 i wnaeth ar y groffian a'r cyfnod iddo han o'r helyst Gỗi holli, mor uch yn dda olv perfection byddoyou G clamsgel o hyd o gandu Gwy slowio yn newi gwella a persönlich oherwydd y 350 Dych chi ei m noche grede, Gwell Llywb yn ei dŵr gwyl eisiau gweld yn surprises Fy oes fel nod i gaelheread gan baut o stretches Gwyän, pyst Оlau Cymru sut mae DJ Braffet, gyd yn Cum imo ar ôl раскult gyda ei pale yn criad Is that before, after or during the game? No, no. Everybody's good. Just all good lads together. There's no big heads, no big heads at all. That's all. But after the word, I can sink him down. What was your favourite memory? I can't really think about that. 1982? That was a good day. More or less, it was when he put me in that jump on the wall. It was a good French foot on the wall. I ran it quickly for a full time because that was coming off. And when you played for us in the Premier League, you had some fantastic days down there, weren't you? Yep, brilliant. Obviously the one everybody remembers is I was grateful to play a part in the victory against Liverpool. But especially I think when we beat Arsenal there, that was a good Arsenal team that we beat too once. Who are you marking on that day? Can't remember. Sent to about 11, 12 of them at the time. I missed out to Ipswitch, I lost to Ipswitch, I was a band. Terry Dallan had a good shake, we had a lot of season, Terry. We'll be seeing him tomorrow, Terry's coming along tomorrow. The best coach I had at this club, I never even thought he was with him. I was a blank off wiggins sometimes I go training with him. He's a bit of a dole. If you swing over to John and Marquette, John, if you remember 1987-88, Terry Dallan nearly got us up into the top flat, didn't he? That was a great team, wasn't it yourself? Stuart, Greg Abbott, Paul Tomlinson and girls. No, Peter, let's feel it, wasn't it back then? That's right, we were a stone's throw away. When you leave a football club, people always say, let's say, they're better than they think they are. We were the other way around. You can speak for the boys there, big sticks. We thought we weren't that good. We thought we'd just go on and do it. It wasn't to our left, I thought, jeez, we were a good side there. It was like Cavalier football at times as well. It was attacking football when it certainly got the crowd off their feet. It was exciting times to play because no one fancy does as a team. But we just went out there, rolled the sleeves up and got on with the job in hand. Eight to one games and beat the entertainer. We certainly done both. The thing it causes in the end was just to lack of bodies in the place. Because if you look at the amount of players that football clubs have nowadays, we need very, very small squads. And I think Terry Dallan was well-documented. Terry wanted a couple of players and if he'd have got them, then it would have been different then. But it was brilliant playing in them days, brilliant. A new player for Bradford City. I've got all your emails and all the girls at reception have been ringing around getting people today. So it's just going to grow and grow. It'll start small today, but tomorrow we're doing it. Is it 50, 60, 70? Will you say tomorrow? Harking back to the old days, we'll do the same thing with them. They'll have to see what sort of storage we have in that sort of system.