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Oriundo
The term oriundo (; plural ''oriundi'') is an Italian and Spanish noun describing an immigrant of native ancestry. It comes from the Latin verb ''oriri'' (''orior''), "be born", and is related to ''Orient''.〔Pianigiani, Ottorino. (''Dizionario etimologico'' )〕 == Overview ==
Some ''oriundi'' have played for the Italian or Spanish national football teams in international competition; among these are some who had previously represented their native country. FIFA requires international footballers to have either citizenship of a country or close ancestral ties to it. ''Oriundi'' may qualify under the latter heading; in addition, they can acquire citizenship more easily than immigrants not of native extraction, owing to jus sanguinis. When the Italian and Spanish leagues imposed quotas or bans on "foreign" players, ''oriundi'' were partially or totally exempt from these. Tours by European club sides of Latin America were common from the 1920s to the 1950s; tours in the reverse direction also occurred. European managers often recruited Latin Americans they had seen playing on these tours. The recruitment of dual internationals was greatly reduced by FIFA which ruled in 1964 that a player could not represent more than one country.〔Taylor, pg 97.〕 In the 1960s, with incidents like the Battle of Santiago in 1962 and several finals of the Intercontinental Cup, South American football came to be seen as more violent and defensive, and hence fewer players were recruited.〔
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Oriundo」の詳細全文を読む
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