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4th July 2021
05:23pm BST

Liam Coleman of Wexford catches a kick-out ahead of Brian Fenton at Chadwicks Wexford Park. (Photo by Brendan Moran/Sportsfile)[/caption]
Shane Roche had clearly lit a fire under his players and it was evident in how each man spurred and rallied the other after every block, score or turnover.
Even the great Con O'Callaghan was finding it tough to get his scores. When he found some space, at one stage in the first half, Furlong was there to block his goal-bound effort.
[caption id="attachment_231479" align="aligncenter" width="1280"]
Dublin's Con O'Callaghan has a shot on goal blocked by Michael Furlong of Wexford. (Photo by Brendan Moran/Sportsfile)[/caption]
0-6 to 0-3 the champions led at the break. Wexford had the wind, what little there was of it, in the second half. Fans clung to that. If only the home side could break out of harrying mode and take their scoring chances when they came.
Wexford did not get their fourth point of the day until the 50th minute. There had been a chasm of 40 minutes between that and their previous score and that was the difference. Still, they were only six points back with 20 to play.
Dublin stretched ahead, 0-14 to 0-5, as the game headed into the final 10 minutes. Cormac Costello was the best Dublin player on show and he had found his range. Colm Basquel chipped in with a fine score.
Sensing it was time to fling the dice a final few times, Wexford pressed forward and answered with two sweets scores from Donal Shanley.
The final score of the game arrived via the boot of Dean Rock and that was it - an eight-point winning margin for Dublin. It is the lowest scoring total Dublin have returned in a championship game since they drew the 2016 All-Ireland final with Mayo [scoring 2-9] before going on the win the replay.For Wexford, not exactly something to be etching on a wall for eternity but a real scrap, and something they can be proud of. Not many ruffle the Dubs' feathers like that.
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