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7th July 2017
10:57pm BST

"What was the hatchet job on Sean Cavanagh?! For three matches in a row that year, he and his Tyrone colleagues were systematically pulling guys down. And everybody was sitting there in the stands going, 'Jesus Christ... ' "After that third time, when he pulled down Conor McManus at Croke Park... and it really, particularly annoyed me. "Because whenever I did a fundraiser for Clontibret one night, they put up this big photo on the wall of Conor McManus sitting on my knee, beside the Sam Maguire, whenever we won the All-Ireland [1993]. And this kid, who had dreamed of that his whole life, he was going through and he was going to stick the ball in the net, Cavanagh jumps on him and he pulls him down. "And Cavanagh is all with the poor mouth stuff. 'Oh I'm just doing what anybody that was on my team would. I don't like the rules as much as the next man. I think the black card couldn't come in quick enough'. All that aul' stuff. All that pious stuff."
Everything is personal, Brolly insisted. He continued:
"[Sean] knew what he did and he did what he did himself. He did what he did and he knew what he did. "My point about that was, urgently, we need to stamp it [deliberate, tactical fouling] out of the game because it was destroying the game. It was systematically ruining the game and they were just using it as any other tactic. "And Mickey Harte would be defending it and saying, 'Well that's it and he's just taken one for the team'. All of that stuff."Brolly feels the "uselessness" of the black card means a real chance to eradicate the game of such negative tactics was missed. The idea of taking a black card for the team has 'become the norm'. The full discussion on Cavanagh - the full episode, in fact - is definitely worth the watch:
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