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Published 16:23 14 Apr 2020 BST
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Paul Flynn, he was somewhere in the middle.
Couple of years on, he stops and smiles. The Waterford dressing room was a mad house in the early noughties, a pick and mix of all characters great and small, all personalities loud and unassuming but inside was a magical bunch; a magical bunch who caused a whirlwind wherever they went.
The memories come flooding back.
"Mullane, the anger in his face, Dan 6 ft 4, like a model with tattoos on his hand and then grabbing balls and hanging them in the net," recalls Flynn, a star of that Waterford team on Monday's GAA Hour Show. "Ken at centre back - no teeth in him...You know, we used to have lads taking out their teeth in the dressing rooms and putting them in their pockets! "'T'was good times for the GAA, good times for hurling.And the 2004 Munster hurling final was their day of days. The sun scorched over Thurles on a Sunday that had a near religious feel to it, as the people of Cork and Waterford travelled in their droves to hurling's own promised land. Their representatives didn't disappoint with a contest and a game that will live long, as TG4 viewers found out on Sunday, when the game was shown again to much fanfare. Mullane's red card, Deane's majesty, Ken McGrath's catches all had the hair standing perhaps the most pulsating moment of all came when, Paul Flynn hammered one in from 40 yards to keep Waterford alive. https://twitter.com/GAA__JOE/status/1247847109887434752 Years of conjecture and debate has followed but speaking to Colm Parkinson, Paul Flynn notes that he and Dan Shanahan had spoken about the prospect of a long-range shot before.
"I have to go along with the public perception that I did, because at this stage, I still get the free odd pint over it so if I actually contradicted myself, that would stop. "To not sound cock-of-the-hoop about it, myself and Dan did have a little thing in place where if Dan stood in front of the goalie that the odd day, we might try something. We tried it once or twice before, and two of them hit the cross-bar. Of course when one does go in, it was a mistake.But Flynn had form for it. Known as one of the game's deadliest finishers, he could strike the ball at an almighty pace. The Ballygunner man looks back fondly.
"Funny enough, we used have a good bit of banter. Diarmuid O'Sullivan started pointing to the bottom corner...I just looked at him, shook my head and said 'no!' Even in the Munster hurling final, there was a good bit of craic going on between us..."Great times. You can listen to the Paul Flynn Interview on The GAA Hour Show here. https://soundcloud.com/sportsjoe-gaa-hour/2004-munster-final-review-show-incl-paul-flynn-interview

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