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Tamworth v Tottenham (12.30 GMT)
I can't repeat the chants overheard on the pitchside microphone being aimed at Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou.
They concern his weight, his nationality and doubts about his parentage.
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Hull 0-0 Doncaster
Finley Burns gets a minor knock and as he's looked at by the Hull physios the other players are able to get a bit of a break.
It's been an even start. Hull had the match's best chance with that Gustavo Puerta effort. Doncaster had some decent crosses into the box in the first five minutes.
'It is the biggest day in the club's history'
Tamworth v Tottenham (12:30 GMT)
BBC Radio 5 Live
Bob Andrews, chairman and owner of Tamworth speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live:
"It is the biggest day in the club's history. We thought Wembley was good in the FA Vase but this tops it. To have a Premier League club of this stature at Tamworth is fantastic. It is just nice to get all the crowd here. I wish we could get more in but we are full to capacity.
"The money from this game is going to help us develop the ground itself. We need better dressing rooms, we need a stand down the bottom end - we need various things. It's tidy but it needs upgrading."
Spurs aim to avoid biggest upset in 110 years
Tamworth v Tottenham (12.30 GMT)
Tottenham have progressed from each of their last nine FA Cup ties against non-league opponents.
Their last such defeat came against Norwich in 1914-15, when there were only two Football League divisions.
Indeed, Spurs have a very good record in the FA Cup third round and have progressed from 17 of their last 18 ties at this stage.
The exception really stung though - a 2-0 defeat at Arsenal in 2013-14.
Is this Tamworth's biggest ever game?
Tamworth v Tottenham (12.30 GMT)
Well, yes - but they do have some experience of the FA Cup third round in these parts.
This is Tamworthâs fourth appearance in the FA Cup third round - they went out at this stage in 2005-06, 2006-07 and 2011-12.
The last of those saw their only meeting with a top-flight side in the FA Cup - they lost 2-0 to an Everton side managed by David Moyes.
Football is marvellously circular sometimes.
Tamworth v Tottenham already 'part of town history'
Tamworth v Tottenham (12.30 GMT)
Ged Scott
BBC Sport
Once upon a time Tamworth was a place arguably best known for its motorway service station, its pigs, its artificial ski slope, being the birthplace of a former Prime Minister and somewhere you pass through on the railway.
It finally took a dream FA Cup third-round tie with eight-time former winners Tottenham Hotspur to change all that.
No more talk about Tamworth Pigs, Sir Robert Peel and the Snowdome.
No matter how Sunday lunchtime's tie with Spurs turns out on their all-weather pitch at The Lamb, Tamworth boss Andy Peaks says: "We're part of the town's history now."
There has, of course, been a lot more to the Lambs' progress from footballing silence to what is still, outside the Premier League's very topmost echelons, the most eagerly-awaited weekend in the English football calendar.
Three seasons ago, when former Rushden & Diamonds boss Peaks took over at Tamworth, they were languishing in tier seven - the Southern League Premier Central. He saved them from the drop, won promotion a year later and then a second promotion in May to win National League North and return to the fifth tier.
He also readily admits, never mind what happens on Sunday, that staying in the National League this season "will be my biggest achievement in football".
You can read more on Tamworth's recent rise here.