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20th November 2016
03:29pm GMT

We don't need to go into what Wes brings to a team or how infuriating this British and Irish mentality is that says, because you're small, you can't really be trusted.
We should waste no more breath on the idea that a player who takes risks is a luxury player and no more but we shouldn't accept when men like Alex Neil refuse to give Hoolahan even 10 minutes of a big match - and, worse, uses just two subs for the whole game.
Norwich lost 2-1 to QPR on Saturday and their Irish maestro sat on the bench for the entirety of the defeat.
Hoolahan's human - he's not the best player in the world. He loses the ball, he gets caught in the tackle sometimes and he might even piss some people off for rare moments. During Ireland's away game in Austria last week, the Dubliner was taking criticism during the first half. He had lost possession, he wasn't getting turned like he does and there was this God-awful realisation sweeping over the country that maybe he isn't Zidane.
Maybe.
That was a bad game for Wes Hoolahan and, still, he delivered two moments that no-one else on the pitch could've. He delivered two breathtaking moments.
He combined with Robbie Brady to give Jon Walters an open net and his mouthwatering flick allowed it all to happen.
He put James McClean straight through on goal and mapped out his whole run for him for the only goal of the match.
Most people spray that ball wide and they run into the box themselves. Most people don't take that chance, they don't see that angle and they don't have the ability to make that happen. Wes Hoolahan does and, on a bad night for Ireland, he forced one of the most famous wins.
But when Norwich are up against it, Alex Neil doesn't see the use for a player of his quality and guile.
He made a big call.
https://twitter.com/Pmy12345/status/799984299344699392
And it didn't work.
The anger was palpable.
https://twitter.com/mattsomerton/status/799991994999312384
The message was clear.
https://twitter.com/Andrew_Pearse/status/799977841932861444
And no-one saw the logic.
https://twitter.com/Marleysymonds/status/799975975647932417
https://twitter.com/ch_harwood/status/799975817304567808
https://twitter.com/HoolahanAssist/status/799975592414343168
https://twitter.com/thomasmunday/status/799977852363948032
This guy's account is the greatest.
This guy has been doing his homework.
https://twitter.com/REalityCheque/status/799999769930297344
And this guy has a simple, simple solution.
https://twitter.com/CoysAlex/status/800062208000462848
But people wanted it during the game and it never came.
https://twitter.com/rkgarry88/status/800004941045710848
He'll still always be a hero.
https://twitter.com/ellaatovell/status/800061980870479872
Wes Hoolahan is 34. It's only right to assume that he can't play 46 league games for 90 minutes anymore.
But Wes Hoolahan is still Wes Hoolahan. He still brings vision and creativity and football that most others cannot - not in the Championship, not in Norwich. And any manager who doesn't even see how they could get 10 minutes out of him deserves to be under pressure.
Because Hoolahan deserves more than this. So does football.
Aaron Kernan joins Colm Parkinson on The GAA Hour to explain the work he's doing for the Club Players Association. Derry captain Chrissy McKaigue talks Slaughtneil and a Dublin club advertising for hurlers gets a sore touch. Subscribe here on iTunes.
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