Hooter change would create less controversy - McConvillepublished at 11:24 GMT 26 January
Image source, InphoTomas Kennedy's last-gasp score helped All-Ireland champions Kerry past Roscommon
Oisin McConville believes switching back to the old system of the game-ending hooter would leave the GAA "less open to controversy".
All-Ireland champions Kerry claimed a dramatic Division One win over Roscommon on Sunday as Tomas Kennedy punched over a last-gasp winning point.
However, there was controversy as the score happened right on the hooter and Roscommon felt that Kennedy's point should not have counted.
Under new rules, the hooter signals the end of the game but the old system meant that play continued under the ball went out of play.
"I thought it worked a lot better under the old system where it was the final play," former Armagh All-Ireland winner and current Wicklow boss McConville said on the GAA Social podcast on BBC Sounds.
"It created the opportunity for a little bit more drama. The hooter just ending the game isn't for me.
"It would probably leave us open to less controversy too."
The change was implemented by the GAA's Football Review Committee (FRC) to try and stop too much additional time if teams did not put the ball out of play and to create greater urgency for scores.
The controversy surrounding Kennedy's score was not helped by the scoreboard at the Fitzgerald Stadium had five seconds remaining when Sean O'Shea took the free that led to Kennedy's point, while the TV broadcast on TG4 had two seconds left on the clock.
Speaking from his own experience working on BBC Sport's coverage, McConville pointed to how difficult it was to sync all the timing up to the exact second and that consistency was needed across the board.
"One thing we do know, to our cost, is the time on the clock on the TV does not always marry with what's going on with the officials.
"That's something you had to temper it with, but it seemed a very harsh way to lose a game.
"I think the system we had where play continued until the ball was out, I'm not really sure why we've gone away from that if we want to use the hooter."
Listen to the GAA Social podcast with Thomas Niblock and Oisin McConville on BBC Sounds.






















