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29th March 2017
06:43pm BST

His decision on Sunday to give Niall Sludden a black card was plain crazy though and it's one which Colm Parkinson thinks he shouldn't get away with without being taken to task.
"Technically, tackle technique, at under-10 and under-12 you learn to go with the near hand. He didn't go with the near hand but there's nothing to say that, if you go with the other hand, it's a foul," Wooly let rip on a lively GAA Hour podcast. "With the near hand, you can't get a good slap on the ball - you don't have the leverage. He used his far hand, he tried to slap the ball out of Lee Keegan's hands, Lee Keegan went down and I don't blame Keegan because he was going very fast and the momentum can carry you over. "It was a decent tackle, it wasn't even a foul and Niall Sludden's gone. That's wrong. "We've defended the black card all the time on this show. I still think if referees didn't keep making a balls of it, it's a good, good rule, if they keep it for obvious, blatant professional fouls - which that was not. It was a debatable foul. We could have a debate here over whether or not it was a foul. "Stop blaming the black card. The black card is alright. Maybe it needs a bit of a redefinition into the offences - make it a little easier. But the black card isn't the problem, it's the referees. Lane. Let's blame Lane. Let the headlines be about this referee who gave a black card for this. Not the black card itself."Listen to the full heated chat on The GAA Hour from 13:50 below.
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