
In an exclusive interview with Casino Apps, Manchester United and Tottenham legend Sheringham told his club to launch a sensational summer swoop for England captain and Bayern Munich striker Harry Kane.
Transfer rumours and gossip
Q: What are the four transfer priorities – and why – for Ruben Amorim to transform Man Utd into title contenders next season?
Teddy Sheringham: It’s a great question really at the moment. I don’t know that there’s many that do spring to mind. The type of players that you need is leaders. I mean, where are you going to get them from now?
At top dollar, are they going to want to come to United right now? Man City are scouring the market at the moment to reinvest, to get another football squad that were as good as their last (title-winning team). So, they’re probably getting the top targets because people want to play for champions. The top players want to play in the top competitions. So, it’s going to be hard for Manchester United to even compete with these clubs now. Liverpool and City are going to be first and second on the list when a top player becomes available. This is what happens when you fall down the pecking order. I’d rather go to City or Liverpool or Real Madrid or Barcelona, that’s what they will be thinking.
As for picking players, I really don’t know where I’d start. It’s a management rebuilding position now. They’ve fallen that low down the pecking It’s not about getting the top players, it’s the ones under that have the tenacity and the enthusiasm and the optimism of going to the next level, of taking a club to the next level but haven’t been there themselves. Maybe a Micky van de Ven, who’s been inspirational at Tottenham. Whether you’d be able to get Van de Ven from Tottenham is another question. That is the type of player that you would look at and the type of player that Manchester United should be targeting.
Q: With Arsenal needing a top class centre forward; some pundits have suggested that Harry Kane should be in their consideration. Is that a transfer you could ever envisage happening and would the response be far more toxic than the one Sol Campbell faced?
Teddy Sheringham: Yes, he might be coming to the latter stages of his career, but he’s still a top footballer, he’s still playing for England, he’s still scoring goals for England, he’s still scoring goals in the top leagues in world football, in the Champions League, so if that (signing for Arsenal) happened that would really hurt. I mean that is something that can’t happen. Even to think about it happening would hurt Tottenham, if an approach was made, and you have to hear about Harry mulling over that situation? Oof.
It could never happen in a million years could it? That would be a nightmare scenario for every single Tottenham fan in the world.
Q: Can you see Harry Kane coming back to the Premier League in the future to have a go at breaking Alan Shearer’s record?
Teddy Sheringham: He must have that in his mind, that it would be nice to break that all-time Premier League scoring record, but it’s not the be-all and end-all really, I don’t think. I think there’s more important things for him, winning things at Bayern Munich. Winning the Champions League and the Bundesliga. You’d much rather have those on your mantelpiece than the top goal scorer in the Premier League history, without doubt.
He could do both. He could come back at 34, 35 and get the record if he went to the right club. I mean, if you’re talking about going to Man City or Liverpool. What an acquisition that would be for those clubs. Perhaps not Man City because you’ve got Haaland, but if Liverpool were to reach out to him and thought he was going to be the final piece in the jigsaw for them, especially with Salah leaving, then maybe he could make the move this summer.
Q: Does Jack Grealish need to leave Man City this summer if he wants to resurrect his England career and play at the 2026 World Cup?
Teddy Sheringham: Saying that he played the other day, it’s not enough. He needs to be playing regularly. He needs to be playing consistently. Otherwise, he’s just going to glide out of football, the way I see it. He was part of the treble-winning team, and he celebrated no doubt. Does he need to leave to be part of the World Cup squad? Wherever he goes to, he’s going to be down from Manchester City because they’re a club striving to be the best every time that they go onto the football pitch. He needs to liven himself up to get back in the Man City team for me.
Q: Liam Delap has been heavily linked with a summer move. He’s got admirers at Chelsea, Liverpool, Newcastle, Manchester City and Manchester United. Which club should he pick in the summer?
Teddy Sheringham: I think he’s got to choose wisely where he’s going to play football so that he learns by his mistakes and goes to a football club where he’s going to be playing minutes and not sitting on the bench and watching other people play. He looks a real good prospect for me and I’m excited to see where he’s going to go because he could rip it up next year if he chooses the right club.
Q: With Haaland potentially out injured, should Man City sign Ronaldo for the Club World Cup?
Teddy Sheringham: I mean, Man United fans wouldn’t be happy. If the figures add up, Ronaldo would probably jump at the chance. He can definitely score a goal, can’t he? That, there’s no denying. Yeah, they looked a little bit lost without their focal point (in the Manchester derby), didn’t they? They didn’t have that same flow to their team, but I don’t know.
Wow, I’ve not even thought about that, Ronaldo would definitely be excited by it. That would be funny. I bet if you offered him the chance to go to Man City, he would bite your hand off.
Q: On the challenge of replacing Kevin De Bruyne
Teddy Sheringham: First and foremost, he’s been unbelievable. For me, he’s been their top player. Just the way he glides past people and feeds the centre-forward perfectly. More often than not, that’s Haaland. Just one of the top stars without a shadow of a doubt in the history of the Premier League.
It’s been a hard watch watching him over the last year, not getting as much football as he should and not being at the top level that he’s been playing at for the previous eight years. But you just have to remember how good he has been. He’s been a phenomenal footballer.He’s been perfect for the Premier League in his manner and his professionalism. He’s been superb. I’m sure they’re looking all around the world (for a replacement). It looks like they’ve brought in a couple of top players already. Marmoush looks like a real good signing, very lively, but it will take him a little while to settle in as well and to really perform. I think he will be a top player. But I don’t know, where else do you get players of that calibre? You’re not going to be able to nick them off of Arsenal or Chelsea because they’re not going to want to sell. So, they’re going to have to go abroad and then those players have got to fit into the Premier League, and understanding that takes a long time for some players, so they’ve got a lot to do.
Q: Would Bruno Fernandes do a Tevez and be a good replacement for Kevin De Bruyne?
Teddy Sheringham: You know, all we’ve heard coming out of Manchester United is that pretty much every top player has a price, no one is unsellable because of the finances, then perhaps a deal for Bruno to join Manchester City as De Bruyne’s replacement could be struck.
Manchester United need to rebuild. It’s a dire situation at the club. They’re going to need money to buy players.
If City chucked £100 million plus at United for Bruno Fernandes, 30 years-old, maybe they consider it. I think I know what Jim Ratcliffe would say. Jim Ratcliffe would have a look and say that’s a few staff that we don’t have to sack in the summer. Let’s do a deal.
Q: Is Eberechi Eze ready to move to a club that can challenge for the Premier League title?
Teddy Sheringham: I’ve got a couple of Crystal Palace mates that tell me that he’s the real deal. They say that Michael Olise was very good, but Eze could be even better than, that’s the way they’ve explained things to me. So yeah, I don’t think I’ve seen enough of him to know whether he’s… the real deal or if he’s going to be a top player.
He’s 26 now. He’s at a good age. He’s at a good age to take the next step to the next level. He should know all about his game by now and understand what he can and he can’t do on a football pitch. He’ll definitely have his suitors. Maybe he’s someone that City would look at if they’re thinking about a De Bruyne replacement.
Tottenham
Q: Is Ange Postecoglou still the right man for Spurs?
Teddy Sheringham: He is, but – and it’s becoming a huge ‘but’ for me – when you start arguing with fans at every opportunity reacting to criticism, reacting to substitutions, I think it’s not great. He’s quite an experienced manager and you’ve got to try and hold your temper; you’ve got to be seen in the highest esteem. You’ve got to put all that to the side and not react to some things that are going on.
And he seems like, not that he’s had enough, but he seems like he’s reacting all the time to the smallest of things. It might be a culmination of all the small things making him react, I don’t know. But, it’s not a good look. He needs to try and control it, in an encouraging way. Show that things aren’t bad. But he’s explained why they’re bad. Now is the time to enjoy. He’s got all his players back; he’s got a Europa League quarter-final and we should be enjoying that. And that’s how you’ve got to look at it. I know it’s very tough from all the criticism he’s got, but that’s how you’ve got to look at it for me.
Q: Daniel Levy is under the spotlight at Tottenham with the fans calling for change; however, should supporters not be more appreciative of the work Levy has put in laying the foundations for future success?
Teddy Sheringham: Yeah, I’ve been a backer of Daniel Levy, over the last few years. It all depends which way you see it, whether Mauricio Pochettino wasn’t given enough money when they were in a really good position after getting to the final of the Champions League. Levy has said that Poch didn’t want to spend, but I don’t think a manager ever turns something down like that.If he knows that he’s got money to spend, you just try, from years of experience, you know that you need to keep improving your team to make you better so that you don’t stand still. If you stand still, you become worse. So you have to keep improving.
We don’t know the ins and outs of what’s happened with Daniel Levy and how much he’s been giving the managers, but getting back to nowadays, the manager’s bought some good players. You have to accept that Tottenham are not going to be buying the top players. They’re not in that area at the moment, but you have to strive to do what you need to do with the players available to get to the next level. You’re getting decent players and then you have to get good management and good organization to get you to that next level, to get you year in, year out in the Champions League spots.
Q: On if Spurs legends including Sheringham himself should back him more publicly
Teddy Sheringham: Yeah, and he’s right. You have to realise that he hasn’t kept saying it, but he needs to say it. When your two best centre halves, your experienced players that control the rest of the team and your goalkeeper are out for a long period, it affects everybody. It makes everybody shakier all around the pitch. It makes the fans shakier. We’ve had two young lads going in there who have done absolutely brilliant, but now key players are back, that solidity should calm everybody down for the end of the season.
I’m all for sticking with Ange, understanding where they’ve been this season and this ‘judge me from now till the end of the season’. I feel good about what could happen at the end of the season. It’s a tough ask, but if you get on a little run, if the confidence grows, things can happen.
Manchester United
Q: What is Marcus Rashford’s next move? Does he have a future at the club if he returns in the summer, or should he seek a move?
Teddy Sheringham: I don’t think there’s a way back for Marcus Rashford at Man Utd. I don’t think he wants to. I look at the body language he giving off at Villa, and it’s like he couldn’t be any happier to be further away from Manchester United if he tried, to be honest. I think that’s the vibe.
I still don’t see an unbelievable change in his body language at Villa, but I see a slight difference in as much as… He’s trying to enjoy his football at the moment, and he’s fitting in more with the Aston Villa players than what he was with the players at Man United football club.
I don’t think Marcus Rashford has any future at Manchester United after this season.
Q: If your Ruben Amorim, who would you sign Viktor Gyokeres or Matheus Cunha?
Teddy Sheringham: If it’s between Cunha or Gyokeres, just for the fact of the experience of the Premier League, I would go for Cunha. Gyokeres might have done it in the Portuguese league and he’s scoring goals and he’s confident but all he needs to do is come in like Hojlund and not get any service for four games and start getting battered and it’s “who have we bought?” and then the pressure’s on him, and if he doesn’t know how to handle that, then that is a problem.
You need a leader. You need a top player to stick his chest out and go like Cantona and I did when we came to Man United and just say, I was born to play at this place. Not “will I make it at this place?” There are all different characters in football, and you need someone that’s going to get out there and lead the line. That’s why you need to go and get a player like Harry Kane. That’s what United used to do, they used to go and sign the best players on the market.
I’ve said before that they need to go out and break the bank and buy top British players. And if they’re getting rid of their best British players, then… where do you go with that? We know that the club have said that everyone is for sale at the right price.
Go and break the bank and get Harry Kane still. He’ll stand up there and he’ll say: “Give me the ball, give me some service and I’ll score some goals. You do your job, and you do your job, and we’ll have half a football team here. If you don’t, then we won’t. So, follow me and we’ll be alright.”
Q: Do you think United fans are right to stage protests in Old Trafford?
Teddy Sheringham: Yeah, I think so. It’s all coming at one time. And it feels like it’s, just the next step, what’s coming next? They feel like they’re just getting battered from pillar to post, the way I see it. And it’s like, where is it going to end? I really don’t know where it’s going to end.
I’ve just been listening to Gary Neville as well about how bored he was yesterday (during the 0-0 draw between United and Man City), and I thought the same thing. It was a bit of a stroll, the game. It wasn’t Man United on the front foot, looking to open teams up. They’re in that defensive mode a lot of the time. It’s just tough viewing and it’s tough listening to what’s going on up there at the moment.
Q: Are you surprised by how quickly Jim Ratcliffe’s popularity seems to have plummeted among Manchester United supporters?
Teddy Sheringham: He must be thinking “what have I done getting involved in a football club?” You know, everyone was like, Jim will be our saviour. And he’s looked at the club and thought: “Wow, these things need to change. And I need to be the one that goes in there and change them”. This is a big overhaul in the whole, whole football club. It is going to take years of getting (the club) back on its feet for me.
Q: We know Ronaldo wants to buy a football club, would Ratcliffe be wise to get him involved along with a few other legends, because it feels like the fans don’t see any identity at the club other than a corporate culture that doesn’t work
Teddy Sheringham: I don’t think Ronaldo will be getting involved in Manchester United, not as a first involvement as someone going into a football club. I think he’ll be going to Portugal and getting a little club there to get some sort of experience. If that’s what he wants to do with his money, who knows? It’s just one thing after another with Man United and when results aren’t going great for you as well, it all escalates tenfold, doesn’t it?
Q: Was Roy Keane’s criticism of Bruno Fernandes right or did he go over the top?
Teddy Sheringham: I think I’ve said exactly the same (as Roy Keane), that I don’t think Bruno Fernandes is a captain.
He’s not captain material, and his leadership qualities are not really what you want from a captain.
But having said that, he’s the only one playing to his potential at the moment, and above the way I see it.
He’s the one making assists and generally being alive on the football pitch and hoping to make a difference. That’s where he’s at the moment and he’s not loving life but that’s where he’s at. He’s performing. I think sometimes you have to know when to criticise a player, and I think Keany probably chose the wrong moment to dig him out. Bruno’s not the major problem at Manchester United – we’d be in a much worse place without him.
Q: Antony has been on fire at Betis, does he have a future at Old Trafford?
Teddy Sheringham: It all depends on how the manager gets on with him, what sort of relationship he’s got with (Ruben Amorim). I know he didn’t buy him, I know Ten Hag brought him in. You never know. Antony might have a nice relationship with Amorim. He might get on with him and they’ll have the conversation and he might say to him, I want you to come back. And he might say, I don’t want to come back. Why would I want to come back there and get all that stick when I’m enjoying myself in Spain?
For me, just get enough money for him and sell. It’s not the be all and end all for all these players at the moment at Man United. It’s a fantastic club when it’s going well, but there’s a lot of stick to take as well if things aren’t going well and there’s a big rebuilding situation for the manager and the football club, for Jim Ratcliffe and whoever, so do you want to be part of that and still be there or do you want to just enjoy your football and be where you are?
European football and world headlines
Q: On this season’s runners and riders in the Champions League, who do you think will win it and who would you like to see win it?
Teddy Sheringham: Real Madrid will do for me again. Wouldn’t it be great to see them in another semi-final? I can’t say that I want Arsenal to knock them out, because I don’t!
Q: What would a Europa League victory mean to Tottenham and how confident are you about Thursday night?
Teddy Sheringham: For the football club, the wait is getting longer and longer now every year. There are two or three things that you can win and I think it would be invaluable. When you look at the players that are playing for Tottenham now, it’s no 50-1 shot. You’ve got to look at the type of players that are at Tottenham.
We’re talking about some top players. You expect Tottenham to be challenging for the Europa League with the players we’ve got. It wouldn’t be a huge shock if Tottenham were to win the competition because of the players we have.
Q: It’s new territory for some of these Tottenham players. What do you need to do to navigate these tricky European KO ties and what advice would you give the players?
Teddy Sheringham: There’s enough players, a lot of leaders on the football pitch. You’ve got your Maddison’s, you’ve got your Romero’s, your Van de Ven’s, the goalkeeper, they’re all top players, Porro, they’re at a standard that should be looking to win something. It’s not so far-fetched to be thinking about it.
There’s that pressure that, the longer they don’t win things, it builds even more. And the good thing is there’s not that many players that have been there that long to understand how long it’s been.
It’s not as if you’ve got people playing for 10 years and understand it. This is a new football team so hopefully they can put that behind them and go out and stay cool. Perform their stuff and take the club into the next round and beat Frankfurt. It’s not an easy task, I know, because Frankfurt are decent, but Tottenham have the players that can get it done.
Q: Aston Villa are perhaps playing the form team in Europe in the Champions League. Do you think they can knock them out and progress to the semi-finals?
Teddy Sheringham: It’s a big test for them and we know Unai Emery’s got the magic touch when it comes to European football. On their day, we know that they can perform under Emery, and I really like him as a manager. He has a game plan that he puts across to his team and they carry out, without a doubt. They don’t just play in one particular style – they have certain styles or certain systems to go out and counteract whoever they’re playing against, and I think he’s a phenomenal manager. PSG is a tough fixture, especially the way they played against Liverpool.
Q: Is Unai Emery a better manager than Mikel Arteta?
Teddy Sheringham: Managers or footballers, you look at what they’ve won, and you only have to look at what Emery’s won and what Arteta’s won so you know it means nothing about who’s the better manager but they both need to get through to the next round and then the next round after that. It doesn’t matter who’s the better manager (right now).
Q: Was there ever a point in the CL final where you thought you wouldn’t win?
Teddy Sheringham: I think it was just ground into us from the manager that you never gave up. Wherever you were on the football pitch, if you still had a chance of winning that game, whether it was 1-0 or 2-0 down or 3-0, you gave your all. You had to keep going until the bitter end because… there were millions of Manchester United supporters all around the world that would have changed places for us and given every inch of their breath. And as it was 1-0, I think you always think you’ve got a chance. They had chances to go 2-0 and 3-0 up, but Peter made great saves. They hit the woodwork a couple of times, and we were hanging in there. We were like a dizzy boxer that night, but just kept standing on our feet.
Q: Were 99’ Bayern Munich as arrogant as they seemed?
Teddy Sheringham: Bayern were arrogant that night, without a doubt. At one nil, there were moments where it was like: “I’d love to turn this game around and wipe the smug look off your face”.
Q: Did you think about the opponents on the floor at the full-time whistle?
Teddy Sheringham: We were wrapped up in what we were doing, what we had just pulled off. We had no care in the world who we had beaten. When you look back on it, I saw Lothar Matthaus probably 12 years after and he came up to me. We were both doing the same function in, and he came walking up to me and I could see him from about 20 yards away. We were on an Astro football pitch. And as he walked towards me, he was shaking his head and walking slowly to me. And he put both his hands on my shoulders and said: “Teddy, Teddy, you kill us, man. You kill us.”12 years after the event, with all of his success after, and we’ve had failures and success, and still he came up to me and said: “Teddy, you kill us. We thought we’d won.” And I just laughed and thought, well, now you know how we feel when the Germans keep beating us every time we get close!
Q: Will Trent Arnold be a become a better player if he joins Real Madrid? Will the experience make him better?
Teddy Sheringham: When you play for Real Madrid, the expectancy levels are to win La Liga and the Champions League every year. You’re expected to win things at Liverpool, but not to that degree. So you’re stepping up again. I know what it was like to play for Man United and that the expectancy levels there compared to Tottenham and Nottingham Forest, who I’d played for before, were much higher. Those expectations go up tenfold, and that’s exactly where Trent’s at.
Q: All things considered, was Gary Neville actually a better right-back than TAA?
Teddy Sheringham: Obviously, Trent can do things with the ball that perhaps Gary Neville couldn’t, but if you were to pick one of them, if you were building like the ultimate Premier League team who are you putting at right-back: Gary or Trent? I like my defenders to defend. There have been times where Trent’s left wanting, let’s just put it that way, when you look at his defensive capabilities. I like defenders that can defend, but then I like goalkeepers that can stop shots and ping balls 40 yards onto a sixpence. That’s my preference, first and foremost.
Q: After Jose Mourinho’s latest antics, grabbing the nose of an opposition manager, should Jose consider a career in professional wrestling?
Teddy Sheringham: I haven’t seen it yet, that’s the first I’ve heard of it but it’s really funny. I mean I was only talking about him yesterday. I’m here in the Maldives and we’re doing a coaching thing and one of the dads is a Fenerbahçe fan and he said: “Jose’s got to go. We’re so far behind Galatasaray.”
I said it’s always somebody else’s fault, so I wonder why he’s got hold of the manager. What or why would he have done that, but it’s just ridiculous. He’s always got something up his sleeve to take the spotlight away from Galatasaray. He can’t help himself, can he? Maybe he would be better suited to life in the WWE? He’s certainly got the theatrics for it.
Premier League headlines
Q: Who are the contenders for manager of the year and who do you think should get it?
Teddy Sheringham: For someone’s first season in the Premier League and to win the league, Liverpool and Arne Slot have got to take it. I mean, I know they’ve given a little glimmer of a chance at the weekend – I think it’s hilarious that Arsenal only drew at weekend and they’ll be kicking themselves that they could have been three points closer – but they’re not, they’re one point closer so you’d think that it is going to happen and Slot will clinch it in his first season and they’ll get across the line. I think they should. Performing as they’ve done throughout the season, they’ve been the best team in the country without being anything phenomenal. So, for someone’s first year managing in the Premier League, that’s good, it’s very good, especially when they haven’t won it for a few years.
Q: On whether Forest can catch Arsenal and finish second
Teddy Sheringham: It’s so tight up there, from Forest in third on 57 points to Newcastle down in seventh on 50 but with two games in hand, it’s really tight. Eight games to go for most of them. Nine for Newcastle. I’m still hoping in a two-horse title race that Arsenal come third, with Forest overtaking them. I know there’s five points between them, so it’s not really going to happen, but it would be funny. Again, I don’t really want to see Forest fall over the line, but that’s probably where we’ll get to because of how long and drawn out the season becomes when it comes to the end of the season, and they’re not used to it.
Chris Wood is available again, he’s back, he should be back next week, and he’s had a phenomenal season. I know they’re third at the moment, but the end of the season run-in becomes long. I know it’s only eight games, but week to week to week, then they’ve got the FA Cup semi-final to look forward to as well, which is another big moment. They only need to get one or two injuries, or you have to rest people and not play the right team. It’s a tough run-in for them. They need to focus on every game otherwise that Champions League qualification easily slips.
Q: Predicting the top six finish (Liverpool first, Arsenal second)
Manchester City, I know they didn’t look great yesterday, but you know, when they play, when they grind teams down, I think they’ll get into
Q: Mikel Arteta was recently named the best-looking manager in the Premier League – is that the only trophy he’ll win this season?
Teddy Sheringham: Will it be the only trophy he wins? He can have that one. As for who I think should have won, you know what? I think Pep Guardiola.I just think he’s smooth. Everything he does, I think he’s smooth. I love his manner, I love the way he is, I love his positivity, I love his enthusiasm, his professionalism, and he’s cool as well, isn’t he?
Managerial movers and shakers
Q: Brendan Rodgers is having a great season with Celtic. There’s an argument that his stocky might not be higher than this summer – do you expect him to be on the radar of Premier League clubs or in the conversation for any opportunities that may come up this summer?
Teddy Sheringham: I don’t know if Brendan will be a man in-demand this summer if Premier League clubs are looking to make a change.
I mean, he’s going to win a treble with Celtic isn’t he, but what’s the competition like up there at the moment?
Rangers are going well in Europe, but they haven’t offered any kind of challenge for the Scottish title this season. Aberdeen haven’t been great recently. He doesn’t really have to that much up there to win the league does he?
Celtic just sweep everything up, and would they be doing that without Brendan? You would have to look at the competition and say that they probably would.
And again, given the challenge, a treble doesn’t mean as much as it should does it? We want to see top teams competing up there in Scotland. We want to see a strong Rangers, and they’re in a terrible state when it comes to domestic football.
I still like him. I think you could do a lot worse than get Brendan Rodgers in your football club. I like his manner. I like his calmness in the way approaches things.
He gets his team playing in the right manner.
Q: Frank Lampard has been sensational since going into Coventry. Can he take them up this season?
Yeah, I fancied Frank to do well at Coventry. He knows the Championship well and he has done well operating at that level before.
He did great things with Derby, got them to a play-off final, playing some lovely football along the way. He overperformed there and ended up landing the Chelsea gig, which was obviously massive for Frank given his connection to the club.
If you’re a Coventry fan, you would be confident that he could guide the club into the Premier League given his experiences at Championship level. He understands what it’s all about and they’re in a good position at the moment.
I really hope that he can do it. They’ve got six cup finals left to be there or thereabouts. I think he’s been brilliant. It’s great to see our English managers doing well.
The Championship
Q: On whether Millwall can get promoted this year on a long shot
Teddy Sheringham: Ninth place, six points from sixth, six games left. I think that’s a little bit too far now for Millwall to get into the play-offs. But when we won promotion to the old first division many, many years ago like the old Championship, we had a Scottish manager who we really loved, George Graham. Now, the club have another Scottish fella in there, Alex Neil. So perhaps not for this year, but it’ll hold them in good stead for next year anyway, having been in and around the playoffs this season.
It would be nice if they could do the same thing and repeat it again.