So a player can come to this country at 18 and register. Then at age 21 he is considered �home grown� (having spent just 14% of his life here). A strange interpretation, but the football business often gives the impression that it inhabits a strange, parallel universe. .
Let�s think of this scenario: I run a factory and I stipulate that anybody, regardless of their nationality, who wants to work for me must have had a UK National Insurance number for three years before they were 21. Immediately this rules out all the Poles who have recently arrived on these shores and just because I insist my rules apply to all nationalities it is clear that it places foreign EU workers at an unfair (and illegal) disadvantage. I would not get away with it.
Although this scheme may have been checked and considered lawful, it has not been tested through the courts. That will only come when a player who was unable to register here before his eighteenth birthday is denied the opportunity to compete for a place in an English club side because they already have their quota of foreign players. He will argue that he is barred because he did not register here before he was 18. He will go on to say that his original nationality makes it far less likely that he could comply with that regulation than people born in the UK, and so he is, indeed, suffering discrimination on the grounds of his nationality.
You may think I�m being unnecessarily pessimistic, but stranger things have happened when �indirect discrimination� has been alleged and only time will tell.
But remember, although not quite the same argument, football clubs believed it was perfectly reasonable to demand transfer fees for players who were no longer contracted to them. Then along came Mr Bosman.