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3rd September 2019
04:43pm BST


And now we get to the crowd roaring part. The tension building.
O'Sullivan needed something special. A minor miracle. A voice of reason.
Step up David Gough.
"How brave was that of Gough. Because the crowd roared and you know the whole culture of evening the numbers up," says Colm Parkinson on Thursday's GAA Hour podcast.
"Gough was brilliant in that scenario to calmly tick him and put his notebook back. Boos rang out around the stadium. I thought Gough had an outstanding game because the Stephen O'Brien one - some people were complaining that it was a penalty - It wasn't a penalty, it would have been the softest penalty ever. I couldn't fault Gough yesterday at all other than Cluxton coming off his line and I don't know, I think they're often harsh anyways..."
"Technically, that was the only one he really got wrong," added Cian Ward. "When have you ever heard (the likes) in the build up to a game? Nobody knows who the referee is. The fact that his name was in the paper and all the talk about him and questioning his character.
"Personally, if I was a ref in that situation I would have just said look, to hell with it. Then you've the pressure of the game, the extensive pressure. It takes a massive amount of fortitude and courage to just continue to apply the rules with players and fans putting you under pressure too. Sometimes these calls are very marginal too. It happens so fast, things can look a lot worse than they actually are. There's no replays," reasoned the Meath man.
It wasn't the only good call Gough made. Jonny Cooper's red card was warranted, as the lads discuss below.
Some of the 'Junior B level' analysis, as Colm Parkinson labelled it, shouldn't change people's opinions on that.
https://twitter.com/TheGAAHour/status/1168568210146451457
O'Sullivan's face told a different story afterwards. Vindicated. Exonerated. Redeemed.
Fair play to David Gough.
You can watch The GAA Hour All-Ireland review show here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOX03nI23P8&t=1sExplore more on these topics: