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Published 09:46 19 Jan 2022 GMT
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And even though he would have embraced the challenge ahead of them in 2022, when Dublin aim to make it back to the top, he says that, having struggled to make an impact in 2020, last year was the right time to hang up the boots.
"It’s never an easy decision but the stage where I was, it was the perfect time to walk away and zero regrets. Physically, possibly I had another year left in me but it was definitely the right decision. I gave it absolutely everything in the last season, didn’t work out for me, that’s fine, it’s been all good."
Indeed, for MacAuley, the hardest thing about heading off travelling last year was leaving his club behind him. For sixteen years he has played alongside Keaney, O'Mahoney and the rest of the Ballyboden St Enda's stalwarts and on the other side of the world, he thinks of them just now.
"It’s tough. That’s something I haven’t done for 16 years of playing football. I’ve never left Declan O’Mahony hanging in midfield.
“The likes of him and Keaney – and everyone else we soldiered with – I’ve been there for so long. It is what it is. How many times have I turned down going travelling?
“It’s just the way the cards fell. It was just time to get away. No one knew what was going to happen in Covid. It wasn’t a case of if I delayed it a week or two I was going to be able to play championship."
MacAuley, of course, is the subject of this Thursday's Laochra Gael where he discusses his life on and off the pitch. No doubt, watching down from above, his late parents will be proud. His mother Rosaleen died when he was 12, his father Michael died in 2012.
"My dad was big into the football. Never really played it but was just mad into it watching it. We’d sit there all Championship games, Saturday and Sunday, just screaming at the telly.
“You couldn’t be in the same room as him. He was so mad into it. He was happy to brag and every patient that went through his was sick of hearing my name because he was spoofing about some sort of basketball or football thing that I did that week. In fairness, he was happy to see us do so well in the end."
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