Armagh manager Kieran McGeeney aired his grievances with the coverage surrounding modern Gaelic football, saying that the articles he reads say that ‘the world is going to end in the GAA’. The Orchard County have made a flying start to their Allianz League campaign with three wins from three. They have scored tallies of 2-16 in each of their last two games, and alongside Leitrim they have the best defensive record of any side in the four divisions – with just 29 points given up. McGeeney’s comments came in the wake of his side’s recent win over Kildare, but weren’t particularly in relation to coverage of his own team, but the sport as a whole. He criticised some of the coverage around the current state of Gaelic football, saying that the game is better now than it is given credit for, and there is an element of nostalgia clouding people’s view of how the game was played during his time on the pitch. “It is good, but it is very hard to always understand, there were high scoring games last night (Saturday) but nobody is going to say, we need to stop all these scores," said the 2002 All-Ireland winning captain. “You have a few low scoring games and ‘football is terrible’. “I have said this over and over, but all you have to do is watch videos, and I played in it - it is not half as good as people remember, not half as good. “It was the same in the 70s and 80s, it just keeps going on and on but we must be the most negative sport in the world. “It is funny, I always get cracked up when I am called dour and sad and I don’t smile. The stories I read that I am sent say that the world is going to end in the GAA. “It has never been as popular, the crowds are big, and they are making money. I don’t know what people want.”