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27th October 2016
11:45am BST

"What I have been doing is, you get up you get into the club at around 7am each [weekday] morning. "It's a couple hours of training, a couple hours of meetings, then weights and bike-work, [cardio] stuff. You don't really leave till four or five in the evening. That's how things kinda run in Carlton. I'm not exactly sure how Geelong do it. "Look it can be a long day and clearly it can be a stressful job, but I don't think people want to hear people complaining about his life or job, and the stresses of being a professional athlete. But it is a full day its a full-time job. "You get a couple days off a week and the rest of the week you spend looking at games or looking at analysis and footage."https://www.instagram.com/p/-8ZPNxPcIy/?taken-by=zach2e Tuohy prefers the full, busy days as opposed to the morning-on, afternoon-off lifestyle of many Premier League players. He says:
"In sport, different clubs run their affairs differently. Certainly in the last year, we spent a lot of the time in the club and in all of those meetings. I do know of clubs that don't spend a lot of the time [at the training ground]. "It's a bit of a case [here] of - Get in, earn it, do our work and go spend some time with your family."As for the extended Tuohy family at home, the Geelong/Portlaoise man says he will assess his living situation near the end of his contract, in four years time, before making a definitive call. He does add, however, that he would be "staggered" if he does not get back for a full club season or two in the coming years. If Laois want him in their senior football panel, well, who knows. Colm Parkinson is joined by Paul Rouse for a heated debate about Sky Sports' five-year GAA deal and an exclusive chat with AFL star Zach Tuohy on the new GAA Hour.
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