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20th May 2019
10:17am BST

"Anyone who gets an injury will tell you it's a lonely place," he said on SportsJOE's GAA Hour as his teammates prepared for a Munster final without him.
"I'm on a strength programme at the moment, kind of isolated from the group a little...The first couple of weeks are the hardest. Watching the lads play Clare the first day and then Tipperary, you're playing every ball. It's easier play the game than watch it," he said, "You feel useless..."Down but certainly not out. The Douglas forward is a fighter and he threw himself straight into the lonely gym sessions and the individual rehab programme.
"You've two choices, you either don't do the rehab and you won't come back stronger or you get on with it and you put yourself in the best possible position to get back as soon as you can," he continued.Cadogan did everything within his power. Knee surgery leads to a long, winding road but after a summer on the sidelines and a winter of work, he eventually made it back for Cork's last game of the 2019 League against Tipperary. And he hits the ground running. A lovely point with his first touch. He's back in business. Just as things begin to resemble normality though and he's beginning to feel his way back into it, the quad acts up and he knows it's serious enough not to continue. Wouldn't you be sick. For the second year in a row, Cadogan misses the Rebels' Munster opener with full fitness still a journey away. He's back on the bench for the second round against All-Ireland champions Limerick but his impact is only going to be bit part. Cadogan is ready though. It's Conor Lehane who's this time struck by the dreaded reaper and with the Midleton man's day over after five minutes, it's Cadogan's time. His first championship appearance since the 2017 All-Ireland semi-final against Waterford. Cadogan delivers a masterclass of corner forward play like he's never been away. He hits three of the finest points you'll see, one the score of the day off the back foot and his link-up play with Patrick Horgan is sublime from the word-go.
"Alan works as a teacher not too far away from the pitch and straight after school you'd see him. He'd be in running around the pitch or up in the gym. He was sick to pick up them injuries and to be missing out on the hurling but God he couldn't have worked any harder to get back. You'd be delighted for him after all the work he put in, he was brilliant yesterday," said the Douglas GAA secretary to SportsJOE.https://twitter.com/officialgaa/status/1130153459326574592 Cork take the win, Cadogan is back in the game.

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