 Paul? Gwyddo chi, eich gweithio sydd yn gwneud ar eich gweithio y peth yn anodd Antoni O'Connor a Jacob Aberwyr, a rwy'n credu mae'n ddweud unrhyw dwy mor gweithio arall. Felly'r gafor hwn yn cynhyrchu i'r gwaith? E'r gafor, eich gafor yw'r gweithio'n meddwl, rwy'n gallu i'n gwneud eu hwn yn ddylch yn gweithio'r gwneud. yn ei ddim yn oed. Diolch yn yw campaigns yw'n mynd mewn gwirionedd, a'r byd wedi'w'i ddau'n gwirionedd cyflawni'r pwyll telefonol, rydyn ni'n mynd gweithio'r rhaid o'r proses, i mfoto, felly'n ei ddechrau nhw i chi yw ei gwybod o'r gwirionedd. Wath ymateb o'n pwyllfa ym mwy o'r amser? Fe ddim yn cael ei mynd i'w gwirionedd. A'u gwirionedd byd yn oed, I don't know to be honest, he obviously just sees that he's looking for improvement around the place. If he can get as much improvement behind the scenes then it'll help the players on the pitch. I think that's the way he's looking at it and we're enjoying it. We've got a couple of new things like stickers up for where we... Small things like that where we change and stuff like that but it's a little bit more personalised. On the pitch, you've got another experienced face in Jacob Butterfield having arrived too, obviously with yourself recently. What differences has that made this week? Yeah, it's been good. Jacob's a top player, he's played championship for quite a lot of his career. So the more players of that car that he can get in then, the better it is for everyone around the squad. I obviously don't know if he's starting the weekend or whatever but I'm sure when he gets in the team he'll show his qualities. Look at the table now, it's incredible, probably in the time that you've been in it. It's what five points between where the cells are and say, Scunny who are in 14th I think is at the moment. What's being the most significant aspect to that change to actually bridge that gap? Since I've come in, I've not really caught on to the doom and gloom that was supposedly this dull cloud above the club and when I first came in it was well reported that was the case but I've not seen that from inside. From the day I came in the train has been positive, there's been smiles and faces, don't get me wrong there's been ups, there's been downs but tell me a football club that don't get that in a full season do you know what I mean? We're on the up at the moment, I think the last nine games I think we've won six, drawn two and lost one or something like that or something. We're doing alright but we just need to look after ourselves and not worry about anybody else. What have you brought here, would you say? Hopefully a calming influence at times on the pitch, that little bit of game knowledge, but I know how hopefully quality at times and experiencing and hopefully that's rubbing off on other players. Bit of toughness as well would you say? I don't know, bit toughness. Possibly, possibly. I've never seen you bearing on a place like that. Possibly I think I got booked my first three or four games for the tackles which I'm not really known for to be honest but the older I get the more cynical I need to be. But what about David, what sort of standards has he set on the pitch for you? Would you class him right up there in terms of some of the people that you've played for? Of course, his standards are really high. He went back to back promotions in Scotland so he's always had this winning feeling, he's always had this winning formula so training is tough on a daily basis, it's tough. I think the ones that were here at the start of the season, I've realised that they weren't quite as fit as they should have been in the standard of the manager wanted them to be at and to be honest I think we're there now, you can see only goes last week against Rosebury and we go right to the final whistle so that's credit to the manager and the coaching staff and the fitness staff at the club for keeping us fit, getting us fitter and I think the manager just looks for, if you give him 100% then he'll do anything for you. So is it him really that does the job of convincing to come here cos especially when you arrived at the really worst position it might not look the most attractive proposition? Yeah, it's difficult. I found it difficult when I didn't have a club just through lots of things, agents, budgets and things like that so when I first came in, I enjoyed it under the manager I trained that week, done fairly well and there was talks on going for a couple of weeks but yeah it was obviously down to the manager, it was down to the size of the club I played at Valley Parade in front of me between 16 and 20,000 fans on a weekly basis so there was a unanimous amount of things What about facing Joey Barton's Fleetwood tap? What are you expecting? Yeah I've played against Joey Barton a few times when he was at QPR and I was at Birmingham, a couple of times I'd played centre mid for Birmingham directly against him so if his team is anything like the way he plays in it it'll be a tough game, they'll be fighting for every ball it should be a classic league one tough game I think but we've got to try and match that first and foremost and then add that little bit of quality and especially the front players we've got to think we can do that Finally for me, how big a feeling would it be to be out of that bottom four and how it's happened briefly didn't it? Yeah it's, listen I'd be lying if I said it wouldn't be better than being in the bottom four I think as a club as a whole I think we just need to look after ourselves first and foremost just do what's best for Bradford City don't worry about any other results if we keep getting the results that we know we can get then at the end of the season the table doesn't lie so we are confident inside this building that we can get safe and get further up the table