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18th July 2017
11:26am BST

"My thing with Jim is I was the first person he dropped when he got the job. It was a phone call saying 'Thanks for your time with Dublin' and that was it. "2012 was probably one of my better years in that I started every game for Dublin. I had one of my best seasons, I thought anyway, and then I was hit with that. I suppose I was at a point, personally, where I didn't know where I wanted to go in my career. I was DJing, promoting, I had my own company, doing radio, so I was a bit all over the place and Jim doesn't like that. "If I was in a back, 9 to 5, he probably would have been more happy. But I was a bit scattered in my personal life and I had a really bad club championship that year. I think that rectified Jim's call to drop me."Fennell kept training hard and let the Dublin management team know he was sticking closely to their training schedules but no recall was forthcoming. He focused on his club career and helped Vincent's to an All-Ireland win in 2014 but tore his hamstring badly in that final. Dublin went from strength to strength, trophy to trophy and Fennell was forced to watch on as a former player, and fan.
That ruthless, focused Gavin is the one that many of us readily associate with him. At the heart of it all though, there is a man that will do anything for Dublin and who gives up a lot of his time for the game.
Former Galway footballer Pádraic Joyce recalled a talk he recently attended where Gavin spoke extremely well before heading back to his own club that evening. Joyce told The GAA Hour:
"Look at Jack McCaffrey heading off for a year. If that happened in any other county - the Footballer of the Year heading away - there would be uproar. But he was let go and the wasn't rushed back into the squad this year when he came back either. He was eased into the league games and he is absolutely flying at the moment... "It's solely down to Jim Gavin. You can't praise the guy enough. I did a thing there for Clane GAA lately and Jim was guest of honour, and he spoke really, really well. "I'll disagree with those that say he's boring. Most managers can't go out and say they are headcases on the radio, or any of that sort of stuff. They have to have some sort of moderation. He's a really intelligent fella. "He left that function, that day, at 6:30 and he was heading up to train the Under-10s at Clondalkin [Round Towers]. That's the sort of man he is - a real GAA man."Gavin has a clear love for the game and an absolute desire to see Dublin thrive at the highest form of the game. We don't see that side of Gavin too much on our TV screens or hear it on radio stations, or podcasts, but many people in the game are well aware of his passion and commitment.
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