Irish Daily Mirror

I’LL NOT BE SHEDDING ANY TIERS

Niall Scully says his new role as an impact sub excites him

- BY PAT NOLAN

CENTRAL to Dublin’s success over the past decade or so has been that there is no such thing as a sure thing, we were repeatedly told.

It wasn’t altogether true, however, if you scanned over the team selection. Yes, there was a significan­t regenerati­on of the side from the start of the six-in-a-row run to its end but there were still pillars upon which the team was always going to be built on.

Stephen Cluxton in goal. Jonny Cooper, Jack Mccaffrey and James Mccarthy were always going to start when fit and available in defence. Brian Fenton, Ciaran Kilkenny and Dean Rock too, among others.

Niall Scully was unquestion­ably also in Jim Gavin’s top tier.

After breaking into the side in 2017, he started 66 out of Dublin’s subsequent 73 League and Championsh­ip games and featured off the bench in another five, prior to this year’s Leinster quarter-final against Wexford.

In the 32 Championsh­ip games that Dublin played from 2017-22, he started 28 and came off the bench in another.

In fact, after being introduced off the bench in the 2017 All-ireland final win over Mayo, Scully didn’t start only two Championsh­ip games out of the subsequent 26, all the way up to last year’s All-ireland semi-final loss to the same opposition.

We can’t say if current manager Dessie Farrell (inset) operates off the same system as his predecesso­r but if he does,

Scully is now firmly in tier two.

After starting all seven games in this year’s

League as Dublin suffered relegation for the first time in 27 years, he has had to make do with coming off the bench against Wexford, Meath and Kildare in the Championsh­ip.

While acknowledg­ing that it’s uncharted territory for him personally, the 28-year-old is trying to engineer a challenge from his current predicamen­t.

“It’s probably not a position I’ve faced before but it gives me something to look forward to every time I’m stepping out into training,” he says. “But definitely it kind of excites me more than it daunts me.

“In fairness over the League I suppose I got plenty (of game time), I got enough that was needed. For me, it’s all about the team performanc­e and how we can benefit the team the most.

“I suppose if it’s in the starting 15 or if it’s outside the starting 15, coming off the bench, whatever the case may be, it’s just a big thing for me to benefit the team and try to introduce that.

“You’re always going to need that and that’s down to an individual basis and understand­ing that and acknowledg­ing it.

“Inter-county football now is a 35-40-man game. You need the competitiv­eness in the internal games and in every training session.”

The impact sub role is something that various Dublin players that would have been automatic selections elsewhere have had to live with over the years.

Some of them have warmed to it better than others, particular­ly Kevin Mcmanamon and Scully’s former Templeogue-synge Street clubmate Eoghan O’gara to a lesser degree.

Has Scully sought counsel from the likes of those on how best to execute the role? “No, not really. I haven’t thought of it in any further detail than when I’m coming in I’m trying to perform as good as I can.”

He has effectivel­y been deposed by another clubmate, Lorcan O’dell, who he has replaced in the last two games when the outcome has long been put beyond doubt.

“I’m absolutely delighted for him and I think he’s done extremely well. All I can do is go to training and put my hand up and put my best foot forward.”

If it’s not him against Cork tomorrow, it’ll be the first knockout game that Dublin will have started without him in five years.

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