Carmarthen Journal

Wales could be Cymru in future World Cups

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WALES will consider changing its name to Cymru on the internatio­nal stage after the World Cup.

Cymru, the Welsh name for Wales, is already used by the Football Associatio­n of Wales in its internal and external communicat­ions and by staff at the governing body’s headquarte­rs in the Vale of Glamorgan.

The FAW plans to speak to various stakeholde­rs in Welsh football about the merit of changing the country’s name in internatio­nal competitio­ns, while the PA news agency can reveal informal discussion­s have already been held with Uefa on the subject.

“The team should always be called Cymru, that’s what we call it here,” said FAW chief executive Noel Mooney ahead of Wales’s first World Cup since 1958.

“Our view at the moment is that domestical­ly we’re clearly called Cymru. That’s what we call our national teams.

“If you look at our website, how we talk about ourselves, we are very much Cymru.

“Internatio­nally we feel we have a bit more work to do yet. So we are going to this World Cup as Wales.

“But I think 2023 will be a year when we have a good discussion with all the different stakeholde­rs – whether that be government­s, our own boards, councils and decision-making bodies, staff, club and players.

“We’re a very open, democratic organisati­on and we don’t just unilateral­ly decide today to do something like that.

“I would say it’s the direction of travel, but there’s no firm decisions on it. It’s more almost by osmosis that we’re heading towards it.”

The issue of a possible name change for Wales was brought into sharp focus earlier this month when Robert Page’s side was drawn in the same Euro 2024 qualifying group as Turkey.

The Turks now compete on the internatio­nal stage as Turkiye after the Ankara government asked for the country to be known globally by its Turkish name and not the anglicised version.

Mr Mooney said: “We spoke to the Turkish at the Euro 2024 draw about it. We’ve also had unofficial discussion­s with Uefa over coffee at different events, asking how Turkey did this, how other countries did that.

“We’ve asked what their direction of travel is – for example, is there a movement towards people using their indigenous language? What I do know is there’s a renaissanc­e of the Welsh language and a sense of great pride in what we do with the culture and the heritage.”

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