 Donnie, great to see you. We'll start with the big positive news this week. Dom Solanke signing a new contract, he joined Bournemouth in 2019. There's obviously been a figurehead for the club as a striker for a number of years and the fact that going into his prime arguably at 26 years old, he's still got his best years ahead of him. How pleased were you to get that done? I'm really pleased. I think it's a similar situation to Philippe Bellinx that we talked in the past weeks. I think it's very good for the club. It's very good because he wants, like you said, to spend probably the best years of his career here and playing for Bournemouth. And also he's a player that right now is doing really well. He's performing really well and we hope he continues the same way. How much do you feel he can improve? How much are you looking forward to working with him on the training pitch and trying to develop his game even more? I think he has the attributes. He has the willingness to improve. He does a lot of things very well. Obviously, you talk to every striker. Everyone wants to score more goals because it's the first thing you look when you are analyzing a striker. But I'm sure if he continues playing this way, helping the team this way, the team will provide him the chances and he will score the goals for sure. Just come off the back of the first international break of the season. Has everyone come back fit? What's the injury news ahead of the weekend? Yes, today was the first day we could train with Marcos, with Junior and with Luis. With Luis, in his case, it was actually the first day he trained here with us, because it's true that we sent him two weeks ago. But today was the first day he could train with his team mate. And now we only have injured Tyler Adams, Alex Scott and the ones that have been more time like Fredericks and Marconas. Just one of the players coming back from international duty who's had a great last few weeks, David Brooks, three goals in three games for Bournemouth and for Wales scored that late winner for Wales against Latvia, which would have obviously given him the headlines, particularly through what he's been through. Are you seeing a player now that's really free from the past and enjoying his football and very slowly getting back to the player that he was many years ago? Yes, with Bruxy has been really easy for me because from day one he was ready to compete for the position he was ready to train. He knows that he has a strong competition now with new players also arriving, but he's doing really well. He's pushing every single training. It's good that he can add to his game these goals that he has scored lately, starting playing as a sub and he's he's doing really well. Does it almost make it difficult to not play him at the moment with the form that he's in? Yes, I have tough decisions to make. And the things that we like is always difficult to make the right decisions to see, especially the forwards, the wingers. They have to know that it's going to be a stretch that they finish games. They play 90 minutes because we want to keep the high intensity. So they have to get used to play 60, to play 30, to play 15, to play 70 minutes. And then they know this and they have to compete for four minutes. Up next, Chelsea here at the Vitality Stadium on Sunday live on Sky Sports. It will be a challenge when you look at the way Chelsea have started this season, over £200 million spent, a new head coach has gone in. How do you assess their start and what have you learned from your analysis about this Maurizio Pochettino side and perhaps why it's not been as effective as people thought? I think they have been in control of all the games they've played. I think, actually, I think they are the team with more possession right now in these four first games. So they have been in control of the games. Probably they haven't got the points they have deserved because it's difficult to explain a lot of times. No, when you play, you have more chances than the opponent and you finish losing the game. But this is football, it's about scoring goals. And for sure, they want to come here and also win the game and start winning games. But we have to give them a really, really tough game. And on Maurizio Pochettino, someone you'll probably know from La Liga, both playing in the same division for a number of years. I know he's older than you by 10 years, but there was a little crossover when you were both still playing at the highest level in Spain. What do you remember about him as a player and what have you watched in terms of his coaching development? He was a very good player, playing for Espanyol, for PSG. After when he was coaching Espanyol, I also played against them. He has been really successful as a player, as a coach in different teams, as Lidl Tottenham, PSG. And now he has another challenge with a very good squad. But this is the Premier League every week. You're facing top level players, top level coaches, and now it's our turn at home. And we want to give them a really tough game. And just a couple of final ones for me. Obviously, the last time we saw you was before the the window had closed. There was a lot of late activity. Kiefer Moore nearly left, but he didn't. Pat Sandaka nearly came in, but he didn't. You ended up with Luis Sinistera confirmed at 20 past 11. How much have you seen from him already and is he ready to be involved this weekend? I think he's ready, but it's true that today was the first training he has done with his team mates. It was a really strange situation because he could come to the stadium. He watched our game against Wrenford, but he couldn't train with the team because he went straight away with Colombia. He has played some minutes there and he has come really fit. I think he's ready to help his his team mates, but it's true that we haven't had time to spend with him and to know him better. And just finally, there was a lot of speculation on deadline day about Lloyd Kelly and a rejected offer from from Tottenham for the player. Is he OK in terms of his mindset? Because he's had a tough 12 months, you know, with injuries. He had the captaincy taken off of him last season. And when you get linked with a big move to Tottenham and it falls through, it doesn't happen. How is his mindset? Is he available? Is he ready to play and commit to Bournemouth? Yes, he has trained really well this past two weeks. I think they have been very good weeks for him because he came from an injury. So he needed the workload and also we were here just training with nine ten players so we could focus more on them. So I think they have been really successful weeks for him. Probably last day of the market was difficult, not only for him. For, you said, Kieffer, for Jadon Anthony, for Luis, who came here at the end for different players. But once a market is closed, I think everyone is really focused, willing to push and he's ready to help us here. And only just on that Lloyd Kelly theme. Has he shown you the way he's trained that he's ready to play or have you had to have some talks with him or maybe the board or whoever have spoken to him to make sure he's focused? No, he has trained really well this past two weeks. I think he is ready to help the team. He knows his best interest is to play well, to try to compete for a minute. Everyone is trying to push and he has been training really, really well. You've spoken already about some of the guys who've travelled around the world. Is that quite a new thing for you to have to deal with as a coach? Because I presume in Viacano you didn't have too many going off long distances so to be going to Colombia and Argentina and to Africa to be working out whether they are fit to play a few days later is a challenge for you. No, it was used in Viacano probably not top national teams but I had African players playing World Cup, I had Falcao from Colombia. I'm used to this time of late flights, players arriving Friday and knowing not exactly if they are ready to play or not because of the rest issue. I think everyone knows his body better than probably coaches. We talk to them when they come back from the national team and I feel like everyone has come with no injury issues quite well. They've trained all today and everyone is willing to help us this weekend. Obviously you're still waiting for that first win. I know it's only been a handful of games. How are you feeling about the fact you haven't won yet but I've had some tough games, the fact you've signed players who you haven't quite been able to get in the team yet. You've got injuries still coming back. Are you feeling still that people should still be patient with this team? No, it's for sure if you ask Pochettino, he will say the same. You know, they have, I don't know, 19 injuries and for sure he's willing to use, I don't know, in Cunco or use another player but I think that happened. We knew, especially in the cases of Tyler and Alex Scott that probably are the ones that are concerned more that they were going to be out of the team for some weeks and we have to accept this. It's not that we are only thinking in the short term. We have enough players, we have numbers now, we have recovered. Tavernier helped us the other day. Adam Smith was on the bench. Dango has been training with us this week so we are slowly, slowly recovering players, important players for us and I think we are getting stronger. Is Marcus Tavernier ready to start? Yeah, I think he is. He played really well the minutes he played the other day and I think after these two weeks that were good, especially for Marcus Tavernier, for Lloyd Kelly who were coming back from injuries. Adam Smith, we could, this week, recover also Dango. So especially for these players, they have been successful weeks. And just a final one for me, going back to what Mark started with on Dom Selenki. You mentioned obviously he wants to score more goals, I think six is his best Premier League season. Do you think if he gets to that stage where he is scoring maybe 15 a season that the big clubs like Chelsea and Liverpool that he was already previously at would start to come knocking back for someone like him? I hope we find ourselves in that situation. That's a good sign because at the end it's not easy to score the goals you talked about in the Premier League. But I think he's doing really well. I'm not so concerned about the goals he scores. I ask him, I ask all the players, if you are on the pitch and the team is playing well, you have more chances to keep playing, keep having the minutes and he helps us a lot in different aspects of the game.