With football still on its break, clubs up and down the country are finding novel ways to try and keep their fans, and no doubt themselves entertained.

Old clips are getting wheeled out of famous goals and moments, and the same can be said for those outlets that cover the sport as well.

Unsurprisingly, some clips of Chris Kamara on Soccer Saturday have once again emerged with, perhaps his most famous of all, the video of him missing Anthony Vanden Borre's dismissal at Fratton Park for Portsmouth being shared.

It's arguably Kamara's most famous moment on television so far and, with him set for a new show coming to Portsmouth at the end of next month, we caught up with him to look back on how that moment came about:

“I got to Fratton Park that day and they said: ‘look, health and safety have shut off the gantry where we’d normally go for Sky, and the only people allowed up there are the two match commentators.'

"With the old gantry, you used to have to climb up a ladder right by the directors' box and it was only about a foot wide but there was a gap where you had to step across.

"Not so much a leap of faith but a step of faith but you could trip so they decided that that was a hazard waiting to happen even though it hadn’t for donkey’s years and so I was put in the corner of the Fratton end instead.

"For me, as an ex-Pompey player, that was great because the banter with the fans was great and I was in between there and the North Stand.

"To the actual moment... I get told that Jeff was coming to me. Now, the stewards had moved us under cover because it was raining so they’d moved us right close to the wall of the Fratton end so when I was watching I had to walk about four or five yards and then go back to my position.

"Anyway, there were a couple of goals on Soccer Saturday before Jeff eventually came to me and when he did I was looking over my shoulder anyway and he’d said there’d been a sending off.

"What Anthony Vanden Borre did when he deliberately handballed it was, different to English players, instead of waiting for the second yellow card he walked off to the tunnel whereas English players would have been appealing it and the crowd would have shouted too because the crowd didn’t know either!

"There was no hoohah towards the referee and Avram Grant was on the touchline and I just looked along and thought he was making a substitution.

"You get a couple of scenarios, you either lie or tell the truth and sometimes if you tell the truth in that situation it comes out wrong but it came out right because everybody loved it!"

Chris Kamara is at Kings Theatre, Portsmouth on 24th April with 'The Unbelievable Chris Kamara Show,' get your tickets here.