 Good afternoon Gary. I know you ask this question every week but I'm going to phrase it slightly differently. This is now your sixth week in the job, going into your fifth game in the job. The more you do the role, do you get more of a taste for it? Do you start to feel more part of the furniture here and that you could do it permanently? I think I aim to manage a football team permanently. That has always been my goal since I started coaching. The more I do this, the better I'm going to get at it. But it doesn't change my outlook on what's going on here. I'm really happy with the situation as it is and happy to take it game by game. But you will start to feel more part of the furniture here as well. Even if a new manager at this stage were to come in, you'd want to stay on as first team coach because the players obviously have that respect for you now. I think I've been here a relatively long time in football now anyway. So I feel at home here because I've been here for 18 months. I get on great with everybody from upstairs with Richard Hughes, Neil Blake, to the guys that we work closely with over in the pavilion and the training ground. So yeah, I love it here and no rush to get away. Obviously it's still unbeaten under your management as well. But it has been two months to the day now that home fans saw a goal here. It's the hardest thing to do when you're a newly promoted club is score goals in the Premier League. But how do you get that elusive goal here in front of the home fans? Firstly, I think two months to the day is very misleading because we had one home game called off. One was against Arsenal that is obviously going to be tough to score in and obviously I wasn't taking the team at that point. So we've failed to score against Wolves and Brentford at home which obviously is what it is. We'd like to score goals against Wolves and Brentford. We're working at it. But the boys have really brought something in the last few weeks that has given us a chance to be competitive in every game and we hope to stay like that. Of course we want to cause teams more problems than we have going forward but not at the expense of causing ourselves problems. You will be aware as a player of your experience and a coach of your experience that there is such thing as a good and bad time to play teams and as recently as four or five days ago Lester looked short of confidence and now they've got that big first win of the season under their belt they'll be coming here with a bit more confidence wouldn't they? Yeah, I think having watched all their games they were very unfortunate to be on one point before the first game against Man United. They were dominant, controlled the ball really good side. Tottenham, very, very good away at Tottenham. I lost very late on but were the dominant side so they're a very, very good team. The result against Nottingham Forest didn't surprise me. I thought that was coming for them. I expected them to turn it around and I don't expect them to be anywhere near the bottom of the table come the end of the season looking at how they've played the last few weeks. I've got a top coach, top players. So yeah, it's going to be a real test for us. Just one final question for me. The man who continues to get all the plaudits in the Premier League and in Europe now as well, Erlin Harland, Bournemouth remain the only club that he hasn't scored against all season. So are any managers trying to pick up the phone and say, Gary, what's the secret to sub Erlin Harland? I wasn't taking that game so I can take no credit for that. Oh, you were on the dugout? Yeah, so nobody has called me yet and my phone's on do not disturb most of the time at the minute because we're quite busy. What is the secret? How do you stop him? I don't know. I don't know. If you stop him, someone else will score against you for Man City as we found. Gary, just picking up on what Jamie said there about the goals. Obviously Leicester have shipped five and six in a couple of recent games as well. Given the two home games you had against Wolves and Brentford and two defensively solid and well set up teams, does Leicester coming here present you with a better opportunity to try and improve those goalscoring stats? Yeah, maybe. I think it is a different test. Leicester, they're extremely good with the ball. They've dominated possession in every game they've played. I think they've had more than their fair share. So they're a real good side with the ball. There are opportunities to try and hurt them if we can be good enough in our moments. Yeah, I think this club, even if you go back a long way back to the winter garden, meetings and things, they're used to being sort of underdogs and we strive and we succeed and we're really comfortable with that. It's something that one of our big strengths is that this club has always managed to find a way to fight against the odds. Most games at this level we're going to be underdogs and that's fine from outside but that's not what we believe in the changing room. We're always ready. We believe we can be competitive and Leicester coming here gives us another opportunity to hopefully show how strong and resilient we are defensively but also to cause them problems. With the way you've solidified things you might feel maybe your expectations starting to rise with people thinking you should be winning home games against bottom half teams. Do you take that as a compliment in a way that doesn't affect me at all? I just look at Leicester as the next challenge. Wolves and Brentford are gone obviously. We reviewed them and we learned from them things that we did well, things that we didn't do so well and we try and improve them. So Leicester coming is just a completely new challenge for us. On to the last of a couple of individuals briefly and Marcus Sinesi who obviously came in with a baptism of fire trying to stop Man City and Liverpool. I know you've commented a couple of weeks about that and his attitude in training. I think you might agree he's been one of the standout players the last couple of weeks defensively. How much progress has he made and how much has he needed these last couple of games to help him settle? He's made loads of progress. Came from a team and a league that was very different to what he was going to come up against here. He had to work hard. We had to work hard with him to help him adapt and I think to go to St James's Park and put in a display that he did and then to come up against Ivan Tony and some of the pressure that Brentford put on him and stand up to it shows that he's come a long way in the last few weeks and we continue to work with him and try and help him improve. And has George De Gaulle made similar progress having had a tough start to life in the Premier League? Yeah, I mean Jay-Z's great. He's relentless in his attitude. He's always smiling, always bubbly, always ready to work, always ready to improve. And yeah, so when Jay-Z, whenever asked, he's always willing to carry out whatever you ask him. So yeah, great lad and he'll continue to improve. Of course he's only young, loads of improvement left in him. So similar to most of the boys really. We work with all of them on areas we feel we can help them. Just finally, for me as an England fan, would you like to see Jay's Madison and the England World Cup squad? I hope Saturday dents his chances. But yeah, I haven't really thought about it. And yeah, I don't know, I can't, there's so many good players in around it. I haven't looked at the numbers or who should or who shouldn't. I'll stick to trying to pick my own squad. Hi Gary, can I just get an injury roll call if we start with Joe Waltham and Chris? Yeah, they've had a really good week. Both of them have trained all week with us. Really good to get them back out there. So yeah, that's been a positive. And Lloyd Kelly, how's he doing? Yeah, Lloyd won't be with us again this weekend. He's obviously a week closer than he was last week. But yeah, this weekend comes too quick for him. And then Ryan Fredericks and Junior Stas, they weren't in the matchday squad last weekend. Are they available for selection this week? So they've both had good weeks. Ryan Fredericks has been really promising on the grass, done some really good work. Junior's coming along as well, maybe not quite so far along as Ryan, Ben and Joe. But Junior's made good strides. This weekend's theme is no-ring for racism. How much more inclusive do you feel like the game is now compared to when you were playing? Yeah, there's a huge difference, I think, just the education around it. I remember being a young footballer in some circumstances. I think it was away in Lithuania or somewhere as in England under 19. And you saw racist abuse going on and you weren't educated enough or you didn't really know how you were supposed to deal with things like that. Whereas now I think we've made big strides, of course we can still improve, but for the education around it and how everyone feels around it now has come on a long way. This year's theme is allies. How important is it for players, staff, fans to be allies around them that are potentially subject to racist abuse? Yeah, it's massive. Whenever you're going through difficult times, having people around you that can help and making sure we're there for the boys if there's any issues around it is huge. So, yes, real positive.