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16th December 2017
06:00pm GMT

"I'd love to be professional, definitely, 100%. I'd love to do it every day... but that's just the way it is. "To be honest I wouldn't change it. I wouldn't like to see it going down that road because it would lose our heritage in Ireland especially. It wouldn't sit right with me. It would lose the community spirit."https://twitter.com/RTEOne/status/941815360948277249 It's refreshing to hear such honesty. It's also difficult to disagree with the 29-year-old Portumna man. At the end of the day, we all love the community spirit of the GAA and wouldn't want anything to threaten its existence. Professional status would certainly be a threat. Canning was also notably upfront with the perception of him as 'a hurler,' insisting that he isn't defined by the sport he plays and loves.
"I don't see hurling as my first thing. I see myself as a family person and that's what my family see me as. They see me as Joseph more so than Joe. "Hurling doesn't define who I am. I feel uncomfortable when they call me 'Joe Canning the hurler'. I'm an amateur at the end of the day."Canning, a Unicef Ireland goodwill ambassador, went on to share a poignant story about a young girl he met during a visit to the war-torn Syrian capital of Aleppo. https://twitter.com/RTEOne/status/941819002174582784 Unsurprisingly, the response to Canning's interview has been hugely positive. A class act on and off the pitch indeed. https://twitter.com/BrianBoshell/status/942021795720433665 https://twitter.com/ciaranq911/status/942020556706205696 https://twitter.com/FlanneryTony/status/942008153570529280 https://twitter.com/MikeCooke92/status/941991826692722688
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