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16th November 2016
10:45am GMT

"We are club players after all. We wouldn't be there if it wasn't for our clubs."
Yet Andrews is not there for his club as much as he would like to be. He admits it was difficult to acclimatise with Brigids so soon after the All-Ireland final replay.
"You don't really get to see your club that much and you certainly don't get to play that much - I think I only played 3-4 matches all year for Brigids. It is hard to just slot back in and, especially when it went to a replay, you know six days later we're playing a championship match and trying to fit back in with different styles of play and things like that."
Paddy Andrews of Dublin and St Brigids believes club structures are 'unfair' and something has to change #GAA pic.twitter.com/6O12yTL1LF
— SportsJOE GAA (@SportsJOE_GAA) November 16, 2016
The situation is exacerbated in successful counties like Dublin and Mayo, but nowhere is immune. Waterford football champions The Nire shocked Carbery Rangers in the AIB Munster club semi-final at the weekend, despite only winning their county final two weeks earlier.
"It's not just in Dublin," said Andrews of the division between club and county. "I think it is across the board for inter-county guys. You have the national league and then you're rolling straight into provincial championships, you can see where inter-county managers are coming from, they don't want to release guys back."
When the likes of Andrews are playing three times as many games for their county as their club it is clear the system is broken. Andrews admits as much.
Club players have had assurances before and it is unlikely many will be holding their breath this time around. The GAA Hour chats to Ballyea sensation Tony Kelly and features a raging argument over which road you should take from Clare to Wexford. Subscribe here on iTunes."It has reached a head at this stage and something is going to happen now."
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