 Mae'n gweithio i chi'n gweithio i'r awsiau Evertons, yr ydych chi'n gweithio ar gyfer fynd y ffaith yn cyflawni'r cyflawni phwng yma, sy'n gan ychydig i chi'n mynd i gyffredig i chi fel y ti'n gweithio i gyd. Rydyn i chi'n cyflawni'r cyffredig? Mae'n gallu'n i chi'n gweithio i chi'n gweithio i chi'n gweithio i chi'n gweithio i chi? Roedd o'n bryd yna, Mae'r ffarrwch ymddangos, yn y bwrdd, ac reud o iawn yn gwneud... Ymdo. Mae'r ganddo eich bod yn rhywbeth? Ymdo, mae'n ganddo i'n ganddo i'ch gwneud i'r cy walnut. Mae'n helpu i gweithio, ma ridw, ganddo i'n gallu bod ganfermwyr ymddangos lle ac yn awyd. Mae'r ganddo yn cael ei ddyloch i gyrfu'n yma, ond i'r Seffan. Ymdo, a Summerfwyr yn sicr yn cynnig wrthu ar Watford. Felt pethau o'r cyffredinos yn byw yn y cyflodau ac mae'n sefydlu. Yn ni'n gwybod ei bod plant i trafa'r Gymru, e'n cael ei ddechrau'n bwrtho. Yn ni'n rheswm. Wrth gilydd i. Mae'n thynd i ddechrau. Wrth gilydd i. Dyma hwn o'r bodyn ymdau yn i gael ymdau i ddechrau'n gwybod er mwyn i gael trwyd yn ei ddechrau. Byddwn ni wedi dechrau. Dweudwch yn cael ei ddechrau ond byddwn ni'n gwneud bod yn y gwaith, …dyn ni i'n ffordd, o'r yw ffordd i gondol, mwy hi'n ymwneud hwnna, fibre ar y cynnig ymwyngy Creat. Cymru fyneb hynny i chi ar gyflwyndus hiyn yma yn yma. Rwy'n meddwl yw yn gwybod bod yw'n gwybodol ddim yn gwybodol? Yn gallu safnod o'r hynny yw'n gwneud hwnna, mae'n gweld fel hwnna'n gweithio'n ceisio. Nid oes y gallwn, mae'n cael ei bobl ar hyn sydd wedi'i gwneud. Felly, y gallwn gweld i gweithio y credu'r amser yn y gyllid, fel yma'n gweithio, ond mae'n gweithio'r amser yn gweithio, yn gyngorlu'r gwybod, a beth nhw'n由ch i'r amser ar y guggel felly, mae'n gweithio ar hyn yn y trofynnol better. Felly, mae'n gweithio, na'n cael ei ffrindio, rhaid i ffraseronungu i'r amser ac a'r ffordd yma. Maen nhw'n fy fan mai yw'n ddiddordeb yn hyfforddiadau ar y club去lyfion, fel oedd ymgyrchu i ddarparu a phurol yn ei gyd, fod o drafodau a llefodau, gyda maen nhw ychydig. Felly mae gennym wedi bod ni yn ymgyrch i'r oddau fel yma, yn gyntaf yearshifterdau. Mae gennym i ddiddordebau a phwysau. Oherwydd, byddwn y gallwn iawn ar y ddechrau... I can't say I've enjoyed the first part of the season where things weren't going our way and we were losing but it's been such a different season than what you're used to. If you look at the results at the beginning of the season but we've still got a chance to go seventh with a win this weekend so it's been a strange season but hopefully it'll be a good end to it. You've cracked a few good ones in so far which is your favourite goal so far? It's nice that there's a few to choose from isn't it? Yeah of course. I think the Southampton one was a good one but I think my first one against Hadwick Split so obviously I think a goal I remember for a long time. Were you a bit disappointed when Wayne Rooney then scored from inside his own half? No, I actually think mine was better so it was good for him to get almost as good as a goal. I think obviously his goal was fantastic, a bit more technical the way he struck the ball but I left to give myself the winner of those two goals. It would be interesting to see which one comes out on top at the end of the season awards. Are you enjoying working with Sam Allardyce-Gilfe? Yeah he's good. He's a very straightforward man. I think he tells you what he wants, tells the players how he wants us to play so he's very organised, very into stats and he knows what to do to win games and how to break down and beat the opponent. He's actually quite funny around the training round. Good man to man and he looks after the players, gives us rest when we need it and he works us out when we have to just so that we've got the chance of performing to our levels on a match day but I think obviously with this experience he's a very good manager. Just changing track slightly. The World Cup in the summer. Iceland will be there. Is the excitement building already back in Iceland? Yeah I think. Probably hasn't stopped as it since you've qualified. No exactly. It's been a long time coming and of course it's coming fast but I can only speak for myself. I've been waiting for the tournament and still I am. And I think the nation is with me as well. I think everyone's just very excited for the first game obviously as our first World Cup tournament. So it's very special and I think everyone's really looking forward to it. For the older generation of football supporters who have never known anything like this, it must be absolutely fabulous back home. Yeah it is. It's been a really good five or six years. Just missed out on the World Cup in Brazil and then made it to obviously France for the Euros and now we've made it to Russia for the World Cup so it's been not just for the fans but for us players as well. It's been a very exciting time and a very good one to be a part of. How much belief did the Euros give you because you don't have it so well? A lot of belief. I think the most important game was losing to Croatia just missing out on the World Cup in Brazil. I think that kind of made us more determined to actually get to the final being that close to getting to the World Cup. And I think of course with going to the Euros and doing well in France, that showed us we actually can do this and we kind of set us off a target even though we're in a tough group and we wanted to go to Russia as well. Well of course one player that Guilffy Sigurdson could meet in the World Cup is Rameiro Funes-Mauri. Iceland and Argentina have been drawn together in Group D. It's great to see Rameiro back in full training and we caught up with him recently. He confirmed he's ready and he's raring to go. Of course I'm very happy to be fully fit in the squad. You know it's been ages since my injury but now I think it's all in behind so I'm just looking forward to joining the team to be fit to be ready to play. Obviously I had some two games on the 23th and that was giving me the eligible to play for the first team. And since you've been out injured a new manager has come in, Sam Allardyce and his back room staff. Does that give you extra motivation now because you've got to prove yourself to a new manager? Of course I think it's when you injure and different managers come it's tough because you have to show what you can give to the team and to the club but he knows every player and I think he has given the opportunity to every injured player that's come back. I'm waiting for that opportunity also. Have you had any welcome bounce with Rameiro yet? Nothing too serious. Obviously I am and I think he is as well hoping that with a short period of time he has to get proper fit. I'm sure he's more than capable of doing it. And if he gets a few games under his belt he's got a chance to be there so hopefully for him he'll be in Russia. Great to see him back isn't it? Yeah he's a very good defender, actually surprised how good he is and how well he's come back from such a difficult injury. But you can see him training and he's working really hard and he's a top player. Got to see Leighton Bain's back as well? Yeah of course we need all of our senior players and good quality players fit and he's one of them. So it's nice to see him back training and hopefully he can stay fit until the end of the season. When you think of Leighton Bain's you often think of Stephen Pinar as well or former South African international midfielder this week announced his retirement and amongst all his media obligations he found time to talk to the Everton show. It's been playing my head for a while so obviously sitting down with my family, talking about everything, what we want to do next. Then I came to make peace with it with the decision when you get injured you always want to be on the field so for me that was a bad time. Every time I was fit I enjoyed my time. I had good memories, the support has been great to me, the club. For me obviously representing the Blues was something special. When I joined Everton I think that's where I played the best part of my football. Even sometimes I didn't go the way I wanted but you always want to win something with the club that you've played for so long. That's the only minor thing in my time at Everton. I couldn't win a trophy with the club. The reception I got when I joined the club at first was unbelievable. It made me feel at home from day one. The support has always been great to me. When you have love from the supporters you feel at home, you're more relaxed. You can just enjoy and make the supporters happy and that's what I always wanted to do. From the training grounds take everything to the field so obviously the supporters don't see what you're doing on the training pitch. Then you have the weekend games where you have to show them that you really appreciate the love that I've been giving you and make sure you wear that shirt with Ty. You played against Steven Peano of course in the Premier League Guilfee and also trained with him for a while as well. I trained with him for a few weeks and I taught him and obviously played against him as well. I know how good he was technically and he was a very clever player. He could see things. I said for him to retire but he's had a wonderful career and a fantastic player. He had a terrific partnership here with Leighton Baines as I alluded to earlier. They seem to be telepathic. They were so on the same wavelength. I remember watching them or playing against them. It was kind of when you played against Everton or when you were watching them two were the ones you had to stop and make sure they didn't create too much. They played really well together and I think if you look at a full back in Owinga, they were probably the best two for a couple of years. Who was the best on-field partner you've had? I've had a few. I think when I played with Wilfred Boney at Swansea, we were never worth anything but we always knew where the other one was or where he was going to run or where he was going to be. So it was quite easy just to play off him and play with him. Plenty more to come from Guilfee Sigarton in part two of this week's programme. When we'll hear from Michael Keane. Welcome back to part two of this week's Everton show. As you can see I'm in the company of Guilfee Sigarton here at USM Finchfarn. Guilfee, let's go right back to the very beginning. When did you start kicking a football around the streets of Iceland? I think I was probably literally when I started walking in the house. I probably had a football here kicking about with my brother, my dad, breaking things. I think I started training with my local team around four or five. Was it a popular sport, a hugely popular sport in Iceland when you were a kid? I think it's been the most popular sport for years now back home and I think it's getting more obviously more popular with the success of the national team at the moment. When did you realise that you had something about you because every small boy who wants to play football, wants to be in his school team, wants to score the goals but very very few realise that they are actually better than most of the rest? It's a good question. I think I always wanted to be a professional footballer and I always wanted to move away from Iceland to be able to play football on grass all year round. But I think as soon as I got the chance to not just go on a trial but actually sign for Reading, that kind of made me realise that I've got a chance not to play in the Champions football in the Premier League. So it was probably around 15, 16 where you can actually see yourself achieving your dreams. It's funny you should say that, you need to move away from the country so you can play on grass all year round. There are geographical issues aren't there with football in Iceland? Yeah of course the weather isn't the best over there but of course we have indoor halls now, full size pitches indoor which allows the kids now to play in a lot better conditions than when I was playing football. But yeah I think the only chance for me to become a professional was to move away from Iceland as soon as possible to have the best training and the best coaching possible. Was it mentally tough for you when you first came over you were a young man leaving home, leaving your own country, moving to the UK away from your family? Not really, I always wanted to do it. I was always ready to move away from Iceland. I think I was only away for six months on my own until my parents actually moved over as well. So that kind of made it a lot easier for me but it gave me obviously a lot of support having them there but I think I was always kind of ready just to leave Iceland and chase my dream. How much of a learning curve was your short spell at Shrewsbury Town? It was good. I think it was good for me to experience League 2 and League 1 with the crew as well and just to get some proper games instead of playing in the reserve team and playing games where some of the first team players didn't really want to be playing in and then you had under 18 players playing. So it was, I think, a much needed experience and playing for points on a weekend was much better than playing in the reserves. Did you enjoy playing in Germany in the Bundesliga for Hoffenheim? Yeah, it was a very good experience. To step up again, isn't it? Yeah, definitely. If you look at the stadiums, the teams over there, it's a top-top league, a very tough league. And the atmosphere in the stadiums as well is fantastic. It's always sold out. And yeah, I mean, I really enjoyed playing there. Did you always want to come back to the Premier League though, Golfy? I think so, yeah. I think the Premier League is the league everyone back home in Iceland watches. And me, when I was a kid, I was no different. So there was where I wanted to play football and I'm lucky enough I've been playing there for a number of years now. Just away from the pitch, how's your golf? A bit rusty. I'm not going to lie. I haven't played too much golf over the winter. I'm more of an off-season or in the summer type of golfer. So I'll have to wait a couple of more months until the clubs will be out every day. What other things occupy your time when you're not playing football? It's a good question. I tried to relax as much as I can in between games and in sessions. Of course we do travel a lot playing internationals and stuff like that. But yeah, golfing. Do you get the time to go back to Iceland? No, not as much as I'd like to. Mainly with international games and in the summer I spend a bit of time there. Do a bit of salmon fishing when I go back home in the summer. So what about at home? Can you get an Icelandic TV channel or do you get Icelandic DVDs to watch? Yeah, of course. Anything is possible with this DNA. You can get anything you want, basically. It's all through the internet and stuff like that. But I do tend to probably watch more of American episodes and films. Plenty more to come from Guilfee Sigarton, but we're going to hear now from Michael Keane, who of course is back on his old stomping ground at the weekend when we go to Burnley. Yeah, I'm excited when the fictionalist first came out. It's the first one I looked for. Obviously I was there for three years and had a great time there. I love everything about the club. So yeah, I'm looking forward to going back. How big a part of your development was your time at Burnley? Because that's where you really established yourself as a Premier League footballer, wasn't it? Yeah, it was massive. Went hard for some downs there, getting relegated, but then to bounce back. And just the fact I played so many games there, week in, week out, with the manager that they've got, he taught me a lot. And yeah, obviously I played a full season in the Premier League, which enabled me to get my move here. So yeah, it was fantastic for me and definitely became a better player when I was there. You had a few loan spells before you went to Burnley and you originally joined them on loan as well. So how big a decision was it to leave a club like Manchester United and decided you were going to sign permanently for Burnley and make your career there almost? Yeah, it was a big decision, but when the time came in January I knew it was the right thing. I wasn't sure at first, that's why I went on loan. But in January I knew the club was great for me. I was playing games in the Premier League. It was the best experience I was going to get and I could tell with the staff I had there, the players I was playing with, that I'd become a better player. So I made the decision and yeah, I think it was the right one. You were a hugely popular player there as well. Was that the case from the start with your links with Blackburn for a short while as well? Did they let you off that when you first arrived? I think they did, to be fair. There's probably one or two that were questioning me, but they soon warmed to me. And like I said, all the fans were fantastic with me there and I'm looking forward to seeing them all at the weekend. But obviously hopefully I can get the women of Everton. That's the main thing. It's a massive game for us. If we win we go a level on points with them, so we'll be looking to do that. It's not an easy place to go to Burnley, is it? No, I mean, they're always tough to play against. They don't score a lot of goals, but they don't concede many either. They're very hard to break down and defend really well. And they're a very tough team to play against. Will you be speaking to Johann Goodmanson this week, who's the only other Icelandic international in the Premier League? I'll speak to him after the game, but I think before the game and during the game I won't be saying to him. If you get the chance, you're going to go right in. Do you think of the World Cup? Yeah, of course. I don't want him to be into that. Of course, we're playing for three points and that's the most important thing. Jordan Pickford stormed well since he came to the football club, hasn't he? Yeah, he's been fantastic. I think even with us conceding a lot of goals early on in the season, I don't think he was the one to blame. He's been very good and for his young, I mean he's very young still and for a goalkeeper to be playing at this level and playing this well is not very common. Normally, keepers take a little bit longer to get to the highest level, but he's fantastic and I think he'll have a very good future ahead of him. You've got to know him quite well, haven't you? Yeah, we live close together. We spend a lot of time together, not just here at the training ground, but we do things outside of football as well. He's had to be mentally tough, hasn't he, because he's a young boy. It was a big transfer fee and as I said, from time to time we have conceded goals even though they haven't been his fault. It must get him down a little bit from time to time. Yeah, I think he looks at it the right way. He gets frustrated instead of getting down, but he works really hard and you can see he's kept us in a lot of games and I think, as I said, with not just his technique but he's actually a very good goalkeeper as well. Ten games ago, Guilfee of the season, we've been on winning runs before. We can do so again, can't we? Yeah, I think it's very important, especially in the next few games, that we get on to a good run like we did before where we went a few games without losing and getting better back victories together. That actually moves you up the table very quickly and I think that's the target for us to get back to winning ways and staying there. As you found out at international level and also a club level, confidence and momentum is everything, isn't it? Yeah, it is. As I said before, we turned the corner with winning one game and then all of a sudden things looked better and we started playing better and we were getting results. Even though in some of the games we weren't performing to our maximum, we were still getting results and I think that shows what momentum and confidence does to our team. Are you enjoying playing for the Everton supporters? Of course, yeah, they're very passionate and every away game, the away stand is filled. It's unbelievable and I think it means a lot to the players as well, even though when we weren't doing well, they were still travelling to every away game. It's very good, especially when we're winning, they're very loud but when we lose, they let us know. There's no way to hide. Gilfee, thank you so much for joining us this week on The Everton Show. Thank you very much indeed for watching. Do join us again in seven days time.