Prefer this tbh...Apologies for the almighty dig, but one always feels slightly proprietorial about one's own threads and the question at hand definitely fits: are we (us poms) in danger of losing our cricketing identity with the sharp upturn in foreign-raised players being selected for our team? It's feasible we might soon see an ODI top order including Trott, Pietersen, Kieswetter & Morgan.
I don't think of myself as too much of a little Englander, but the situation makes me uncomfortable. Two questions come to mind: should we always select on merit even if it means native-raised sons of Albion form a minority in our team; & why are the neo-colonials so much better than those born-and-bred? Coaching? Pitches? Economics?
If you count Strauss as a Saffer then you have to count Andrew Symonds as English.Is Prior's parents Saffies or are they Brits who were living/working in SA and then moved to England? Our resident Sussex fan tell me more. A guy at the gym that I visit is from the Old Country (South Africa that is) and he is 100% convinced that Strauss, Trott, and Prior are all South Africans then Englishmen.
If they want to play for england they're as good as english for my money. What i dont agree with is the players playing county cricket with an EU passport or with English grandparents that have no intention of ever playing for England.
Same with the Scots.Every Irishman who has ever gotten good at cricket has played in and, in the relatively rare event he's good enough, for, England.
That won't change, hopefully. Irishmen are notably different from SAfricans.
Scotland overseas? Riiight.what about the overseas a side
Hussain
Denness
Ranjitsinhji
D'olivera
Lamb
Pietersen
WK
Freddie Brown
Defreitas
Larter(scotland)
Mullaly
struggling for openers and a keeper
It's not true ftr, hence the country's called the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.If they are from Norn Iron then I don't think it matters that much in that they are British. Not that I would say that in Belfast for fear of my personal safety.
Apologies for the almighty dig, but one always feels slightly proprietorial about one's own threads and the question at hand definitely fits: are we (us poms) in danger of losing our cricketing identity with the sharp upturn in foreign-raised players being selected for our team? It's feasible we might soon see an ODI top order including Trott, Pietersen, Kieswetter & Morgan.
I don't think of myself as too much of a little Englander, but the situation makes me uncomfortable. Two questions come to mind: should we always select on merit even if it means native-raised sons of Albion form a minority in our team; & why are the neo-colonials so much better than those born-and-bred? Coaching? Pitches? Economics?
Personally I support teams because I've grown into supporting them, for whatever reasons. I'm a Man Utd fan not because I have any real connection with Manchester (the relatively tenuous connection is that my Grandad, who died 16 years before I was born, at one point worked at the ground and thus he, and later Dad, were fans - I joined the family tradition). I'm an England fan because they're the team I've grown into supporting - nothing is ever going to change that.
It'd rather disappoint me if people would lose their allegiance to a team just because of its makeup of a certain time. I've never seen support as something which has a "point" - a r'aison d'etre - merely something that was once instinctive and has remained so.
Indeed, you could look at the England dressing-room at various points between about 1980 and 1995 and find plenty of foreign-raised (to some extent) players - Smith, Lamb, Malcolm, Lewis, Small, Radford, etc.) and I don't know that the fan-base ever suffered as a result, for instance.
I would imagine early exposure to cricket must help in players' developments. I'd hazard a guess that of the native-raised members of the England squad, those who didn't attend fee-paying schools were introduced by the club route.Might it also be the case that in South Africa (if not Ireland) they (a) have a climate more conducive to outdoor games; and (b) still play cricket in schools?
I would like to see there being some sort of limit placed on the number of overseas-born players in the England side at any one time (I always exclude Strauss and Prior from this consideration btw), if only to try to put an end to the digs we inevitably get from Aus/SA supporters, and others ... and recent remarks from Geoff Miller suggest this is playing on his mind as well. Trouble is I don't see how it can be achieved. If a South African playing county cricket becomes qualified for England, he can't be kept out of the side on a quota basis can he?
Geographically you're right, however anyone who holds a UK passport is a subject of her Brittanic Majesty, making them British subjects.It's not true ftr, hence the country's called the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Your ideas about Ireland are ignorant.I think I've pointed-out why my ideas about Ireland are neither ridiculous nor ignorant before now, so I won't do so again.