It was a little too late to make the front pages of the papers today, but Japan's dramatic Rugby World Cup win against South Africa was inevitably the first talking point for this week's Paper Review.
Shane was joined by Bernice Harrison of the Irish Times, Barry Devlin of Horslips, and journalist Eamon Delaney, who all weighed in on one of the greatest upsets in rugby history.
Barry started by explaining, "I was hauled in to the room to be watching [the Japan game]... This would probably have done more for people who wouldn't have been that interested.
"By the time six o'clock came around there were people analysing the game who didn't know what the game was," he laughed. "It was such a fairy tale. Normally when teams do this, they fall at the very last hurdle, and they get this wonderful moral victory. And then they did this extraordinary thing, when they said 'we aren't going to kick this penalty, we're going to go for a try'".
Eamon said he didn't watch the Irish match because he thought it would be too one-sided. "With rugby there's much more potential for one-sided encounters. There's so much pre-match analysis everywhere. But then I turned on social media and saw Japan, and I thought 'wow, that's amazing'".
After a brief chat about today's All-Ireland final, the panel moved on to other stories. A lot of papers have devoted a lot of space to the new Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Bernice observed, "it seems everything he did this week the media was waiting to beat him with a stick about. He doesn't like driving chauffeur cars - as he shouldn't if he is the left-wing leader of the Labour party.
"Then the media followed him down the street shouting questions at him. He refused to answer, he just walked straight on. Then the media pundits decided that was fantastically rude of him. But who was being rude?"
Other stories discussed today Ruairi Quinn's colourful comments on capitalism, the refugee crisis in Europe and more.
Listen back to the full Paper Review below: