adrenalinxx posted:
There are examples of players switching betweem international clubs in Rugby League, no matter how unlikely that Hansen would decided to play for GB there is still a possibilty that he could switch therefore still retains his eligibilty to play for GB.
We could go on forever with this but now he has played for NZ he is not eligible for GB despite having a British passport in the same way Henry Paul is not despite his obvious English connections having played RU for England.
I would have thought the fact he withdrew from the England U18 side was pretty conclusive evidence he did not want to associate himself with a country at international level so he could play for another at a later date.
We will just have to agree to disagree about the eligibility issue but one thing is for certain and that is Hansen has made his choice and if you look for quotes from him about it he clearly is a Kiwi in RL representative terms.
That is his choice and that being so if the RFL decide he is no different than Barrett or Richards who would both be classed as overseas if the new rules come in then he can't complain.
Which everway you argue this there is still a problem, saying International Representation governs the eligiblity of player it would means that any Aussies who has caps for another Nation would be classed as from that Nation and therefore not a quota players.
Logan was not on our overseas quota because he had an EC passport not because he represented Scotland.
Aussies can't represent other nations on a whim. They have to have some connection to that nation as Logan does to Scotland. So Andrew Johns could not decide to play for Scotland and as a result be off-quota because (as far as I know) he has no Scottish family connections.
Richards is just the same. He is "Irish" as Logan is "Scottish" but Richards has not represented Ireland at RL and he is already off-quota because he has an EC passport.
If you says passport governs eligilbity then players with EU passports could not count on the quota.
I am saying the opposite. Hansen has a GB passport but because he has chosen NZ he is now ineligible for GB despite his GB passport.
It can't work one way and not the other saying Hansen has NZ caps therefore is a New Zealander and say that Logan with Scotish caps is an Aussie, both players are citizens of other countries.
If Hansen was like Iro he could play for a pacific island nation
and NZ. Logan could in theory play for Scotland and GB in the same way.
But Hansen isn't like Iro. He sole representation is for NZ - so he can't play for GB.
Whether the Aussies would consider Logan or Richards (if the latter did represent Ireland) for Australia I don't know but I am certain they would not consider them if they had played for GB.
I have already said that I think deciding elgibilty by the Nation which that person represents is a good idea to decide quota players because if a player is representing a developing nation then they are helping them compete against some of the bigger sides but it would work like that for all players.
If you mean we should not count players from say Tonga or Samoa as having them play here helps those countries that is a whole different debate.
Dave