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1st September 2019
07:16pm BST

At half-time, TV viewers were left reeling in an ugly row that ended up with Spillane being the voice of reason. What is rare is oddly beautiful.
Brolly clearly had a swarm of bees in his shuddering bonnet about the appointment of Meath referee Gough, who was in the spotlight over his teaching job in Terenure, Dublin. The implications had been clear, leading into the game, that Gough may be compromised as he has close ties to the capital.
The whole Gough saga had been instigated by former Kerry boss Eamon Fitzmaurice saying he would prefer if the GAA had not appointed Gough as he was 'living and working' in Dublin.
On the two big decision from the first half - the penalty awarded against Dublin and the Cooper sending off - Brolly declared:
"The penalty was a scandal. It was not a penalty in 100 years." Claiming that Cooper actually could have had a free out, Brolly added, "The referee must have been clearly influenced by the propaganda coming from Kerry."Bizarrely, amid the debate over the big Gough calls, former Dublin midfielder Ciarán Whelan admitted that, as pundits, he would be biased to the Dubs and Spillane would be likewise for Kerry. Spillane bristled at the suggestion that he was anything but objective. https://twitter.com/TheSundayGame/status/1168181119201636355 Brolly had gone too far, in openly claiming - in a broadcast that will have been watched by well over 800,000 - that Gough had been compromised by the two-week news cycle regarding his fitness to referee his first ever final. It was dangerous rhetoric and it flew in the face of the many that watched the game and felt Gough had handled the final well and had taken a number of brave and correct calls. Not every referee will go through a game flawlessly, but Gough had not shirked big decisions and was consistent with his toughness on players that were dragging and pulling at their opponents [he handed out 10 yellows and one red card]. Following the game, which ended in a 1-16 apiece draw, Brolly appeared to have calmed somewhat. Touching on his previous criticisms, he stated that Gough was a good referee but expressed his relief that the Meath man would not be overseeing the replay. RTE producers would want to seriously question whether Brolly and his wild opinions are fit for purpose when the broadcast of the replay, on September 14, comes around.
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