Jacob and Josh Murphy are set to become the next pair of brothers to face each other in the Premier League when the twins line up for Newcastle and Cardiff respectively this weekend.
They will also become the second pair of identical twins - after Michael and Will Keane - to face each other in England's top flight of football this Saturday.
However, this weekend's clash at the Cardiff City Stadium will be the first time the pair will have faced each other - and neither of them will be holding back once the game begins in Wales.
Jacob, who grew up supporting Newcastle, admitted: 'We've never played against each other competitively so it'll be strange having to tackle him.
'We speak every day on the phone but we are big lads now and we have to get on with our jobs. We will swap shirts at full-time. Or maybe half-time and have a go on each other's teams!
'Josh has already tried to have a friendly bet with me on who will score most goals but I'm not a betting person. We don't have to gamble on that but I hope it is a good season for both of us.
'Each club will say they've got the better twin — but I am ready for that.'
The pair originally started their careers together by coming through the ranks at Norwich before Jacob flew the nest to join his beloved Newcastle for £12million last year.
Josh followed suit and joined Cardiff for £11m, setting up their first competitive match in their careers.
Jacob insists that he's never had a rivalry with his twin and that having Josh as an opponent will encourage a healthy competition between them.
Jacob said: 'I always had someone to play football with. It stayed like that through our childhood.
'It was nice to have a football buddy. And when we used to practise in the garden, we'd stick little brother in the goal.
'We just loved the game, helping each other to get better.
'Aged 16 was when it started to become real and we thought, 'Wow, this could become a job for us' — and it did.
'We never had a rivalry. We just supported and helped each other. We'd bring each other up if one wasn't doing as well. We were there for each other.
'It was important at Norwich that I had his back and he had my back. We looked after each other.
'I find it strange how other siblings are so competitive because me and my brother are not against each other.'
It wasn't just football that the Murphy brothers grew up doing together.
Both Jacob and Josh used to spend their weekends working for £2-an-hour washing dishes in their family's restaurant.
The brothers were kept grounded by their parents who allowed them to work in their restaurant, Arbuckles, which has restaurants in Downham Market in Norfolk and in Ely in Cambridgeshire.
Jacob explained: 'Me and Josh used to work there on a Saturday night. We'd be on the pot wash.
'I used to hate it but it was my mum and dad's way of showing us, 'Look, if you don't stick at football, this is what you will be doing'.
'They did pay us but it was £2 an hour or something, aged 14 or 15. It was more to teach us life lessons.'
So who will Jacob and Josh's Newcastle-mad parents be supporting when the two go head to head?
Jacob said: 'The family will be torn! They have the Newcastle loyalty as fans but also the son loyalty. They will want us both to score and for it to be a draw.
'But I want a Jacob Murphy goal and a Newcastle win!'
ashokpadiyar12345
0
Nice neyeg