I was only thinking that today during the second half. How hard that monaghan side have worked and how good they are ND how theyâll walk off the field knowing theyâll never compete with that Dubâs side. Heartbreaking for them Iâd say.
Conor McCarthy is a lovely player. But Monaghan will never have enough players of the standard required.
They had no answer to Dublinâs movement and athleticism in any area of the pitch and no idea how to work the ball forward despite winning the vast majority of their own kickouts relatively uncontested. Their attempts to work the ball forward were reminiscent of Dublin during the 2010 league when Brogan and McManamon were marooned on their own up front and neither they nor their team-mates had any idea how to bring them into the play.
Dublin werenât anywhere near peak form and were profiligate enough. Con OâCallaghan didnât have a very good outing and will be under pressure to hold his place. But Fenton was back to his imperious best.
Itâs regular enough for young fellas to struggle at the business end of a season when they break through. The year McCaffrey and Kilkenny came through they disappeared for the semis and final having been feted as superstars. They get noticed and then get heavily marked for the first time at that level or the game just passes them by. Its rare that a young fella carries that shit through for a whole season* Ă Callaghan had one game Ffs sake è.
I think James O Donoghue was a belter all season for Kerry when he broke through but canât be fully sure as Iâm drinking by myself in a tent in wicklow.
Mannion too, although he did get a goal in the 2013 semi-final.
Kilkenny actually got three points from play in the 2012 semi-final against Mayo in his first senior start, but he hadnât been slogging it out over course of the season.
I donât remember OâDonoghue being very good in the 2011 final which was his first season.
Colm Cooper pretty much carried his form through the whole of his first season in 2002, but even then he fell away in the second half of the final after a good first half, although that was a function of Kerry fading in general.
Ronan Clarke is one who didnât fade and ended up being instrumental in winning that All-Ireland for Armagh at just 19 years of age.
Is Fergus in danger of a ban, two reds in two games via 2 yellow card offences in each. Daft stuff considering Tyrone were cruising in both, he needs to reign it in or he could turn into a liability.
Not much. As far as I could tell Harte, Cavanagh and Bradley are the only players with limited or no defensive responsibilities. Although sometimes Bradley was the only player in the opposition half.
Basically Donnelly plays in midfield with Conall McCann. Colm Cavanagh drops back and protects the D but then sporadically goes forward too. Both wing forwards play in their own half but then bomb forward when they turn possession over (e.g. Mulgrew today when he came on). Sludden as âcentre forwardâ follows the ball around and uses his intelligence and pace to get on it. Heâs really fast and can break forward to great effect from deep.
Sometimes Sludden and Harte swap positions when one needs a breather. The other thing is they very much look for Tiernan McCann when theyâre pouring forward because heâs a brilliant passer and ball carrier.
When the 12 (or 14 if Harte and Cavanagh are in position to) funnel back then the cunts really sprint back and they all know where to be. Obviously the man marking defenders are still very tight but the others take up their zones so they always have lots of people around the ball to make tackles and blocks.
When they go forward in unison from their own half they look class.
In five league games, Harteâs system has produced an aggregate score of Dublin 5-61 Tyrone 2-69.
Bear in mind that the league tends to be where Dublin assert their dominance most - not in All-Ireland semi-finals and finals.
In fact in seven non-replay All-Ireland semi-finals since 2010 inclusive, Dublin have an aggregate margin of +1. In every All-Ireland semi-final Dublin have won in that time, their opponents had a potentially winning gap over them.
The evidence shows that Dublin struggle with Tyroneâs system.
The evidence shows that Dublin donât blow teams away in All-Ireland semi-finals or finals.