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Published 12:38 19 Jul 2019 BST
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McFadden dominating alongside Jason McGee rids Murphy of the necessity to play as an orthodox midfielder. He's defensive-minded and mans the Donegal backline where Murphy's size and aggression is no longer needed full-time and, along with McGee, Thompson and Michael Langan, he's an option for their own and for opposition kickouts which now don't require Murphy to win every single one as well as spoil the other team's best player whilst he's at it.
Shaun Patton's kicking is scarily getting better and better and with the pace, trajectory, distance and accuracy he gets - coupled with Murphy's freedom - it's like Donegal are back in the golden era with Paul Durcan himself picking out Murphy on the half forward line.
The most important thing Declan Bonner has done though is made the county self-sufficient. Tactically, the shift has been to get the most out of Murphy in midfield and attack - rather than pining for him in one or the other - and the positional changes have helped but so has the coaching and so has the mindset.
There's no player not contributing in an impactful way to the Donegal set-up and, if there was, they'd be out. The looping is relentlessly dizzying, the angles of the runs are sharp and meaningful and the off the shoulder bursts are genuine and threatening. There are options inside and strong ball winners and when you add that up, you have Michael Murphy as just one of the lads. One of the bunch. Christ, an add on. When Michael Murphy slips off the radar like that, he'll hurt you.
It makes Meath coach Colm Nally's comments on the We Are Meath podcast seem baffling. He stopped short of calling Donegal a one-man team... but he still said they're the closest thing he's ever seen to a one-man team.
"I'm not saying Donegal are a one-man team," Nally clarified before the but. "But they're the closest team I've ever seen to a one-man team. "Michael Murphy was getting scores, then he was in the middle catch the balls and then at the end he was clearing the ball off the line. So I mean if you put him in our team, I think you'd see a different result."The man's a massive player and he's a Donegal player so complaining about what he can do to teams is like undermining Barcelona's wins just because they had Messi. Messi's a Barcelona player. It also overlooks what is actually happening and how Murphy is benefitting from the work of others - almost like it's a team. His score on his first game back from injury this year when they beat Armagh in March highlighted a pattern that would be reeled out from then right into summer. Ryan McHugh is advanced, driving in at the opposition defence and drawing players towards him.
Michael Langan gets off his shoulder and goes straight for the posts.
He shakes another man to make a dent and you can now see Murphy come into picture on the left.
Unmarked.
But it's impossible to worry only about Murphy when the rest of them are posing very real problems. They're not paying lip service with their runs, they're actually looking to do something and Michael Langan has scored in every game this championship so he can't be ignored to keep an eye on one man.
And that's just an example of McHugh and Langan. What about the rest of them? The most vicious of them?
The scoring charts show where the damage is being done for Declan Bonner.
Donegal top scorers (2019 championship)
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