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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
Sport
Vincent Whelan

Joe Brolly savages 'entirely unnatural' Sunday Game format that leaves him pitying pundits

Joe Brolly has had another cut at his former employers RTE and The Sunday Game as he labelled its GAA coverage 'entirely unnatural.'

Writing in his Irish Independent column, he stated he actually feels bad for RTE's pundits who are constrained by an overly formal structure that doesn't allow for free-flowing debate.

He wrote: “The day-time pundits on The Sunday Game are forced to stand awkwardly behind podiums, like politicians about to make their opening statement. Instead of conversation, it is a stage-managed chore. Your turn.

“Now your turn. Now your turn. Now, competition time. The forced laughter as the unfunny but polite-to-smile-at remarks are made.

“It is entirely unnatural. No one discusses a game like this. No one wants to hear it discussed like this. If you were in a bar and they were at it, you would make your excuses and get offside to another crowd asap.

“Because it is so stage-managed and risk averse, no one says anything. Instead, it has been reduced to statements of the banal.

“I feel sorry for the pundits, who must need oxygen masks to bring them around when the show is over. But more for the audience, especially the younger audience, who simply will not watch if this continues.”

Brolly was famously let go from the national broadcaster in 2019 after he made a number of controversial remarks about referee David Gough's performance in the Dublin-Kerry drawn final.

For the replay, former Mayo boss Stephen Rochford replaced him on the panel.

Since then he has been a vocal critic of the station for - in his view - being too concerned with being politically correct rather than focusing on delivering as entertaining a product as possible.

In 2020, RTE's Head of Sport Declan McBennett explained the reasoning behind removing Brolly from their punditry team.

"The decision was made and I was happy to stand over the decision and I believe it was the right decision,' he told Independent.ie.

"The optics didn't concern me. Because I'm not about the optics. To my mind, it was about putting the best people on the replay. We brought in Stephen Rochford."

He explained: "There are three reasons why you get a seat [on the panel]. Credibility, informed opinion and the ability to articulate that opinion.

"If you're a pundit and a contract gets cancelled, you have to ask yourself why. And I think if you examine those elements already mentioned, it probably answers that question for everybody.

"Part of RTE's remit, whether we like it or not, is to put the most credible people there. Credibility is a huge element of what we do."

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