 Well, hello and welcome to the official AFC Bournemouth podcast coming to you, as ever, from Vitality Stadium. Now our job here is to bring you closer to some of the personalities connected to the club throughout the course of the season or the off-season in this case. Now for those of you who haven't listened before, my name is Zoe Rundle and I'm part of the media team here at AFC Bournemouth. As ever, I'm of course joined by my colleague Neil Parrott, who's been covering the cherries for over 30 years and continues to be a fountain of AFC Bournemouth knowledge. Neil, we're in the middle of the summer break. Not much has been going on, has it? I'm fairly quiet, actually. Zoe has, as per normal during the summer, just the change of her head coach, England losing the first Ashes Test match pre-season and just about to start, so it's all been going on. Well, it's going to be really, really exciting over the next few months and the season ahead and we've got a really exciting guest here today. I've got no doubt there's going to be a lot of laughter over the course of the next hour because this guest lives and breathes the cherries. She's been a core player for the women's team ever since 2017 and she's a huge part of the club. Now without further ado, we're delighted to welcome Katie Scadding onto the official AFC Bournemouth podcast. Katie, it's great to see you. It's great to have you here. Tell us how have you been? How's your summer going? Yeah, it's been good. It's been a nice deserved break. It's quite a long season but it's even better that the sun's shining and we've managed to have some well-deserved time off. Just tell us about that sun shining because, first of all, you look very, very tanned. Where have you been? Yeah, so I've been living it up in Spain and Portugal for three weeks, playing beat soccer. So the off season, try and make the most of it and play the sport that I love that is still football but not on grass on sand. So just tell us a little bit about where you've been and what you were doing and how it all panned out over there. Yeah, so I'll go out there and play for one of the Spanish teams who play in the Spanish League. So they have three sections that they call phases. So the first phase was in a place called Rosas. So we were there for three to four days, then head down to Cacarés and then the third phase isn't until July, so hopefully go back out there and fingers crossed we'll finish in the top four, currently sitting third. So yeah, it's a great experience all around. Now, you're a goalkeeper and you once played with a broken wrist. Tell us about that. Yeah, so it takes me back a while. I think it was my first season within the women's game and it was in a cup final and the game was neck to neck. We were playing money fields and I'd come out for a 1v1 and knew something bad had happened but didn't believe that I'd broke my wrist and just thought I'll be all right and carried on playing. Just kept asking the ref how long was left knowing that I was in quite a lot of pain but I think there was about eight minutes and just the excitement of being in a cup final just got me through it and luckily we won so it was worth every minute. You've also got a Wembley appearance on your CV. Tell us about that one. Yeah, so that goes back right to the start from when I can remember being at this club. I was at Broadstone Middle and we were in the school's competition and the final was at Wembley and we played a school from up north that had never even heard of the area that they were from and we beat them in the final 1-0 and that was the start of it really. I think that was the first time I put on a ball and a shirt as a player and haven't looked back since. What was the experience like of playing at Wembley? Did they make it two or three pitches on the main pitch? So we just had one seven aside pitch sort of in the middle and our parents and close friends were sat in the executive area. So it was just surreal even being surrounded by that many seats. They weren't filled up but it was still a great day out and at the end obviously we won. So walking up the stairs and lifting the trophy was unbelievable and one that I remember every year. We played, it was in May and I still come May every year and I look back and I can remember those special moments. Now another very special moment for you. You've got a European Championship winners medal. Just tell us about that. Yeah, so again goes back to Beach Shocker. It was my first tour to be selected to go away and just the experience was incredible. I didn't play that tour but just to be around it and have the experience of being in a different country and obviously in a competition that is quite big and known. So yeah it was just really good and I'm grateful for the opportunities that football brings whether it's on the grass or the sun. Now away from the pitch you're also a coach with the Community Sports Trust. Just tell us a little bit more about you know how you're working week looks because that obviously involves a lot of weekend work, evening work that sort of thing. Yeah so work full time for the community and have been there a while and I started as a little 16 year old girl on an apprenticeship and yeah I've just gone up since and worked my way into full time and you know different sessions every day. Like no day looks the same and really enjoy it. Seeing the smiles on the kids faces when we come into their school just makes their day and I remember when the community used to come into my middle school and they'd bring power strike down and things like that that you just will always remember as your school members. I remember I think my first year here was also your first year as an apprentice. I remember coming to a school with you and Steph Small another one of our AFC Bournemouth women goalkeepers and it was great to see you know you girls out there engaging with the local community. How much do you feel you've grown as a person and your confidence has been boosted in the last sort of six seven years? Yeah definitely I think some people won't believe it but I'm matured as a person off the pitch massively but even on the pitch and I think it's just down to the experiences that the club's given me. But yeah I love what I do and hopefully continue to do it forever. You were named the PFA community champion for AFC Bournemouth in 2021-22 that must have been a great honour and testament to the work that you do. Yeah definitely I didn't expect it at all I don't I wasn't even sure that I knew the award existed especially not at our level but you know to be noticed and of the work that I'm putting off the pitch and on the pitch for the community it's nice to get something back but it's not the reason to do it it's the reason you do it is because of the love and enjoyment of it so to be recognised just means that a little bit more. Now you're a key member of our women's team here at AFC Bournemouth you've won three promotions in your time here how has the setup evolved over you know over those years? Yeah definitely to look back from when I started at an under 16 to now regularly playing in the first team I think it just goes down to the connection that the club and the community have and it just has evolved each year there's always something exciting going on and whether that's in the plans or not it just keeps going and there's always something to look forward to. Just to give people a flavour of what you do you are here now doing this podcast between sessions so tell us what you've done this morning and what you're doing this afternoon so people know. Yeah so like I said every day just looks different this morning we had a group from kinsen primary come in and they're all young carers so outside of their school life they've got it tough at home and they just came in to have a little break and we gave them a tour of the stadium which they're really appreciative of and then obviously what we all love doing is getting out on the grass and playing some football and then I've got a little break now which obviously brought me here to the podcast and then head off to lily put after school club to teach the kids football in year two so yeah. Brilliant now we're just talking about how the setup has evolved what about the facilities can I remember sort of first team players talking about you know that when they used to train at chapel gate and places like that and now we're looking at a state of the art training ground being built nearby what what can you remember about the facilities when you sort of first came in? Yeah definitely so when I first started we didn't really have a base we were just training we trained at the stadium we trained at campford magna on the 3g and our games just used to be sort of here and there but obviously especially this season we've been more based at the club and we've had more opportunities and just to be at ringwood where the community and currently the women's team are based it just shows that the way it's going of even being thought of to have that facility and be able to play at the same place every week. And now you're in the national league which is the fourth tier of the women's game and you finished fourth in your league last season a lot of really young players were given their debuts that must have been a really encouraging sign for the future. Yeah definitely I think it just goes to show of the pathway that we have here and that the credit to the club and to steve of of what they've developed here but yeah credit to them as well you can't just walk into the first team you've got to work hard and I think they've done that since they joined the club so they deserved it and I think it would be a good step in stone for their careers. When I say young players there's the rule that they're not allowed to play until their 16th birthday in the first team I think that's what I know that's right so when I say young players I'm talking about 16 17 I mean you're only 21 you must feel like a veteran. Yeah I do joke around that how I've become one of the so as they say senior players I still don't believe it I think I'll get on better with the 16 year olds I definitely feel a lot older I think it's good to have that balance in the team of the younger ones and the older ones that are more experienced and I've just sort of been sat in the middle but it's been quite nice to be recognised as one of the senior players and I think that just goes down to the club and how long I've been here and that could be some of the 16 year olds in a few years down the line. Now you captained the team a couple of times last season that must have made you feel incredibly proud. Yeah I think it's one of those that you don't really look into but come the day when Steve says you're going to be the captain for that game and stuff like that it's just nice to be recognised especially when the club means that little bit more to you know does make you look back and appreciate of what you've done and where you've come from but I think whether you've got the captain's armband or not everyone has different roles and responsibilities and to be that team leader on and off the pitch is just nice. Now am I right in thinking that you went to the same school with Kelly Fripp, Caitlin Elliott and Wally Gadwell? Yeah correct so I went to Corfields school. That's amazing I mean you know to have four girls from the same school all in the local area as well playing for the same team you know representing AFC Bournemouth what an accolade that is. Yeah definitely Kelly was the year above me but I don't really remember coming across each other at school and obviously Caitlin and Molly are there or they're just finishing from there so yeah I actually didn't know that Molly was there until the other week when we would just happen to talk about schools and she said and both of us were a bit shell shocked that we had been at the same school and some of the teachers are still there just shows of how like a small and close place Bournemouth is. Now in the league this season it was a tussle between Cardiff City and Exeter for that one promotion spot Cardiff got it in the end but would you like to sort of see a second promotion spot be given in the division because it's so competitive there's so many good teams and to be fighting for one space is is tough. Yeah I think it's definitely tough and I know there's been a few things on social media and the leagues have been talking about it to try and change that. For us last year we finished second and for only one team to go up it's heart breaking really for all of the work that you've done for the season and knowing there's only a ward if you get to the top but even more so you look at Exeter this year and they finish on the same points as Cardiff but just to miss out on goal difference I think just to keep the women's game growing it just needs to be two up and two down just to keep the leagues flowing but there's definitely a good competition in it and hopefully soon it might be that two can go up into the next league. You're mentioning that year that we finished second I mean in the end it came down to that one game against Cheltenham really at the end of the season that it was neck and neck and to define a league on on one game is you know after such a long season you have two teams that are out performing the rest it's it's tough to take isn't it? Yes definitely harder to take when you know it's down to one game and you can feel the pressure but you also know that the other result needs to go your way and sometimes the luck of the draw doesn't but you know we've all still got that goal in mind and hopefully this year will be the year that we can push on and keep developing. Now you've just answered my next question actually you've got three new teams joining the division this year Bridgewater, Abingdon and Torquay so what are your hopes for the season? Yeah definitely I think we've all got the same ambition us players to the coaches and the club we want to thrive and keep pushing on as much as we can and I think the new teams coming into it just makes it a little bit more exciting. We've come across Bridgewater before in pre-season friendlies I think we've played Torquay a while back when I first started within the women's team and then Abingdon as well we've played them within the southern region so I think it again just brings good competition and hopefully we can stick to our goal and get that completed. Your boss Steve Kuss is old club Torquay as well so I'm sure he'll be looking forward to a trip down there. Yeah definitely I know that club means a lot to him and it obviously was the start of his career but I know deep down that he'll want us to beat them and hopefully that we can give him that result. Now I know you're very modest and you said that you didn't really want to talk about the Hampshire Senior Cup final but we're going to have to because it's very a big chapter of your last season. For anybody listening who doesn't know what happened Katie saved three penalties during a penalty shootout win against Southampton in the final Fratton Park and she scored one herself. Let's ask you about the 90 minutes first was one one a fair reflection? Yeah I think so you know is a team that we hadn't come across before so we knew it was going to be a tough challenge but we were also excited for it. I think the first 20 minutes we won our best and knew that we were going to have to graph to get the result and we went one nil down and I think it just shows what we have as a team to mentally battle and to just keep working to get that result and the game finished one one and we all knew that there was no extra time and it was straight to penalties and yeah. Now you nearly saved the first two penalties in that shootout getting a hand to the first and powering the second into the reef of the net. Being ultra critical should you have done better with either of those? Yeah definitely I've watched the videos back a few times and I was so annoyed but I try not to look back because on the day we got the result but had it gone the other way thing I would have continued to beat myself off about it. Now after your first save you then took your penalty before taking it am I right in thinking you poached your tongue out with someone? Yeah I think someone had given me a signal in the crowd and I just thought I've got to play along with it here don't let it get into the head and just gave them a bit of a look and gave them the tongue. Did they react? I think they just laughed and just sort of looked at me like what was I doing but it all worked out well. Now did you volunteer to take that penalty after the 90 minutes or had you kind of pre-planned who was going to take them before before the game? Yeah I think it's um we had trained on the Sunday before and the game was on a Tuesday night so we had had a few penalties just in training um and then come the end of the night minutes Steve had his list of people that wanted to take it and there was a few that didn't want to go in the first five and obviously being well as they say so one of those senior players I felt like had to step up and um first second and third had been taken and everyone sort of just looked gormously at fourth so I took took it forth and luckily connected with it well and it hit the back of the net. Now it went to eight eight what was going through your mind when you walked into the net when it was eight eight with that knife pen well it wasn't the knife penalty because you'd already saved a couple but what was it like what was going through your mind when that person stepped up to take that final penalty? Yeah to be honest I hadn't I'd lost track really of what was going on there had to keep off skin the referee um sort of what was happening now and I know that we had scored and that if they missed it would be game over because it was sudden death and the player that um stepped up was my teammate at Bournemouth under 16 so um I know that she was gutted and messaged me after but to save the penalty I think gave me sigh of relief for everyone um also knowing that if they'd scored that one we would have had to go back to the start and um I think it was KJ who would have had to step up again so I'm glad we just did one round and not two. For anybody listening who hasn't seen the penalty shootout log on to afcb.co.uk because it is fantastic and I've got to ask you really high quality penalties from both teams? Yeah definitely I think when there's 17 penalties and not one individual missed the target just is you couldn't really write it and some of the penalties that hit the back of the net from us and from the other teams were great strikes and penalties is never a nice way to go out of the competition but when you win it it means that a little bit more. Just given name check to the people who scored it was you Katie James, Molly Clark, Helen Blizzard, Maisie Smith, Kelly Fripp, Caitlin Elliott, Molly Gladwell and Lucy Cooper all scored how did the celebrations go that night? Yeah definitely they didn't go as wild as probably some people thought you know we had work the next day I think some of the girls even had an exam for their GCSEs so they were short and sweet in the changing room but we had the karaoke machine on and everyone was singing and dancing and yeah it was a great night and one that we'll always remember. I think that just sums up you know at the moment where the women's game is and you know we watched the men's team here week in week out and then you've got players representing the women's team who have GCSEs the next day they've got work the next day you know it's quite a commitment and we're going to come on to the commitment a little bit later but it is you know it's you give up a lot of time to play for this club. Yeah definitely but we all know it's worth it and what we get back just makes it that little bit better that we know whatever we give we'll get something back. Of course the other thing you've got to remember is there's a lot of people in there who can't celebrate by drinking champagne or anything like that as well. Yeah there was unfortunately for us that were over 18 there was no champagne but the Luke's aid and the water was flying around the changing room. I can imagine you were front center stage of those celebrations knowing what you were like. Yeah I was there a little bit especially with the water just telling myself that it was champagne but to be fair KJ was up on the changing room dressing table as you say and having a little boogie up there so let her have a limelight for a few minutes. Now another really memorable moment from this season was when you played Maidenhead United here at Vitality Stadium in April you obviously paid at the stadium before but what was that like there was a big crowd here compared to what what there has been before. Yeah definitely again it's one of those that we'll look back on and playing at the stadium is so special to all of us but when you've been here for seven seasons it is really rewarding and again the crowd made that experience 10 times better to have almost doubled in fans from last year just shows how much the women's game has grown and I think that's down to the lionesses and their success in the Euros but it's just good to see that it's still affecting our level and that hopefully we can keep progressing. Yeah we're going to talk about those lionesses a little bit later on but being an AFC Bournemouth fan can you sum up how it feels you know to be walking out here at Vitality Stadium wearing the badge. Yeah definitely I remember coming to the games with my uncle and Mark Lufa who also works at the club and every now and then I used to come in sit in the north stand and you know watch Bournemouth playing sort of league one and to know their journey that they've had to be a part of that and then have my own journey within the club and be able to come out to as we know it as Dean Court and the Vitality Stadium just yeah one of those that will always look back on and have lots of photos and memories from that day and even better when we get the good result. I suppose you can almost draw parallels between the journey that the men's team has been on over the years and the journey that the women's team is now on you know trying to rise up through the divisions trying to get to the top tier trying to make a name for for the team there's a few parallels there. Yeah definitely I think obviously you can never compare the men's and the women's games but the journey we're trying to go in the right direction and I think that we've got the men's journey to follow and I know that they've done the club proud so hopefully we can continue to do so. Who are your cherry's idols? Yeah so I think when I go back to saying that I used to come to the games used to be the goalkeeper Jalau and I know he's at Newcastle now with Eddie so it's nice to still be able to follow his journey but he was the one that I looked up for and was obviously in the same position as I but even more so now probably Mary up so know that she's had a massive effect on a lot of people especially on and off the pitch. I don't think her career has been the easiest but it just shows the strong person that she is to dig deeper and I think that some of us can compare to that and yeah she just keeps you going and one to look up to that's also in the women's game and is succeeding. Now the women's setup here has made enormous strides under the community sports trust and it's now being bought under the direction of the football club. This is a huge statement of intent from the owner what's it like as a player to hear this news. Yeah definitely I think the community have done so well of supporting the women's team and I know that they're still supporting it but to be taken under the club is just again down to the growth of the women's game and we're really excited to see what that has in future for us as players. As Zoe said about the commitment earlier on not including your job role here as a player just give us a run through of how your week goes concluding with the game on a Sunday. Yeah so we train sort of two to three times a week in the evening so you've obviously got to be committed to be there to train and not just individually but to be there as part of the team and then obviously games on a Sunday whether they could be home or away. I think our furthest trip was Cardiff and down to St. Austel so I'm glad we haven't got to do a Cardiff this year but I think it just comes down to the commitment levels of us players but also of the club and Steve and Matt as well that put in the same amount of time that we do and hopefully you know we'll always be committed and we'll keep growing forwards. Everybody comes to the Premier League game sees the players over there with the nice cars and wages this that and the other but what a lot of people don't see is teams like the women's team and the youth team turning up here at six o'clock in the morning getting in a mini bus and driving in here there and everywhere so you really have got to throw yourself into it. Yeah definitely and I think I've always said to myself you know whatever you put in you're always going to get back out and you know when we've got to go on a Sunday to Cardiff um there and back in the same day it's it's tough but when you then get to play at the Vitality Stadium it all comes down to that and you do the dirty work to get the good reward so. You're now playing your home games at Ringwood Towns Long Lane just tell us a little bit about what's happening there there's been a new development and a new hub. Yeah I think it's exciting as well um they obviously cracked on with a 3G pitch straight away so that we had a home to train at um all the time and the pavilion is underway I believe and um they just look after the facilities really well there and I think since we've been at Ringwood weekend we count them that's been our home um we've had a lot more spectators come along week in week out and um we've had a couple hundred at each game and we're really appreciative of that. Now eventually the women's team will be using the club's new training ground I appreciate that you won't know too much about this just yet we don't quite know how it's going to look and how it's all going to work but it's a another really exciting development isn't it to have every one kind of in one place first team academy women's team it kind of creates this one club mentality a little bit more. Yeah definitely I think um everyone knows about the one club mentality and that everyone's on the same path and it's a everyone that supports the club or that works within the club knows that it's it's more than just a club it's a family and a home to a lot of people and I think that will just um show that even more of everyone being in the same same place and ultimately achieving the same goal. Effectively you could be sort of in the right the right club at the right time because Zoe's touched on the the training ground the new owners bringing the the team in house if you like it's such an exciting place to be at the moment in the women's team. Yeah it's definitely exciting and I look back from when I first started of what we had to what we've got now and if I looked back at seven years ago I wouldn't have even thought that there'd be talks of us at the new training facility and even playing um on the pitch but it just goes down again to the growth of the women's football and it's really nice to see that the club are doing their part in to help us do that journey. I think it's it's fair to say that in seasons gone by with rivals so close to Southampton and Portsmouth who are in a league above you that there would have been a tendency to lose players to them as they progress but hopefully now that that won't happen as much as it has in the past maybe. Yeah definitely I think you know all the clubs are on the same page they want to be playing at the highest league possible and these days you need a club like Bournemouth to back that and let the journey sort of take its toll but yeah it's just an exciting time to be around the club but it's even more exciting when you've been here for so long and you can see the journey. Something else that must have impacted on you is the success of the Lioness is winning the Euros last year the World Cup taking place in Australia in New Zealand starting next month. How how have you found this has impacted on you as players if you like? Yeah definitely I think before sort of they went to the Euros you'd hear of the women's team but even their support that they would have it would never be as many as they've had now they've had sellout crowds sort of fixed or after fixture so I think it goes down just to the whole growth of women's football across the world and yeah it's just nice to see and it gives us something even more so to look up to. So with all the growth that's happened with people coming to to the games has that come down to your level as well have you seen more people at Ringwood? Yeah definitely I think when we first started and we were based at Ringwood we probably had sort of around a hundred whereas now week in week out sorry we get a couple hundred and it's the same faces that we see and throughout the different weeks and depending who we're playing we'll get some new faces and it's nice that we tend to see the same ones come back and even sort of going back to my job when I go into schools and sort of they'll recognise and notice that they were at our game at the weekend it's nice to see. Where do you see yourself in five years? Well hopefully still here but I'll just try and take each season as it comes and just take whatever is thrown at me and just take every opportunity with both hands. Now we always like to get some supporters questions in Katie and we've had some in for you first one is from Steve who are the worst and best dressed teammates? Oh it's a tough one we only usually see each other in a training kit but I don't think I can say a worst dressed but best dressed just going to go with Molly Clark. Okay John wants to know what you eat before a match. It's always pesto pasta my favourite. And Brian is asking if you have any superstitions? I'm not too big on superstitions but I'll do it day in day out and it always like left sock first left shin pad first and then left football boot which I'm really surprised because my left foot is horrendous but it's always been the left. It's funny every time you ask that question about suspicious people say no I haven't got any but I always put my right boot on first and that is a superstition. Now David is asking what colour boots do you wear and what colour boots would you like to wear as a goalkeeper? Well I've always been either a black boot I think I pushed the boat out last year and had grey boots with a bit of yellow and blue on but they have just released the new sort of old-school TMPOs and their orange and I have been tempted but I'm not sure they'll go too well with the new kit. I've got to ask as well when you're playing beach soccer you play at barefoot so is the ball modified presumably to you know so it's not as hard to kick? Yeah I don't there's not really much different in it. It's got a bit of extra padding but you sort of just get used to it and yeah you adjust quite quickly when you're on the sand quite often. Well our final question is from Sarah also about beach soccer where is your favourite place that you travelled to play beach soccer? I think it would have to be Saudi Arabia we went there in November and it's one of those that you probably wouldn't just visit for a holiday but just the culture and the experience was definitely out there. Now we've got some quick fire questions that we're going to do just to round off they're completely random we quite like doing this with our guests just to get to know them a little bit better so I'm going to fire five at you Neil's going to fire five at you I'm going to start with your favourite current AFC Bournemouth player. It would probably be Netto you know same position and I just love his celebration photos. Is that something that you're going to get involved in on the AFC Bournemouth women's pitch? Yeah I might have to try it I gave it a little go at the Hampshire Cup final but I think I need to up my game. Now tell us your favourite takeaway. It's probably I wouldn't know if you class it as a takeaway but it's probably Nando's. It's not it's never as good when you take it away but it's a great meal. I'm going to put you on the spot tell us a joke. Oh I don't think the joke that I've got in mind is very appropriate. I'm going to have to pass on that one. For the sake of the reputation of the AFC Bournemouth podcast I will allow you to pass on that one. Thanks. Now I know the answer to this one hair in a bun or hair in a ponytail? Oh hair in a bun. The buns developed over years and I think it's still got a bit of work to do but I couldn't deal with a ponytail any longer it just blows in the face too often. Scoring a penalty or saving a penalty? I really did enjoy scoring a penalty and having that little bit of strikers glory but it's got to be saving a penalty as a goalkeeper. Favourite cherry's game? That I've played in or? Let me ask you both. Favourite cherry's game you've watched here and favourite one you've played in? Favourite one I've watched was when Bournemouth beat Liverpool 4-3. I came here as part of the women's team and that was the game that we got chosen to watch and yeah it was one that I remember and I think everyone is still shocked by that result. And favourite one I've played in it would have to be the Hampshire Cup final. Biggest achievement? Biggest achievement. Probably especially on the grass playing at Wembley it was always something that I wanted to do as a little girl and even now just being able to walk out on the vitality pitch again comes down to that. Morning person or night owl? Or it's a tough one. I'll probably go between the two but I'll probably say night owl. Favourite holiday destination? Oh I went to Cape Verde a while back and it seems to be up there of one that's got lots of memories so I'd definitely like to go back. Tea or coffee? That's a tough one. Being English I feel like I should say tea but since being out in Spain coffee has done it. Well Katie it's been an absolute pleasure having you here with us. Thank you so much for sitting down talking to us about your work on the pitch and off the pitch and we're really looking forward to seeing what you girls can achieve in an exciting new era for the club. Yeah thank you very much and thanks for the support that we continue to get on and off the pitch. Now if you've enjoyed listening to our podcast we would love it if you could like and subscribe on whatever platform you're listening on. We'd also be so grateful for any shares on social media so that other fans be it AFC Bournemouth fans, women's football fans or just the general football fan can enjoy it too. Our thanks again to Katie Scadding and from Neil Parrott and myself Zoe Rundle. Thank you for tuning in to the AFC Bournemouth podcast.