As a GAA supporter, one of the most satisfying things to watch on the pitch is a well-orchestrated dummy.
Whether it is a magical dummy hand pass, similar to Owen Mulligan’s mastery in 2005, or if it’s a solo reminiscent of Stephen O’Neill against Kildare, we are all for it.
Over the weekend we were summoned to Donie Smith’s glorious dummy solo against Dublin in Croke Park and Tyrone forward Mark Bradley’s wonderful piece of skill against Colm Boyle of Mayo.
26.3.17 @TyroneGAALive v MayoGAA Mark Bradley dummy and point #DOCSPORT pic.twitter.com/vaWGm0YVpO
— DOCSPORT (@DOCSPORT3) March 26, 2017
One moment of genius that somehow managed to stay below the radar was produced by Galway U-21 footballer Robert Finnerty in the Connacht U-21 Football Championship, which saw last year’s All-Ireland winners bow out of the competition.
Bradley wasn't the only one selling dummies at the wkend here's Robert Finnerty for @Galway_GAA u21s-highlights @ 8pm #TG4 @SportsJOEdotie pic.twitter.com/zBlwHBB2bC
— GAA 2020 (@GAA_2020) March 27, 2017
Jason Redmond, Pundit Arena
Read More About: colm boyle, donie smith, Football, GAA, gaa dummies, gaa dummy, Gaelic Football, galway u21, mark bradley, Mayo U21, owen mulligan 2005, owen mulligan dublin, owen mulligan dummy, robert finnerty, stephen o neill, stephen o neill dummy, stephen o neill tyrone