The Scotsman

O’neill hits out at Republic over recruitmen­t of young Catholic players

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Northern Ireland manager Michael O’neill has claimed the Football Associatio­n of Ireland targets Catholic players to switch allegiance and play for the Republic.

Players born in Northern Ireland are eligible to represent the Republic and O’neill, who recently penned a contract extension with the Irish Football Associatio­n after turning down the Scotland job, is peeved at losing potential future senior internatio­nals to the nation south of the border.

James Mcclean, Shane Duffy, Darron Gibson, Eunan O’kane and Marc Wilson – senior internatio­nals with the Republic – all represente­d Northern Ireland at youth level before they transferre­d.

O’neill has decried the situation by criticisin­g the FAI’S approach. In an interview with the Irish Daily Mail, the Northern

0 Michael O’neill: Unhappy. Irish boss, who is Catholic himself, said: “The FAI only ever approach one type of player: Catholic.

“I don’t have a problem with James Mcclean. He was 22 years of age, he knew what he wanted. I have a problem when it’s a 16, 17 or 18-year-old having to make a decision on his internatio­nal future.

“What is the point of asking a player to change his allegiance, to make a decision about his whole internatio­nal future, and then not pick him?

“Daniel Devine of Partick Thistle is a West Belfast boy and would have gone to the Euros with us. Only he can’t play for Northern Ireland as he’s signed an internatio­nal transfer. I can list you ten players who’ve made that decision and have never represente­d the Republic.”

O’neill intends to speak with his Republic counterpar­t Martin O’neill – himself a former Northern Ireland internatio­nal – about the situation and said: “I hope Martin and I can get some sort of gentleman’s agreement whereby if a young boy has represente­d Northern Ireland at aged 17 to 21, the FAI don’t ask him to change.”

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