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10th August 2017
03:50pm BST

3. Last weekend - When was the last time we seen a football game that ebbed and flowed quite like Galway and Tipperary?
4. Less demanding to practice - Hurlers can practice every single hour of the day, and they wouldn't get tired. They can puck off a wall, with a pal, and they can do it all without breaking a sweat. A footballer practising takes a lot more energy and effort, and kicking the ball off a wall or with a pal doesn't have the same magic.
5. You can always have a puck - Even when you're 50, 60 or even 70, you'll still be able to pick up the hurl and go at it again. By that age a man will be stiff, they might be shook and their hamstrings certainly won't allow them kick a football. You never lose the hurling.
6. Less cynical play - There's no black card farce in hurling, there's no outrageously obvious cynical play, like we sometimes see so often in football.
7. Less emphasis on physicality - Footballers are trained to be physical specimens , a hurler with all the skills and speed will trump a physical lad with a lack of skill, the cream rises.
8. Less tactics - Tactics, tactics, tactics. That's the way football has gone nowadays, whether it's followers like it or not. There's defensive tactics, there's players flooding back and so on. We saw Tipperary and Galway on Sunday and it was fifteen on fifteen, it was the beautiful man-on-man battle which is what we want to see in the GAA.
9. The foreigners can see it - Every time there's a hurling game broadcast on Sky Sports, Twitter is taken over by foreigners who had never seen our great game before and think it's the best thing they've seen since sliced bread - well, some of them.
https://twitter.com/mattfharris/status/614264531569766400?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportsjoe.ie%2Fgaa%2Fthe-canadian-twitter-reaction-to-hurling-went-exactly-how-you-might-imagine-30065
https://twitter.com/IceDogsThisWeek/status/614264119085137920?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportsjoe.ie%2Fgaa%2Fthe-canadian-twitter-reaction-to-hurling-went-exactly-how-you-might-imagine-30065
10. Inventiveness - In nearly every game of hurling we are provided with so many glimpses of flamboyant originality that just amazes us. Moments like Austin Gleeson's earlier in the year, Mark Coleman's sidelines, or Walter Walsh's against Limerick, but in reality, whenever Noel or John McGrath and so many other hurlers touch the ball, we are amazed.
Agree now?