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THERE IS NO doubt following this game that this Dublin side is a machine that does not look like it will relent any time soon. Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO Last Sunday, Jim Gavin’s side joined only three other teams by achieving four All-Irelands in a row and it is hard to see how they will be beaten in 2019. Credit must go to Tyrone who did so much right in this game but fell short to a higher quality team.

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Dublin players’ in-game awareness One of the outstanding characteristics of this Dublin team is their ability to adjust in-game to what the opposition are doing. This is one of the biggest strengths these guys have. Last Sunday, Tyrone went four points ahead with 15 minutes on the clock.

On the next Tyrone attack, Dublin dropped all 15 men behind the ball, ensuring that Tyrone would not go further ahead and forced Cathal McShane into poor shot location and sent the ball wide. From the kickout, Stephen Cluxton sent a ball over the top to the arriving Jack McCaffery who bombed up the Cusack Stand side and slipped a pass to Ciaran Kilkenny who split the posts. Source: James Crombie/INPHO On Niall Morgan’s restart, they went man for man and the Tyrone stopper hit a poor kick to Ciaran Kilkenny. He offloaded to Paul Mannion who was brought down for a penalty which he converted. The next two plays, Dublin again pushed up on Tyrone’s kickouts and were rewarded with two more points directly from it. They were then sitting two points ahead of Tyrone. The change in approach came directly from the players on the pitch.

Another example of this was as they approached half-time, they wanted to kill the game and waste time and ensure they went in with a strong lead. Their ever-present leader Jonny Cooper went down injured on a Tyrone restart and killed any momentum that Tyrone were trying to build. Everstar wine cellar model hdc36ss manual. As the game looked to be slipping away from Tyrone, they decided to put Colm Cavanagh in to full forward in an attempt to salvage something. In Dublin’s semi-final against Galway, a target man in Damien Comer caused them serious problems early.

When Tyrone did this, Brian Howard dropped directly in front of him showing that they once again had learnt from previous experiences. Tyrone’s negative – early sweeper While it is very hard to be too hard on Tyrone’s efforts last Sunday as they did an awful lot of things right, one area I felt that went wrong for them was the deployment of Colm Cavanagh, and how they transitioned him. As Dublin gained possession be it from a kickout or a turnover won, Colm Cavanagh immediately went straight back to cover the “D” area and ensure Dublin would not run through the middle and score an easy goal. The logic of this is very easy to understand, however at times, Colm Cavanagh was back in his position up to 30 seconds before Dublin crossed the 45-metre line making him ineffective for this time and meaning that Dublin always had a plus-one in attack as they went forward. Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO This made it incredibly hard for Tyrone to get direct contact on their opposition higher up the pitch. Dublin are incredibly fluent and smart in their play when coming up against an approach, they will not bring down the middle but will instead travel down the wings with angled runners coming off the shoulder. They continue to run at these angles making the sweeper redundant in his job.

Dublin on the other hand transition the sweeper more effectively by a player dropping; off Cian O Sullivan early on and Jonny Cooper later when the opposition cross the 45. This allows them to go man for man early on in a Tyrone attack. Download video ice age 3 sub indo 3gp. If a team are to beat Jim Gavin’s men in 2019, there is no question that they will have to be able to go man for man at times in defence.

Dublin cannot be allowed to continue to gain momentum as they bring the ball up the pitch. The kickout battle Stephen Cluxton delivered probably his finest display in a final on Sunday. The Parnells man finished with a kickout retention of 94%. This was partly down to Tyrone having their press not right, but the Dublin keeper must be commended for his pinpoint accuracy.