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2nd September 2019
01:42pm BST

He doesn't stay down for long though.
Within a few seconds, he's back to his feet. Looking groggy, feeling it too. He takes a few steps but the ground isn't being covered with the flow or grace we're used to. But it's still being covered.
His legs jelly but it would take more than that to stop him. And so with Dublin hunting and probing, O'Shea was back as part of the screen within a minute. Ready to chase, ready to sacrifice, ready to answer Kerry's call.
When Paddy Small took it around there was always going to be trouble. If he wasn't there, it would have been double. Sprinting was an impossibility and O'Shea's tackle was poor.
But you'd have to think the Gods of football had their say at this stage. The free was too far out for Rock and O'Shea breathed a sigh of relief. He did not deserve to go out that way.
We took a closer look at O'Shea's performance for the ages on Sunday and it resembled something similar to Noel McGrath's in the All-Ireland senior hurling final. A space invader, a constant mover. The ball just seems to follow him around the place.
By the end of it, he'd been on the ball an unbelievable 23 times. Treating it like he loved it on each and every occasion. Either with a driving run to protect it or an incisive hand-pass to preserve, every Kerry move either starts with him or goes through him.
His shooting was just as economical out there as the below graph shows. O'Shea took 11 shots at goal on Sunday and ten of them sailed over the bar. One dropped short but it still caused panic stations in the Dublin back-line as Cluxton punched it to safety.
[caption id="attachment_205806" align="alignnone" width="500"]
O'Shea's first half shot map in the All-Ireland final. 5/5 frees and one brilliantly taken score from open play.[/caption]
[caption id="attachment_205807" align="alignnone" width="500"]
And O'Shea's second half shot map. Two from play, one off left and one off right. One 45 and one brilliant free.[/caption]
Meanwhile, his 23 possessions is something unprecedented in an All-Ireland final. His willingness and his fitness to stay going are out on their own.
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