 Hei boedden a'r gyllid, mae'n gweithio i'w gweithio panfru ar y bryd i'r sefydliad ymlaen yng Nghymru, byddwn ni'n gweithio i'r sefydliad bryd i'r sefydliad ymlaen, genny'n symud o'n gweithio'r gyllid ac yn ôl gyllid a'r gwaith ar gyllid a'r gyllid, ac mae'n gweithio i'r gweithio panfru ar y brosedol i'r holl yma. Rwy'n gweithio i'n gweithio fe ymlaen i'r buss i'r Billy Bantham, ac rwy'n gweithio gan gweithio panfru. We now hear these words in the league of dream. Jimmy, you are going to jump up in the air When you hear dreams, you are going to sleep When you hear Bradford City, you are going to do a silent cheer When you hear Billy Bantham you are going to do a baton pause When you hear Never Stop Believing you are going to point to yourself Jimmy was a small boy with a big dream, he wanted to play football at Wembley Stadium Jimmy was football daft when he wasn't playing football in the garden or talking to his friends about football. He was watching football on the telly. Jimmy soon grew from being a small boy into a really tall young man. He left school and got a job working at the co-op. Being the tallest meant that he could reach things on the higher shelves that no one else could reach. Jimmy liked his job but he had forgotten his dream. Sometimes you need a little bit of luck to help a dream come true. And today was Jimmy's lucky day. He was playing for his local team when a man came to watch. Later that evening Jimmy got a phone call. Would he like to play for Bradford City? Of course he would. Now Jimmy was a proper footballer but it was hard work. City were going through a bad time and losing too many matches. His dream of playing at Wembley still seemed a long way off. When the new season started there was a real buzz about the place. Jimmy met some old friends and a lot of new faces at the club. Gary, Andrew, Nathan, Nakee and Rory were there. Mr Parkinson, the manager, gathered Jimmy and the other players around. If we believe in each other he said we can make our dreams come true. The trouble was all the other teams were dreaming that it would be their big season too. After Christmas City started to struggle. When they lost to Oxford the club mascot Billy Bantam saw that Jimmy was disappointed. Chin up Jimmy. He said never stop believing. With things not going too well City were pleased to have some cup games too. In the first round they beat Knox County. Next in the second round they beat Watford and after that in the third round they beat Burton. Two weeks later in the fourth round they beat Wigan. Then in the fifth round they beat the mighty Arsenal. City were so close to Wembley. In the semi-final Nakee scored and City beat Aston Villa 3-1 at home. But they still had to play another game at Villa's ground. Nobody expected City to win. Villa scored an early goal. Now City were only winning 3-2. But then they got a corner. Jimmy jumped and fumped a great header into the top corner. Goal. The fans went wild and as Jimmy ran towards them he knew that his dream was about to come true. Villa scored again but it was too late. The final whistle went and Jimmy and Bradford City were going to Wembley. But dreams don't always turn out as we hope. Sadly for Jimmy this one turned out into a nightmare. The City players were nervous and lost the final by a whopping five goals to a nil. Jimmy was upset but he still remembered that Billy Bantam's wise words never stop believing. City might just have a second chance. If they could do well in their last few games they could still make the player final with one big effort. Jimmy and his teammates did it. They were going back to Wembley. Because they had played at Wembley before the City players weren't so nervous this time. Jimmy scored another fantastic header and it was City's turn to win easily. As Jimmy sometimes dreams really can come true. If you work hard and never stop believing. Now it's time for our Bantam's big read. So we're going to have 4.5 minutes of reading your book what you've chosen today to read in front of us all here at the Bradford City Stadium. Great first half boys and girls. An excellent 4.5 minutes of reading. What I'd like you to do now is you're going to get your World Book Day sheet. You're going to go down to the first half reading challenge which is predicting what's going to happen next in your book. So think about what might happen in the next 4.5 minutes of reading in your book. I'd like you to write that down in that box on your worksheet. Billy, how's your reading going? Excellent, well done. Boys and girls, go out there. Have a fantastic second half and try your best. Enjoy your reading. Well done boys and girls. This is the most important bit of our World Book Day. The Bantam's big read. You're going to go back to your worksheet. You're going to go to the box at the bottom. It's my pledge to reading. You're going to write in there a little pledge what you're going to do when you are reading going forward. My pledge I'm going to put down is I'm going to look at the man of the match of the last Bradford City game which was Levi Sutton. His number was 22. So I'm going to pledge to read 22 pages up until the next Bradford City game. If then Lee Novak becomes the man of the match, he's number nine. I will read nine pages in my book until the next Bradford City game. You can put whatever you want down there. It doesn't have to be like mine. It can be anything you want to do. Billy, can we give a big cheer to the boys and girls who have read so fantastically well in their schools are at home. We'd hopefully see you soon in your schools and thank you very much from Bradford City FC Community Foundation. We hope you enjoyed the Bantam's big read. Yeah, it's a bit strange because obviously one of the main reasons you play football is for the fans to enjoy it so no, it is strange but hopefully they'll be back in really soon. The main reason was the size of the club. I don't think there's anything better when you're playing for such a big club with expectations and fans watching you and I'm cheering your name. That was probably the main reason for me. Yeah, it's strange. It's a bit like, especially at the start of the season and the end of last season, it was a bit like a training games but without Simon and silly now you kind of get used to it. So no, it has been strange but you get used to it. To be fair, I've played football since I was young so I've always kind of had a football in the pathway for myself but obviously I went to school and enjoyed school and that side of it but no, I've always played football really. Yeah, I think that's probably one of the biggest parts of me probably progressing through my career of my mum and dad always being behind me. My brothers, they always believed in me and gave me probably the chance to play football right now.