Chris Stanton
As part of our enhanced match coverage on setantasports.com, we will be providing blog entries from our reporters after each Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup match.
These will allow our reporters to provide an honest opinion on the match and the issues arising from it away from the more traditional match report they will be writing.
The idea is to generate debate and give the sort of view that you would expect to receive in any open discussion at the pub after a game.
For instance, there will now be the opportunity to explain some of their player ratings - why somebody was ranked particularly highly or very badly. The reporter will also be able to add his response to any points you may raise using the feedback forms.
Our reporters will also be tasked with keeping their blogs up to date on any other topics that crop up at regular times so why not get in touch with them?
A Turkish delight
When Graeme Souness signed the then grossly under-appreciated Tugay Kerimoglu from Glasgow Rangers in 2001, the Scot said that he was the player he hoped he himself could have been.
Souness wasn’t always a good judge of a player, he did sign Ali Dia and once thought that Paul Stewart was an adequate replacement for Peter Beardsley, but, for spending the best £1 million Blackburn Rovers have ever spent, his team's supporters and adherents of the beautiful game are eternally grateful.
After eight years of Turkish Delight at Ewood Park, time has finally caught up with Tugay, who at 38, is the Premier League’s oldest outfield player. Sam Allardyce, the man who had the unenviable task of calling to a halt what has come to resemble an extended swansong.
Tugay, who enters his 40th year in August, will almost certainly hang up his boots after Sunday's match against West Bromwich Albion.
A range of passing from five yards to 50, Tugay has been called a pass-master, his team's midfield maestro. Put more simply, he is the greatest midfielder to ever wear the blue and white halves.