Quote ="ap1717"I dont like the idea that the fact could happen... Idris plays for Nigeria then bang he's playing for Australia, the same could happen for Greece with Anasta & maybe Kouparitsas etc etc.
We're meant to helping the International Game by getting rid of nation hopping, this idea quashes it somewhat. Sorry mate i dont mean to trample all over your idea.'"
No worries at all.
At the moment we have an international game that is virtualy ignored by the Aussie (well, my experience is Sydney) public despite the soccer-like levels of coverage (front and back of the newspapers, almost eight straight hours on the major terrestial channel each Sunday etc). SoO is routinely referred to as 'the pinnacle of our game' and despite NZ's win last November, the Roos are assumed to be head and shoulders better than them and anyone else, rendering any contest as pointless.
What got people interested last year was the contest between Samoa and Tonga, two sides with large communities in Sydney who identify with those nations despite being largely made up of people who would qualify for the Roos and in all likelihood would opt to play for them over Samoa/Tonga if the choice was ever to arise.
'Nation-hopping' seems undesirable but at the moment the lure of playing for the Roos sucks in all the best players. Civoniceva could have done fine wok for Fiji but he wants to play SoO and tests at the highest level so he's never represented them. An International Origin would allow him the opportunity to do so by taking Australia out of the picture.
The result would hopefully be a tournament made up of teams that people (in Sydney, Brisbane, maybe Melbourne, maybe the North of England and maybe London and some of the bigger cities around the rest of the country) would care about. This would be a suppliment to the World Cup and traditional Aus-NZ-Eng tests, which would continue in the other four out of five years of the cycle. Some sides would be better than others but it would be hard to pick a clear favourite. RL would be maintaining its history of innovation by looking at international RL and making it look like the people who take part and watch. Civoniceva is Fijian and Australian. If we had a tournament like this built into the international calendar, he'd be able to represent each.