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2nd September 2018
01:51pm BST

"I don't think we have long enough to get into the complexity of the GAA but in order to deliver at a high level, I didn't feel I had the support of the executive, the key people in Mayo, to bring the team forward. In many ways, it's not a decision I would agree with but I've had to accept it. "I suppose, we didn't win any silverware in my three years in charge, and that was a big change for Mayo, they'd won five Connacht championships in a row, there was no All-Ireland which was always going to be a barometer for my success and no Super 8s this year and a perceived lack of young players being brought through. "I don't know of any one reason, as such, but it was clear to me that the level of support you need to take the team forward just wasn't there, unfortunately."Cue O'Callaghan cutting through the shit. "And to put that into English," the presenter responded, "did you really feel that they didn't want you to stay on? Hadn't you put together your backroom team?" Rochford's response to that was, once again, mostly impenetrable, waxing on about how sport doesn't really matter in the grand scheme of things and that life 'will move on' and 'so will Stephen Rochford' (yes, he referred to himself in the third person). https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/1036221086789193728 Again, O'Callaghan wasn't having any of it, plainly asking Rochford to explain the difference between an executive committee and the county board. In the end, Rochford didn't really say anything explosive or revelatory, but he seems intent on making clear his 'disappointment' with how things panned out. If he keeps coming up against seasoned, no-nonsense interviewers, something is bound to come out eventually.
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