Goals shift momentum and win games, but Jack O'Connor felt Paddy Small's second-half major at the Hill-end was a particularly pivotal moment in Dublin's All-Ireland final success over his Kerry side.Small's goal 10 minutes after the restart drew the sides level and revitalised the Metropolitans and their fans, and while the Kingdom went on to forge a three-point lead in reply to the setback, O'Connor opined that the effort in doing so left an indelible mark."I'm disappointed," the Kerry boss told RTÉ Sport in the wake of Dublin's 1-15 to 1-13 victory."We were well in that game and I thought at stages in the second half we were almost in control of the game."Obviously, the goal was a huge turning point and while we came back well, after the goal I just thought the effort to come back and go back up three probably took its toll in the last 10 minutes."But I'm very proud of the lads, they gave everything out there."It was a fierce battle, probably Dublin's extra bit of experience got them over the line in the end."Manager Jack O'Connor analyses where Kerry lost the All-Ireland final, pointing to the gifted goal for Dublin, their extra experience and missed chances in the second half. #sundaygame pic.twitter.com/z3kvEB6vC7A slippery surface and referee David Gough's laissez-faire approach allowed for a physical game, and one played at a frenetic tempo."Conditions were tough and David was reffing it on the margins, really," O'Connor said."He was allowing a lot of contact and that obviously made for a great game and an exciting game, but we couldn't fault any fellas, we really, really emptied the tank there."Coming towards the end, there were fellas getting diving blocks and turnovers, but my initial feeling is that we left