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20th May 2018
07:04pm BST

In an age of physicality and packed defences, he has constantly and beautifully managed to dodge the trenches that players have been trying to drag him into his whole life.
There's no point in lying, this containment mission does work at times. McManus himself admitted to Colm Parkinson immediately after Sunday's game to getting frustrated at these approaches, but he's always just waiting for the chance that he knows is going to come.
"I suppose the game is evolving all the time and teams are trying to keep possession and not get turned over as much. It can be difficult to play in, but things do open up," he assured SportsJOE's Colm Parkinson in Omagh.Things did open up in Tyrone. Colm Cavanagh was forced off through injury at the break, and with the opposition's first choice sweeper gone, Manzy made Tyrone pay down the stretch. His 66th minute point off his weaker foot was described by spectators as 'outrageous,' a 'privilege to witness,' among other superlatives. With true Conor McManus modesty, he brushed aside all the praise that came his way as if to say he'd gotten lucky with it. By this stage, we all know that luck has nothing to do with what Conor McManus does.
"If you close your eyes, some of them are bound to go over," he said to Wooly.https://twitter.com/SeanCavanagh14/status/998256499460923392 And he was delighted with the win.
"Yeah, we knew it was going to be tough coming down here. We wouldn't have a great record against Tyrone in the Ulster Championship. It was tough, we didn't play that well in the first half, but we probably got the goal at the right time and it helped us play our way into the game. "We played too our system, luckily we got a few scores towards the end and we pulled away. These games tend to be like that, you just have to be patient, because things do open up eventually."And when they open up, there's no better man to dart through and make the difference.
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