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2nd August 2019
10:55am BST

"He's certainly not sending Christmas cards to the county board," McStay said. "Some of the senior players were quite deafening in their silence in support of him once he left. It just died a death, he was gone and it moved on. "He will feel nothing but the only thing that matters: to win. He's a son of Mayo, the same as I am, but when you're on the other side, it's about the W. "You don't want it but you're saying, 'Jesus, if I could pull one on him, or pull one on Mayo, it will help the pain to a certain degree'. "He can't unknow what he knows about Mayo. He knows everything."And McStay went into detail about what Rochford will know and why it's a big advantage here at 35:00: Whilst McEntee argued that Rochford's influence to date with Donegal is overrated, McStay says that you'd be naive to think he won't bring a lot to the table for this fixture.
"Do you think Declan Bonner isn't saying this week, 'how can we get under the jumper of X, Y or Z? Who might they match up on Michael Murphy? Who might we match up on whoever?'"
And there's no better man to ask because, for three years - just until the last winter - Rochford lived and breathed Mayo football.
"He was their manager for three years after all. Tony [McEntee] knows his bit from coaching, the S&C guy knows his bit but the manager knows the whole lot - or else he's not managing it right. "It's hugely important. He knows who's tiring, he knows who likes to go on their left side, he knows who likes to take an extra touch on the ball, he knows who doesn't like to pass the ball when he gets two on on with the goalie. All these things. "He would've been going to bed every night thinking about nothing else. It's 24/7. "He's honour bound to use everything he has to try and get the win for Donegal."
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