Former GAA President Seán Kelly has called on the organisation to "help other counties before it's too late," as Dublin's domination of football shows no sign of stopping.
A facile 1-24 to 0-12 victory over Cavan in Saturday's All-Ireland semi-final has again raised questions about the resources and finances available to Dublin that other counties just don't have.
The Dubs strolled to their tenth consecutive Leinster championship this season and have breezed past all the teams they've met on the way to the All-Ireland final.
Kelly was central to plans to revive and promote Gaelic games in the capital during his reign in charge of the GAA.
In the early 2000s, with both football and hurling coming under pressure in Dublin, a committee was established to 'rescue' GAA in the capital with extra funding made available to help grow the games and the player base.
Those plans worked and Dublin have gone from a position where they had won just one All-Ireland title in 15 years to chasing their sixth consecutive crown this year.
Now Kelly, the man who helped to kick-start the Dublin revival, believes that it's time to focus on helping other counties reach the same heights as the Dubs.
Writing on Twitter, the former president said: "Having been centrally involved in getting the funding to strengthen GAA in Dublin, which @Dubs_gaa has used brilliantly, I can say 'mission accomplished', so why continue with the mission??
"Time for new mission - help other counties before it’s too late!"