Courtesy of insidethegames...
Scottish FA chief claims BOA are trying to sell tickets for London 2012 with talk of Team GB
June 20 - British Olympic Association (BOA) chief executive Andy Hunt has been accused of trying to hype-up expectations that a British team containing Scottish and Welsh players will take part in the London 2012 football tournament to try to help sell nearly two million tickets that are available for the event.
The claim was made by Stewart Regan (pictured), the chief executive of the Scottish Football Association (SFA), who is furious with Hunt's comments published first on insidethegames last week that he is "incredibly positive" to a solution to the row that has been going on since London were awarded the Olympics nearly six years ago.
But Regan insists that the position of the SFA remains unchanged and that they will refuse to endorse Team GB because of fears that it will jeopardise their independence to compete in events such as the World Cup and the European Championships.
"Our position remains: we are opposed to taking part in Team GB," said Regan, who is English.
"I was surprised by Andy Hunt's comments, especially since we have had no dialogue with him.
"We signed a letter to FIFA in 2009 which gave the FA the right to represent the Home Nations as Team GB.
"We need to protect our identity and we have no interest in taking part.
"We have consulted with the Association of Tartan Army Clubs and they are opposed to participation in Team GB and we have also spoken with the squads, who have shown no appetite for it, either."
Hunt's comments coincided with London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe revealing that they still have 1.7 million tickets available for football matches that are taking place across the country, including at Hampden Park in Glasgow and the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
"I guess Andy is under a great deal of pressure from the London Olympic Games Organising Committee and the International Olympic Committee to get tickets on sale for the football events," said Regan.
"As we know, there isn't a final position on Team GB as far as football is concerned.
"We haven't spoken to Andy.
We've had dialogue with the Football Association but our position on the matter hasn't changed.
"FIFA have made it clear as far as they're concerned, they're passing the matter back to the British Olympic Authority (sic) and to England to try to get to a successful position as far as a Team GB is concerned.
"We've seen FIFA's comments and they've stated they were prepared to give assurances that there wouldn't be any future repercussions if Scotland do participate in Team GB.
"However, we're aware that any change of FIFA Executive Committee in the future can overturn that decision.
"Therefore, it's very important for us to maintain our independence.
"Scotland has a seat at the FIFA table, it has a seat at the International FA Board under the banner of Scotland.
"As far as we're concerned, that's something we feel is very important and something that we wish to protect."
But Regan admitted that if players like Scotland and Sunderland goalkeeper Craig Gordon - who has in the past expressed an interest in being involved in London 2012 - want to play for Britain in the Olympics then there is nothing they can do to stop them.
"We recognise that, legally, there is nothing we can do to stop players putting their hand up and wishing to take part or being selected to take part," said Regan.
"But it's something that we wouldn't endorse and wouldn't be prepared to put our independence at risk over."
Scottish FA chief claims BOA are trying to sell tickets for London 2012 with talk of Team GB
Monday, 20 June 2011
By Duncan MackayJune 20 - British Olympic Association (BOA) chief executive Andy Hunt has been accused of trying to hype-up expectations that a British team containing Scottish and Welsh players will take part in the London 2012 football tournament to try to help sell nearly two million tickets that are available for the event.
The claim was made by Stewart Regan (pictured), the chief executive of the Scottish Football Association (SFA), who is furious with Hunt's comments published first on insidethegames last week that he is "incredibly positive" to a solution to the row that has been going on since London were awarded the Olympics nearly six years ago.
But Regan insists that the position of the SFA remains unchanged and that they will refuse to endorse Team GB because of fears that it will jeopardise their independence to compete in events such as the World Cup and the European Championships.
"Our position remains: we are opposed to taking part in Team GB," said Regan, who is English.
"I was surprised by Andy Hunt's comments, especially since we have had no dialogue with him.
"We signed a letter to FIFA in 2009 which gave the FA the right to represent the Home Nations as Team GB.
"We need to protect our identity and we have no interest in taking part.
"We have consulted with the Association of Tartan Army Clubs and they are opposed to participation in Team GB and we have also spoken with the squads, who have shown no appetite for it, either."
Hunt's comments coincided with London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe revealing that they still have 1.7 million tickets available for football matches that are taking place across the country, including at Hampden Park in Glasgow and the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
"I guess Andy is under a great deal of pressure from the London Olympic Games Organising Committee and the International Olympic Committee to get tickets on sale for the football events," said Regan.
"As we know, there isn't a final position on Team GB as far as football is concerned.
"We haven't spoken to Andy.
We've had dialogue with the Football Association but our position on the matter hasn't changed.
"FIFA have made it clear as far as they're concerned, they're passing the matter back to the British Olympic Authority (sic) and to England to try to get to a successful position as far as a Team GB is concerned.
"We've seen FIFA's comments and they've stated they were prepared to give assurances that there wouldn't be any future repercussions if Scotland do participate in Team GB.
"However, we're aware that any change of FIFA Executive Committee in the future can overturn that decision.
"Therefore, it's very important for us to maintain our independence.
"Scotland has a seat at the FIFA table, it has a seat at the International FA Board under the banner of Scotland.
"As far as we're concerned, that's something we feel is very important and something that we wish to protect."
But Regan admitted that if players like Scotland and Sunderland goalkeeper Craig Gordon - who has in the past expressed an interest in being involved in London 2012 - want to play for Britain in the Olympics then there is nothing they can do to stop them.
"We recognise that, legally, there is nothing we can do to stop players putting their hand up and wishing to take part or being selected to take part," said Regan.
"But it's something that we wouldn't endorse and wouldn't be prepared to put our independence at risk over."
Maybe England should follow out lead and accept that fact too, itwoud stop your so-called "Golden Generation"
embarrassing themselves and England on such a regular basis. It might also, though the odds on this happening are longer - teach your media humility.
David Beckham, 2005.
“The FAW will not undertake anything that would jeopardise its position as a separate nation within Fifa and Uefa,” said Football Association of Wales (FAW) secretary general David Collins. “Wales doesn’t want to compromise its position as a separate nation within Fifa and Uefa. It wants to continue playing football internationally as Wales. And I must say that everything I’ve heard from the Welsh media and the supporters in Wales fully endorses the [FAW] council’s decision.”
“There’s nothing to stop an association saying ‘the four British associations have played together at an Olympics so they can do at a World Cup as well’. We should not take the chance of joining a British team. I’m sure Sepp Blatter means what he says but why should the associations take that chance? I have never accepted that we should take such a risk. It is more important to be in the World Cup as independent associations than in the Olympics as one. For many years there were threats to the independence [of the Home Nations] and those could surface again.”
Should an opponent lose a player to injury, good form insisted that the other side simply take a man off to even up the sides. Matches were not to be played for trophies and leagues were not tolerated.
A Victorian trend for codification saw rules of the game formalised in 1863 and the FA was formed in London to agree regulations. The FA’s founders, those who set themselves up to run the game, came from southern England, the universities and the public schools. The FA’s first meeting in the evening of 26 October 1863 at the Freemason’s Tavern on Lincoln’s Inn Fields in central London included representatives from prestigious public schools like Blackheath Proprietary, Charterhouse and Kensington.
“You see, it is not worth the while of a university or public school man to run the risk of accepting payment for his services on the football field,” said Charles Wreford-Brown, England’s captain in the mid-1890s. “Taking wages and presents, a good pro makes about £5 a week all the year round but just think what a public school or university man, or anybody of social position, would lose if he were discovered taking money secretly.”
Corinthians sat out the competition, thinking it beneath them, but the Casuals, another amateur club set up for Old Boys from Charterhouse, Eton and Westminster, soon took part. The two clubs were always close (and shortly before World War Two would merge) and an early pact saw Corinth – as Corinthians were often known – standing aside to allow Casuals a clear run at the Amateur Cup, but the Old Boys’ clubs soon lost interest in the trophy. Old Carthusians did not even bother to defend the trophy they had won in 1897.
In 1886, the FA introduced match fees for internationals of 10 shillings a game. Amateurs playing for England took nothing. In 1891, the Football League first tried to regulate wages. This was partly to pacify the avarice of club owners but also underpinned the amateur game by making professionalism unpopular in terms of earnings for any gentlemen tempted to go pro. Initially, players could earn no more than £10 a week. This was a maximum not an average, and for the next 70 years footballers would struggle to free themselves from this yoke.