 And I think with the Lampard thing as well, he's coming now at a point where it's good for him because obviously he's an inexperienced manager. He's going to make mistakes and I think he has done this season. He's going to get better and the thing is now we have there's so much like turmoil and there's so much fallout with the fans on the board and the club and there's so much like, you know, negativity that a manager to come in and get us all together and behind him and make this feel good about the club when there's nothing really to hang on to in a relegation battle or just have been. So for him to come in and uplift their fans and bring us together and be that, you know, sort of person, that statue that we can all worship while everything around the statue is terrible. I'm trying to think of an allegation. It's me thinking the statue is André Gomez in this field. The statue is definitely Lampard. At least you know he's someone we can get behind. And the good thing about it is Everton fans after this season and everyone now realising that there's not a lot of money to spend the clubs in the mess because of these people. But now Lampard's here, you know, it takes the pressure of him that we have to get Europe and for so many years we've like been hounding managers to do this and do that. That's not good enough. Lampard's a young manager and he needs to learn and like he gets, he really does get it. I know a lot of managers say it. He really does understand the club and he gets the fans, he gets the fans frustration. He hear him and how good he is in the media. And to be honest, when, you know, like when back in the summer and point of draft of Minitas, there was so much like the club knew he didn't want in. They made the decision anyway and then you think, well, okay, right, it's done now. So there's no point being negative about it. You have to look at the positive because what else can you do? You have to back in otherwise you do them to fail. And he was always doomed to fail anyway. And that's why it was such a bad appointment. But I think what Raphael Benitez was, right, Lampard. Oh, no, Benitez. Yeah, I think the thing with Raphael Benitez was alright, he managed Liverpool. But I, my thinking at the time was he can come in stabilizers. We've got a scene that's not essentially very good. They've got quite a few managers sacked. So I've room to come in and be a proper coach for the players and get us playing. You know, the Benitez tight football is big, powerful, 4-4-2, direct at home, go at teams, get at teams, but be solid and tight at the back. That's very much what we need. And it's very much quite an ever to an identity, certainly under moys. We get at teams, we'd be solid, you know, we play that 4-4-4-1-1, 4-4-2 at times. So for me, I was just thinking, well, we might get a bit of identity back. But I think because we had so much like bad things going on with the board and like Marcel Brands, you know, the protest at the board, the fact that we couldn't have a manager that we looked and get behind as well. And they appointed that manager we didn't want. It just left. Oh yeah. It was a suicidal appointment. The Benitez appointment really, really was because we all knew how it would go. And even when you try to convince yourself that it could go another way, deep down we all knew this will end in a sour manner, whether we have a good year, whether we have a good two years, whether we have a good three months, it will end in a sour manner. And I think he made the good points about Frank Lampard. He's done half the work in the sense that he understands the football club and the fans and the know of what the fans need and what the fans expect. And he's built that relationship with the fans. He's seen them on the on the top of the executive boxes at the end of the Crystal Palace game, which was just unbelievable to see. And, you know, as I said, that is half the job because you think back to managers that we've had since Masheri's come in, Ronald Cooman didn't get the club. Rafa Benitez didn't get the club knew the city knew his way around County Road, but didn't get the club. And Cialotti, I suppose, did, but certainly not in the same sense as Frank Lampard. I think he understood it in a different way. And the fans loved him because of how good of a manager he was. But, you know, certainly you wouldn't you wouldn't have seen the passion and determination is what you see from Frank Lampard, from Carlo. Martinis didn't really get the club. He just sort of was a nice fella. Silver, I suppose, did, but again, it wasn't in the same sort of way. So the thing that would shift Frank Lampard up is ultimately his ability as a football manager to watch the rest of this video and to access exclusive live content, scan the QR code or click the link in the description to join us over on Patreon.