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3rd September 2018
09:33am BST

"We didn't have a total performance we still have plenty of things to work on," said Philly to Marty Morrissey.https://twitter.com/RTEgaa/status/1036347529716105216 And that's the one criticism that has been levelled at them over the last few years. That they don't show enough emotion, that their outrageously driven mindset doesn't allow them to bask in the glory of the achievement that they'd all probably dreamed of as kids growing up. When does it actually become enough? When does this pursuit for perfection end, many ask. This shouldn't really be delivered as a criticism though, surely? Isn't it more a compliment to these men's unbelievable professionalism that they're so ambitious and so insatiable that they just want more and more of it. It's delivered as a back-handed compliment though. Donal Óg Cusack famously dubbed Kilkenny's four-in-a-row-winning hurlers as the 'Stepford Wives' in his autobiography Come What May. What the Cork man was getting at was that the men of Kilkenny were perfect in their execution but that they were robotic as a result of that. That they didn't really enjoy all of this successes and lost sight of the most important thing - enjoying it all. But the Kilkenny lads and the Dublin lads will say that their time in their county jerseys are short, that they can look back with pride when they've hung up the boots. Some think that's too late though, some thing you have to enjoy it there and then. There are no rights and no wrongs because everybody has different attitudes to things, but the Dublin lads seem to be fairly justified right now.
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