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30th July 2023
08:16pm BST

"He's doing a hop ball and booking them both... Jesus!"Over on the BBC, meanwhile, Gough's decision to split the difference and reverse the free awarded to Clifford got the approval of their commentary team. To make matters worse for Kerry, Dublin won that hop ball and broke up the field. Within a matter of 30 seconds from Gough throwing the ball in, Paul Mannion was arrowing a point over the bar and the scores were level. It was also the last time in the match that Kerry would have the lead. Following the game, the RTÉ panel discussed the moment and Joanne Cantwell revealed that the broadcaster had access to Gough's ref mic, which captured why that Kerry free was scrubbed. [caption id="attachment_290963" align="aligncenter" width="1280"]
David Clifford of Kerry is consoled by Brian Fenton of Dublin after his side's defeat in the GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship final, at Croke Park. (Photo by Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile)[/caption]
"What happened there - because some of us had access to the ref's mic - is that David Gough had called a free to Kerry and then his umpire said, no, there was two of them at it. That's why he gave the throw in.""We saw it from the back," added former Kerry defender Tomás Ó Sé, "and I looked at it. Both of them were off it. To admit it, both of them were at it... you often wish umpires would make contributions like that. They often don't but they did today and, I think, the right decision was made as it could have been given either way." Peter Canavan stated that many fans would love to hear the referee microphone comments that The Sunday Game panel had access to. The Tyrone legend backed up Cantwell when he informed viewers that Gough had been told by his umpire that 'the two of them are at it'. Related articles:
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