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Published 12:40 29 Aug 2023 BST
Updated 12:41 29 Aug 2023 BST
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The 29-year-old, who often plays as a wing forward for the Slaughtneil hurlers, says that while he would generally cover less ground in a hurling game, due to rucks and snappy breaks of the ball, it would be more intense.
"What I would find in hurling that it's more bouts of intensity, and a lot more all or nothing because of the speed the ball moves."
"So you're reacting a lot sharper in hurling. At club level, distances covered are relatively similar, but the physicality of being in rucks is a lot higher.
"Across the board, you'd cover more ground in football, it's just the rucks and stuff that are more physical in hurling and that's how it differs."
"They're so similar and so different in many ways.
"You'd do the same conditioning for both but how they apply is ever so slightly different. The reactiveness is the bigger change."
So there you have it, footballers cover more ground but hurlers move harder and faster in short bursts. Who has the bragging rights there?
Meanwhile, Rogers says he's excited about playing Division One Football for Derry next year, and claims it will have a big impact on the younger players in the squad.
“Everyone gets comfortable with being at that elite level. It paves a really good pathway for the young folk, 100 per cent.
“They know the lure of playing Division One football, the lure of playing against the best in Ireland every week. So it is very much a very positive factor with being in Division One. I think just for competition for big honours, it is a very big factor.”
“Once you've reflected on it and see it like that, it gives you such a boost in the short term in that if we develop now, imagine what the addition of those players will be if they come into the right environment and set-up with the experience we have. It is exciting in my eyes, anyway.”
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