About: Club v country (deleted 19 Jun 2008 at 14:43)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

A club v country conflict is a power struggle that occurs in a sport between a country's leading clubs and the national governing body responsible for the national side. Contentious topics include the number of international matches, player availability, youth setups and so on. However, the root cause of these is usually money. Conflict particularly arises when one side gains an advantage by growing its revenue, thus gaining more money and hence more influence, and wishes to mould the game in its own interests against that of the other party. Examples have been seen in football, rugby, cricket, etc.

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rdfs:label
  • Club v country (deleted 19 Jun 2008 at 14:43)
rdfs:comment
  • A club v country conflict is a power struggle that occurs in a sport between a country's leading clubs and the national governing body responsible for the national side. Contentious topics include the number of international matches, player availability, youth setups and so on. However, the root cause of these is usually money. Conflict particularly arises when one side gains an advantage by growing its revenue, thus gaining more money and hence more influence, and wishes to mould the game in its own interests against that of the other party. Examples have been seen in football, rugby, cricket, etc.
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Day
  • 14(xsd:integer)
Month
  • June
concern
  • fails WP:OR and WP:MPOV
Time
  • 664.0
Timestamp
  • 20080614110400(xsd:double)
Year
  • 2008(xsd:integer)
abstract
  • A club v country conflict is a power struggle that occurs in a sport between a country's leading clubs and the national governing body responsible for the national side. Contentious topics include the number of international matches, player availability, youth setups and so on. However, the root cause of these is usually money. Conflict particularly arises when one side gains an advantage by growing its revenue, thus gaining more money and hence more influence, and wishes to mould the game in its own interests against that of the other party. Examples have been seen in football, rugby, cricket, etc.
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