DollyAll the latest from Dolly in the treatment room:

Paul Murray got through Saturday's game with no problems at all. He played 75 minutes and felt really good afterwards. His legs were a bit stiff on Sunday, but he had no adverse reaction to his knee or his hamstring tendon, that he had problems with previously, which is excellent news for me, him and the gaffer. We just need to build his fitness up now, and the more games he gets under his belt the stronger he's going to get. It's excellent news.

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Simon Hackney is still doing very light rehab. He hasn't even got on a bike or cross trainer yet, so we have another week of light duties before he can do that.

Danny Graham had a stress fracture of his tibia 18 months ago, and he was out for a considerable amount of time then. In the week after the Northampton game, in training, he felt the area where the fracture was starting to ache a little. Of course, with him being Middlesbrough's player we sent him straight back there. They scanned him and, at present, it looks fine. They have suggested that he has a two week period of inactivity, just doing light duties on bikes and things like that. Then they will rescan him in a fortnight's time, around the end of January or the beginning of February. As it stands, that's all I know. Whether or not he comes straight back in to the fold with us, or whether they say he needs a longer period of rest, we won't know until he gets the second scan done. We are hopeful that it will be clear.

Kevin Harper went back to Stoke last week. Although he played 60 minutes in the behind closed doors game v Preston, and got through it with no problem, he started to feel one of his calf muscles tighten back up again. It has been a niggling little thing for him, nothing that has actually stopped him playing, but just something that's niggled. Stoke have sent him back to their specialist and they have discovered a problem with his Orthotics, which had collapsed in the middle. That was why his problem dragged on for five weeks, instead of the one or two it should have been. Orthotics are the insoles in the footwear - you get your feet put in plaster and it shows the degree of tilt, and the Orthotics throw you back in to the neutral position, compensating for the error. His had collapsed, so they were throwing his feet inwards and tightening a muscle in the back of the shin. Since he's had the Orthotics fixed it has cleared up.

That's all for now,

Keep well,

Dolly