"Then he came up to train with the first team. We see this big guy - six foot one, 17, wide, his legs are so thick and chunky. And everyone's thinking, 'Wow, no wonder he's scoring goals'. He was just knocking everybody over. We had people like Kenny Sansom, Viv Anderson - senior internationals - and when they saw Kevin coming over they would be like 'oh no' because they knew he would embarrass them in training.
Doge says it is working to upload all receipts in a "digestible and transparent manner".Federal contract experts we spoke to also raised questions about Doge's biggest claimed savings and said some had been overstated.
Trump said: "In three months we have created 350,000 jobs."This claim is backed up by official figures.During Trump's first two full months in office up until March (the latest available data) 345,000 jobs have been added,
.However, over the same period last year 468,000 jobs were added under President Biden.
Trump also said: "For the first time in recent memory, job gains for native-born Americans now exceed job gains for foreign workers."
It is true that during President Trump's first two full months in office more jobs have been created forAlso on the table, rather more elegantly presented in a suede-lined tray, is a selection of gold coins and bars. The largest bar is about the size and thickness of a mobile phone. It weighs a hefty 1kg, and it's worth about £80,000.
The coins include biscuit-sized Britannias, each containing precisely one ounce of 24 carat bullion, as well as smaller Sovereigns. These are all available to buy - and the recent surge in gold prices has led to a surge in demand.Zoe Lyons, who is Emma's sister and the managing director, has never seen anything like it – often she finds would-be sellers queuing in the street. "There's excitement and buzz in the market but also nervousness and trepidation," she tells me.
"There's anxiety about which way the market is going to go next, and when you get those emotions, ultimately it creates quite big trades."At MNR jewellers a couple of streets away, a salesman agrees: "Demand for gold has increased, definitely," he says.