 Gwelch chi i'n rhai i ddweud, Ion. Rwy'n dechrau'n cyfnod. Rwy'n dechrau'n cyfnod, rwy'n dechrau'n cyfnod y Llews Cynesterau yn gweithio'r llanol arall o'r llanol, ond mae'n meddwl ar gyfer y glasigol. A gofynno'n rhaid i'r cyflwyno i'r colegol sy'n golygu'n defnyddio'n gweithio'r llanol? Ion, mae'n golygu'n gweithio'n gweithio. Felly mae'n gweithio, mae'n golygu'n gweithio, Mae'r angen eich meddwl, sy'n feddwl bod nhw'n gallu'n sicr yn ymddangos hon i ymddangos. Mae'n ffordd hynny yn ddod i'r cyfle a nhw'n gallu'n meddwl yn ddiweddol. Ond hynny'n gydag, mae'n meddwl yn ddiweddol. Mae'r angen yn enw'n meddwl o'n ffordd hon i'r gweld. Mae'n gwaith fy nghylch yn ateb yn gweithio fan y dda i'r cyfnwys o angen i'r cyfle oherbydd. A byddwch i'r cyffreddau le, wedi'i gwyno'r gyfly yma. I think it's good for the team. You've touched upon it there. He's obviously been an important player for you this season, but he feels like he's becoming a better player week in, week out now. How much better can he get? How many more levels are there to his game? I think he has been really good. I mean, it's he has had. I think it was not easy for me to give him especially a first start. I remember because also we had some wingers playing really well. And now it continues with the same fight, you know? It's a position we've talked a lot about the wingers' positions, but he's doing really well. He's doing his offensive stuff that we know he has, but also I think he's improving a lot in the effort he's put in out of possession and he's becoming, I think, a more complete player. On deadline day, you signed Enes Oenau from her taffay, a player that initially couldn't come over to the country because of his visa. That's now been sorted out. He's obviously been training with his new teammates. Is he available to play? And what have you seen in the training sessions that you've worked with him about his quality and what he'll bring to this squad? Yeah, I think for sure have been a difficult day for him because he was looking forward to come here and start training with the team. But he has been training with us last two, three days. And I think he's doing well. He will be part of the squad and he's ready to help the team straight away. Obviously, we'll have, like with Romain, we'll have to spend some time now with the info, with the things we want from each player, but I think he also speaks two, three languages, so I think it has been really easy for him. And I hope that this process of the adaptation is quite fast and goes well. Can we just get an injury update on a few players ahead of your trip to Fulham? I know there's been a couple of doubts, a couple of injuries in your last game against Nottingham Forest. Can you just take us through the players that you have concerns over and those that will be definitely unavailable? Yeah, I think I will give you all. I think we are out with Max Aron, James Hill, Ryan Fredericks and Tyler Adams. No, that's it. I think that's it. Ryan Christie, OK? Everyone else is OK. Everyone else is ready to play. Obviously, the last time you won a Premier League game, funnily enough, was against Fulham on Boxing Day. It doesn't seem like it's been that long since you won a match in the league. How different are you as a side and how different are Fulham as a side compared to that last meeting where you won 3-0? It's strange because we played not so long ago against them. We haven't changed a lot both teams. I think the way we play is pretty similar, pretty consistent game-to-game. I think they are a very good team. They are especially on the ball, they take very good positions, they have players with a lot of quality. I think we have to defend really, really well. Otherwise, if you are not aggressive enough, if you don't win duels, they have been really good, especially some games, where they start taking the ball and feeling confident. You can suffer a lot in their stadium especially. But we know also that if we are good and we are in our level, we can be dangerous for them like we were last game, we played against them. How much will Armando Brogio change the dynamic of their attack should he start? He is obviously a player with good experience, hasn't played a lot at Chelsea, but he wants to prove that he is more than capable of playing for Chelsea and at the very highest level. Were you expecting a significant input from him? Yes, he is a top level player. This is no doubt, he has the level, he is a very good number nine. He can do a lot of things from the number nine position because he is good inside the box. He is also quite a fast player for his size and quite dynamic. I am sure he will want to show everyone, score goals and do a good second half of the season. We hope he is not against us. We can mark him as good as possible, but undoubtedly he will give them much more offensive power, I think so. Just two quick final points for me, there has been a lot of talk about these blue cards, Sin Bins and those being issued by the referee for cynical fouls and dissent, and a player would then have to go off the pitch for ten minutes if they received a blue card. I know of course this is very early on in the process of exploring whether this potentially could be an option to add to football. What is your thoughts on this and whether it would be a good or a bad thing? I don't know if right now we need new things because I think it's pretty clear, the yellow card, the red card is an innovation. I think they should try it in other levels, see how it works. For me the first thing when they told me or when I learned about this was that if you play ten minutes with ten you will try to play as less as possible because at the end you know that in ten minutes you are recovering one player, so I think the ball in play in these ten minutes will be really, really low because even if you lose time or you have some medical attention and they put time later, okay but later we are eleven, so I think I'm not sure it's going to go for a better entertainment. I'm not sure, I don't see it. And just finally for me, I know you're a big NFL fan, I know you've spoken about it publicly as well. Chiefs against the 49ers this weekend, I'm guessing you'll be watching and just that love of the game which stems from you being in New York in 2015-16, can you just give us an insight into your thought process ahead of the Super Bowl? No, a lot of fun from neither of the teams, I've not been thinking at all in the game. I have enough with Fulham and with the game we have, I suppose that after the game on Sunday, after watching also the other games, I suppose I will be watching it. Thank you. Thank you. The game against Fulham here, Lewis Siniseray, it was probably his best moment in a former shirt so far. That sort of goal, how often do you hope to see that from him? Or is it a once-in-a-season one-to-gold? I don't know, I hope he scores a lot of these ones, but normally they are not easy to score. But we know that he has the quality and the level to make this kind of plays. But he also knows he has to do a lot more things for the team and we demand a lot more things from the wingers. And I think he's giving us, every day he's giving us more and becoming a more complete winger. And that phrase becoming a more complete winger, how excited are you about how much potential he has? I think he's a player that he has shown before in Feyenoord, in Leeds, especially that whenever he has had a good run of games and has had a good physical condition with us, he hasn't had any physical issue. He has been available in all the trainings, all the games and I think it gives him a lot of confidence because he has the technical ability and he has the attributes to be dangerous up front for us. And the timing of the deal, making it permanent, was it just because he was so upset to have a Premier League goal taken away from him by that ruthless Justin Cliver? No, I don't think so. It's good that he's also helping us a lot in offensive set pieces. Even if he's not tall, he's much more dangerous there than it looks. And it's good he provides these kinds of things to the team. I think the timing is because I think the club had better conditions than the one that previously we agreed on and they took the chance and they decided to send him. I think that's the main reason. As far as Bournemouth on the road, I think you've very nearly matched how many away wins of last season and you've already scored in more away games in the Premier League than last season. What is the key to performing away from home? There are two ways of looking at it. I think we have a Feyenoord run 14 points away, 13 at home. Normally you have more at home. We are doing quite well away. We are playing well. We are having chances. We are scoring goals. Probably we are not as good for sure. We are not as good at home. I think we don't change a lot. If we play at home, we play away. The way we go for the games is pretty similar. We will try to go there and win the game. If we cannot, they are very good. We will try to get a point. But it's not like we play differently away or we wait more and then we counter or no. We try to control the game. Sometimes we are not able and we have to do it without the ball. Here I think the three-mill against them, they had more the ball than us because normally they are very good in possession. It's difficult to stay a lot of time on the ball against them. And we have to know this when we play them. We have to know that even if we are not on the ball, we have to suffer. We have to stay together and we will have our chances, our momentum. But it's not easy against this kind of opposition. I think it's difficult to say one of the best teams on the ball, but they are really good. Is it difficult to convince players you can have exactly the same approach away from home? Is there a natural sort of reticence reluctance? No. I think we do it naturally. The messages we send, I think they are pretty similar. Obviously we prefer to play at home because we have the supporters behind. But even if in our away games we have a lot of support, I think we are doing really well.