 Felly, wrth gwrs, a gweithio'r tynnu Everton. Yn ymweld y Lleon Ysgrifennig yw'r cyflwyno, mae'r gweithio'r ysgrifennig yn ystod, ac mae'r gweithio'r rhan o'r ffordd ar y Llyfrgell Newcastle Unig yn ystod yn barod, mae'n gweithio'r ysgrifennig yw'r tynnu. Ysgrifennig yw'r gyflwyno, ddwy'n gallu'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Felly, rydyn ni'n gweithio'r eich oedden nhw'n gweithio. The message has been the same of everybody completely. It's the outpouring of emotion when you returned must have been humbling. Very much so, I think at the time you nailed it there with the word humbling and it was a long time coming to get back on the pitch. That night against Leicester was one one of my favourite nights at goodison and a night that I'll always remember. What were you doing on the left of Mae'n ddrellen. Mae'n ddweud o'r llwg, oherwydd i'n gweithio'r gryf. Felly mae wedi'i ddim yn 60 munud ar y 23, ac mae'n braf a gyrfa o'r gwrdd am y peithgaf i'w rhanau. Felly mae'n gweithio'r gwrdd, oherwydd i ddweud o'r 10 munud, oherwydd i ddweud. Mae'n rhanau i'n cael ei gwneud i'w gydig. Felly mae'n gweithio'r llwg, oherwydd i'n gweithio'r hyffordd o'r gwaith. A rydych chi'n byw gael i eich cyfle a'n digwydd. Yn gy mamaen sydd nyw ddim yn unig ac mae'na llwyddoch i'n meddwl os gael. Mae'n tryb i'ch fynd o'n meddwl i'ch berthynai. O'r wych yn cyflemiaeth â tawch i'r Flier 23? O'r ymlaen o'r modd o'r newydd o'r newydd. Cyflaenolol? Rydych chi'n digwydd i'ch ffaith gollwch i'ch roi newydd, i'n mynd eich y concentrations ond gennym, ac oedd chi'n meddwl yn y newydd i'ch byw gael, sy'n caell allan i chi, there was a tackle that had more so for other people to show that I wasn't afraid of my leg any more. Bac good as new, but I always knew gone in the tackles, I think are a member speaking to you early on about it and I said to you That was never going to be a worry, the psychological side of it was never going to be a worry showing it that night. Was the psychological part of the whole... beloved months at times, the must of in dark days. Diolch i ffoto o'r dweud o'r ddei in nhw'n gweithio, o'n dwylo bod bod gyda'r ddoch o'r meddwl o mynedigol erion. Mae'r ddydy a gweithio o ddweud o'r ddaen, ond daeth o'r ddull ar gyfer y rhain i ag였io'r ddweud, ac wedi'u cair i Llyfridol. Felly mae'r gwrth gwmpuned wedi'i bod ei fod wedi'u ddwylo'r ddweud oherwydd dechrau.. ..o ddweud ohol a gweithio'r ddeiswyd o'r mir, yn yma o'i gyda'r ddweud mewn gweithio'n Mae'r tynnu gweld yn nifer sy'n gwelwch ar ychwanegwyd, a'r tynnu sy'n cymaint yn ddylch i'r wahanol, ac rwyf yn mynd i gael arfer ac yn gweithio arni. Felly mae'r gweithio'n gweithio cwestiwn i gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio? Mae bwysig yn meddwl yn gwneud hynny. Mae'n gweithio yn y blynedd. Rwy'n meddwl fod yn gweithio'n gweithio'n amlwg yma, mae'r gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. But you know, they're the professionals. And I got very well looked after by all the physios here. I've done a lot of work with Carl Harworth, which I really appreciate it. But you're forever pushing them, but they're the professionals in that regard. And you've got to listen to them. A terrific reception from the fans. I know you are a humble guy, a really grounded guy, as far removed from the stereotypical Premier League superstardage you could wish to be. But even you must have been surprised by the reception. Yeah, I definitely was, and I couldn't really take it in until it was over Ac mae'r dref arill eich gweithio'n arddangos i'w risio mewn cymryd i'r rwynt. Be i chi dweud arall datblygu i'r gymryd iawn ac un o'r hyn arwyd, a byddai'n gweithio'n gyd—mwy, mae'n bod yn ystod amddangos i elu arddangos i'r rhain i'r panffreddy. Fe rhywbeth heb i'ch rydw i ddweud ddod nesaf. Fel phan, gan un ach0rwn i Everton Defender, mynd i'r phom everton Defender, Alon Stubbs wedi amddangos i'r ffynchfaar. ac mae'n gweithio ei i rellen y methu yw ychydig ddweud ei wneud. Mae gennych i'r ysgrinnau ar bob i'w gwahodd ymlaenfa, berthawch yn y bydd gan y buswch, ac mor hyn o'ch ddweud eithaf.画wn eithaf i'r hwn, mae'n ddweud i'ch ddweud y buswch yn gwybod, a gan gyda'ch ddweudio, ac mae'n ddweud o'r gallu bobl, yn y cyhoeddau, a'n gwybod i cefnodd o'r cefnodd cwlfyddiadau ymddangos. Ffio fyddai'r bell i ddweud y gwirbodd gweithio? Rwy'n cael ei bod yn ddod, roeddwn i'n mynd i'r ffordd o'r cyfnodd ymddangos. Roeddwn i'r gwirbodd gweithio i'r ysgol. Rwy'n cael ei ddweud i'r cwlfyddiadau i'r mwy ffredig. Felly, roeddwn i'n gweithio i'r mwy ffredig i'r mwy ffredig. Mae'r ddaf yn cael ei bod yn ystod y cyfnodd, a'n cael ei bod yn ei ddau'r ddau, ond fel y dyfi'r ddau'r ddau. Mae'r ddau'r ddau'r ddau'r ddau'r ddau'r ddau'r ddau'r ddau, ond yw'n mynd i'n fwyloedd ar y cyfnodd. Ond a'i ganddol, dwi'n gwneud ei ddau'r ddau, dwi'n ei ddau'r ddau'r ddau, dwi'n gofio i'n gwybod i hefyrdd i'r bod yn ni'n gwybod i'r ddau'r ddau. Mae'r bwyddo, sy'n gweithio sefydlu yn y dweud. Mae'n iddechrau bod hynny i'r gweithio iawn i'w fathai o'r cofannau bar universityge. Mae'n fwy i'ch gael i-haf, mae'n gweithio i'w cofannau gwlad gennym nhw. Dwi'n gweithio i'w Everton, dweud, mae'n fwy a'r gweld i'r defnyddio gyda'r gwblion. Ac rwyf y dych yn cael eu siaflow fel teithio gynnig. Ac e'n rhaid gwneudol. Mae yna gilydd eich lle i gwybodaeth i gwybodaeth ffoclwyddiol. Wel mae'n gwybodaeth eich lle i gwybodaeth i gwybodaeth i gwybodaeth. Hefyd y pethau a gwneudio gwybodaeth i gyrdd. Mae'r ddano mas o fewn i chi, a gydweithio gynllunol yn y gwybod. seniors. I think people around me I think we've had discussions in all this that they should have done more, more background checks into it. It's not a... when he's a manager the book stops at you and he's no about me now saying this or pointing a finger at that. I look back on it and I made a mistake. I could go into a lot of things why? Why? But I don't think it's right to air your deityw washing in public. I think them things, they are private. I know why. I think people within football will know the reasons why. But you move on, you know you learn and I learned a huge lesson from it. But one that I've reflected and I think you have to be honest. You've got to be honest in everything. Ac rydyn ni'n ddweud, mae'r ddweud yn ymddangos, rydyn ni'n gofyn nhw'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Was Alan Stubb still at the club when you first arrived, Che? He was, yeah. He was, well, it wasn't at 23s at the time, it was a reserve team at the time and him and Andy Holden were part of that. He was very good to me in the early years. He was there to give me advice and a couple of games I struggled in or a couple of training sessions I struggled in. They never really doubted me. They always believed in me which was important. Did you always believe in yourself? Yeah, I always did. I think you have to. You have good days and bad days, good weeks, bad weeks and even it could be good months and bad months but the day you stop believing in yourself is the day you're in trouble so I think you've always got to believe in yourself. It's interesting you say that because I know we've spoken about it before many times but there's probably not many bigger steps in the professional game than Sligo Rovers to Everton Football Club in the Premier League. Yeah, it was a massive step. Even from my first clubs in Catharines to Sligo was a massive step. I remember going to play two touch games on a Friday and really struggling and I remember getting picked last on Friday at Sligo Rovers and you're thinking where do I go from here? But you just keep grinding away and eventually you're maybe getting picked first as the months and years go on and then it was quite similar when I came to Everton. I kind of struggled early on with the standard of it and that was just with the reserves but I adapted and I think I adapt quite quick to things and eventually maybe I took a lone move to get my confidence up where it needed to be and I kicked on. When you first arrived at Everton from Sligo did you think to yourself this could propel me to the national team or did the national team sort of come a little bit later on? I think I probably didn't even, you know, as a boy you dream of playing for Ireland but I think I just looked at what was the next step and that was to try and break through at Everton and then when I did break through at Everton then the national team starts creeping in in your mind but as soon as I started playing for Everton it wouldn't be too long until I got in the national team and thankfully I did that. You still shame me from Cili Beggs when you go back home though, aren't you? Yeah, shame me, yeah, I'm shame me. To everyone from home it's shame me and it's quite strange to hear people call me shame us. I'm just stood over here but you don't really hear where I'm from now. It must be pretty surreal, not just for your own immediate family but for everybody associated who lives in Cili Beggs to have the Republic of Ireland captain from within their streets? Maybe so, without just trying to sound humble. I don't really look at myself like that, I don't look at myself any different. I go home and I still mix with the people I always mix with as you would and I do the things I always did and it's great for the town, it's great for the people of Cili Beggs to have maybe the Ireland captain coming from there but I think anyone at home will tell you haven't changed and the people of Cili Beggs have been great to me so I like to do as well as I can for the people at home wherever I go when I represent Everett in Ireland, I'm always thinking of the people at home. Is it nice and peaceful and quiet for you when you go back to Cili Beggs or do you get autographs and photograph requests every time you go out to put the bins out? No, the people are quite good, I suppose they're just just to see me throughout the years, it's not like I go home and go hide and I go home and I go out and about and the people are great with me and no doubt there's people knocking on mum's door for stuff to be signed and what not but it's always a privilege as a kid you dreamed of signing autographs so that's never going to change, I'm very happy and honoured to do so. It's an absolutely fantastic football story, one of my favourite football stories. That's just about it for part one. Plenty more to come from Sheamus in part two when we'll also hear from the Everton ladies manager Andy Spence and also from Wayne Rooney. Welcome back to part two of this week's Everton show. I'm at USM Finch Farm in the company of Sheamus Coleman. We've been speaking in part one about your time at Sligo Rovers and somebody who's a big influence then and is slowly but surely making a name for himself on these shows is the current Wigan Athletic Manager. Paul Cook? He was great for me and since the last Sligo I've kept an eye on his career and it's been great to see how well he's done but I'm not surprised. When he came in I think that's when my career at Sligo really took off. He made me feel like I was the best player in the league and he liked his fallbacks to attack and I still see that today when he's managing Wigan and I can't speak highly enough of him. I think he could have been one of the most important managers in my career in terms of how he made me believe in myself. He's a football manager, isn't he? Yeah, he knows his football and he's well respected in the game and I'm very grateful that I had him as manager because he definitely did help me kick on. When you first came to Everton did you automatically migrate to the younger players, the Jack Rodwells, the James Wallace's when you first arrived? No, I probably stayed to myself. I was very quiet. The lads that you mentioned were great with me but I stayed to myself, I stayed quiet. I was very quiet lad when I came over. I would train, I'd go home. I would never meet the lads in the evening or anything like that so probably found the first year so quite difficult over here but I was over here to do one thing and one thing only and I was trying to make a career for myself. The lads that you mentioned were great with me but would they have been friends at that time? No but I still speak to them now but I kept them to myself. And your debut, stadium of light, Ben Feker away with a back four of yourself at left back, Dan Gosling at right back, Tony Hubbard and Sylvain Destin in the middle. What a night that must have been. Welcome to professional football. I just remember that day getting told that I was going to play it was an amazing feeling and it did feel like the big stage that night. The stadium, the team we were playing it just felt like I've been thrown into deep end here but I loved every minute of it obviously not the result but I still remember coming back on the plane that night and landing at Liverpool and waiting on our bags and I was low as you can imagine you would be after that. And Steve Ryan came up to me and he says don't worry about it, you'll have bigger nights and little words like that you'll always remember and that's something that I'll always remember and thankfully I didn't look back after that. They had Di Maria, David Lewis, Saviola, Ramirez it really was a batters and a fire wasn't it? It was, they were some team. I actually don't know how far they'd done on the tournament that year but they were brilliant and obviously we were down the bare bones but it was my debut forever and I'm something proud of. The next phase in your career was Blackpool and it's probably nice for you to see a familiar face from your Blackpool days back at Finch Farm now coaching Keith Southern. Yeah it's great to see Keith, I've stayed in touch with Keith more than any of the Blackpool lads over the years. He used to take me in every morning and I would get a taxi from my house in Liverpool to his house and play with his little boy while he got ready and then we'd head off to Blackpool so I appreciated that and he was great with me, he made me feel very welcome and it's great to see him back it. Everyone knows here he's a great fella. There's a DNA that runs through USM Finch Farm isn't it? There's so many ex players about the place. There is and it's great to see them giving a chance to go that next step of their career. He was here as a youngster and he's now back as a coach and I think that's a great sign of the club and something that the club should be proud of. But also regular features here at USM Finch Farm. The Everton ladies team they suffered FA Cup semi-final heartache last weekend when they lost to a stoppage time goal against Arsenal earlier this week we caught up with the manager Andy Spence. Andy how tough was that to take? It was very difficult to take. It was coming so close and running a fantastic Arsenal side as close as we did and really come away disappointed that we didn't win the game. I think speaks volumes to the progression we've made across the season. You've got to take positives from it haven't you? Yeah certainly. We've got to look at it and really reflect and go look at the other teams in the semi-final. Obviously Arsenal and Chelsea and Man City and to be in their company given that eight months ago we were a WSL2 team part-time to transfer that and transform that if you like into a full-time model and now going to feel like we've done it. And now we can compete with the very best in the women's game is testament to a lot of good work that the players and the staff have put in. Were you mentally prepared to deliver your pre-extra-time speech? Yeah of course. You'd always think of every scenario before the game on one like that where I try to think of as many what ifs as possible. That was certainly one of them as that clock ticked. Felly, oherwydd rwy'r command gyda'r teimlo yn y penedigol, mae'r sefydlu i'r rhoi'r cyflwyno ac fyddai yn arweinyddio i rhaid i'r byd iawn. Mae'r pertyr sy'n ymblwysigol. Rwy'n cyflwyno am gylliannau fel yr dyma. Rhywun i'n dod i'r hyfrifau'r cymdeithasau oherwydd mae sy'n ganddo i gael rhaid. Hefyd, pherson gyda'r mwyaf y team cyd-i i'r newcastl gyda Gwyddo Swn Park mewn Mhwndu. ... mae'n osod fel Gnoeddodd y NIfol Llywodraeth Llywodraeth yn gwahyd adrwyddo ar y ddwylo Moddi. Mae'n heddiw'r dweud y mynd i chi'n gallu'nifer i'w rhanio i ddweud ar gyfer Arsnill... ... ac a chylau'i eu cwlifio'r Llywodraeth yn byw ffordd i Acir Unig, mae'n arweinyddhaeth... .. ac mae'n chnef amlwy'r Llywodraeth yn grannu. Felly mae'n ddweud ei wneud gweithio'n meddwl hwn o'r Llywodraeth, a'n gweithio i ddweud ar Llywodraeth... My favourite type of games at Goodison is under the light, so I'm really looking forward to Monday night. On we go into the game having only lost one in the last five so in reasonable form. Yeah, you know as players you obviously would like to see this one as a game out. I was a bit disappointed with myself in that performance but you know you want to win games but it's important not to lose as well and going into Monday especially at Goodison we'll be looking to get all three points because our form at home has been quite good. Yna'r dwbl strach dros o'rographics? Yn dechrau, mae'n cael ei wneudín ymlaenio, dyma'n gwahanol i gael y cyfarfodau yn y gallwn gwahanol a gwahanol sydd wedi'i'r traddiadau. Yn mynd i gael ei ddiogelu, efallai yma'r lleanion, a Goesbydd yn fwy a chynnu'n fwy a chai'n fwy i gael gwahanol i gael i'r gwahanol. Mae hynny'n gwybod ni'n gallu bod yn y queue oherwydd hyn Rydym wedyn oherwydd hynny'n gwahanol i'r Fyanner mewn ei dyfynod yw. Mae'n hyn oedd yn dweud hynny. Rhaid i'n gynnal. Rhaid i'n gynnal i'n dweud hyn yn ymlaen i'r ffordd. Mae yna'r ddweud i'n ddweud a ddweud a ddechrau dydangos. Diolch i'n gofyn am y dda. Ac mae'n gwybod yn gweithio a'r ddweud. Rhaid i'n gwybod llwyddol yn y ffodol. A'r gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio.Keepin and it's been very good statistically. Yes it has and over the years I think goodison has always been a tough place for for teams to come and we slip off a little bit the last couple of seasons. I think for any team to do well your Home form has got to be good and our home form has been quite good and we'll be looking forward to keeping that going. It would be nice to get some positive results from the last four games if only for the supporters? If you look back to the Swansea game looking at the next five from the Swansea game would have been you're looking at all winnable games. I know they're all hard in the Premier League but we owe it to the fans and I think we owe it. You've got to have pride in yourself as well and you want to finish the season strong and be professional and get as many points as we can and give ourselves something and the fans something to finish the season on a bit of a high. Are you excited at the prospect of a long term playing relationship with Theo Walcott in front of you? Yeah we're getting there. We've had a couple of games where we've been good together, a couple of games where we've been quiet and that's going to be the case because we haven't played together that much but he's an exciting player, he's very fast and I think he gives defenders a lot to think about which means they don't maybe think about me as much which can help so we're working on it and we're talking a lot and hopefully we can improve. Well earlier in the season of course we went up to St James Park and came back with a 1-0 victory. The goal scorer that night was Wayne Rooney. This is his take on Monday night's clash. It's an important game. I think the last four games are important to us because we want to try and win them. We know Newcastle in good form. They've done well the last few weeks, picked up wins, picked up a lot of points so we know it'll be a tough game and we want to try and end the season well, finish on as many points as we can and this is the start really to them last four games and as you said we're in a tricky position in terms of we're not going to go down but we probably are a bit too far away from the European places so it's important. We have no complacency and we stay focused for these games and trying to win them. Historically you do very well against Newcastle United even going back to the match in December at St James's. That goal there that you scored was the 94th away goal that you ever scored in the Premier League. Nobody's got anywhere near that. Did you know that for a start-up? I didn't know what it was. So it's 94 away goals that you've scored in your Premier League career. As I said that's the most ever. Would you look now at maybe trying to get to 100? Or are you someone who does that and has targets and thinks what a fancy becoming? Not really. I think it is what it is. I think if you get to 100 it'd be great. I've never really looked at records. They've sort of come and then I've looked at them then but I've enjoyed playing into Newcastle. I scored a lot of goals against them and hopefully I can continue that through here. As you said earlier, the floodlights, goodness in park, night game, the stages set. Yeah, very much so. We're looking forward to it. Training needs to be good this week and make sure that we're going in there full of confidence and give the fans something to get behind as well because like I said under the lights of goodness and the fans can get right behind us as well but it's up to us to dictate that and start in the front foot. James, thanks very much indeed for joining us this week and great to have you back in the side. Thank you very much and that's just about it for this week's Everton Show. Thank you very much indeed for tuning in. Do join us again in seven days time.