About player playing in 2 different countries

Discussion in 'FIFA and Tournaments' started by Makandal, Aug 26, 2007.

  1. Makandal

    Makandal Member

    Apr 21, 2007
    Cambridge, MA (USA)
    Club:
    New England Revolution
    Nat'l Team:
    Haiti
    In this past Fox Football Fone-in show (8/21/07), at the very end a caller asked a question about the possibility of Beckam playing for the US team, to which of course Natalie (host of the Beackam show on FSC) & Steven answer a categoric no, and Steve was trying to explain the rules, when Nick cut in saying the name of a player who apparently had played for 2 senior international teams. Then he suddenly stop midway into what he was saying to change the subject (I hate when they do that). I didn't catch the name of the player (anyone did?) and would like to know if there are exceptions to the rule?
     
  2. lanman

    lanman BigSoccer Supporter

    Aug 30, 2002
    http://www.rsssf.com/miscellaneous/double-caps.html lists all of the players to play for more than one country, although many are as a result of the break up of many Eastern European states.

    I'm not 100% sure on the current rules, but if you have played a full international for a country then you cannot play for anyone else.
     
  3. Makandal

    Makandal Member

    Apr 21, 2007
    Cambridge, MA (USA)
    Club:
    New England Revolution
    Nat'l Team:
    Haiti
    Thanks for the link. Som interesting cases in there:

    Sergei Kormiltsev for Russia (1998) & Ukraine (2000-2003).
    Jeff Cunningham for Jamaica (1999) & USA (2001-2003)
    and apparently some players who changed their names to play for 2 different countries.

    What does the rule says and what exceptions are allowed beside political/geographical change?
     
  4. Excape Goat

    Excape Goat Member+

    Mar 18, 1999
    Club:
    Real Madrid

    Jeff Cunningham never represented Jamaica in a FIFA-sanctioned match. In short, it was a friendly match that did not count against him. I assumed the case for Sergei Kormiltsev is the same. Martin Vasquez and Chris Armasis were examples of the same situation.

    Around 2 or 3 years ago, FIFA allowed to swoitch national team for players who were capped in the Junior level. The player, however, must be have dual-citzienship at the time of his junior cap in order for him to switch. I heard of a few African-born French players who were capped by the French U-20 team switched to their native countries in the senior level.
     
  5. wufc

    wufc Member

    May 1, 2005
    UC Irvine
    Club:
    Los Angeles Galaxy
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Imagine if FIFA didn't pass their rule, maybe Tim Cahill would have finally joined Samoa to lighten their beatdowns (Cahill was previously tied to Samoa for playing like 2 U-20 games at the age of 14).
     
  6. Wezza

    Wezza Member

    Sep 17, 2006
    Nat'l Team:
    Australia
    Thankfully they did though, a player of his quality playing for Samoa? What a waste.
     
  7. Nuzzo

    Nuzzo Member

    Jul 13, 2006
    Bulgaria
    Alfredo Di Stefano played for Spain, Colombia and Argentina. Also many argentinians played for Argentina and Italy, but that was long time ago. I don't think that now a player can change his NT after playing in Senior NT matches
     
  8. ECUNCHATER

    ECUNCHATER Member

    Sep 30, 1999
    I think some of the players on the 1950 USA team that beat England in the World Cup weren't even citizens of the USA. I could be wrong though. Anyone know the answer?
     
  9. wufc

    wufc Member

    May 1, 2005
    UC Irvine
    Club:
    Los Angeles Galaxy
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    3 of the players that played in the England game weren't citizens.
     
  10. Cris 09

    Cris 09 Trololololo

    Nov 30, 2004
    Westfalenstadion
    Club:
    Borussia Dortmund
    Nat'l Team:
    Germany
    Alberto Spencer played for Ecuador, Uruguay while England approched him as well...this was in the mid 60's though.

    From Wikipedia;
    On the international front, Spencer holds the unique distinction of being the only goalscorer, capped by two different countries simultaneously: Ecuador, and Uruguay. He 'switched' shirts no less than four times. Incredibly, because of his last name (British ancestry from his father's side) and brilliant football skills, he was nearly capped by the English national team before their run into their 1966 World Cup. He played for Uruguay against England (2-1) in a friendly match at the legendary Wembley and scored, making him the first Uruguayan (actually he was not, since he refused to apply for citizenship) to score in that stadium.
     
  11. Kebbie Gazauzkas

    FC Krasnodar
    Bulgaria
    Mar 29, 2007
    Sofia, Bulgaria
    Club:
    --other--
    Nat'l Team:
    Bulgaria
    The legendary Ferenc Puskás has been capped for both his native Hungary and Spain. I think that for political reasons (Communist takeover in Hungary) he was unable to represent the Magyars during the last years of his pro career.

    Currently players are not allowed to switch senior national teams.

    My personal view - naturalization procedures in soccer (and in sport in general) should be banned. It's way too easy to acquire a foreign passport these days and this is making a mockery out of the whole purpose of national teams. There are many Brazilians, Kenyans etc. representing different national squads.
     

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