 Mae'r gwaith yma yw'r ffوجog ffordd. Mae ffordd y ffordd yn ysgrifteig iawn iddyn nhw'n gweithio'n adnod amlun o'w gweithio newydd, pleidio ac statio all ymlaen. Buid hynny y ffordd, gweithio'r link i'r gweithio i'r adnod ar gyfer yr adnod. A'r ffordd, gweithio â'r gwaith i'w rhagwtio a'r cyffordd i ni? Wel ym. Rwy'n ei gweithio ar arfer? Wel'r moneg? Maen yn gweithio ar gyfer y gweithio'r gweithiool pan pob well ar y stidion. I don't know, it's the answer. I don't think so, because I think Farad said that it would be a separate account that allows you to use. One's his current account, and one's the USM account. I think I should imagine it'll be to use a word that was used around 1999 with this D-King thought it'd be ring-fenced. Set up a different company, don't you, when they're doing the stadium and stuff? So, I understand that money has to be paid in somewhere, but that's what. If the stadium finance, I think it will be different than the finance. I think building it obviously won't come out of the pocket of the club. It's a separate company, so they will leverage the stadium against the capital. Like you would for anything, essentially we already know that the money that they wanted to take off the council was going to be paid back yearly over 25 to 30 years with £7 million a year going to the council, which for a lot of people seemed a really, really good deal for everyone, clearly against Liverpool fans who obviously cleaned their own bins. So that proved that that's how it would work, and for me, that's how everyone funds everything, you wouldn't pay. It doesn't actually make any kind of sense to pay for anything up front with cash. You don't have that kind of money, no-one has that kind of money floating about, you just don't have it. And plus, far from the shade he's an accountant, he's an billionaire, he's become an accountant, a billionaire through being an accountant, you must know who's an accountant. I can't remember, some bushing fella. You don't get to that place without knowing how finance works, and how credit works, and how shares and businesses and loopholes and things like that. No, you've got another loopholes, haven't you? There are loopholes, you don't just go out there and spend money, you've got to know how money works. It's like money works night and day, they say, it can work for you. It's why rich people don't just go put money in the account and leave it there, they put it into stocks and shares, they make it work for them. That's how the world works, that's a bank's work. That's where we've been going on. It's how banks work, you give banks your money, and they use that money to try and make more money, you invest it. It's how the world works, it's why the world's gone backwards in the last 10 years, is because rich people aren't investing their money, they're just keeping it for themselves, and they're not investing it back into the world, because that's how it's supposed to work. We'd set up a separate company and we would essentially use whatever income we got from the stadium to go back to pay the debts. One of the problems with Everton was, one of the problems for the last 30 years, up to a couple of years ago, is we got a loan, didn't we, off Berlin's banking about 25 years ago, and we leveraged it against the stadium, so the club owned the stadium, but if they'd made the stadium separate at the time, they could have leveraged against the stadium, which wouldn't have impacted against the club, which means the club would have been death-free, but because they didn't at the time, it meant that the club saddled that death for years, and we could never escape. We couldn't escape the interest, never mind, that was it. The interest was crippled. So this will all be separate. From the minute that stadium becomes a reality, it will be a completely separate thing. So at the moment now, that might have been set up anyway, hasn't it? No, but if you go into, it can't actually start, can it? So if you go into the debt now, the club has to cover those debts at the moment, so anything in terms of shape preparation and all that, we've had to pay off. Exactly to that goes into the debt of the club, but once the stadium gets to go ahead and becomes legal, then you'd set a separate company up, which you probably already have, and all the funding comes from that, and then it doesn't touch the club, so hopefully theoretically that continues for the entirety of repaying back the money for the stadium, and that way doesn't hurt, but that's just a legal thing. Will that actually mean that Everton don't have to incur the costs on the field? Will the realistic answer to that is yes, Everton will have to incur the costs of the stadium in real terms, do you will, won't he? Well, he will, but they'll have to try and come to it with name and rights and everything else, and it'll be paid back. I suppose that was what the attraction of the city council deal would have been, is that you cover that back in within, someone said, I'll give you this loan of, well it will pay it back £10 million a year for 25 years or 30 years, then £10 million is nothing there because of TV rights. The beauty of the council deal was or was is still up in the air. Excuse me, it probably won't happen, but the reason why it was so attractive was because the council can get a loan essentially off a central pot of money, which is there through the government to pay for large developments within a city, to help a city, so that could be an arena, so that could be the, that could be any arena, that could be any stadium.