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Published 18:12 5 Feb 2018 GMT
Updated 18:39 6 Feb 2018 GMT
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"I suppose at the time, momentum is a huge thing and you're thinking there's seven minutes left on the clock and it's a great time to get a goal but I looked at the Dublin players and none of them seemed to bat an eyelid. "It was just normal for them – and in the next play they scored a point, so that shows you what they were thinking. There was no reaction, thinking 'oh no, not again,' they literally just went straight back to their whole process. The whole team was just ready to move on to the next play.
When asked by host Colm Parkinson if he had wanted to look back and see one or two of the Dublin players giving out to each other, he said:
"Well, it's a sign that you're getting on top and that there might be a crack there, but they've been in that position so many times that they've just played until the very last minute. They're never a beaten team. That's the hardest thing about Dublin, they're never actually beaten and when that goal went in, I thought 'this is it, this is our opportunity,' but James McCarthy got the next score for them and they just took it from there, which was very unfortunate for us."It's a fascinating insight into what it must be like to play Dublin in a decider. Tearing through their defence to score a cracking goal in the 54th-minute and get Mayo in front was a glorious moment for Keegan, but his main takeaway from the moment was Dublin's reaction to the moment or lack thereof. It's the emblem of a remarkably well-drilled unit: the ability to just instantly forget a bad moment and carry on with the game, still driven by that singular belief that they will win. That's what Dublin have. That's why they've won the All-Ireland three times in a row and that's why Keegan hates playing them. He's not alone there, though.
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