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Ire v Aus

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Ire v Aus
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  • barbarianB Offline
    barbarianB Offline
    barbarian
    wrote on last edited by
    #74

    Sorry, just done some Google research and it appears I am wrong. Quade's mum is a Kiwi, not sure where I got the idea she was an Aussie from.

    So add Quade to the residency list.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to barbarian on last edited by
    #75

    @barbarian all good, we'll donate him to you 🙂

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by
    #76

    Yeah Quade caught in the John Howard law chance. Emigrated months after the change in 2001 I think. Very hard for him to get citizenship.

    Think that eventually would have rules him out of Olympic 7s.

    rotatedR 1 Reply Last reply
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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #77

    Speaking of Quade, part of me was hoping Australia would win in the dying seconds from one of Quadey's 'extremely flat' passes.
    The outrage could have continued.

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  • rotatedR Offline
    rotatedR Offline
    rotated
    replied to Rapido on last edited by
    #78

    @Rapido said in Ire v Aus:

    Yeah Quade caught in the John Howard law chance. Emigrated months after the change in 2001 I think. Very hard for him to get citizenship.

    Think that eventually would have rules him out of Olympic 7s.

    I think it was actually pretty easy - Quade's road block was satisfying a 90 day consecutive residency period in Australia the year prior to applying. He was an NZ citizen plying his trade in the South of France. Very tricky to cry fowl that he couldn't get his citizenship processed.

    Cooper would likely have the ways/means to achieve Australian citizenship in a variety of ways if he so chooses. He may well have already.

    Billy TellB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #79

    I think his 'laptop incident ' may not help with a citizenship application in Oz.

    rotatedR 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • Billy TellB Offline
    Billy TellB Offline
    Billy Tell
    replied to rotated on last edited by
    #80

    @rotated said in Ire v Aus:

    @Rapido said in Ire v Aus:

    Yeah Quade caught in the John Howard law chance. Emigrated months after the change in 2001 I think. Very hard for him to get citizenship.

    Think that eventually would have rules him out of Olympic 7s.

    I think it was actually pretty easy - Quade's road block was satisfying a 90 day consecutive residency period in Australia the year prior to applying. He was an NZ citizen plying his trade in the South of France. Very tricky to cry fowl that he couldn't get his citizenship processed.

    Cooper would likely have the ways/means to achieve Australian citizenship in a variety of ways if he so chooses. He may well have already.

    ...cry fowl...

    Desperately trying to think of some chicken jokes.

    But instead all I can come up with is cry foul.

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  • rotatedR Offline
    rotatedR Offline
    rotated
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #81

    @Crucial said in Ire v Aus:

    I think his 'laptop incident ' may not help with a citizenship application in Oz.

    200 years ago it would have been all he needed.

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to rotated on last edited by
    #82

    @rotated said in Ire v Aus:

    @Crucial said in Ire v Aus:

    I think his 'laptop incident ' may not help with a citizenship application in Oz.

    200 years ago it would have been all he needed.

    I know. They have carried their precious denial a bit far nowadays.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to barbarian on last edited by booboo
    #83

    @barbarian said in Ire v Aus:

    @taniwharugby said in Ire v Aus:

    @barbarian while I don't care about the ins and outs, wasn't there a thing last year before the RWC about Quade not being a citizen?

    Yeah that's true, he was never an Aussie citizen. But as I understand it you can qualify through family, as Toby Smith and Mike Harris did.

    You don't need to be citizen (do you?). Just resident for 3 years.

    Edit; is it necessary for the Olympics?

    rotatedR 1 Reply Last reply
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  • rotatedR Offline
    rotatedR Offline
    rotated
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #84

    @booboo said in Ire v Aus:

    @barbarian said in Ire v Aus:

    @taniwharugby said in Ire v Aus:

    @barbarian while I don't care about the ins and outs, wasn't there a thing last year before the RWC about Quade not being a citizen?

    Yeah that's true, he was never an Aussie citizen. But as I understand it you can qualify through family, as Toby Smith and Mike Harris did.

    You don't need to be citizen (do you?). Just resident for 3 years.

    Edit; is it necessary for the Olympics?

    IOC requires it. World Rugby does not. In any event Quade wasn't a resident of Aus leading up to the Olympics he was playing (or not playing as a healthy scratch) for Toulon.

    boobooB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to rotated on last edited by
    #85

    @rotated said in Ire v Aus:

    @booboo said in Ire v Aus:

    @barbarian said in Ire v Aus:

    @taniwharugby said in Ire v Aus:

    @barbarian while I don't care about the ins and outs, wasn't there a thing last year before the RWC about Quade not being a citizen?

    Yeah that's true, he was never an Aussie citizen. But as I understand it you can qualify through family, as Toby Smith and Mike Harris did.

    You don't need to be citizen (do you?). Just resident for 3 years.

    Edit; is it necessary for the Olympics?

    IOC requires it. World Rugby does not. In any event Quade wasn't a resident of Aus leading up to the Olympics he was playing (or not playing as a healthy scratch) for Toulon.

    I have always felt "citizenship" requirement is more easily bypassed. How many Kentan runners found that gaining Bahraini (or other middle eastern country of convenience apologies is it was in fact Qatar or Oman or someghing ... ) was remarkably easy as processes were ummm altered to suit.

    Citizenship in and of itself should not be enough. Needs an additional criteria like residency or parentage IMO.

    mariner4lifeM D 2 Replies Last reply
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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #86

    @booboo meh who gives a shit? The olympics is a bloated corporate nationalistic dick-waving contest based on who can throw the most cash at the medal table. It's long ceased to be the pinnacle of pure human athletic endeavour.

    Finding a small reason why an Aussie can't represent Australia seems incredibly pointless

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • D Offline
    D Offline
    Derm McCrum
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #87

    @booboo said in Ire v Aus:

    @rotated said in Ire v Aus:

    @booboo said in Ire v Aus:

    @barbarian said in Ire v Aus:

    @taniwharugby said in Ire v Aus:

    @barbarian while I don't care about the ins and outs, wasn't there a thing last year before the RWC about Quade not being a citizen?

    Yeah that's true, he was never an Aussie citizen. But as I understand it you can qualify through family, as Toby Smith and Mike Harris did.

    You don't need to be citizen (do you?). Just resident for 3 years.

    Edit; is it necessary for the Olympics?

    IOC requires it. World Rugby does not. In any event Quade wasn't a resident of Aus leading up to the Olympics he was playing (or not playing as a healthy scratch) for Toulon.

    I have always felt "citizenship" requirement is more easily bypassed. How many Kentan runners found that gaining Bahraini (or other middle eastern country of convenience apologies is it was in fact Qatar or Oman or someghing ... ) was remarkably easy as processes were ummm altered to suit.

    Citizenship in and of itself should not be enough. Needs an additional criteria like residency or parentage IMO.

    Agreed on citizenship. Wales, England, Scotland and Northern Ireland are all British UK citizens. People born in Northern Ireland also automatically qualify for Irish citizenship. Longer residency 5-7 years for playing for Tier 1 Nations. 2-3 years for Tier 2. And re-capping after two years for Tier 2 players.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    wrote on last edited by
    #88

    Although that's probably not too far off a fair assesment, I think it's demeaning to label nations as tier 1 / tier 2 etc. It should be the same rules for all.

    D 1 Reply Last reply
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  • D Offline
    D Offline
    Derm McCrum
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #89

    @MajorRage said in Ire v Aus:

    Although that's probably not too far off a fair assesment, I think it's demeaning to label nations as tier 1 / tier 2 etc. It should be the same rules for all.

    Err, they are graded as such by World Rugby. For Development funding purposes, so that's the basis I was applying it. If you're a Fijian player, who got a couple of caps playing for Italy through residency or dual parentage, then a stand down of 2 years, and you can go play for Fiji.

    MajorRageM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to Derm McCrum on last edited by
    #90

    @Pot-Hale Yeah I know, it's just my view.

    Especially when Italy and Scotland considered tier 1, but tier 2 nations can and will often beat them. Yes, for funding etc it makes sense as without World Rugby funding, the game may not survive in some of these countries. But I struggle to see why they should have more relaxed player eligibility laws when they are already better than some tier 1 nations.

    D rotatedR 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • D Offline
    D Offline
    Derm McCrum
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #91

    @MajorRage said in Ire v Aus:

    @Pot-Hale Yeah I know, it's just my view.

    Especially when Italy and Scotland considered tier 1, but tier 2 nations can and will often beat them. Yes, for funding etc it makes sense as without World Rugby funding, the game may not survive in some of these countries. But I struggle to see why they should have more relaxed player eligibility laws when they are already better than some tier 1 nations.

    Ok fair enough

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  • rotatedR Offline
    rotatedR Offline
    rotated
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #92

    @MajorRage said in Ire v Aus:

    @Pot-Hale Yeah I know, it's just my view.

    Especially when Italy and Scotland considered tier 1, but tier 2 nations can and will often beat them. Yes, for funding etc it makes sense as without World Rugby funding, the game may not survive in some of these countries. But I struggle to see why they should have more relaxed player eligibility laws when they are already better than some tier 1 nations.

    Unless they address the professional league aspect that results in countries being net importers of talent - either by counting days as an overseas professional at a reduced rate towards qualification or abolishing it entirely there is a need for something like this.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    munstergreen
    wrote on last edited by
    #93

    Brilliant analysis as usual from Murray Kinsella at the42.ie

    Murray Kinsella  /  Nov 29, 2016

    Analysis: Attention to detail and violence help Ireland deny Pocock

    Analysis: Attention to detail and violence help Ireland deny Pocock

    We examine each of the Wallabies back row’s efforts to steal Irish possession last weekend.

    Really highlights what a demon Pocock is at the breakdown and how well Ireland executed Joe's plan to deal with him.

    1 Reply Last reply
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