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Published 23:00 23 Feb 2019 GMT
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Tyrone decide that they won't be stupid enough to walk into that wall - especially with the three-point advantage.
So they just kicked the ball around under absolutely no pressure in their own half and the crowd grew restless.
Tyrone tried to advance but knew they'd be drawing contact. So Niall Morgan himself arrived to help.
Every single player on the pitch - 29 of them - were inside the Monaghan 65' and Tyrone kept the ball there.
Tyrone eventually got a way through - taking risks with all the bodies there - but McShane ballooned an effort wide. It took three minutes though for that bit of action and then the half time whistle blew much to the relief of the crowd.
At one point, the camera flashed to the Tyrone dugout. Mickey Harte was motionless - he's not going to tell his players to willingly surrender themselves to the blanket but Stephen O'Neill was in the background shaking his head, presumably exasperated at Monaghan's tactic during that sin bin spell.
It's difficult to stop teams who want to play so defensively - even just for a brief period like Monaghan - and, in truth, they should be allowed to be defensive, like every sport allows for. But you can incentivise them to come out by introducing a back-court rule into Gaelic football.
https://twitter.com/ConanDoherty/status/1091796516606496774
That wouldn't punish the team on the ball - Tyrone weren't at fault for what happened on Saturday. As the game showed, there is still comfortably enough space inside the opposition half to keep possession if that's what you want to or have to do, but a team might like the chances of pushing up or pushing you back and, suddenly, you'd have a new dynamic.
Another reason for Tyrone's caution with the ball is because they know what would happen if they give it up. Monaghan would've kept it and ran the clock down until they were back to their full compliment. The back-court rule would make it tougher to keep the ball - a pitch is too vast for it to really be a skill to appreciate. But if a team wants to keep possession - and they should be allowed to do that too if they really want - this just makes it more of a skill to be appreciated. And it might encourage some teams to push out because they could be handsomely rewarded if successful.Tyrone send open letter to GAA over Allianz sponsorship
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