 Mae'r gofyn o toffi TV eras y final wedi efo'n 1, Benny Hill. Keith Mullin, back in the house. Saedliar. How are you getting on mate? I'm good you know, I'm all right you know. The dulcet tones. Keith's recovering from some surgery. The dulcet tones. The voice is coming back you know. It's on its way back. On its way back. Which is all good. And joined by David Feelysdarr of Howard Way. He's talking to me. There you go. Hollywood Davies. Hollywood Davies. No, no. Boys, Carlo Ancelotti's first game in charge of everything football. Still sounds a little bit mad. I'm not going to lie. Initial thought. I'll go to Dave first. Initial thought on the appointment before we get into the game Dave. Absolutely magnificent. Seriously. All hyperbole is sad. If this was a case study and it was in any other industry, in music industry for example. And say you put someone with that kind of track record. And that's world global standing in this game. From where we've been looking like a dodgym car. Just bounce them down for six, eight, 15 years before that. And now we've got direction and clarity. And somebody in charge you will attract people who you want to be involved. As a statement, as an initial statement. It is literally letting fireworks off in the sky. It's fantastic as well as I'm concerned. Folla faci. Not really much I can say really to that, is there? No, I'm extremely happy. I mean, just to echo what Dave has been saying is, you know, we've messed about to suppose and took a few risks over about five years with various managers hoping they're going to come good. But you know, you can't really give this fella sort of a stick. You can't level. He doesn't know what he's doing. You can't level. This fella hasn't got a clue. The usual stick that you might see on social media because he has got a clue and he does know what he's doing. Better than you. So, you know, the only thing that possibly can go wrong is here is if we don't step up ourselves to the pop to the level that he's going to set. I mean, that's a big thing Dave isn't it is that we've had since David Moyes and David Moyes was good for whatever. You know, we was good. Let it not be like this. He was good manager for that. He just didn't, you know, we won nothing. So you'd have to look past that. We've messed around. We tried partners. We tried human. We tried Michael Silver. All of that was in there to study this year. But this, do you think this is what far up machine he had in mind when he bought the club he wanted someone like Carlo Ancelotti at the top end of it, a well-class manager? Absolutely, but also kind of got lucky with Duncan as well because of fairness. So again, back to the case study part of it. If this was somebody else and we were looking at it, you'd say it's the dream ticket to start off with. It's the dream ticket because the elements, forget about the others, even man is, but go back to Michael Silver. It was the breakdown with the fans, even winning. Nobody really bought into it. They bought into it until such time as we can see the best in any game. And we never come back when we can see the best. So we can see the best. And everyone, I go to away games, that's the barometer you use. It's not the goodness in game where people have been sitting there for 40 years and you pull up with, pull up with. In the away games, you let them know what you think about it, but it's not going around. So the first shelter here for anyone to get the sack or drop him on, it's usually out in the away game. And I could see with it. Honestly, I used to feel sorry for them by the end, but it's not a good position for a lad who pays to go and watch this. But I kind of thought there's no way out of this for them. I genuinely don't. Well, to go from there to here, it's literally a juxtaposition within a month. It's not yet a month since we went to Liverpool. Don't remind me. No, we were in the ground. But the point being, the question you asked me about the being pleased with it, again, if it was a case study, that's a no brainer, boys. It's literally, you just jump exponentially without really, you spent money, but you've been throwing money out the window the last three years. It hasn't took you the single step. This one is an actual tangible three leaps forward in my opinion. You've got to, you've got to as well think about, you know, Duncan Ferguson as well. You know, we were on a ship that was just like wandering. It was sinking. This ship was sinking. You know, we tried all those other people, you know, and it just hasn't worked. I need to say this though. It was sinking. He's come in, not just steady there. He stopped it from sinking, and then put it right back in the right position as to where we're actually at it. Reminded us all, us all, of who we are. You know, on who we are as a club, Gallows come in, and he's now picking that up, which I think it's perfect for them, you know. I think no one really should underestimate what Duncan Ferguson did here as well. Yeah, I was going to say, because obviously after Amfield, you know, I mean, to be honest, I think the decision probably was made after Norwich, you know. It was done, wasn't it? No, when we were going there. There was the two games, and it was like you can't really put someone, you know, rightly or wrongly, whatever. But after Amfield, you just looked at that team and you were like, there's nothing in it. There's no, you knew you'd be able to play. I've said that all season and people have disagreed over ever, but the level of football that we have in our squad is easily better than, for me, better than 14 other clubs, maybe 13, 14. Ability wise, doesn't mean a thing if you're not a team. Doesn't mean a thing if you don't work out. So after Amfield, you're looking and you're saying, this team doesn't know how to even stay in a football mat any more. We just threw Leicester away. We were winning 1-0 at Leicester two minutes ago and we lost the game. Three days later, we're 2-0 down in the Derby after 12 minutes or wherever it was, you think, in 10. Because one ball was just killing us. So what he was able to do Duncan Ferguson in time for that Chelsea game, which was less than 48 hours after Amfield or wherever it was, at less than 48 hours after he'd been given a job, we turned up with a totally different mentality against Chelsea, you were flying. I'm white the floor with them and then I think the other thing that needs to be said is that for each game after it, he'd lost players. So it wasn't like, if he'd still had the same team against Chelsea's, what he had against United, and then we were the bad if for Arsenal, I didn't mean to probably got even better results because I've seen people going, well, it was the one game and then it means results got worse. You didn't have players. I need to say this, that actually the most, that's the aspect of what I will condemn Michael Silver for the most. We all know the four of us in this room here all have had interview stroke, intimate conversations with Duncan Ferguson, all four of us known. So that's got to be said. But for Michael Silver to have him in that position and coming before him and to not utilise that aspect, what's literally been sitting in the corner of the room for two years and you are a manager who every time you go behind, you've never won a game of football. So I'd say that's like having a star striker and just don't pick him because he's sleeping with your daughter. You know, like that, what you're doing is you're shooting your own self in the foot so I'll lose sympathy or empathy on that point. Well, by definition, Duncan's experience throughout that time had him chompon at the bit. So literally that 48 hours thing, you've just mentioned that, he didn't care about it, it was four hours because he thought everybody had been going through his head for that long. So that's what I'm pleased about for him because I know that how much I interviewed him, you interviewed him, we were all there when we don't have both things and you could see it in him. Once you turned the camera off and you spoke to him privately, he loves this place like we all love this place. So to not utilise that aspect, it's a tantamount of derelicts in the duty, in my experience. You can't ban shouting in the dressing room, in the footballers. I mentioned the ability there, Keith, and you'll notice even from music, it's no good having talent if you're going to work hard. Exactly. Well, it's no good having a lot of talent in a band if the band I'm going to play together is music and play music. You've got to be a team. People just think that if you put loads of great musicians together, that they automatically start playing great music together. They don't. They don't. You have to work at it, you have to practice it and you have to plan it, and you have to get that right. It's the same with football. I just looked and that's what I've done. The biggest thing I took away from is Tanya, apart from the passion, the obvious, and all of that was the fact that it just reminds everyone and I think this is something we stepped away from in this country, I think. It's that foreign managers have come in, and bear in mind, I'm saying this, I can't when we've got an Italian manager, but what I'm saying is, we've had an influx of foreign coaches and they've done some amazing stuff for our game today, but there's been this almost subconscious thing of hard work doesn't matter anymore and we'll get on a training pitch and we'll just play football because we're running after the ball will be fit and yet I said it many a time on here, the hardest working, fittest teams in the Premier League, Liverpool, Manchester City, unless they're working credibly hard, and Spades did it under Pottetier. No mistake, no coincidence there in the top four every year. This is the thing Martin has missed, he tried to model us on Barcelona without the hard work. Barcelona is one of the hardest working teams. Can I just give a little caveat to that? Two examples, Barley, Peter Eid, both of those players get into any team, including that Liverpool one and including that Manchester City one at the top of their game, and they could tackle all day but also play football. That's the ideal scenario. That's the ideal scenario. Look like Maradona when it's all easy, but when you go to the trenches, the first one is in, winning your games that you ordinarily wouldn't have been in, that's the situation. That's what to me, that's what Duncan Ferries brought back. Before you show all your silky skills, you're going to run round and you're going to put tackles in, that brought the fans back with the team. It's set up now nicely because he's got like you said, he's turned the shape around, got the water out of it, stayed it in the right place, got the fella coming in with all the division of nowhere. Now we've got him in. So many. It was his first game yesterday coming and obviously there's that little bit of pressure as a fan as well, you're thinking just get off to the good start, get rid of any monkey off your back, any of that. Get it out the way, came in. Straight away there's been a little bit of a tinker in with the team, should it be started, should it be playing higher up, which was something Duncan Ferries didn't think about, but he didn't have to put a pair of them fully fit at the same time. And should it be there, but not on the left in the field, you know, Hullgate and Mina back in there. I've got to mention Hullgate because I think the kids being superb, whether it be in the field or whether it be Shansab, I think he's been brilliant. You know that thing you're putting in the field? That man United, he was brilliant. Man United he actually ran the game. He ran the game. He ran the game. He played well against Leicester, but Man United he was the best player on the pitch. Everyone was going through me yesterday. Exactly, exactly. So you know, we started off. I think the game barely come and barely out what the other, 4-4-2 or 4-5-1, two banks of four definitely slain a low block, make you try to play through them. And I thought the first five or ten minutes it felt like a boxing day game. It was a bit like, you know, the atmosphere was great and then it just quickly fizzled. It wasn't it and then it was like Sheffield's in it, Sheffield Wednesday. You know, that kind of, but then, you know, what was evident to me was we were trying to play a lot more football and I'm okay, sometimes that rolling out from the back and asking about what it is. It does, doesn't it. But you've got to just kind of go well and that's the way it is. I said this to Duncan Ferg when he was in here about hybrid football is the way to go and they will do it really well. Play it short or you play it late. Whatever it is, get your up the pit. And I thought we did that a time yesterday under Antelott. Did you notice anything totally, like starkly different to what we've done or just little subtle stuff? There was little subtle things, and, you know, some of those those proven balls through midfield which we haven't seen for a while. People have gone far, you know, the use of the wings has been far too prominent. Benard is well coming inside. But Benard coming inside. You know, and the changing up of the tactics. You know, mid game, you know, people changing positions and stuff. There's almost like a sort of system you could see sort of developing yesterday that is asking questions of the players, where it's like are you good enough to be this system? Are you good enough to do what this manager wants? That's where I got from yesterday. He's trying things out with this players. I mean, I think the biggest one was probably Seamus Coleman, dropping as a third centre back when we were attacking. When we were defending, we'd flip around and it was a 4-4-2. And that helped get Sid to be higher up the pitch. And he did this, I was saying off camera before, because Napoli gets Liverpool. His left back goes and plays as a left winger basically. With all these centre midfield. Benard comes in and all of a sudden they're like, where are we here a little bit? But what I mean, what barely did very well, Dave, is the sitting that back for and they like adding crosses away all the way around them. You've got to give them kudos for it. But the second ball in the final third of the pitch, they literally throw themselves in front of it. Don't even have to win the first ball. But whoever it is, everybody, everybody, the wide midfielders, the midfielders, the forward, everybody, as soon as that second ball comes alive, they just hit it, all of them. So that, it compresses the space. So the Benard thing coming off. If you don't break the lines, the only option are down the side, they're really strong and they put it in and they cover really well and they've got them two banks of ball, like you said, or a ball over the top, which is managed from heaven to them. It's literally like throwing it down, throwing it all day long, actually doing that. So to come off with Benard, we were talking off camera about war cut. It was just about to bring war cut on when we scored the goal because war cut the ball over the top where you can bring them out, bring them out, bring them out, throw it over and still beat the goalie to it. That's the only other option open to it. So the dominant to get that goal in the manner that he got, we got some fortune, we've all said it, we did it one post and then went and off to the other. But that's what you have to do with it. Three weeks ago, that goes out for the goal kick, by the way. So we got lucky a little bit there. But yes, you would say in the lip, we've just been talking about Duncan on the having 48 hours from, I'm feeling when you come out of there, it's kind of been the same thing with this fellow too. So to make that little tweak and for that to provide the difference for the three points, well boys, that's got to fill you with optimism going forward because soon people are going to start empowering him and giving him players who can actually affect this system in this league and ones beyond it hopefully and specifically in cup competitions where the time limit, you haven't got 15 games, you've got 15 minutes to do it, that's when it's going to come through. We had the opportunity to open a game up after five minutes, we had the ball in, Gary Mina, great at the back of Cross and Mason at the scoring, it was in the six yards. Keeper makes a brilliant save, makes it easy for another. Let's be honest, it's a six yarder. And that would have really opened the game. It had settled everyone down in the game. Well, yeah, yeah, all done. Somebody who's going to put it in. They had a moment where it was a diagonal ball to the back post and Rolls-Royce and he said that they've got Gary Mina to it off. And we had the free kick which Chris would have done over it. He was honest, it was a good rumble. You know, the referee had missed a free kick for us and give them a moment. You should have done it with the target. Yeah, oh, we should have listened. You hit the target there. And then we had a suppose in the first half, our best moment come from Jibril Sidderby. It was a good little move, got him in. Bernard, it was threaded him in and he hit a good shot and the keeper makes a great save with his feet there. Again, little bit of fortune. It's the defender goes back and don't dive in it and just can't get it. And it's like you're talking fractions. But we got to half time. At that point though, it felt... When I said to you a bit Wednesday on Boxing Day before the 90s, you remember when it kind of that, you turn up and it just goes boom. I thought it had deep. I thought it had. Because you should have been getting blocks in with that don had missed two out of this and it kind of had that feel in the body. It had a sondl in the room to make a stoker home on Boxing Day with a 1-0 defeat. Well, you know. He got stupid. He can deliver a ball into the box. We have got a centre forward who can put it, you know. He's a big, big lad. Should be able to put it in the back of the net. And that's what happened yesterday, really. There was that. That was the difference between it being 0-0. Oh, 18 months ago we'd have lost that 1-0 in the last minute. You know. 6 weeks ago, 8 games ago. And that was the difference as we ground out a result. Well, we'll talk about his goal in a bit, Dom. But just in general of late, I mean, Joe's put a thing here, are we now seeing the best of Dom in a Calvert Llewyn? That's the question. Dave, I suppose, you know, you can see the development all the time with Dom, can't you? He is getting better, isn't he? Of the top of my head now. We're still buying, aren't we? Absolutely. I'm just about to qualify. We have, actually. Of the top of my head now, I can't think of a game. He's played for everything that I haven't been in the ground. Good, bad on, indifference. Like I said, just off the top of my head, I can't think of one where he's played and I haven't been there. So, therefore, I said to you off camera before, or both of us said to you off camera, why don't you do him under a bus? Cwm, and certainly did. And Michael Silver for the first year, they were playing him more for the system than for the player himself. So his development was second. He wasn't even secondary. It was about fourth consideration. His job was to have his back to their goal when he's actually got number nine on his back and should be putting the ball in their net. Favour of the picture. His back to their goal is looking his chest as his main weapon and everybody else run off and passing out wide, getting in. He's not far away from his development, yet he did in any way. Davis is another one. Look at his age and how many games. I think he played 72 games for Everton by the time he was 19 or 20. And most of those games were losing or drawing. For young players, you want confidence, which confidence, you know how it works. Confidence bouncing on. This was the opposite scenario. So for this kid to come through that now and to see Premier League defenders terrified of him, he was saying a pace. So we'll let him go the other way. He'll ban you off. With the exception of about three or four defenders in this whole league, we don't want a foot race with him. I go to the game and everybody will say, bring them out, bring them out. Let them push you towards the halfway line and then just think a little one over the top. For me, he's got a one-tap ball. And so then. I mean, I've looked at, spent the first part of the season looking at his average position. And his average position was deep in Guilffy Shriggarton. And great. No. As needed. You said that the manager used to be. The manager. This is the thing. This was my criticism at the time. Great. Unbelievable in the air. Spring fabulous. Work hard all day long for you. We'll do anything you ask. Play by the wing. Does a shooting off all of that shame since Duncan's got it shot. Six shots again yesterday, which is incredible because I think he was averaging one a game under silver. So he's had six, three, nine. It's confidence. It doesn't matter whether it's confidence. You've got to be told get shots or whatever. Agree. You've got to do it yourself as well, Dave. You've got to carry baby steps. You've got to do it yourself. Funnily enough, he's one of our most experienced players. Now, that's the only thing over the place we've had. He's a kid. He's a kid. He's one of our longest-saving players. Which is bizarre. Back to the point you just said about Dave's. Absolutely bizarre. So, the manager's come out after a game. Carl-an, once he lost, he said, brilliant. You know, what a great, you know, gives everything a laugh. But you've got to get his runs better. You've got to get in the area where he's gone to score goals. Which tells you, he's looking at him and saying, I can see how I can improve this kid. It's whether or not he's spawned. Definitely. He's also by definition saying, he's going to be around for a while, get used to him because I'm talking to him already about improving. Why wouldn't he be around? Why wouldn't he be around? See, when people see, and it's not many people to be fair, but I do see people questioning him and Dave's all the time. Dave is modern. Dave is modern. He's one of the worst players to ever wear the shirt. If you go back through Facebook and Twitter, in the last 12 months, people said he's one of the, well, you haven't been to heaven that long if he's one of the worst players. That's a myth. Yeah, by the way. It's absolutely myth. It's just hyperbole. It's hyperbole. Players grow and improve all the time. They do. You know, and you need lads like him, and Tom Dave is over there for the squad even. Listen, ideally, Everton will end up with a well-class striker who scores 40, 30, 40, right? Whether he gets to 24 goals, 25 goals a season when he's mid-20, we don't know. But he's getting better. He's got it now. He's got such a shabby. Well, it's a myth, he does. That's what shabby was like. Shabby was no proletary goalscorer. It's a great tag. He's a better goalscorer. He scored six volleysm outside the box. A different player, mate. Yeah, a different player, but I didn't say he was an identity kid, but he does his elements of them, particularly back to goal. It's great. He touches lovely, like European. When you've got players like him in your squad, I don't understand why they have to be well-classed or not good enough when we've got eight or nine other players. Because everyone plays FIFA, and everyone's a football manager now. We've brought him a lesson back. Everyone plays FIFA, and everyone knows everything about everything now. That's what we think. I go on to FIFA for 12 hours a week. I'm as good as him, so I'm telling you these guys are these brilliant. Just that. It's like, no, no, just see with your own eyes. I just think, at the moment, he's probably playing his best. And I'll say over the last year, I don't think anybody has improved as much as him in that squad. I said in the league, in the league as a striker, actually at the end of last season on the radio, honest to the God, the improvements in that kin all over the game. He's got eight goals now this season, and we're not at New Year yet. And people said he wouldn't get double figures. So you'd like to think that he'll score at least another two goals this season. I've seen a staff do the day. I've seen a staff do the day. I think I'm right in saying this, because it was just a play pass on Twitter. But for a minute on the pitch, this season, I think he's out performing for menial, for goals, per minute, per pitch. There's not much in it, but I think he's ahead, and he scored yesterday, and for me, no, as well. No, he scored last night. Did he score last night? Well, I don't think nobody knows of them. To be honest, they could play now, out there, and I still wouldn't pay no attention to it. My point is, that's at really high level to be in comparison. Yeah, you can. Even. So that's a compliment in itself to the kid, to be bracketed like that. I think he's got the number nine on his back, and I think he's making a good first of it. Well, this is an opportunity to step up, really, isn't it? He's improving in confidence. His game's getting better. As Dave said, you can see some defenders are terrified of him, because he's winning that ball in the air all the time. I want to, like I said before, I want to knock it out because he's gone this quick, and I think once he gets into his stride, he's awake, he's going to have to bring him down or leave him. No, but it also opens up the rebound. It also opens up, Michelle is coming behind, and the banser is terrified, it's chasing him, they're not worrying about the show. So we have a shot, even if he saves it, the other fella puts it in. So, well, and I mean, I was really interested in what Anselotti said about him after the game. So, that's a me, when you've got a man to identify, and not on day one who's been there, and done it with the best. Worked with Ronaldo, worked with Banser, worked with Zidane, the players he's worked with, you know, Cavani, Ibrahim, his strikers are a who's who, Chef Cienco at his best. It's a who's who, I've sent her forward. Paolo, Malbini, I like that. That's exciting, isn't it? Absolutely, absolutely. So, hopefully for Dom and the players, I'll obviously be absolutely delighted. You mentioned this fella before, Bernard, dropping into midfield, you know, he often talked about Bernard on this show as well, and said, he's, to me, he's quite a... I think he's got the ability to play where she gets in, hard to play when we play with the number 10. Cos I think he can take the ball about ways he's clever in that position. Doesn't shoot enough. Doesn't shoot enough. Doesn't shoot at all goals anyway, Jenny. But works hard, and technically, technical ability, fantastic. And I think, again, he's another one that he's got, he can benefit as well. We had a great game yesterday. He did. He looked at certain times, like he was going to be the only one that was going to be able to break through those lines with a little bit of skill. That's something of a little bit of magic. Because when you're facing a team like Benny, yesterday, the way they'd set up, that's what you need to get through those lines. You need that bit of magic. I would also say to that, exactly to that point where Keith just said then, how he used Martins at Napoli, you'd look at that and think he's kind. I'm not saying it like for like, but it's kind of reminiscent. Martins is not unlike Bernard as a player. The positions he takes up in his international team, all of that, but he bags loads more goals. So what you do is, the way he used Martins at Napoli, perfect by the way, absolutely like a concierge how he used him, like a conductor. Well, without buying in, I'm talking about what we're here today for, four papers today, you'd look at him and say, he's the nearest thing we've got. And in the first game, he already adapted it, like he saw it too. So just off the back of that, he's talking about Dominic Alford living and what positions he should be taking up. This fella will be the next one for him because he's technically fantastic. I said to Keith yesterday, and I said, who's going to score the first goal under Carlo? And I said, if it was a bookey, it would be Charlotte. But I'm going to go for him. This is before the game, by the way. I'm going to go for him because I think the other fella might have had a word with him and said, if you brought that to this league, people are going to start paying real attention to you, because you've got everything else. The size of him doesn't mind the tackle. He's crying when he gets a tackle. Doesn't roll over when he gets a tackle. If he gets a tackle and gets bound over, he gets up and has another go. All of those things are taking boxes for us. Add the goals to it and you'll go for the level. Well, that's what I think. I'm excited to see what Anciolotti does. We're in the book of 60s at the take-off because I think all she's shy of is one of them. He likes an arm now. Anciolotti, apparently, is an unbelievable man. He could see, yes, he was happier. He could tell by the way he was playing. He loved the way he worked and all that. I think he needs to be a bit fitter. I agree. That will come as well. I'm quite excited for him. 85 touches in the game. 31 successful passes. 14 successful attack and final third passes, which was the most I think of any player for us. That's the most shot though, isn't it? If you do that and do nothing else, that's the only way. Chance has created three. 84% passing accuracy, which is quite high for that position. Three successful dribbles. Three ball recoveries, which shows you how hard he works as well. One successful tackle and one interception. Definitely his best game for a while. That's good, like I say, but the thing with Anciolotti is if he can pick up little bits and drop into that pocket and do that, have more shots. Going back to what you said before. People can't say that on the go. He's clueless, he's this, he's that. This is Carlo Anciolotti. This is a three-time champions. Just that, just some of the tactical changes and the positioning that some of the players were taking up during the game where I was like, OK, we haven't seen this for a while. I'd like to say this though as well. You would have liked to have seen a fit André Gomez there yesterday. You would have liked. Ghosting through them two lines. Because you look at Cybaman, when that kid of Filipe E comes back in and is fit and ready to go, or I Gomez am delfwb llyfr this season. Cybaman, we will, but in that, I think he's a type of player that Anciolotti does a lot of love. He's like a super model what when you look at that midfair he'd be like a super model what. It'd be interesting because we have got Mae'r hwn yw'r un arddangos fel y cyfa. Mae'r rhan i chi'n ziwgau'n ddim yn rhoi'r gweithio. Ond yw'r un o'r cyfrifiadau, mae'r potatino a'r cyfrifiadau i'r tro i gael, mae'r clops yn y Livapool. Yn lefnodd roedd ystafell i'r leiserfynol, mae'n llefnodd o'r ddweud o'r llyfr. Mae'r roedd y llyfr yn gweithio'r leiserfynol. Ond mae'r rhan o'r clops yn y Livapool. Some of them players have gone up three levels, it might be people like horse blood or whatever, but you know they've gone up three levels, gwad diolwyd ddws i club, and Potatino definitely did it. And Perth's favourite line is the ones who didn't go up the door, they didn't run away like Hans Hans and play for Crystal Palace. With the other ones I have been able to go up and become these players. So this fella has done everything, Hans's lost he's done everything. Ym wyw'n ddod, ydyn ni'n dwyaf, oherwydd mae'n ddysgu ddau 11 o siarad. A mae'r pwysig wedi gweithio gwahanol a'r rangunau. Ddyna i ddill pan i'n gwybodaeth a'u cyfrifeth o. Mae'n ddill yn defnyddio eu pwysig oedd hynny. Mae'n ddill yw iddyn ni'n dod o'i bwysig. Mae'n ddill yn ei ddill o'i bwysig oeddon ni'n ddill, a'i bwysig oedden ni'n ddill. Gwyddon ni'n ei wneud o'r trei'r mynd yn rhan, ond nid o'n mewn yourdyn nhw'n ddechrau. Yn holleg y gall Wendlach yw ychydig i fynd i ddweud eich gwneud yng ngyrsrith, nid o'n holleg i ei mynd i'n ei gynlleniaeth fyddai'r mewn ysgron. Yn holleg yng ngyrsrith hefyd, sy'n beth ond ym mwyn llawer. Ynch chi'n nhw'n gweithio bod hynny weddi gychwyn i'r pryd wydd fath i ran, ..en ramnawd a sôn playe i'r gwyno, dwi'n nhw ffinnwch yn fwy. Wad o bêr? Naw, gan ar y cael o anty. Wad o bêr? Rydym ein unig o'r ddeu wannwch a'n gwyntio. Llywodraeth fel o'n nôl o'n amlwydd. Hefyd, y pedb o ar y cael o'r diolch... ..y'n hoff iawn. Sŵr ychydig o'ralledwch 1000 miliwn iddyn nhw. Fy rhai i ddiw i ni, yna ar y clwb, maid. Mae'r clwb yn mynd gwaith o'r 30 bob am Y David Moyers. Mae'r ddechrau'n gennym. Mae'n gweithio, dyna'n dweud o'ch hwnnw. Mae yna'n 80 miliwn sy'n cymryd i'r gweithio. Mae'r ddechrau'n dweud o'r ddechrau'n gweld y'r cof. Mae'r ddechrau'n dweud o'r ddechrau. Mae'n dweud o'r ddefnyddio'n ddechrau'n dweud o'r dweudio. Mae'n dweud o'r ddechrau. Felly mae'n dweud o'r ddechrau. Ac wnaethwch chi, fod nendersyn a gwneud yn gweithio, yna wyt i'n ddefnyddio'r gwahaniaeth nifer. Ond, nid yn fawr ddefnyddio'n ddefnyddio, yna gael gwahaniaeth. företwch, mae'n 12 rhan o — mewn effeithio yn gyda'n ddifrif deallu gwahanol, a ddillwch yn ddech chi'n gweud beth rydym yn gweithio. Dhwng ychydig, mae'n ddechrau'n ei chlywf yn gyfrewd. Mynd bod ei lleín, ac mae'n ddillwch yn fawr. commencé. I've put it all in on now and go, I haven't got the time left on my creator to give you another five years while you've figured out that you ask the biggest problem you've got is spending money lastly and not work. That's three number tens thing. No, I won't know. Oh my god. Let's not to visit it. Oh my god. Let's actually visit it. I say let's not do it again. But Marcel brands in there now and I think lecture, y cwme eto deservations and you should letzten meter Martyn definition. Ie d国 yn gennynd i bod gwybod cyflwyno chi. Nid ddweud y gallwn gweld y mae'r llai ei drwng yn yma o'n gwybod y amgylch. Felly bydd y rŵp ynchyn o bwrdd o'r bwysigol i'r niferau. Felly y nifer, Oeddennyddol yng Nghymru yn yw'r beth sydd yn y byddorol. Mae'n modio syllfa. Wrth gwrs, mae'r bwysigol efo'r bwysigol. Yn mynd amser, mae'n modio y bwysigol o'r bwysigol a'r bwysigol o'n gwybod. Mae'n gwlad wedi eu gwlad ond y ouf, a byddai yn ceitech yn gweithio. Dwi am rhan o'n cael cements, ond mae'n helpu chi wedi fynd yn ei fishy â bryd. Ond mae'n mynd i'n dda i. Felly mae'n meddwl. Mae'n meddwl. Mae'n meddwl. Dwi magwel, mae'n meddwl. Mae'n meddwl. Yn rhoi'r meddwl. Ond ei'n meddwl, mae'n meddwl wedi fydd yn ei het. Mae'n meddwl ddiech yn cael mewn meddwl. Ond mae'n meddwl, mae'n meddwl yn ei het. Yn ddyliadau gorfod ac yn y gynnig? Felly, byddai'r werth yn ddweud yn barrel ac yn fan i'r bod yn ddiw. Felly mae gennyddiad criminaliaeth yng Nghymru. Ond at y pwysig tynnu'r ysbyt hwnnw. Ond oes y gwahanol i'n ddiw. Felly ddim yn ei bwysig? Mae'n ddysgu shefnid bwysig yn ei ddwyair. Mynd oes byn ei ystafell a fe ittiad. Mae'n ddylch weithio'n meddwl. A fe i gael am y rhaid i'r eifael. Gael ystafell gwaith y ganddoedd. ..a'u gweld wedi ei ddysgu, roedd gone i'n meddwl... ..ygwelodd yn y cael gweld yn y bach. Felly mae'r gyflwch yn ymwneud, yw'r cyd-ddebyg... ..yna ychydig yn gyd. Mae'r cyd-ddebyg yn ymddi'ch gyflwch. Mae'n gyflwch yn y rhan o'r ymddi. Mae'n gwybodaeth i'n gwybodaeth. Mae'n gwybodaeth i'n gwybodaeth i'n gwybodaeth. Mae'n gwybodaeth i'n gwybodaeth. gyda'r pedig gweithio, ac y gallwn i gynnwch ar y bor hwnnw yw'r bwrdd, a ydych yn eich cyflym y gallwch yn enw y bydd yn hynny. Dy flynydd y bydd hynny i ychydig i'r bwrdd i'r bwrdd. Dwi i gynnwch, y canoedd o'r cas, mae'n statig. Mae'r央dd wedi ein gweithio yn ei bwyd. Mae gweithio i'r gwaith een rhan yn llyfr. Dy flynyddu arall. Mae'r hunain, rwy'n meddwl. Beth yn eich sydd wedi ymlaen. So, any time that I said to you about Calvert Llewyn, I said to you about Warkot was about to come on, Benard, breaking the lines, all of those things were the same mindsets as Cydderby, being able to hit a ball on the run and just get that half, yw a'r ysgengen i fod, get that half a yard, half a step in front, and that's why the goal that we got was a diving, eh there? Because he's just looking to get it across, get half a yard and I'll do the rest from there. Y probleme yw ymdyn nhw'n gwybod bod ni'n adrodd y ball yn gweithio'r hynny. Felly, mae'r ynchynig wedi'i gwybod i'r ddweud i'r ffordd. Rwy'n cael ei ffordd i'r ffordd, yn y magau a'r gwybod i'r ymdyn nhw'n gweithio'r ysgol. Ymdyn nhw'n adrodd ar gyfer y gweithio, o'n digwydd am ddifen. Ac yn gweithio, yn gweithio'r ffordd, rwy'n cael ei ddweud o'n ei wneud. It's really valuable. At the end of the season, you're looking at points. You forget about how you scored the goals and how you won the games. But when you break them down that's there the games. You should get four points for it there because that's what... Do you see what I'm trying to say to you? It really is. I think he's been... There's loads of good things about this. OK, defensively he's not great. But then I don't think she is great defensively to be honest with you. I think we've had an issue with our lightbacks and not knowing who's on it in behind. A Llewc hasn't been for again, I think that's not cos he hasn't had an ad in front of him. But what I think is really good about him is not only does he run up and down and throw crosses in, he threads balls into central areas that are not. Do you know what I mean? He's such a good passer in the ball. He done it two or three times just when he took four players out of the game by playing it three people centrally and got us on the table. And that goal, the goal we're talking about, you know, we went in one and zig it in to be fair. I think you had a great game, but you went over to Dwight Mich Neil. One press it in, one the ball off and give it a sit to be. He's doing what you've talked about, you know, whipping it in. And there was Tom with a fantastic card. That ball in you just said though about where he looked stuff through the through. He plays at international level with Antoine Graysman. He will make fantastic runs for you in the smallest of channels all day long. So you then, as a provider, you're looking for it. So if you're looking for it there, you just start looking for it in every game you play now. So as long as those runs will be provided, you're already seeing it, that's boss. And again that's something I think Antoine Lothey will use with him. And centre forward and saying make the runs because this kid will find you. Anyway, it doesn't have to be a great gap. Make them anyway, bend them off. 62 touches, one assist, again his fifth assist of the season. Seamus made the toss of him, didn't he? When he scored, he came down to it. Seamus got hold of him and was pointing to the crowd saying that was him. He's in the top, sisters I think. There's Trent Alexander-Arnold's top I think. He's either second or third. Successful passes 30, successful attacking third passes eight in that final. Three chances created. Passing acurus, he's 79%. Aerial Jules won four ball recoveries as well, which showed you the impact of him in the game. I just think, since he's got in, I think he's been absolutely brilliant. I mean 50 million quid, he's 27. He's spending, spending. Because I think, me and Ped have said this, I think all of us have said this when we've done shows in the past about what happened with Leighton Bains. I love Bains and this has been coming and it's been great for those couple of games. But we allowed that crossover to go on too long, so that he got to the stage because we loved him. I don't want that to happen with Coleman. Coleman's being fantastic. I don't want it to get to the stage where people are like, get him out, I hate him, get him out. I don't want that because he doesn't deserve that. He's at the bottom. You know, don't go on too long. So, Sidderby at 27 I think is a great age. 50 million quid y nôr breng. Unless they can get a 20-year-old, 21-year-old who will do very similar and you've got him, but I don't. At least your husband off is giving us the dough. Get the ball to them. Yeah, yeah, get the ball to them. John Joe, Kenny might come back and shout to him. Maybe so, maybe so. I wouldn't devour him, but. Well, if you're not going to play and you're playing there first, so you stay, don't you there? Yeah, and plus they love him. Yeah, and that's a good league to him. And that's what I mean. So, you know, we might have to look at her, but for me, he'd be an opening. 15 million is nothing. That second half, we got on the ball again, positive in puffing the manager. We got on the ball a bit more. Dom had a couple of headers that were at the keeper, meaner had a header at the keeper. Bernard was breaking the lines, but it was always going to take that. And I thought even the sub, I thought he put Moise Keen on at the right time. I thought Keen pinned him back a little bit. I thought he did well when he came on as well. He knocked a few people about, didn't he? Got involved. Oh, so the goal, if we're adding a bit of post and come out, he was about to put it in the net into that. He let's have that. You lost the thing. The goal, like you said before, Sigarton great press and wins the ball, you know, off the white McNeill. Rolls her a header, Sidderby, and he just runs on to it. Whips are absolutely brilliant balling. And it's a brilliant header. It's an absolutely brilliant header from Thomas Calverloom. Diving header. One post. Moise Keen's running in. So there's your number ten. If you've got five or six goals, that hits the post, comes off and gets a tapping ball. But there's your number ten. If you're number nine doing the header, and when your number ten goes in, swap that round. If he does it the next time, he's got to follow it up. And that wasn't happening? He was behind there. He was literally there waiting for it. Come on. Just on Moise Keen. Keen. Obviously, you know, coming a big reputation, he's only a young lad in a foreign country, playing under a manatee that is trying to, felt like he was trying to save his job every week, even two games in this season. So it then becomes about self-preservation. A manatee doesn't it. It becomes about, I've got to make sure I can get results on it. I don't know whether I can rely on you. So his development has stalled a little bit, but that's acceptability, Keen. And I think... But under Antelotti, Italian-speaking manatee, I've felt at that rates are very high. Tired to buy him at Napoli. Tired to get him to do with him. I think, you know, Antelotti's already come out and said, what do you think to him as a player? He obviously rates him. I think we signed a 19-year-old kid, prospect. And that's what we signed. I think Evertonians thought we'd signed a 25-go a season. Already established centre forward. That's not what we signed. We signed a prospect. We signed someone who is... This is a rough diamond here. We've got a polish here. We've flown them into the Premier League and expected them to just start banging them in. In a team that wasn't doing well. There's never going to happen that place. Never going to happen. So I'm hoping that we'll see something from him towards the second half of the season. He's a 19-year-old kid in a different country, in a different league. Nobody's used to, doesn't speak the language with loads of people he doesn't really know. Is that to bring his mar with him? Do you know what I mean? Let's see where we go with it. I think Antelotti could probably do something. Hopefully we'll be able to bring him on. I'd say that every time he gets 20 minutes, he looks more of a failure. He looks more like yesterday, when that game finished, it looked like if this was a half-time, he was looking forward to the second half. Whereas three games ago, he was kind of, okay, that's over with it. Now let's go and think about this and sit down and just, you know, don't expose myself too much. Yesterday, although we won the game by that time, but he looked as if at the end of the game, he looked as if at the end of the game. He looked as if, I'm sorry for another 45 minutes, maybe he's want to go again, cos I'm getting this now. I feel it all me now. Other people are taking the onus of me for to do it all the time. So now really can't start. I think we showed the start of that. And now we don't chuck him off. You know what I mean? He brought him on at half-time in a cup game. I thought he'd done well in the cup game against Leicester the second half. I did too. And then he didn't get it. He'd come on against us and Leic didn't, but then he didn't take a penalty. Do you agree on that? That was just, yeah right. Any striker should take a penalty. But then again, like you say, he'd come on. And I think Avan Anselotti, Avan David Anselotti there as well and Avan Mauri Di, Francesco Mauri Di, the fitness fella who were all Italian speaker, I think will help him settle. Actually not really doing a thing. He seemed at the goal, and even Domet did do it. And then they had a little dance celebration. Oh yeah, when he walked away. And little stuff like that helps them feel more part of it. He was like that when we scored and that's what you want to see. You want the club to buy. It's like cricket with the bowlers and the batsmen, they all stick together because we have to work together in order to make the team. So the midfielders will all be tight. The strikers will all defend. They're like, you're not coming in here. We just made a film about it. That's how they were. When you buy into it, like he was with Don yesterday and with the crowd, that makes him feel more of how he was. And so the next time it comes, he's looking to win back. He's like, I want him jumping on me. Instead of me being the one you get, I want to be the one scored in the goal. That's our confidence thing there. The other thing is well before we finish, bat to bat clean sheets, which we haven't done. I think we've done the first two games of the season. One since until these last couple of games. It's our best run of the season. Four Premier League games on beat. But the clean sheets, we restricted them to basically nothing. They didn't have a shot on target. They had six, Evan had 21 attempts. They had six, nine on target. They did the target, they should have hit the target. But they didn't, and you have to give people. There was one in the second half. Brady, I think, was coming down the back and he should have hit the target. He didn't. Other than that. We literally restricted them to nothing, and that's good defending, isn't it? Absolutely. You know what they were coming over to set up to do. They were just coming to set up to frustrate. As Dave said, hopefully get a set piece or something. Put your under pressure on them and put the ball in, but we contained it. We dealt with it really well and we defended really, really well yesterday. We have done for the last four games, really, or four league games. Only conceded, two goals in four games, and that, you know that. Coming out of Amfield, we conceded five, so then only conceded four in the next four. On the way home, we conceded five by the time I got to the brif, by the way. So, you know, I think we're looking better than the Department did also. The defensive, we're looking a lot more flexible. A lot more flexible in defence, you know, from a positional point of view. We've moving some of the players around, even as you say, enjoying the game, you know, and they're covering for each other, you know, and from about, from just all around, a better performance, you know, which, you know, moving forward has got to, you know, fill everyone with a bit more confidence, you know. Definitely. I mean Dave, that's the basis to start then. He's done from his stock conceding goals. It is, but also, I think what you've just said then, the actual underlying aspect is, we did look like conceding ago. No, no. They're not the type of seed, they're not Liverpool or Man City, but you have to play everybody in this league. Yeah, yeah. So you've got to gear yourself up against everybody in this league. If they've got to the last seven or eight minutes, it's nil nil, and they get a corner stroke free kick twice in the last eight minutes, we feel like we're losing this game, the pressure then comes on us, that was taken away. I need to say something as well before we finish, if you don't mind me going off the agenda. Evertonians, in the grounds, have really come to the party to use the idiom since Liverpool, because we, let's have it right boys, we're talking in, I'll see it, it's family stuff we're talking in. We can be our own worst enemy, often are our own worst enemy, often like to be our own worst enemy. However, with the roof literally falling in and the house on fire, we decided this time was the time to stand up. Well, bravo toffees, because that yesterday, with him in charge, big man number two, and you've just won your first game, that's all down to us, as much as it is to them on there, cos without us it doesn't happen. And I'm not looking to pin rosettes on anyone just yet, but if you're looking as a method of going forward, that's going to be included in the mix boys. Well you've got it. It's intrinsic. You've got to echo what Dave's saying, you've got to look at me and that's what clopped it. You did? That's where he goes to landfill, and he's come on to the ground. Why wouldn't you? That's what Duncan was doing. Why wouldn't you use this? Get behind your team, cos that's what they are. We're just as much as part of it, as the team. We've got a duty when we go through no-tane styles to get behind it, back it, make it difficult. We've seen it with the last few own games, when they started getting the atmosphere, we were spanking everything. Deciding to... The siren, and then the start of the season, even though we've only lost one in six own games. When you look at that, it's been a little bit... Transfer when they did that. But what we did, after Amfield, we do this sometimes, we've done it sometimes, we've been angered on from delegation, from nowhere. Everyone's kind of gone, oh I'm gone. We need... We had different Chelsea with Duncan, and him running up and down the line, lit everybody. And the only game we haven't had it there, he was arstal, he was a bit full. He half-trailed a bit flat. But I thought the crowd did stay with the team yesterday, even at 0-0 with 10, 11 minutes ago, just before Dom's school. There wasn't as many groans, there wasn't... You were just thinking, can we just get that one opportunity? And we got it, and if we can stay with the team, with this fella in charge, him and Duncan there, and these players will respond. You do this, Peter, you do this all the time. You both are the vehicle to take full, but you also take the brick pad. Someone's got a cob on you, come to use it, you're managing the team. Well, we have to say, us as intermittent contributors to it, we have to say, honestly, this is not an... It's caused an effect. You said it before, it's caused an effect. You can't deny that we were on the floor, boys. And now we're kind of like, finger on Chelsea, Arsenal, Man United, and Leicester in the Cup, and come on. After walking out of Anfield, are you kidding me? No, look at that, if you're the chef. So then, that, to ignore that, and to not include that in any progression we're going to do, you're being remiss, boys. You're not being stupid. You're being stupid. You're being stupid like that, like you've caught it. So that's got to be included. It's imperative. We all want to be on that. That's you anyway. That's to be honest, that's then another one. You want to be winning things. I want to be an adge anyway. No, but what I mean is we want to be update, challenge him. We want to be trying to win things. We want to enjoy going again. You enjoy going again. You can't wait to get in. You know the noise is going to be great. You want to back the team. You want to see goals. You're enjoy going back to good looking again. And that's what Duncan Ferguson started with that Chelsea game. And it's carrying on, isn't it? Like you just said, sorry, because we walked out of Anfield. We were going in to a month of nonsense games. And there we are. Haven't played at Chelsea, United, Arsenal, Leicester in the Cup barely. Ok, Leicester penalty shoot-off. We didn't lose the game. Five games that we've been on a decent run. Now we go to Newcastle and that will be a tough game because of everything that goes with it. Newcastle knows it's a tough game. They're all right. They're all right. They're a tough game. I'm going to have to mix the team. But you go in there thinking, well, even if we get a point, that's all right. But we can win this. And then you go to City, then, and it's a free hit because you've had a good run. They should beat you because they're at home on the train of win leagues, but you never know what happens to you. So that's what's been good about it. That's what's been good about it. And we have to remember it, don't we, with that when we back the team. More often than not, the team response. Well, if you imagine this like a play, you're either part of the play or you're just paying your money and you're going to watch. And you make a decision as to whether or not you want to like it or not. Now, hey, I hear that a lot from fans, well, I pay my money, I love them all if I want. Well, that's what you then become. You're not there. There's a supporter at that point. You're a spectator. Because you're a spectator sport and not a supporter. It's a different thing. It's a different thing. So that's the way I always view it. It's a different thing. I have to, you know, if I want to enjoy the good stuff, I've got to live with the bad stuff and I've got to be a supporter. What do you say to people who would say, but being well more bad than good? Oh, well, they're not wrong. There has been. And then you've had a role to play in that as well. Yeah. I listen to my believer in positive energy and positive magnets, positive attract positivity and I see it from the other lot that the positive, no matter what, and everything seems to fall for them. When United were winning things, they were positive, arrogant, positive and all went for them. And now they're negative to falling down the league. It's all of that positive. And so you see all that. You've got to look at it this way. Outside of Man City and Liverpool, that's the Premier League is awful right now. It's average isn't it? It's average. It really is. And so there isn't any reason. If we can start playing for an opportunity to get us up that table, to get the confidence back in that team and to get some points on the board and to start winning things. I think finally just to finish it, us as Blues, if we see the team giving everything, we'll back them, no matter what. Absolutely. Absolutely. If the team don't, then you'd expect people to boo them not the way it is, but if you've given everything and you've lost the game, you can lose your football game the whole night you're over it. Three bezels possible in every game. Exactly. If you can't buy into that, stop going. If you give everything, machine them, it'll last a bit more. We lost on penalties. I can still clap them off. He did you. Whereas four weeks ago, we'd have been heckled and booed on all that. We'd have lost four. You look at the moment, they've given you everything, they've lost the game. All right, let's get on with it. We go to the next game then and everyone claps them and you turn up again. That's kind of how it has to be, but I understand when people are like, I know, but it's been so long. Oh, get it. But unless we believe and unless we stay positive, if you actually look at things, you wouldn't go the game would you? No. Because you go, well the people with the most money will win everything. What's the point in going? Where's unlucky? What's the point in going? We haven't got the best squad. What's the point in going? And you go because it's 11-11. Positivity. Anything can happen. It's a family. If you're bad doing your head and you don't say from work, I'm not even bothered going on. It's your bit. You just get on with it. If you're still here at this stage, get on with it boys. Before you finish, I need to say something. Go on. My arm, matey, he hasn't been well. I'm all right. So I'm really glad to have him back here. I'm really glad. That's why we're back here now. Dave, this camera. Say it again. This one. Go on. My arm, mate, hasn't been well. That's the reason we haven't been coming in as often as we would normally do just to have that said. But I'm truly delighted to have him with me again. Now, it feels like we're back in the game kind of thing. So I need to finish by saying, I'm so thankful for working with my best friend. Ida chico! Si oeddydd! Si oeddydd! Boom! I mean, there's not really much to say after that. I just left with finishing up. Big thanks to Dave. Big thanks to Keith. Give the video a thumbs up. Subscribe if you haven't. Join us on Patreon. And more than anything, back Carlos Blues. Absolutely. Peace out, Toffies. Merry Christmas. Merry Christmas.