Cardiff job 'perfect opportunity' for Ramsey - Choprapublished at 11:59 28 April

Former Cardiff City striker Michael Chopra says managing the Bluebirds in League One is the "perfect opportunity" for Aaron Ramsey.
Ramsey has been in interim charge following the sacking of Omer Riza but has been unable to prevent the club's relegation to the third tier.
The Wales captain has indicated he would like to continue his playing career, though his contract with the Welsh club expires at the end of the season.
"I think he's got the pedigree, there won't be much pressure on him in League One," Chopra told BBC Radio Wales Breakfast.
"If Cardiff stayed in the Championship I would have been a bit wary of giving him the job but I think it's the perfect opportunity for Aaron Ramsey and hopefully Chris Gunter because they've got great football knowledge.
"He knows the area, he's a Cardiff fan. If he's not going to get a chance at Cardiff City, where else is he going to get a chance of being a football manager?"
The Cardiff City Supporters' Trust have called for a meeting with owner Vincent Tan to discuss a number of matters including a "lack of specialist football experience and knowledge at club board level".

Chopra - who made 145 appearances and scored 65 goals for Cardiff across four spells all under manager Dave Jones - believes the club should appoint a director of football.
And he names Jones (pictured above with Chopra) along with former teammate and Shamrock Rovers sporting director Stephen McPhail as potential contenders.
"You just need someone who knows the club and knows football," Chopra added.
"There are people making decisions, footballing decisions that don't really know what's going on, on the pitch or what needs to happen behind the scenes.
"I get on really well with the people on the board, I like them as people. But to not turn up to football games to follow the team, when you are board members and things like that, I think it's a little bit disrespectful.
Chopra believes the club is missing a philosophy.
"I speak to a lot of Cardiff fans and they hate me saying this but you look at Swansea, they had a philosophy at that football club even when I was playing against them," he said.
"They would play a certain way, a certain type of formation and a certain pattern of play. And no matter what manager came into that football club, they had to buy into that philosophy.
"Now when Cardiff City employ a manager, they want to bring their own players in, they want to change the system and the way the team plays and they've had seven managers in the last four years."