With the help of the Sky Sports punditry team, we'll be looking back at the weekend that was and getting deeper into what you're talking about on a Monday.
The main Talking Point this week is the fact that Kildare's Lost Generation has, suddenly, been found. The Lilywhites are shaping up to give Dublin (or Westmeath) their biggest Leinster final challenge in years, and while much is down to the management of Cian O'Neill (and some of his curious tactics), they have also been helped enormously by the return flight of some of their Earls.
Kevin Feely has drawn a line under his soccer career across the channel, and is now back home, dominating the skies. Paddy Brophy is back from Australia, having left Perth's West Coast Eagles to come home. But the most impressive player against Meath was undoubtedly Daniel Flynn.
Like Brophy, Flynn has returned from Aussie Rules, having left Port Adelaide. Against Meath, he scored 1-3 to seal the man of the match award from Sky Sports.
After the game, he gave this remarkably breathless interview to Sky Sports' Damian Lawlor.
That interview is a testament to Flynn's work rate and the sickly heat that was general across Tullamore on Saturday evening, but what is equally obvious is sheer enthusiasm Flynn has for playing with Kildare. It betrays the general good feeling around the county at the moment: Cian O'Neill is building a slick operation, adding craft to the graft he instilled last year.
Kildare have racked up some big scores so far this year: hitting Laois for 1-21 and Meath for 2-16 in a couple of Tullamore turkey-shoots. The attack operates well as a unit, with Flynn an integral part of it. While he and Cathal McNally (who scored 1-4) won plenty of primary possession (between them, they racked up a remarkable 36 possessions) it was Flynn's movement off the ball which was exceptionally impressive.
His back-post run helped to create space for McNally's finish for the first goal, and later in that half, he found himself in a superb position to score one for himself, only for Niall Kelly to drive the ball into the side-netting, ignoring Flynn's pleas for an easy pass, which he could have flicked to the net.
He was afforded that opportunity late on, however, flicking Slattery's pass to the net to add to give Meath's woes a more tangible feel on the scoreboard.
Flynn has travelled home to find that Kildare are going places.
Watch the full Episode 3 of Talking Points below, where we also talk about Cork's return from the doldrums, Waterford and Donegal's strange malaise and how Mickey Harte has learned a thing or two from Coach Taylor.