Buckets22 wrote:zzzyyxyyxzzz wrote:But, but, but... yeah right.
Brazdeikis was born in Lithuania's second-biggest city Kaunas in 1999, but migrated with his parents to the US when he was three.
That is straight from the article

Oh, I know. This is also in the article:
“His citizenship has been restored because the amendments allowing children who were born Lithuanian citizens, but later acquired the citizenship of another state, to keep both citizenships came into force on January 1,” - and this after playing for the Canadian youth team.
And that reminds me of when Slovenia changed their citizenship law in 2017 to allow Randolph to play for them. The original poster was talking about respect for Lithuania and no respect for Slovenia in 2017, and I just wanted to point the fallacy in that argument.
Look at this photo
https://sportklub.n1info.si/kosarka/randolph-seveda-bom-rekel-da-je-bila-nasa-ekipa-boljsa/That is Randolph a month ago watching the NT in Ljubljana, Slovenia (he is not curtently on the team). My question to all who say "must have a connection with the country to play or it's cheating"... So now Randolph is Slovenian enough to play? A five year loyalty is enough?
Citizenship Law is complicated and varies. There is no way to make it "fair" for everyone. People can buy citizenships or receive them for merit and they don't even have to live there in certain countries. It is what it is.
I made my position on the issue clear a couple of pages back in this thread, so I'll let it go now.