User talk:BrianD



FIFA organization
2009 FIFA Congress - held Dec. x, in Dublin, Celtic Alliance (in conjunction w/draw for World Cup 2010)

As of the 2009 FIFA Congress, there are xx FIFA Member Associations OAFC - Oceanic/Asian Football Confederation in Asia and Oceania Aceh Afghanistan ANZC Brunei & Sarawak Cocos Islands East Timor Fidji French Republic Hawaii India (United Interim Parliament) Indonesia Japan Pakistan Papua New Guinea Phillippines Singapore Soviet Socialist Siberia Sri Lanka Tonga Vanuatu

CAF - Confederation Africaine de Football in Africa (also covers the Middle East) Algeria Assyria Cabinda Egypt Iran Kongo Kurdistan KwaXhosa Libya Madagascar New Britain New Union of South Africa Pais del Oro People's Republic of Angola Republic of Angola Seychelles Somaliland Zaire Zululand

CONCACAF - Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football in North America and the Caribbean Aroostook Alaska Bermuda Canadian Remainder Provinces Costa Rica (portion controlled by Costa Rican forces) Cuba Deseret Dinetah Dominican Republic East Caribbean Federation Haiti Mexico MSP Netherlands Antilles Nicaragua North American Union * (may split Puerto Rico Saguenay Superior Thunder Bay Victoria Virginia Wisconsin

CONMEBOL - Confederation Sudamericana de Futbol in South America Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Ecuador Paraguay Peru United American Republic Uruguay Venezuela

UEFA - Union of European Football Associations in Europe Aland Alpine Confederation Auvergne Bourgogne-et-Franche Comte Celtic Alliance Cleveland and Northumbia Cyprus Denmark Faroe Islands Finland Friesland Galicia Greece Greenland Iceland La Republique Poitevine Lille-et-Terres Flamande Luxembourg North Germany Norway Orleans Pays-Libres des Basques Portugal Prussia Sicily Republic Sweden Transylvania

Vermont proposal
The Republic of Vermont is an American survivor nation in former New England.

As with every other state, Vermont was hit by Soviet nuclear weapons on Doomsday. Burlington, its largest city, and Montpelier, the capital, were bombed, along with Plattsburgh, New York.

The communities in the north - specifically the county capitals of Newport, and Saint Albans, along with Swanton, Highgate Center, Richford, North Troy and Morton - banded together in an informal alliance. This group made agreements with the so-called "Lawrence raiders" for medical aid and limited supplies, in exchange for being left alone.

Communities south of former Burlington and Montpelier formed a provisional state government in Windsor; representatives in fact signed the constitution of the provisional republic of Vermont in the Old Constitution House - the same site the constituion for the first Vermont Republic was signed 206 years earlier. Survivors from the bombed areas were routed to triage centers near the largest southern towns: Bennington, Brattleboro, Hartford, Rutland and Springfield. Addison, Orange, Washington and Chittenden counties were abandoned. Middlebury and Randolph were reestablished as villages in 1999, and as the radioactivity has gone down, the 'Republic of Vermont' has sent exploratory parties to examine the ruins of Montpelier, Burlington and nearby Plattsburgh. The Republic also has sent parties to salvage the granite works in Barre, hoping that it can be used as a source of revenue in the post-Doomsday world.--BrianD 01:25, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

When it comes to the Virginian and Lincolnite teams, I think they would definately have teams. Thought they would probbably not have officially been in the NFL.

Lincoln: Nebraska Cornhuskers (college fooball team "upgraded" to professional)

Virginia: West Virginia Mountaineers (same thing. more commonly known as the Virginia Mountaineers)

--Yankovic270 01:13, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

Yankovic, thanks for the idea! Sorry I didn't know enough to set up the article to where you could leave a message. Anyway, my thoughts are that such a professional league is years off, because people are just now getting out of survival mode into a more-or-less pattern of living, and coast-to-coast travel is still prohibitive..although if the powers behind the various countries got behind the idea, and you had owners who could weather the travel and salary costs, I suppose the NFL could be resurrected in a few years time.--BrianD 01:25, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

One man's dream
Iron Mountain entrepreneur Elliott Gold has a room full of memorabilia from the old National Football League.

Front and center sits a jersey and helmet allegedly worn by Green Bay Packers quarterback Bart Starr, alongside other items from the Packers and other NFL teams.

Twenty-seven years after Doomsday, the league is a memory that long lives in the minds of many older Superior citizens, one of whom is Gold. And if he gets his way, the long-dead league will soon rise again.

"Like a Phoenix," Gold said.

The league is only in his mind at this point, as many as 12 teams, in survivor nations, named after former NFL and Canadian Football League franchises. A team in Superior named the Vikings. The Green Bay Packers. Aroostook Patriots. Victoria Lions, not after the franchise in Detroit but the CFL team in British Columbia. The Thunder Bay Blue Bombers. A team in the Municipal States of the Pacific, possibly named after the San Francisco 49ers or Los Angeles Rams. Teams in the Virginian Republic, Lincoln, Deseret, Canada, even in Saguenay.

And, a team in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, home of the other known NFL or CFL franchise whose city survived the war: the Saskatchewan Roughriders.

Gold knows that his dream is far-fetched and that a few important factors have to come together: large and sustained population growth, the emergence of a middle class with expendible income, transportation across the continent as easy and cheap as before the war.

But, he says, a man can dream. And dream he does. --BrianD 18:20, October 9, 2009 (UTC)

Yankovic, this would be probably better off under the "Elliott Gold" article. Anyway, my thoughts are that such a professional league is years off, because people are just now getting out of survival mode into a more-or-less pattern of living, and coast-to-coast travel is still prohibitive..although if the powers behind the various countries got behind the idea, and you had owners who could weather the travel and salary costs, I suppose the NFL could be resurrected in a few years time.--BrianD 01:28, October 10, 2009 (UTC)