 Jack attack, two more years, congratulations. How's it feel? Yeah, delighted. Obviously it took its time, but it's done now and just can't wait to get going. Looking out on this pitch now, it doesn't seem too long ago we were out here at the end of the season. Looks a bit different now, but I guess looking out on to it now, it fuels your excitement a little bit more and makes you want to get out there all the more quickly now for pre-season. Yeah, I hope it's in better shape come first game of the season, but I'm delighted. Just can't wait to get this stadium full and rocking again. Talk us through your breath of city career so far and what you've taken out of it nearly two years now. You've had a fair bit of time to come in and make your mark. What's it been like from your point of view? Yeah, I've enjoyed every second of it. The fans have been classed with me. I think that's all you want when you're coming as a new player for the fans to take to you and have done that here. I'm excited for the next season and see what it brings. Where do you think that popularity comes from? You are a bit of a fan favourite. A lot of people seem to admire your endeavour and people tend to say that you typify a lot of what they expect from players. Do you feel that yourself? I think whenever you go out on the pitch, I think fans can accept if you give 110%, that's all you can really give. I think that's what I do every game, whether I'm having a good game or a bad game. If I bring that every game, they can accept it. What's next for you in terms of ambitions and goals you've got two more years initially and then the option of a further one? Is it really a chance now with the age you're at as well to really kick on in your career and be a part of something special? No, 100%. I think the first time when I came here and had this interview before, my plans were to get this team promoted into League One. But it didn't happen and now it's another chance to do that. I think with the squad and the manager, we've got more than capable. How much of an incentive was the manager? You're a full man United fan, so you're familiar with my cues. I wouldn't see my grandad when it got announced and he's trying to get me to take all my United tops into getting signed and that. It was a massive reason why I stayed. I guess as well when you talk about coming in two years ago, standing on this pitch and saying that you want to be part of a promotion wing inside, and having not done that over the course of the past two years, it makes you all the more determined. Was that a big incentive as well? You could have gone elsewhere, you had offers from elsewhere, but leaving here would mean that you've not really achieved what you saw. No, no. Leaving here with what I've done is a failure really. I thought I've done well personally, but as a project, as what I wanted to set out at the start, I didn't achieve that. So to leave was not really something that I wanted to do. Do you have areas in your game where you're looking at now and thinking next season I want to improve in this area, I want to be able to do this a little bit more? 100%. I spoke to my family in that, and I think we'll speak to the gaffer as well. I want to create more goals, I want to score more goals. I think there's a midfielder nowadays, that's what you've got to do. You've got four so far now for Bradford City. You've said whenever you've scored goals, there's been a little bit of self-deprecation about the one at Walsall being a shank, the one at Grimsby being a fluke, but you keep on scoring these goals and getting nominated for goal of the season. I've never scored one with my left foot. The dribble, everything was good, but the left foot is a swinger. I say the Grimsby goals. Walsall, yeah. Swindon, Screamer. Swindon, Screamer. So four goals away, you've not scored out here, I guess that's one thing you took off. It's disappointing because I had opportunities as well, I looked to set up other people instead of being selfish and this is one place I do want to score because I want that feeling that a lot of players have had. I have a full house, I think there's no better feeling. I guess last season more than the season before, given the fact there was no fans in it, it really gave you an appetite for that as well and you look at the way we ended the season with three back-to-back wins. There's really a platform to build on now, isn't there? I think like you say towards the end of the season when we're winning games it's a full house, it's probably not a better place to be, league one or league two. I want to score as much as anyone else wants me to score. I think I've celebrated other people's goals like they might let me own, but I'd like one myself. I guess having these crowds here that we can gives us a bit of an objective going forward as well. I think when we've looked at games such as the gaffers first game and charged the first game of the season last season, the last game of the season last season where we set the attendance record, it shows you the potential there for what can be and what we can aim to achieve and how it can look should we achieve what we obviously want. Yeah, it's no secret. This club's too big to be in league two. It's just we've got to take it to the next level. It's alright saying it year and year out, it's now up for us and us as players and us as the gaffer and the staff to take it to our next level to become the sleeping giant that it is. Can you find a message for those supporters that are looking forward to seeing you out here again and presumably all looking forward to getting back in pre-season and getting going again for two more years? Yeah, I'm just delighted. I think they've been fantastic with me so far, just that continued support and I'm sure we'll get to where we want to be.