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Joe Brolly refuses to back down over Kerry criticism even after Jack O'Connor called him out following upset of Armagh

Joe Brolly refuses to back down over Kerry criticism even after Jack O'Connor called him out following upset of Armagh

The Irish Sun01-07-2025
JOE Brolly has defended his criticism of Kerry's panel prior to their decisive All-Ireland quarter-final win over Armagh.
The nature of
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The 1993 All-Ireland winner had tipped the Orchard to come out on top
3
But Kerry's run of 14 successive points propelled them to a 0-32 to -1-21 triumph
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Sean O'Shea led the way as he contributed 0-12
His comments were placed under a far greater microscope when manager Jack O'Connor
O'Connor acknowledged: 'One of the great motivators in life is trying to prove people wrong. We were being portrayed as a one-man team.
'I saw somebody writing this morning that said the only Kerry player worthy of being called a Kerry player was David Clifford.
"Now, David is a great player but David will tell you that there was a fair supporting cast there today.'
Read More On GAA
Brolly has now defended the offending article which also branded O'Connor's charges "useless altogether".
The ex-
Speaking on the
The Derry native insisted: "You're like one of these people on Twitter who read the headline of the piece and now go then, 'Well, what do you say now?!'
Most read in GAA Football
"Let me try to explain this to you. My pieces are an entertainment, they're a conversation in the pub. They're written before the games - you understand that?
"I don't have a crystal ball, games are chaotic and unpredictable! Anything can and often does happen.
'Lots of fight' - RTE GAA pundits react to Sean O'Shea's 'very interesting' interview after Kerry dethrone Armagh
"These pieces essentially - I'm not one bit irritated! - they're fun.
"That's why they're read, that's why people get into it and enjoy the conversation and the debate and all the rest of it."
Despite dealing with an extensive injury list, Kerry stormed into an All-Ireland semi-final against Tyrone on Saturday July 12.
No part was played at Croker by Paul Geaney, Mike Breen, Tadhg Morley, Diarmuid O'Connor, Tony Brosnan or Barry Dan O'Sullivan.
Tom O'Sullivan limped off in the first half and Paudie Clifford was only fit enough to be subbed on at the break.
Still, O'Connor acknowledged that his introduction 'gave everybody a lift' and the Fossa man had a big impact as the Munster champions seized control.
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