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Published 09:20 30 Aug 2019 BST
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"Have no doubt about it, pressure comes on when you're coming down that straight. Some of us did things that we normally wouldn't do. Our positioning, we lost our shape. I'd only put it down as pressure," he says.
"I remember I was chatting to Paudie O'Mahoney during the week and he said to me, 'I remember ye were as pale as ghosts at breakfast. Do you know? Even though there's no hype, have no doubt. You could hardly talk and you'd be pale and you're wondering and next thing the match is on and you feel it's going away from you...If we're close enough to them down the straight with ten minutes to go, you'll see a lot of mistakes..."
"I know for a fact that the more All-Irelands you play, the more nervous you get. People say experience, Jesus, the experience of the fellas I played with, the pressure got worse and worse. Because you realise that you're not just playing for yourself and your family. You're playing for the county. Then you throw in the five-in-a-row pressure, let me tell you, there is pressure."
"Mikey Sheehy," says Sean Lowry. "In '82, his legs were in jelly even though he was fit as a fiddle..."
https://twitter.com/TheGAAHour/status/1167147171902349312
The thing about Dublin though is they've stared pressure down before. When Lee Keegan scored that famous goal and the whole country was behind Mayo, they just took it in their stride and won the next kickout. Bernard Brogan senior maintains that Steven Cluxton's ice cool persona has a huge part to play in this.
"We might see mistakes but Dublin have won games by a point. They've won two All-Irelands by the last kick of the game. When another team get a goal, Dublin have an ability to get going. Cluxton's kickouts, he contributes to that because we win a lot of them, we get the ball again. When games go against teams, they kick out the ball and they lose it - the whole game and momentum changes, that's crucial for Dublin..."
None the less, Bomber Liston recalls the aftermath of the '82 loss. A difficult time for Kerry people, they still made the most of it.
"There was a song that time 'Five-in-a-row, five-in-a-row, can not believe we've won five-in-a-row. We were in Mulligan's the next day, it was the worst experience of all the next day. You're trying to blank it out. We were having a few pints, there wasn't much chat. Then the song turned to, 'Five in a row, Christ we were close to the five in a row..."
You can listen to The GAA Hour live from Liberty Hall here.
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