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Published 12:58 20 Aug 2018 BST
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Niall Burke's score then made it a one-point game before Graeme Mulcahy swelled Limerick's lead back to two.
Canning had another free on 77 minutes and had the option of dropping it in around the square or taking a point and hoping referee James Owens would allow Galway one final phase of play to level it. The Portumna man took his point and his faith in Owens paid off.
One final free but, with the angle, nigh on 80 metres for Canning to take the final to extra time. "It's up to Joe now," Marty Morrissey told RTE's rapt viewership.
Two big, deep breaths and a slice of his blade but the connection was not as pure as Canning would have hoped. It was on the very limit of his range but, given the player, moment and championship summer we've had, you would not have put it past him.
But Canning knew. His face gave away what we would all see, seconds later.
The free dropped short and Limerick held on. The demons of 1994 exorcised and a 45-year wait put aside.
A third losing final to add to his, and Galway's, victory last September. Well-intentioned as they were, each of those three hip-hooray cheers, initiated by Limerick captain Declan Hannon, would have stung.
On the Sunday game, hours after Hannon had raised Liam MacCarthy and both sides had went their separate ways, Jackie Tyrrell told The Sunday Game:
"I know Joe Canning got Player of the Year last year, but I think he was even better this year."He did, and he was. The brilliance was there for all to see this summer but it was not enough. For 30 minutes in the second half Joe Canning was at his very limit; his very best. Not for nothing is this man called a legend.
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