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12th April 2017
06:24pm BST


"His ease with a football was fascinating to watch," O'Gara said. "Growing up in Cork, you watch all the GAA games and he was to the fore for such a long period of time. The guy was a genius with a football. "You wouldn't see that very often because sometimes GAA matches can be very boring but when he hit Croke Park, he had the capacity on his own to light the place up."The Crokes player was declared by many as the best but then that brings with it debate. What about the others? What about men like Peter bloody Canavan? Listen, what Colm Cooper was able to do was pure graceful. He waltzed around GAA pitches like it was only a game in the backyard. He kicked scores off either foot, rolled the ball into each corner and dummied men so cruelly that sometimes it was hard to believe he was doing all this on the biggest possible stage. But as the stage got bigger, Cooper shone brighter. Peter Canavan was no stranger to that sort of elevation either. The Tyrone legend led his county through thick and thin. In the bad days, the barren days. Canavan was still electric. He was still respected as one of the best on the island until he became so good that everyone was just crying out by the end for him to win the All-Ireland he deserved almost more than anyone. He finally got it, he got two actually, and he was, like all the other less successful years, front and centre of the charge. He led with aggression and drive but by God he was pure magic. You couldn't get a hand on Canavan, not off the ball and certainly not when he was on it. He was hearty and willing, a heart almost the size of his frame. So when the question was put out of who was better between Kerry and Tyrone's finest, some people fiercely disagreed. On Facebook, over 5,000 people voted.
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