 Fi'r hwn yn ystod o'r llwyddon o'r cymdeithas yr Ychydig, wefwyr o'r ffordd o'r llwyddon, fe yna i gynnwys ei wneud o'r ffordd yn ei wneud o'r ffordd o'r ffordd. mae hwn yn digwydd, mae hwn yn rhoi'r pethau. Yn rhaid i'n ddiddor 250,000 o'r ddiddor gael cysyllt. Yn rhaid i'n ddiddor, mae'n ddiddor. Yn ystod i'r ddiddor, ond yn ystod o'r ddiddor yma? Mae rhaid i'n ddiddor yn ddiddor, mae'n ddiddor'i'n ddiddor, mae'n ddiddor, mae'n ddiddor. No, no, no one's tonight. Again, we said this last week and I suppose it's still, and I've seen a lot going, I've seen it continuing, the discussion continuing, and the argument continuing that from a business perspective and from a job evaluation perspective, he did his job, he created his job. Untold wealth almost for these football clubs in his position of doing that job. Now, people are like he was paid a salary, correct? People are like he was paid bonuses, which he was. He's very, very, very wealthy off the back of the Premier League, you know, you're talking upwards of £38 million he's taken, allegedly. So, therefore, you know, I think any of us would love a £30 million for all at some stage. So, from that side of it, from the side of it where he's, as he done his job, does he deserve a bonus, then those, the clubs and people in that industry will say absolutely deserve a bonus, and it isn't a bonus, it's a consultancy fee for the next three years, the way they've weathered it. But it's hard not to be critical on the other side of it, because like I've just said for all of those reasons, he's had a hell of a lot of money out of football, he's made a lot of money out of it himself. Yeah, he's made the clubs money, but he's made himself very wealthy. And it's difficult for me, you know, we don't sleep out the other night to raise money for homeless, you know, for a different thing, but we're involved within a football capacity, I suppose. And there's grass roots, football, there's no money. So, when you look at those aspects of it, it's so much stitching your throat. And it makes you think it's wrong, basically. Yeah, I know that's a fair enough, and we've got more to talk about, and we're going to talk more about what that article did say. I don't have any issues with the man in and the sons he is in. People, people earn a lot in some businesses, they earn a lot of money. Those people work very hard to get to those places. They don't know. There's a lot of people in the world who earn a lot of money for doing nothing, and they're putting positions of power because some people parachute them into positions of power, almost like, you know, because it means that someone's got a favourable ear and make things happen for them. But this to me is just like a man who's got the top of his profession and is doing, has done really, really well. I think he's done really, really well in the clubs, lots of money. I think in a lot of ways he has been paying evidence bills for a long time as well, if you want to say that, because at the end of the day, most of evidence money comes from the Premier League, comes from those TV deals. So in those terms, again, I've got no real issue with them in the kinds of money you earn. It's like when, you know, a football club, when people talk about the wages of football and you say, well, I'm going, what is that? How important are they to the game and how much money is coming in the game? So how much money do they deserve? They deserve a lot of money because there's a lot of money in football.