 Hi, Gary. Any fresh injury news after Tottenham and any of the injured players showing any signs of returning to action? So, we were missing Ryan Fredericks. He'll still be out. Junior Stanislas almost out still. Junior Trey already won't be available for the first game next week, definitely. Matty Vignier has done a couple of light days' work after the bang on his back at Tottenham. So, hopeful that he'll be able to be involved in the matchday squad. And, yeah, apart from that, we're, as we were, lads are in a good place. You've had a few days to reflect on Tottenham. It was a seismic win. What effect is it going to have? Do you think there's seven games left? Yeah, I'm not sure. I think it was a big three points for us, of course. I mean, they all laugh throughout the season, but the closer you get to the end, they feel bigger. And being away from home at a big club, yeah, it was obviously a big win for us. And a big performance as well to go with it. So, yeah, looking forward to getting back home. We've obviously had two away games on the trot. And it'll be a very tough game against a Westamside that can be stubborn and hard to break down. So, yeah, we'll need a good atmosphere here on Sunday. And try and make sure the lads are in a real good place to go and attack the game. And, yeah, make the vitality what it can be when it gets bouncing. Just sticking with Spurs, you said afterwards that Stalini didn't shake your hand. But after you said that in the interview, did he actually wait for you? And then did you see him afterwards in the end? Yeah, we bumped into each other after I'd done some of the media stuff. So, yeah, we shook hands at that point. It's Westam then on Sunday, Gary. If you make it three straight wins, how confident would you feel about survival? Yeah, I'm just trying to win the next game. Whether it's free on the trot or not, it doesn't make any difference. We need more points, definitely. 33 is not going to be enough. So, yeah, as we were two weeks ago before we'd beat Leicester and Tottenham, just desperate to add another three. So, yeah, the focus hasn't changed. It hasn't switched. Yeah, we understand that we're still in a scrap to make sure that we're in this division next season. So, this week is going to be a big one for us. And it starts on Sunday, where three points would give us another step towards us achieving what we set out to. Obviously, they're playing Gent first. Is it going to help that they're playing Thursday night before Sunday? Because despite their performance last Sunday, they have been struggling to win on Sundays after the Europa Conference games. Yeah, I think it's a home game for them. I think it's a chance for them to win a big game in front of their fans. They had a good performance in front of their home fans on Sunday, I think, against Arsenal. So, no, I mean, they've got world-class players that are used to playing in big games. This will be a big game for them come Sunday. So, I'll be very surprised if West Ham turn up here at anything, less than 100% for all ready to go. Because, yeah, it's obviously a very important game for them as well as it is us. So, yeah, I don't see us having any advantage over that. I think our real focus is on arriving on Sunday in the best shape we can possibly be and try and ask West Ham as many questions as possible. A decade ago, you were playing for West Ham. What are your memories of your two years there? Yeah, I loved it. I really enjoyed it. I suffered a really, really bad injury, but that sort of helped me as well because I had to fight back from something. And, yeah, there was a chance that I wouldn't play again after that and managed to play for another eight odd years. So, yeah, I had some real good times, made some good friends, we got promoted, managed to have a decent finish in the Premier League the following season. So, yeah, fond memories is a great club. Much bigger club than I realised before I got there. I think, yeah, once you sign there and you're there every day, you realise how big a club it is. So, yeah, I enjoyed my time. And from someone so young in your managerial career, how much do you admire David Moyes, who despite his 1,000 games, is still getting some flak from the West Ham fans who want a more progressive style of football? What do you think of David Moyes and the ways he's managed West Ham? Yeah, huge respect for David Moyes, I think, to have had such a successful career over such a long period is extremely impressive. I think he managed some big clubs done incredibly well with so many of them, really impressive as well. When he took over at West Ham, they were not doing very well and he took them to some real highs last season. So, yeah, I think he's obviously had a lot of respect from me from what he's achieved so far. West Ham may be suffering a little bit this season from being in an added competition, but, yeah, West Ham are still a very good side and David Moyes is still a very good manager and it will be a tough game for us on Sunday. Just finally, Gary, if you do pull it off and Bournemouth stay up, I mean, would it be a great escape? You're involved in a big one with Pompey way back in 2006. Any comparisons with that team and what Bournemouth are doing now? Togetherness, maybe. I think that group that was in at Portsmouth, we were a real together group. And, yeah, it may be slightly different because we were cut a drift that season a little bit at Portsmouth, halfway through, we were a long way behind or maybe slightly later than halfway through. Whereas we've sort of been in the fight always from the start of the season, we've always been in and around everybody. So, yeah, slightly different, but this group has definitely that togetherness and that drive to try and achieve something. And, yeah, a lot of work still to do over the next six weeks to make sure that we do achieve what we set out to and it would be a big achievement, yeah. Thanks. Gary, just to pick up on Jeremy's last question there, how have you fostered that togetherness in this squad? Yeah, they're a good group already, so it's not like I have to take a group that is as huge divides and cracks and try and mould it all together. They're a group that was already, together, already willing to, as you saw last season, yeah, to do what we did in the championship last year. You need to be a group that is all pushing in the same direction. So, yeah, I think we've used this year, we've used some of our tough moments as well to make it stronger. We've suffered, obviously, a few late goals and some tough losses and some losses that maybe we didn't deserve and that you can go two ways with that and this group has taken it as a way to grow and improve and I'm pleased for them that they've managed to show everyone that they're capable of some real good results over the last few weeks, but yeah, nothing achieved yet, so you need to push on and make sure we add a few more. Jeremy Carragher on TV this week put you in the manager of the year category. If you pull this off, I'm pretty sure you're not going to say that you should vote for yourself on that one, but have you felt appreciated for the work you've done, maybe from outside of the people in your close area and parts of this club? Have you felt appreciated on a wider scale? I don't really feel anything on a wider scale. Just focused on the players and making sure that they're ready, always making sure that they get the credit that they deserve if they perform in a certain way and yeah, I'm not too interested in what people think of me to be honest. I think if I focus purely on my work and my players and let them do the talking on a Saturday, happy to be judged always on what we produce and hopefully come the end of the season, we can achieve what I expected us to and what I set out with this group on, I don't know when it was, maybe September, which was a goal to stay in the league. A lot of people would have thought it was an unrealistic goal, but I always thought that we would give it a real good go, so yeah, it would be a proud moment if we do manage to get over the line, but not for me, as I say, for the group and the club and what it would mean to everybody to have another crack at the Premier League next season. You've got this big week coming up with West Ham, Southampton and Leeds, three teams in the bottom six. Are you putting it together and saying to the players, right, by four o'clock next Sunday, let's make sure we're safe? No, no, I'm just West Ham. Let's get out of the Vitality Stadium on Sunday, 4.30, whatever time we get done and let's make sure we've got more points than we've got now, preferably three, and see where we are after that one. Wanted to ask as well what you think that goal and that moment and what it meant will have done for Donga Watara. Obviously, he's picked up most of the headlines of the last week or so, but we know of his ups and downs since coming here. What have you seen this week and what do you think that will do for him? Yeah, it gave him a lift, definitely. He's had obviously quite a few goal involvements, assists, and yeah, been involved in some of our more dangerous attacks, so he's had some good moments, but that one was obviously a big one. So, yeah, pleased for him because he'd obviously started a lot of football matches and then came off against Leicester and then came out at a start on 11 for the first time, so to have that impact off the bench and especially the nature of the goal because it was a big moment, showed real composure, nice finish. So yeah, I'm sure it's given him a lift and I mean, he was already in a good place, but yeah, I'm sure it's given him a lift. Last one, just coming back to the appreciation theme. Dom Stelanke's now got five goals and six assists, which is better numbers and quite a lot of top players in the top half of the table. Had his performances flown under the radar again and a wider perspective because maybe he'd had that little spell without a goal? Yeah, maybe. I think unless you watch Dom regularly and closely, some of the stuff that he does can go without being noticed. I think I expect more of him, of course, because of how good he is. So I expect him to score goals and I expect him to be involved in the goals we score, as well as the incredible work that he does for the team in and out of possession. But yeah, please for him because he's, yeah, the last few weeks, he suffered with a few niggly injuries this year that has meant he hasn't maybe trained as much as he and I would have liked him to. Whereas the last few weeks, he's had a real clear run. He's training every day. He's looking sharper and no coincidence that when he gets his big moment now there, he's managed to make sure that we capitalise from them slightly more often than we were before. So yeah, Dom's in a good place. Yeah, I've been asked a few times about whether we're considering leaving him out and the answer was always no, because yeah, he's a very big player for us.