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2nd July 2020
05:00pm BST

"Even the whole Michael D thing," he said after the 2018 final on The GAA Hour, "I went into the dressing room, into the bathroom. I wanted to stay away from it to get my own head right. "All this circus going on outside, I just went away from it. I didn't want that negative stuff, to be feeling sorry for myself...it was just to leave whatever disappointment, fire it into the sink and get back out."True colours are revealed in times of adversity though and Dowling proved a team player. Indeed, most Limerick fans would agree now that the Treaty wouldn't have won that All-Ireland were it not for Shane Dowling's influence. In the final itself, he got his just reward when skilfully dispatching the winning goal that left Galway reeling and eventually defeated. But his impact stretched the whole year, having come off the bench to shoot 1-4 and tip the balance in his county's favour in their extra-time semi-final win over Cork. While not making the starting 15 clearly devastated the sharpshooter, the fact that he kept spirits high and standards higher is something that the people of Limerick will always appreciate. Thursday morning's news that Dowling has been forced into an early retirement due to persistent knee problems is a blow not just to his county, but to the game of hurling in general. He wasn't fast, he may not have been the fittest but Shane Dowling possessed the type of gold carat skill that very few players are blessed with. From his time as an under-21, he could puck the ball a country mile and right through his career those Rolex wrists did things that most hurlers could only dream of. Come 2019, there were kids all over attempting the 'Shane Dowling.' https://twitter.com/GAA__JOE/status/1278625153174339584 In the Na Piarsaigh colours, he always made that ball sing. https://twitter.com/GAA__JOE/status/1278657190832803841 And so in times of upset or regret at a career cut short, Shane Dowling can always ask himself whether it would have been better just march behind the band, or to score the winning goal on All-Ireland final day. He came out the right side of that one.
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