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5th July 2019
09:29am BST

(Photo by Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile)[/caption]
"Everyone says that, coming through the qualifiers, you have momentum. I think the injuries have offset that momentum and may have taken the wind out of Mayo's sails," said Parkinson.
"Lee Keegan, Jason Doherty's a doubt, Diarmuid O'Connor is out. Matty Ruane is gone as well. "Keegan is just such a kick in the arse for Mayo. I mean, I see Mayo as pretty much in the same position as they were coming up to 'Newbridge or Nowhere' [against Kildare last year]. I see them dead men walking, ready to be taken out."Heneghan, a Mayo native and Kiltimagh clubman, tried to look at the positives but found it tough to argue with Parkinson's claim. "Galway were very good in the first half against Roscommon," said Heneghan of the Connacht final, "but they were shocking in the second half. As you said, there's a lack of leaders there. "I don't think Galway have been right, this year yet, at all. These last couple of years, they've been playing better. I'd agree with you, though. When people say there is momentum in the qualifiers, there is an element of wild optimism in saying and looking for any reason at all why we can beat Galway. "I still think we can, by the way, but if you are looking at it realistically and analytically, if I could pick one player that Mayo could not afford to be missing, it would be Lee Keegan. After that, Jason Doherty and Diarmuid O'Connor wouldn't be far behind. These are absolutely massive players." Heneghan admitted that, with all the injury setbacks, it was 'hard to get away from that feeling that we're dead men walking'. Still, when it came to the predictions, later in the show, he plumped for Mayo while Parkinson sided with The Tribesmen.
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