands.

The players that you claimed had ‘no connection to the country they played for’ were literally born within it, and were citizens of it :shrug:
 


1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
some good niche knowledge in your whole post - but some real lack of geopolitical history in this part!

Klose is Silesian. The town and region where he was from was German until just two years before Klose’s father was born.quite a stretch to suggest he / his family have ‘no connection’ with Germany.

Suriname was still part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands until the mid 70s. Those players were all literally born in the Netherlands.
Also, France still has its Caribbean colonies as 'dependencies' and they are regarded as French foreign departments. People from Guadeloupe for example have full French citizenship rights.
 




Jolly Red Giant

Well-known member
Jul 11, 2015
2,615
I’m not going to debate the wrongs of imperialism with you.

irrespective of the background to it, Suriname until the mid 70s was not simply part of the Dutch Empire - it was literally a constituent part of The Kingdom of the Netherlands.

The players that you claimed had ‘no connection to the country they played for’ were literally born within it, and were citizens of it :shrug:
And you are suggesting that I have a lack a knowledge of geopolitical history (for clarification - I hold a PhD in history).

Suriname was a colony of the Netherlands, conquered and subjugated - it's native people and the African slaves forced to work and die on plantations in a political entity they wanted no hand, act or part of. And when the Dutch p*ssed off they left Suriname mired in ethnic conflict and ultimately under a brutal dictatorship.

Ireland was in the same situation - Up until 1922 it was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland - yet the island of Ireland was conquered, subjugated and its population oppressed to serve the interests of British imperialism - and in 1922 Britain left Ireland with the same sectarian divisions and reactionary, sectarian bonapartist regimes on both sides of the border in as the Dutch did in Suriname in 1975 (and we won't go into the mess Mountbatten forced on the peoples of the Indian sub-continent in the 1940s). I can claim a British passport - why - because my father, who never set foot in Britain, was born in Ireland in 1914, before Irish independence. Does this make me British - does it like f*ck - and would I claim a British passport - would I like f*ck (and neither would my wife whose mother was English through and through with zero Irish ancestry and lived there for the first 30 years of her life).

Ask the people of Suriname, both indigenous and descendants of slaves, if they were part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands - or if they were a subjugated people. The Surinamese players who ended up playing for Holland did so to escape dire poverty - and in the process faced all the racism that colonised people face in every imperialist country.

Just because you can claim a passport doesn't mean you have a single connection to the country - practically every sheikh in the middle east holds an Irish passport because the Irish government sell passports to rich people - the British government sold British passports to more than 200 Russian oligarchs since the Tories came to power eight years ago.

Geopolitics is where this entire discussion originated from - the reason why there are 6 million people in the UK with at least one Irish born grandparent - and there are a half a million members of the Windrush generation, nearly 2m people of Indian ethnicity, and 1.5m with Pakistani ethnicity etc. is because of geo-politics, imperialism, colonialism. Britain's wealth and power was built on the backs of colonised people all over the world and as a result of poverty and deprivation these colonised people were forced to move to the UK to find work to put a roof over their heads and food on the table.

And - finally - as regards France - France has, and always has had, a policy of 'assimilating' their colonised peoples - abandon your own culture, language, history, etc. and become French and you will receive all the rights of a French citizen. Forcing subjugated peoples to become French whether they wanted it or not. What has been the end result - have these assimilated peoples been treated the same as white French born people? - have they ever faced racism in France? - ask the family of Nahel M, the victim of a racist murder by French police a couple of weeks ago.

Imperial powers have always robbed the best of the colonies - do you know how many times the British media have claimed famous Irish people (including sports people) as their own? I could produce a very, very long list. One of the best was the actor Richard Harris - born in Limerick and lived for years less than 300 yards away from the home where I was born and raised. When I was a teenager he used to come to watch us playing racquetball against the seawall on the beach in our town - he won every tournament in the town when he was growing up. He spent more time in his home there than anywhere else during his life and kept the same house his entire life. Yet the British media almost always portrayed Harris as a British actor - Harris himself used to talk about how he'd see a headline one day 'British Actor Harris Wins an Oscar' - and then a week later the same newspaper had 'Irish Actor Arrested After Drunken Brawl'. The London Film Circle at one stage nominated the following for 'Best British Actor/Actress' - Saoirse Ronan (most British people can't even pronounce her name), Colin Farrell (with his thick Dublin accent) and Michael Fassbender (who hails from Kerry). Cillian Murphy repeatedly has had to tell British reporters that he is Irish after appearing in Peaky Blinders. And the British media have even claimed this guy as British - despite his gaelic name, thick Dublin accent and red hair -

Domhnall_Gleeson_by_Gage_Skidmore.jpg
 


hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
62,759
Chandlers Ford
And you are suggesting that I have a lack a knowledge of geopolitical history (for clarification - I hold a PhD in history).

Suriname was a colony of the Netherlands, conquered and subjugated - it's native people and the African slaves forced to work and die on plantations in a political entity they wanted no hand, act or part of. And when the Dutch p*ssed off they left Suriname mired in ethnic conflict and ultimately under a brutal dictatorship.

Ireland was in the same situation - Up until 1922 it was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland - yet the island of Ireland was conquered, subjugated and its population oppressed to serve the interests of British imperialism - and in 1922 Britain left Ireland with the same sectarian divisions and reactionary, sectarian bonapartist regimes on both sides of the border in as the Dutch did in Suriname in 1975 (and we won't go into the mess Mountbatten forced on the peoples of the Indian sub-continent in the 1940s). I can claim a British passport - why - because my father, who never set foot in Britain, was born in Ireland in 1914, before Irish independence. Does this make me British - does it like f*ck - and would I claim a British passport - would I like f*ck (and neither would my wife whose mother was English through and through with zero Irish ancestry and lived there for the first 30 years of her life).

Ask the people of Suriname, both indigenous and descendants of slaves, if they were part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands - or if they were a subjugated people. The Surinamese players who ended up playing for Holland did so to escape dire poverty - and in the process faced all the racism that colonised people face in every imperialist country.

Just because you can claim a passport doesn't mean you have a single connection to the country - practically every sheikh in the middle east holds an Irish passport because the Irish government sell passports to rich people - the British government sold British passports to more than 200 Russian oligarchs since the Tories came to power eight years ago.

Geopolitics is where this entire discussion originated from - the reason why there are 6 million people in the UK with at least one Irish born grandparent - and there are a half a million members of the Windrush generation, nearly 2m people of Indian ethnicity, and 1.5m with Pakistani ethnicity etc. is because of geo-politics, imperialism, colonialism. Britain's wealth and power was built on the backs of colonised people all over the world and as a result of poverty and deprivation these colonised people were forced to move to the UK to find work to put a roof over their heads and food on the table.

And - finally - as regards France - France has, and always has had, a policy of 'assimilating' their colonised peoples - abandon your own culture, language, history, etc. and become French and you will receive all the rights of a French citizen. Forcing subjugated peoples to become French whether they wanted it or not. What has been the end result - have these assimilated peoples been treated the same as white French born people? - have they ever faced racism in France? - ask the family of Nahel M, the victim of a racist murder by French police a couple of weeks ago.

Imperial powers have always robbed the best of the colonies - do you know how many times the British media have claimed famous Irish people (including sports people) as their own? I could produce a very, very long list. One of the best was the actor Richard Harris - born in Limerick and lived for years less than 300 yards away from the home where I was born and raised. When I was a teenager he used to come to watch us playing racquetball against the seawall on the beach in our town - he won every tournament in the town when he was growing up. He spent more time in his home there than anywhere else during his life and kept the same house his entire life. Yet the British media almost always portrayed Harris as a British actor - Harris himself used to talk about how he'd see a headline one day 'British Actor Harris Wins an Oscar' - and then a week later the same newspaper had 'Irish Actor Arrested After Drunken Brawl'. The London Film Circle at one stage nominated the following for 'Best British Actor/Actress' - Saoirse Ronan (most British people can't even pronounce her name), Colin Farrell (with his thick Dublin accent) and Michael Fassbender (who hails from Kerry). Cillian Murphy repeatedly has had to tell British reporters that he is Irish after appearing in Peaky Blinders. And the British media have even claimed this guy as British - despite his gaelic name, thick Dublin accent and red hair -
Like I warned you before you wasted a chunk of your life typing all that - Im not interested in discussing imperialism with you - everyone knows all of that, and nobody is arguing otherwise.

Not sure of the relevance to your claim that 4 players born within the Kingdom of the Netherlands had ‘no connection’ to the country.

It would have been far quicker and less embarrassing to just accept you were wrong.:shrug:
 
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Sue1983

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2018
602
I think he is a young man who lost his way. Hopefully now he is back on track. I really hope he does well at Hull.
 




Neville's Breakfast

Well-known member
May 1, 2016
13,450
Oxton, Birkenhead
Wow - what a fantastic way to derail an interesting chat Jolly Red Giant. Thanks for your earlier posts but maybe it would be easier to engage with people without the massive chip on your shoulder!
You don’t enjoy lectures on Dutch colonial history and pictures of Irish people ?
 




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