A robust, empassioned defence of the Maori question from a few posters, and I agree that different opinions should be respected and debated.....but having said that, you're all wrong and totally out of step with the exigencies of int'l RL!!
First of all, anyone who brings up Italy, Lebanon, Greece etc as part of a defence of the Maori inclusion into the WC argument is barking up the wrong tree. They're countries, 'Maori' isn't a country. Has it ever been a country? (Serious question, has there ever been a state in what is todays NZ called 'Maori'? What was NZ called before it was named NZ: Aotearoa or the Maori Kingdom or someething else?).
Observer,
I'm aware of the Fifa GB polemic but if you think the FA, the Welsh FA and the FAI
wouldn't have objected to any real threat to combine them you're nuts. I know you're not nuts, and I know you don't really believe the HNs in football would have been sacrificed for a GB team. There's too much money, power and history at stake in the respective four nations.
You raise the 2000 WC and the scorn attributed to the HNs. But look at the HNs from a day-to-day perspective, not a 'big match' perspective. RL benefits much, much more from the HNs being independent bodies, with each ruling body being forced to develop its own administration which will, in the long run, benefit RL in terms of players and spectators.
By criticising Wales v Ireland on the basis of a low crowd is criticising the very notion and aspiration of a European wide int'l tournament. The ENC is a good thing for RL, a necessity even, in spite ofthe poor crowds.
You say:
In your opinion. If we're supposed to use the very subjective notion of a team's potential contribution as a criterion for RLWC entry, then we'll struggle to stage an RLWC with 4 nations.
I absolutely disagree with that! What are you saying, that only four nations can have any positives coming out of a WC??!
To answer your two questions:
1) The West Indies play test, ODI and WC cricket. What nation or country do they represent? Is it OK that a WC team represents 6 countries?
2) Northern Ireland team plays in FIFA competition, and can vy for WC entry. Does Northern Ireland represent a nation or country? Which country are they a part of?
1. The cricket authorities believe that a federation team offers their sport a serious, viable int'l competitor which would not be the case with individual island nations. The Maori do not offer RL any serious salvation - it's not as though they provide the sport at the moment with a real int'l drawcard. The Windies cricket team is a huge part of that sport's int'l programme.
2. NI is independent in football because, I presume without doing any research, the other HNs are independent and the N. Irish FA wanted to control its own patch. Again, I'm sure money and power have a lot to do with it.
Well they're countries, the Maori aren't representing a country.-screemy
you try telling that to a maori .
what a load of crap.
Ozbash, 'Maori' isn't a country, now be quiet.