Quote ="Wellsy13"Does the island of Ireland not include the Republic of Ireland? The Lions represent the ROI, and the UK. It really isn't that difficult. To say that GB&I doesn't include the ROI is just plain incorrect'"
No, it deliberately doesnt. It includes an all-ireland side. One which doesnt represent either the ROI or NI, but the Island of Ireland. There are some pretty obvious reasons why somoene from NI wouldnt want to play for a team which represented the ROI and vice versa.
Quote We don't have a GB&ROI because that would be stupid. It would exclude NI.
GB&NI would be the UK, which is a sovereign nation. Team GB are actually the Great Britain & Northern Ireland Olympic Team. Team GB is just its brand name. It's just easier to say. It has evolved from the time they have entered the Olympics being called "Great Britain & Ireland". Why they were entered as that back in the 19th century and not UK I don't know. The region has that many different names and been through that many transitions.'"
Exactly like the GB lions.
Quote When saying GB&I, we are referring to the countries in these regions. Great Britain was the brand, and still is. They didn't want to drop that part of the brand, and added the rest necessary to keep it whilst still representing the areas. GB&I represent the UK and the ROI combined. There is no denying this. This is a fact. British Isles XIII, as it says on the badge, is the islands of Great Britain and Ireland combined. It encompasses two sovereign nations. It represents these two sovereign nations. To say that it doesn't is just plain incorrect'"
Why you keep equating ‘ireland’ with the republic of Ireland, I don’t know. It clearly isn’t.
Quote "Great Britain" may be used loosely to describe the UK, but it isn't correct. GB is just England, Scotland and Wales.'"
If people understand it, it is correct. It is the beauty of the English language, it keeps evolving.
Quote Have you just made that up? 80 years ago we were just called The Lions. Before that, we were the Northern Union. Australia weren't even Australia a lot of the time. They toured as Australasia and included Kiwi players. They weren't Great Britain until the late 40s.'"
My apologies, we have been GB since the 1940’s. which is 65 years ago, not 80+, that makes a huge difference.
Quote They didn't just add the rep side of Ireland, they added the correct tag that would allow them to keep Great Britain in the name.'"
No, according to your logic, the name would GB and NI and ROI because that is where it represents. But it doesn’t, because it isn’t. It is called GB and I a team of people eligible to represent Great Britain, including those from Northern Ireland, as it was before and those eligible to represent the all Ireland team.
Quote I understood it. It was just completely pointless to use a word that can represent both to distinguish from the two!'"
Except you understood it. If you understood it, it acheived its aim perfectly.
Quote No it bloody isn't! It's an island that includes England, Wales and Scotland. Until you can understand this, you are forever digging yourself a whole. It is loosely, but incorrectly, used to mean United Kingdom.'"
No, it can be used to describe sovereign nation of Great Britain and often is, as you yourself admit.
Quote You are not. You are a citizen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.'"
Yes, I am a citizen of the UK, GB, The united Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. They can all be used to describe the same thing.
Quote British and Irish nationality laws are very complex. Being a British citizen means you hold a connection with the UK and the crown dependencies. being an Irish citizen means you hold a connection with the island of Ireland'"
Thanks for this, I, along surely with everyone else was wondering what citizenship meant.
Quote Being born in Northern Ireland means you can hold both British and Irish citizenship.
By saying being British means Britain is a country would also mean that being Irish means Ireland is a country. Both are wrong. Neither Great Britain or Ireland are countries.'"
Erm, no it doesnt.
Quote Yes you're right. GB was for ease of use, as that is what it was originally called. It's easier than saying GB&I. GB is often used, incorrectly, to mean the UK.'"
Except it wasnt GB&I originally. The I was added later, and yes, it is a good thing you have accepted that GB is often used, for ease of use, to mean the UK, those two abbreviations can mean the same thing.
Quote Brian Carney qualified for the team that represented him, Great Britain & Ireland. The fact that you think GB is a country is why you are struggling to understand the rest of this. You need to be either a British citizen or an Irish citizen. If they made a Pacific Isles team, it would be a similarly contrived multi-national rep side. It really isn't that difficult.'"
Brian Carney wasnt eligible because he isnt British. He can however represent the Island of Ireland, not the ROI because there is no ROI team, there is no ROI RL administration. There is an all-Ireland administration and all-ireland rep side. Which is what made Carney eligible.
Quote Did the GB Lions have a British Isles XIII crest for 80 years? I'm pretty certain it was added in the late 90s. Most of the shirts in the 90s didn't have "British Isles XIII" on it. And 80 years ago the team were just the Lions, not GB'"
.And.........
Quote Yes, to keep the GB brand. What you are saying is that the side added a second sovereign nation, ROI, and used the correct terminolgy to keep the name Great Britain (the brand) in the title. I can't believe you're still trying to dig yourself into this hole.'"
No, Im not. What im saying, is what I said originally. That GB & NI are a sovereign nation, and the GB Lions were the national side of that nation. However, NI is now administered as part of an all-ireland RL league and representative side. Ireland. This encompases Northern Ireland and The Republic of Ireland but for obvious political reasons isn’t either or both. It is a rep side, for the Island of Ireland, not the de factor ROI side. So what the GB&I side was referring to, deliberately, was the former national side of GB&NI ‘the GB Lions’, and the all-Ireland rep side.
Quote Rory McIlroy (Belfast born) represents Team GB (officially called the Great Britain & Northern Ireland Olympic team) is hardly a shock.
It is also hardly a shock that he would represent an All Ireland side, being Irish.
It is also hardly a shock that he would represent a GB&I side, being from Ireland.
What is your point here?
Paul McGinley (Dublin born) represents Ireland at the Olympics is also hardly hard to comprehend.
Nor is it that he represents Ireland in the Alfred Dunhill Cup.
Or GB&I in the Seve Trophy.
He is Irish. He qualifies for them all.
I don't get what you're trying to prove here, other than an Irishman represents an Irish side, and also a GB&I side. None of them are nations. They are geographical areas which he represents.'"
It is simply an analogue to this situation. Where the Ireland in GB&I doesn’t refer to the republic but to the all-ireland side they both represent.
Quote You've written a lot of b*llocks on here to try and argue something that just isn't true. Great Britain isn't a country. It hasn't been since 1801. The fact it used to be a country and is used to describe a geographical area is most likely why people still refer to the nation. But it is incorrect.
The Lions do not represent one country alone. They are a multinational side (which includes the UK and ROI).
These are facts. These aren't opinions. I'm not surprised though that you keep dragging this on though as you can never admit when you get something wrong.'"
I honestly don’t know how to explain this any simpler for you. There was and is a deliberate decision for Ireland to be administered and represented on an all Ireland basis, where it represents no sovereign nation but the Island of Ireland to avoid any political considerations, and this is what forms the ‘ireland’ in GB and Ireland, it isn’t meant as another name for the republic. GB was the national side for the UK, for ease of use it was referred to as GB. These teams were then merged. This is why we have one nation GB (which was used as an analogue of GB, as you admit) and one island, Ireland.