THE prospect of a Team GB football squad competing in next year’s Rio Olympics has provoked a strong reaction from Football Association of Wales (FAW) president Trefor Lloyd Hughes.

GB teams played at London 2012, when Aaron Ramsey, Ryan Giggs and Craig Bellamy took part, but the FA had said that it would be a one-off.

The FA has now written to its counterparts in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales to ask them if they want to take part in Brazil.

"I am absolutely gutted with the English FA," Hughes told BBC Wales.

"If they want to work with us they have to be more open with us and they don't seem to be keeping to agreements. I'm livid about it."

The FAW, along with the Scottish FA and Irish FA, refused to give their official backing to Team GB in 2012, fearing that a Great Britain squad could set a precedent that affected their individual memberships of Fifa and the International Football Association Board.

"As far as the Olympics is concerned, it was not long ago that they said London 2012 was just a one-off," he added.

"Now it appears they have decided on their own to enter a team without discussing it with us.

"I don't think we will be able to block it, but why has Seb Coe and the British Olympic Association gone to England? The BOA should be more open and transparent.

"It's supposed to be the British Olympic Association, not the English Olympic Association."

Hughes is competing against English FA nominee David Gill, the ex-Manchester United chief executive, for the Fifa vice-presidency reserved for the four British associations.

He has accused the FA of reneging on a written agreement that would see Wales take over the British Fifa vice-presidency in May.

The FA claims the agreement no longer applies because under Fifa reforms the position is elected by Uefa rather than just the four home nations.

But Hughes said: "England seem to want to run everything and take over the whole game.

"But we will not let that happen - the dragon on Wales has still got flame coming out of his mouth. We are not going to be bullied."