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Published 16:00 27 Jul 2019 BST
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"I was down for breakfast and my father was there. He's a Connemara man, a Galway man, and this is the fella that famously doesn't have Sky. "He's a fierce Galway man and I was there pushing the breakfast around the plate. There was no dieticians at that time. It was the full fry. My mother was yapping away and my father was quiet; he was reading the paper. He let down the paper and said, "What's wrong with you?' "I said, 'Dad, I'm shook; I'm nervous'. I was only 20 and I was playing midfield. Galway had won the All-Ireland in 1987 and 88... I went out the back and came back, told him it was my stomach as I was fierce nervous. "My father said, 'If I was you, I'd eat up, out of that. There's no point being in the middle of Croke Park making a fool of yourself, and being hungry as well!'"Duignan returned to the table and finished the fry. At least he was not hungry as he, and his teammates, got a chasing by Galway and missed out on the final. Fitness and diets had kicked on a bit when Michael Carton and Colm Parkinson were breaking into their senior inter-county squads but, as both recalled on The GAA Hour [from 16:00 below], there was still a lot to learn. [caption id="attachment_204509" align="aligncenter" width="1000"]
Michael Carton celebrates with the Leinster SHC trophy after Dublin's 2013 triumph. (Credit: David Maher/SPORTSFILE)[/caption]
Carton was playing for Dublin minors and Under 21s, as well as studying for his Leaving Cert, when he was first called into his county's senior side.
The former half-back recalled his first Dublin gym session with the senior hurlers:
"I remember rocking up and I'd never been to a gym in my life. I just loved hurling. "I lay down on the bench and I thought, 'Grand. This is going to be grand'. I lifted the bar and I had no clips on either end. The weights came off one side, onto the floor, and the other and I was left holding the bar like a plonker! "I was hoping for the ground to swallow me up. But there was no such thing as a proper [work-out] plan. It was going to the bench and bench-pressing. There was no strength and conditioning plans back 15 years."Parkinson recalled a similar situation when, early in his senior Laois career, he went to the gym at I.T Tralee with Jim McGuinness. "This was back in 1998 and I wasn't going to the gym, but Jim was. "I remember doing so many bicep curls that my arms were bent. I couldn't straighten them. When I pushed my arms out flat, they bounced back up and I was thinking, 'When will this end?!'" We've come a long way since the early noughties and, as the game gets closer to professional levels at senior level, one suspects our top players are only getting started.
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