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Welcome to another fine-the-edge production for the Premier League cricket club.
Connecting players and coaches, clubs and leagues, volunteers and supporters alike.
You're in the right place for the best of the 33 ECB Premier League and the 20 NA counties.
Bringing you the stories, the stats and the stand-up performances that make this game great.
Don't forget to hit the subscribe button to both our Premier League and pendable CA shows
so you don't miss any episodes. Now shall we get stuck in?
Okay so welcome everyone to the captain's table and once again we're looking at Premier League's
around the country and looking forward to the 2026 season. Joining me today from the northeast
Premier League, we have the captain of Newcastle and you'll see probably wearing his North
Umbulant cricket jersey. Chris Hilden how you doing bud? How are you? Are you keeping up here?
Yeah well well well now come on then. How cold was it on Saturday?
Freezing, freezing. Yeah there's lots of jumpers, lots of Wally hats, people are balling in Wally hats,
snows but actually it's actually get out on grass and play some cricket. I think it's great for
the ballers. Go for the ballers, have a good hit. So yeah I think really positive for us,
to start this Saturday coming. The weather's set well I think for the weekend as well and for the
for the week, the prep week, the North's teams will be going through so not all things go up.
And then the slog starts, 22 weeks, 22 weekends, for you in particular, lots of satisundees with
and double CA stuff as well. How do you even begin to prepare for that?
I think it starts, it almost starts as a captain in the season before. You start looking at your
team and you look at the lads who have done well, you look at the lads who've got potential
at other places and you start thinking about recruitment. I've always, as captain, I was
captain of some London as well, like to do my recruitment as early as possible. So that group of
players can have a full window together and try to do quite an intense winter programme but are
also aware that the people, that when are professional cricketers either people have got family
lives, lots of students who play cricket, who will be thinking about the dissertations and stuff like
that. Not that I ever did when I was at university, I was too busy thinking about going out of the
game. All I'm playing cricket and playing football, but it seems a lot of them aren't doing
work these days as well. And then obviously at all start, my obviously I've got a wife and a
little boy, they find that tough, especially with a lot of the Sunday stuff, but they're
boring work as well and realise it's a big part of my life. It's been then become a big part of
theirs as a forever grateful for their support as well, especially when there's a lot of travel
and involved in terms of going away with the white ball stuff at Northumberland. But yeah, very
supportive family is very helpful and from a club perspective, a lad who will buy in and
really give it a go and give it their own massively helps and puts us in it in the right head
space, really very helpful. Absolutely, and I think you hit something that's quite interesting.
Diff is around the country quite a lot, but in your part of the world, that university
amount of players who come through and the lad who are all at university, whether it be
in the North York, South Durham, they get Durham University and you only get Newcastle.
There's so many university players and you sign one this year yourself, aren't you?
Yeah, but yeah, the one to Josh Stirlen who played a little bit for Cumbria last season. He was
with us last year and performed really successfully. We'll have signed one of his
mates from Newcastle University in Arthur Wilcox, who I haven't actually played against because
I don't play any of the three day stuff, but the lads who played for Northumberland were really,
really impressed with him and obviously I saw him play at Finans Day at Wormsley and then
when we were unfortunately knocked out and they managed to go all the way. So he'll be really
exciting to have in our team and a lot of experience at a really good level. So yeah, that'll be
nothing. That'll be really, really exciting for us.
Do you think that means that in the Northeast Pram then, over the last 10, 15 years, that
age-demographic player because of utilising players from universities and so on. It started coming
down quite considerably and now we all know that top level cricket, primarily 15, 20 years ago,
average age might have been 30 plus. These things, it's 25 and below us, let's get those youngsters
through. Yeah, well definitely, definitely for the first six weeks, first seven weeks.
That's technical home and play for their home club, which I completely understand when I was at
university. I used to travel from Able, but when you go on a little bit further, for example,
Arthur from Norfolk, that's too big of a travel to go. So I think early in the season that
Dullswood, there's still life in the old dogs. Yeah, I think there's some fantastic
like older players who continued to play in the lead lads who were north of 40.
Still rippling up with Johnny Whiteman as one example. Alan Worthy did fantastically last year,
Simon Bert, Whistle, Stan Sherbin, the still that kind of older era, the experience
part is massive. It comes from just watching in Premier League cricket and then you've got
like the kind of mid 30s, Ryan Pringle, myself, Steurie Pinder, that kind of age of people,
as well as the two of the younger lads. In fact, I had new Castle this year, I've
made a genuine effort to try and sign some older lads, because it is quite tricky to lead a team
solely with under 25, it's tricky. They haven't necessarily got the skills and things,
but the experiences to lean on. They might not have yet, and it's about the lads who have had that,
we've got an opportunity to kind of pass on some of that knowledge. So come on,
then who's the one that's got a way this year that you've tried to sign, give us a heads up on
sort of you might have thought, I've gone after them and bugger. Yeah, yeah, so there was a lads
called Robbie Dawson from Gatorfell, he had a previous in the academy, I was really,
really keen on bringing him in bats, balls, fields. Yeah, it was really, really successful,
but actually, when I did speak to him, I completely, my it is, his response, he was
he was sobbing to the chap, but said, look, Gatorfell, who we signed for about two years ago,
he's been really able to flourish and develop with them, and he felt like he
ignored something, something back to them and wanted it to be with them, which are hugely
and my it because, obviously, that doesn't necessarily happen everywhere, and that's not a criticism
of those people who do, but it's abnormal when you see lads choose that, but yeah, having
an all rounder bat balls of fields, I think, is something that all probably late clubs,
they're always one obviously. Yeah, we lost Ashford Hart to move to Australia this year,
it was obviously an incredibly talented player who has a special county experience with
Hamshire and Durham, so he will be a miss, but no, I thought I think we've recruited,
well, in fact, they're bringing quite a number of players to cover the loss of him and George
Garwold, who's going to play it form beyond season this year, and Bobby Green, who's going to
play at the Grange, but no, I'm pretty pleased with how we're going to set up for the season.
Talking about the rest of the league, then, who'd you see as the strengths in the league in
comparison to last year, because obviously you guys came eighth last year, Bernmur,
I'm surprised they won the league last year, that's me personally, but I'm just one person,
I expected South North to be up there, I expected Fellins to be up there, and they didn't quite
get there. What was the feeling around the league yourself, do you think, was it a little bit of a
surprise that they got, it's not like they had the top five batters up there or anything like that,
was it?
John, it was a surprise, actually, I think, at the start of last year, a lot of the feeling
amongst the league, be that Bernmur would be that would be the favourites, and I think they kind
of proved that with the obviously only last one game last year, which, followed enough,
was against the team that got relegated in time, but yeah, there's such a strong outfit,
again, as I mentioned earlier, regarding demographics, they have not a lot of order experience
players, and I think they can bring that into the team. I am really good friends with
their captain, Brian Bringo, and we had a chat with him, and he said, we did end up a little
way with the league, but we just ended up on the right side of some really close games,
and he said that's the difference, he did actually say that that sometimes can be down the
look, and it can be, but often when you've got experienced teams with lots of top cricketers who
are fantastically over decade or longer, you often do end up on the right side of the result,
but those results. So yeah, I think definitely was the most people thought Bernmur would win the
league, and they proved this right. Could be a bit different this year, but yeah, they'll definitely
still be up there. South North and Liverpool recruiters really really well as well. They've obviously
signed Johnny Bushnall, who was the, who again, bat spawns and females. He is the professional
frost at North and England, and in addition to that, one of my, after I've said this to him for one
of my favourite cricketers that I've ever played with in Calum Fletcher has gone back there.
South North and Liverpool, he's an incredibly skillful baller, so I think he'll be a huge addition
to the South North and being set up. Yeah, big loss for Bernmur Field, isn't it lose in Mr
Bushnall? Yeah, it is. Obviously he scored so many runs last year, got me out first baller
my season last year, which thankfully won't happen this year, it's not playing them. But yeah,
it will be, as I say, as I mentioned before, it's hard to replace some one of Matt's balls and
females, but they've also managed to recruit, I know Josh Balsfield, I haven't seen for about
10 years, probably. He was always a fantastic cricketer and I know he's, he's,
Greg Overs, really good with Barna Castle, so they have recruited it, recruited as well,
and I think everybody's had to make some additions to some losses that they've received,
I think this year there's a lot of teams who've lost players, so that they have stayed
a bit, they're a little bit of moving around. I mean, I've got registered up until
a month, two weeks ago, so about 30 different transfers around the league, and I know I've got
more to add to that, because we're doing every two weeks now. Ben Wellhill in particular,
they've gone a bit barmy when it comes in to bringing a load of players straight away. Ben
Moore, I've made some signings there, I think Cody Hoffmeister coming in for them is quite,
that's quite a cool reason to bring in from South North. But yeah, is it one of those leagues
that, how can I put this, Mori talks? No, I know, I've got to, I think if you compare it to
the elsewhere that we know, we know it correctly. I don't think it's as much like that, I think,
I think players want to play for teams that suit them as opposed to really financial,
really financial gain. Obviously there will be players who do play for the sole reason of
money in that, that might be what their life situation suggests is right for them at the time.
But in the majority, I think players go and think about things holistically, so is it the right
set up in terms of the team? Am I going to fit into the team? Is the pitch
going to be right for my skill set? Is it close to where I live? Is it going to
lead to any eligibility for my account, he's cricket, to the end of the national? I think
teams players, when they do move, it's down to all of those reasons and they'll make their decision
based on that. I mean, Robbie Bowman, who's a very talented cricketer, I've played some
one day cup games for Durham last year, he's decided to leave time, I think, go to Bernmueha.
Therefore, all the right reasons, he wants to play with one of these coaches, to be point
out of a similar mold to Robbie in terms of being a baton and we're really keen on getting
Robbie to come and play for us, but when I spoke, he said I'm going to sign for them because I want
to have the guidance of Stewie there and to play with some ex-first-class cricketers who
have been there and done what I want to do. I think a lot of the time, the decisions are based on
what's right for them in their life as opposed to any financial gain. Another example for us,
for example, Harry Loansden, who we've just signed from Bernmueha, he really wants to play for
Northumberland, so he's joined Newcastle because they're an eligible club. I'll make them
vote on what, and there's other reasons with the sound of it on that, but they're a club that
enhances his eligibility for Northumberland, which I know we've chatted about the other day in terms of
how difficult it is to have smaller pool candidates for Northumberland to pick from.
Yeah, just four clubs in the Northeast that are actually eligible to play for Northumberland.
It's a very small pool that you guys have to pick from, isn't it?
Yeah, well, there are other clubs that they can pick from at the top four.
Five Premier League clubs?
Yeah, yeah, so it is really, really difficult for Northumberland, I know that.
I know that's not mirrored necessarily across the country because the catchment sort of
spare amateurship. The catchment sort of the spake is much larger for some of those counties,
but I mean, it's just testament to our head coach Daniel Sherbin and the set up at Northumberland
cricket. And it only McGee has captained that people are desperate to come and play for us given
our success. The winter program and the fantastic year that we have last year, there's lots of
lads dropping who've unfortunately been released from Durham, who are really, really keen to play.
Obviously, being 35, I've been through the really high times, like the 2020 finals day at Worms,
high times 10 years ago, when we got beat off Cornwall at Wormsley in the one day cup, equally,
when we've opened the ball up, bowling with two wicker keepers at St Burr at Cumbria,
probably 11, 12, 12 years ago, which was really tough. So it's amazing to say how far the
the county club has come, and I think that's testament to everyone involved, and even though
we do have a very difficult catchment to pick from since the right theory for funding changed
through the NCC to encourage more home grown players. That's being particularly tough for
Northumberland and there's managed to build on that and create an environment where
people want to play some people with clubs to play with them. Absolutely, I think that's testament
not just to Northumberland, but to the quality of the North East Premier League, isn't it? Because
the clubs are a strong club. The competitiveness at that level in the Premier League in the
Northeast is it is up there. There's no two ways about it in terms of the quality that's out there.
You're very lucky to have played quite a lot of county cricket around the minor counties,
the NCCA as well yourself. Where would you put the North East in that sort of echelons?
Does it feel as though the NCCA stuff is as strong as the North East or vice versa?
Yeah, I think in general the standard of the Sundayest of the NCCA is higher.
It shows as our manager or coach, he often says to lads it through the window and at the start of
the season that you need to get into the team. You need to be dominant in your club cricket.
You need to be your club's best players. That's fair enough. I mean, you've got lads that
I don't know. A lot of lads who are playing minor counties cricket too, but it
like solid batters batting seven and eight, who bat three, four, five,
for the majority of the club teams. Obviously, you have got lads who in the North East Premier
League who could easily play minor counties cricket and put an order and have family lives or
doesn't invest them who will flourish in the league. But in general, I would say
I feel like the standards got better from in minor counties cricket, but I also feel like the
Premier League, I mean, when I first started in 2006-2007 it was like it was really, really,
really strong and there's probably at some point within the last 20 years that
in terms of its competitiveness. I don't know whether that's because they've gone to the two
divisions, so there's promotion and relegation, which I think is key for any pathway or competition
to improve them. As I mentioned to you for them going to the three divisions from next year,
it's only going to kind of improve that, improve that. Absolutely. So come on, let's look forward
to 2020's season. You know, this is going to go out before you guys go out on the pitch on
Saturday to start with. What does a good season look like for Newcastle? I'm guessing that
where you finished last year, you were probably disappointed, you thought you'd be a top-off
at table. What's a good season look like for you? It's a funny one because I mean,
when you say you'd be disappointed, it was quite a transition for last year in terms of
if there's younger lads coming in, the team had changed quite a bit. Our came in as a captain,
I haven't not played for the club, but I did play for Newcastle about 2015, but I hadn't played,
I was a back-up at home club, which I absolutely loved. Obviously went through to Newcastle
as a new challenge, and actually if you look at the lead table all the way, we came in eighth,
or very unlike Burnley, where we were probably on the wrong side, if some of those results
comes with that space, and it was really, really tight. For example, Hemp Lions, I think, were
very close to playing relegated with about five, six games to go, and they just went on a road
and I finished it for six. So last year was close. I think this year, again, obviously we've brought
new players, players in with a little bit more experience, so to speak, but I think it's going
to be really, really difficult to kind of place. I'd love us to finish in the top half,
but what I would say is South Northumberland and Burnley were seemed to be on the standard teams,
and then you look from the rest of the teams, and you literally could look at any of them and go,
well, they could finish third, or they could finish 10th, 11th, 12th, I think it could be
as concentrated as that, which is, if I'm totally honest, that's exactly what you want,
absolutely. That is what you want the league to be competitive. You want everything to be played,
to be like, well, actually, like Shero's, who's got to win this because all teams have
got particular strengths this year. There's a couple of clubs that have got fantastic professionals,
really, really going to make us the league. We've got Mandade Singh again, who's a sensational
clicker, I think, is it Yash Katari? Yash Katari has gone to Ashinson, yeah.
That's right, but for Ben, we'll go a couple of years ago. He's a bit decent.
I've never seen a lad have as much time ever when they're bad as him, so he's going to be a great
acquisition for them. He's got headlines as professional, is meant to be very handy, and then he's got
the other teams such as Chessley Street, who don't necessarily have a professional, but they've got
some fantastic league cricketers. As I say, all things are going to have their strengths,
and I think it's set up to be a really competitive year, made even more competitive with the fact
that there's going to be three teams relegated this year as opposed to two.
Yeah, and that's a big thing, isn't it? To go from two down out of 12 to three out of 12,
presuming it's just one coming up from below. That makes the leagues, that just compresses
everything so much more, doesn't it? And if you're in tenth place with the week or two or three
weeks to go, the pressure on that, whereas previously it might have been out, we should be all right,
all of a sudden you could lose that Premier League status, couldn't you?
Yeah, yeah, and all of that, but as I've mentioned to friends that I've got
who played with the clubs in the league, and team mates, that is what we'll play for really,
you'll play for the pressure really. You speak to most people that the game is that they will
have enjoyed the most in their cricket and career, or be the close ones. Yeah,
whether it's something on it as opposed to being teams by 200, 250 runs, you want things to be
close. Absolutely. Yeah, so yeah, I'm really looking forward to the challenge of it,
they actually think it's a positive thing for the league, for them to be making that change
from 12 to three, doing this way, given that team that chance from Division 1 to be promoted,
that one team, which is really significant, but I think that's a much better way of doing it
than just having to go down for a lower league and everybody's still. Yeah, and I think in the
long run, it should make that top division even stronger, shouldn't it, without a doubt. So,
let's look at some of the players very briefly around that league then. My bit new castle might be
elsewhere. Just give me a couple of players that followers and listeners to our show might not have
heard of. You know, in Yashkitaari, we've mentioned him a thousand times over the past couple of years,
he's one of those players. You've got Eddie Campion who's turned up at Felling, another one who's
coming from their home counties, that'll be an interesting one to keep an eye on, but
players that you know, you know, maybe a batter, maybe a bowl or anything, keep an eye out for
this one. Generally, they're the youngsters aren't they to keep an eye out for. That's a tricky one,
I thought, well, while I do, I'll start with my home club. I think that's the best way to do it,
and I'll have to have everything after that. So, we've got three young lads. One is called Charlie
Cooper, now he played for, I took him to Sunderland from Wellington a couple of years ago when he was
in the year 13th of Barna Castle, so he'd still had some school cricket, but the impact, the impact
that he had at Sunderland was super, he did fantastically, he managed to balance his studies and his
school cricket and club cricket fantastically. He came to Newcastle with me last year and
probably didn't do as well as that he wanted to. I think it's often quite difficult, especially
when you don't go to university to jump straight into work and life and balance your cricket
sometimes, lose what's or find it difficult to work out what's important to you at the time,
but he's going to give it another go this year, and he is an incredibly talented player,
to get the mental side of his game, right? I think there's a lot of runs in there,
really, really, really talented lads, so I'm looking forward to seeing how he gets on, alongside
Faizant Gouman, who was side from Time Mouth, now he is in that kind of
age of being in his final year of school, the balance of AOLs, a bit of school cricket,
a bit of club cricket, as well as the sterile second team stuff, but the lads are
derriere who I'm friends with, are really keen on him, especially from East temperament and
things like that, so I'm looking forward to seeing how he goes, he's an open batter, and some of the
lads who, this is probably the most, the best one from a club perspective, from a home-grown
perspective is a lad called Charlie Darwin, who is George Darwin's brother, he played some games
for us last year, was throwing a debent in that he was balled at the end at some front
toasted cricketers in the white ball, because he learned curve for him, he did really well at the
end of last year, and he's again in that same kind of AOL level board, but he has trained really,
really well off the window, and I think there's a chance for him to do really, really well this year,
and be that in the second team, cricketers and all rounder, but definitely in, it would definitely be
some, some good opportunities from the ball for the first team as well, so I think he's definitely
wanting to watch out for over the next, next coming years, I would say, for Charlie, but for the
other two, definitely, definitely this year. And I say to everyone, if anyone can go through the
A-levels, and do what they've got to do on the pitch at the same time, Thomas Roos doing it down in
Somerset right now this year, so these boys have got a standard to set on, and they, but
playing Durham 2s, that's the sort of level that these guys are getting to now, isn't it? Yeah,
I feel really old when I say this, but the thought of someone doing the A-levels, playing county
cricketer, but he just did nothing back in the day, you know, he was the older generation,
coming through, now you're seeing these 16, 17, 18, 19-year-olds with all of these exams around
them to do, and at the same time manage it to play Premier League cricket, some N-W-C-I, some playing
2s cricket, it's just a different world altogether, isn't it? No, we're definitely years, I mean,
we played against Dorset in the semi-final of the 2020s, but I know there was a kind of
reasoning in your role, Vlad, who was, who was, you know, his name, who was linked with,
Jiffin Gordon. Yeah, yeah, that's it, who obviously has done something similar and done
really, really well in Australia, so it's good to say such fantastic promise in some of these
players. If we look at some of the other teams that were, they've mentioned, or just
let's, Dora McKayne on a lad calls out Moritzley, who's playing for Dora McKayne at the moment,
he's signed for Chessley Street, and I know there's a bit of excitement regarding him.
There is another lad who, he did really, really well, two years ago, I've already mentioned
Robbie Bournemann, who's gone to, to Berbilla from, from Ty Murphy's, he is still one to watch,
so I was, I was, of the top of my head, can't think, there's much, I think, comes a trip,
so much of my own time, those two off the top of my head, Alliance, we're definitely looking
out to, to watch out for and see how they go. Well, coming back to yourself and your team,
when we close towards the end of the chat, that was one of the questions I'm going to ask. I mean,
playing Premier League cricket, the mental side of it is massive for all of the players full stop.
Being a captain of a Premier League club, how do you sort of balance that with the rest of your
day-to-day, your day job, your family life, because there's just so much to deal with, isn't it?
Yeah, well, the really is, and actually when I was captain at Sunderland, I found that really,
really tricky to be able to do that. Not through anybody's fault at all, but it was a multi-sports club,
so there was sometimes jurisdiction of things that we could and couldn't do,
the finances with split amongst everyone, so sometimes the couldn't be
financed and things like that, so it was really, really tricky, and they will always be my home club,
and unfortunately, they will relegate it from the Premier League in the Division I last year,
but they have signed some really good players this year, and I've still got some good friends there,
so I do wish them all the best, but it was just too much for me to be captain of that kind of
environment. At Newcastle, it is tricky, but I do have some good support from the chairman in
Nick Brown, but in particular, from Phil Hudson, who does a lot of off-field work for me,
in terms of kids and buyers, in terms of speaking to groundsmen,
well, linked to the school at the Royal Grammar School, so working out, when we can train and
things like that, for help and book window nets. He's been incredibly helpful, he'd be happy,
that I'm giving him this acknowledgement, because in the end, the guys that run these clubs at the
end of the day, they're the most invaluable ones for you. Yeah, they are, in my end of your speech,
at the end of last year, I didn't mention them at all, and I think you had to compliment them,
but completely, I just completely forgot them, but no, he needs a huge shout out, but it is,
it is tricky, I'm a PE teacher and a pastor really in the head of year at school,
and some things like that, especially from a pastoral perspective, some things just can't wait,
and when I've got to train and after school, I'm like, well, I can't get there on time,
so to deal with this thing, so those things can be tricky, but thankfully, the lads who in the club
have got some senior players who can run the sessions and things like that, and take over,
they're pretty, pretty self-sufficient, which is good, but it is tricky, the easiest bit I want to say
is the bit on the field, I think that's probably the easiest bit. Yeah, with that white line,
and the old clicks into this is what I do, isn't it? Yeah, and it is tricky, because obviously,
I'm peaking wicket as well, and then back to the top five, and then half of the captain,
the team, especially a younger team as well, which can be tricky, but I love the challenge last year,
and I'm looking forward to that again this year. And you wouldn't have it any other way,
let's get to the crux of it then. Before we finish, no sitting on the fence, no creosote-ass,
who's going to win the Northeast Premier League this year? It's one of two.
I'm going to say, really, really tight, less than games, points, I'm going to go for Burnville,
so less than 25 points, I think, really close, I think.
Absolutely. We'll look out for that, though. I have a great season going forward, Chris.
You've got a lot of bloody cricket coming up in the next few months, haven't you?
And the irony is, where you get to your school holidays, and the end of the CAA turns
the three day, you get that time off anyway then, don't you? Yeah, and I definitely won't be playing
any other. I've played one in it's sourced, and I've been having two years ago to help show
it, and never again, I don't think. Could you have picked any further to go?
Yeah, well, I don't know. I'm sure there were 300 for knowledge, something after about four
o'clock or something, and it was about 35 degrees. John Oswald had given me, my inners had brought
them there before he'd asked me, and he worked at a cricket shop, he brought me some inners,
and I was like, Garmin Gloves, some of my hands were the thickest inners you've ever seen,
it was going 35 degrees. So, yeah, the horrors of sourced, sourced and in Abraham lived
along with my memory for a year, but thankfully, we went back there at the suit with 12s and
beat them. So we managed to get rid of those horrors for there, yeah, we'll be playing any three
day cricket. Absolutely. Enjoy, mate, and thanks for joining us at the captain's table.
No, no worries, Nick, thanks very much.
Right, it's time to team mates with Chris Yulestone up at Newcastle. It's T10, as always,
Chris, because we love our T10. Fast as you can, who's most likely to be late at Newcastle?
Andrew Doyle. Who's most likely to go on a reality show? Dan Hogg, Dan Hogg from Donald,
beautiful man. Who's most likely to throw a bath? George Stuart, even though he bats 11.
So, kicks off when he gets out when I'm like, well, who's most likely to ignore what's up?
Arthur Wilcox or Charlie Coalford. The young lad's too busy playing on snapchat.
Who would you never want to share a car with?
Matt is Stuart if he's been batten because he's battened off stink.
See him as Alex to wrap him up if I play with him. Who spends the longest on their hair?
Well, definitely not me. So, not me. We're hair. I think Dan Hogg again. Love Islander.
Who would you never want to organise the team mate house?
Well, I don't drink, so somewhere where it would be, a big bender in Prague or Benadol,
probably George Stuart. Who's most likely to wind you up or start an argument?
Or George Stuart? Start an argument in a telephone box?
Who's most likely to Google themselves?
George Stuart. And sorry, quickly about George Stuart, we all admit we see he's got a narcissistic
personality disorder and he kind of only half George.
And finally, who's the most famous person in your phone book that you'd love to invite to play for
Newcastle? Well, I do. Ten years ago Ben Stokes was a big now-hinged being played for England.
I said to you fancy game and he came with me for us against Stockton, so Ben Stokes
at your road, I think it would have to be.
For a comment, a thanks for the team mates there at Newcastle.
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