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Monday 17 January 2011

No to Team GB

Those who know me well know that I am passionate about sport. I am delighted that Bridgend Ravens have made such a positive undefeated start to the league, and making their claim to the Principality Premiership increasingly strong.

Although a lover of rugby, as an Ambassador season ticket holder and regular away follower of Cardiff City, my main allegiance lies with the round ball. In one of the most competitively thought battles for automatic promotion, both rivals Cardiff City and Swansea City are still in the hunt for an automatic spot to the Premiership Promised Land. Unlike the Ravens, however, there are a pack of teams as far down as sixteenth in the league with similar realistic ambitions. In this battle for Premiership football, one thing that unites many Cardiff and Swansea fans is opposition against a Team GB playing in the London 2012 Olympics.

Lord Coe, Chairman of the London Organising Committee for the Olympic games, has been putting significant pressure on the four football associations, which includes the FAW, to field a unified Great Britain team for the Olympics. Like many football fans across Wales, England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, I am concerned that a Team GB would end the independence of the said football associations.

Some people have pointed out that the British Lions rugby team have not had any effect on national sides. However, I think this fails to recognise the difference between rugby and football. Notwithstanding the fact that football is a more globalised game with a number of highly competitive teams across Europe, Six Nations games between Wales, Scotland, England and Ireland play an integral part in the rugby calendar. Thus, making any suggestion of the Lions jeopardising Wales’ independence insurmountable.

In addition, FIFA President, Slepp Blatter has said he would welcome a Team GB. He has even said that the individual representation of the Home Nations on the international FA board, which entitles special voting privileges, has caused resentment and was the main reason for England’s failed bid for holding the 2018 World Cup.

I remember the delirium from a packed Millennium Stadium when Simon Davies and Craig Bellamy stunned the famous Azzurri into a 2-1 defeat. Alternatively, I remember the sheer disbelief when Paul Bodin missed a penalty against Romania to end Welsh hopes of World Cup qualification.

What ever your memories of the Welsh national side, and even though their fortunes have not surpassed expectation, the independence of the FAW is worth fighting for and I hope you will join me in condemning a Team GB football team.

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