 Without the points deduction, Sean, you'd be ahead of Chelsea, so you'd be 10th. So it seems like they're definitely there to be gutter. Yeah, thanks for reminding me. That's pleasing. Now, at the end of the day, look, it is what it is. The realities are there. Well, the current realities. But I do understand your point. I think they're a very strong outfit. I know they've been a bit up and down. New manager finding his group and all that sort of stuff. I was at Old Trafford. They've still got quality. They've still got pace. They've still got, you know, a depth of experience. In football. So we've got to be ready back to the point of asking about the points tally. Then, yeah, I mean, you know, when I took over, I think it was 15 points from 20 games or reversed that and got 20 points from 50. Well, sorry, would have had 20 points from 15 games. That's quite a big swing, as you know. And it shows there's growth in the side. And that's all I spoke about at the beginning of the season when people asked me about the expectation, sorry, was to do better. And I think there's clear signs of that. That's important. Games are coming, thinking fast, as we know. How do you keep up that momentum now? Well, it certainly helps when the standard's high in the training ground, which I think we've got there. I think the culture and environment they're working in is very good. And I think they're delivering. I spoke to them this week about it, actually. The drive and determination to train properly every day. I think that's growing all the time. And then giving performances, delivering performances. And of course, when you win in that winning mentality, it's a home game. On the good side, we know that in a big club. It's a home game. We're a big club ourselves. Our fans are going to be right up for it, obviously. So all them things help with that bit of energy and that extra energy that you sometimes need as a footballer and as a team. So we'll certainly be coming back to goodness in good shape ready for the next challenge. And I think there were moments in the Newcastle game where players with that experience certainly used it. Chelsea have a lot of quite inexperienced players. So is that another thing to kind of maybe exploit? Well, there might be some inexperienced in the Premier League but they've also got some experience in other leagues and they've got players who've been bought in for a lot of money and usually there's a reason why that is. So I'm certainly not over thinking. I know there's a bit of noise about the ups and downs of their performances but I saw them and I think they're still a good outfit so we've got to be ready without a doubt. Sean Dwight-Manil scored two huge goals in a week for Everton. He's been very good since you came to the club. What is it about your relationship with the best out of him? You'd have to ask him. I think the simplicity of reminding him what he's good at and believing in him, I think which I do and I gave him his debut obviously. And I think he's a very, very good player and I've always spoke about it. He puts a lot of weight on himself and I said, you've got to relax that, you've got to release it, go and enjoy your performances, go and play with a smile. You know, many managers used to say when I was a younger guy and I think he's one of them. When he plays with a smile he runs hard for the team. It starts to come together and I think he's done that ever since I've been here and I've been very pleased for him and very pleased for us because he's getting the rewards for that. I know that a fine finish, I mean, he's got power. You know, we know that. But two very, very good goals. Thank you. Excuse me. Sean, what have you made of Chelsea? He's spent a lot of money but it's not guaranteeing them success, is it? Well, there's not always that situation. You know, a new manager goes in and a manager I definitely respect and his staff and it seems to me he's making changes. He's finding different ways to work with the players and sometimes that takes time. It did at Tottenham when he was there. I'm sure he's doing his own work with the players to get them into the rhythm that he wants and the way of playing that he wants. We'll have to see when we come across it on Sunday but they've got very good players still and I saw him at Old Trafford and they regathered themselves. I thought after a quiet first half they regathered themselves second half and they looked like an outfit. Yeah, excuse me. I don't think you spend all that money and with a good manager who's knowledgeable and don't get some kind of outcome so we've got to make sure that we're ready for our performances. I think we have been doing. I think we did tonight against another good side. There's no two ways about it. They've proved that, Newcastle. So I think the focus has to be on us and that's what we're looking to build here. We want the focus on us. I would say, of course, modern, we all do the analytics, we all do the reports, we all look at the opposition, but it's about us and I think it's more about what we're doing and how we're stepping into these games. Would you have liked the amount of funds you've had to spend yourself? It's all conjectured, no point. I know it wasn't going to be that. When I took the job, I certainly was under no illusion that there was going to be massive amounts of money. I knew we were going to have to balance it and find ways of working in the market. That's the reality of having a football club. Let's see what the future brings. Do you think that performance tonight is the catalyst for the change in former home here? Well, I think we're performance-wise. As I've said before this game, I think performances have been strong. I think the performance got many a night. It was very strong. Proper had a scratcher to lose that 3-0, I thought. It's not about the performance, it's about scoring goals and stopping them going that. That's the basics that have to be done. I think we did that tonight. Jimmy, I hope it's a sickness bug and you never know, but they can pass very quickly as we all know. There are some long ones. We hope it's a 24-hour situation. He'd have time to get food back in himself and feel stronger again. We're hoping to be around it, possibly in the squad. We'll just have to wait until the next couple of days training goes. Then we'll check on Seamus over tomorrow.