The Wycombe skipper also previews the crucial Easter period before answering your questions.

Hi everyone.

Our 3-3 draw at Peterborough was a good game for the spectator!

We did not start that well and conceded an early goal after some quick thinking from the Peterborough players. We were punished for switching off.

But we quickly got back in the game and scored two goals in five minutes. They were both from set-pieces scored by two of the smallest members of our team - Matt Bloomfield and Sam Stockley. That's not happened too many times this season but it gave us encouragement that we could win the game, but they equalised on the hour.

At 2-2 we had a terrible decision go against us. I charged down a clearance from their keeper which hit me in the ribs and I tapped it in.

The linesman was running back to the halfway line but the referee blew for a handball even though he was 50 yards away. If it had hit my arm by accident then I could have understood it, but it was nowhere near.

For me, having not scored for a long time, it was even more disappointing. You work hard to get things like that, so you want to be rewarded. But I'll keep doing it and hope the keeper makes a mistake.

When they went and scored to make it 3-2, you think it's not going to be your day. Luckily we got a penalty. Unbelievably it was our first of the season in the league. We must be the last team to have been awarded one.

I'm the normal penalty taker, which is nerve wracking at the best of times. But with just a few minutes left in the game, us a goal down and me having not scored for a while, it was slightly worse than normal. It did not help when the ball rolled on the spot. I was delighted to put it away and get us a point.

We have a penalty competition in training every Friday, so it's not like I have not taken one this season. When I'm taking penalties I normally pick a spot and wait to see what the keeper is doing. Some keepers move so early that it's obvious where to put it. But I don't want to say too much otherwise I'll set myself up to miss one! My advice would be that once you have made up your mind what to do, stick with it.

It was a windy day and the pitch was bad, but in spells we played as well as we have for a long time. This is a time when we need to be playing well, particularly on the back of our last three performances.

I played as a lone striker, which can be hard work, particularly as the Peterborough back-three are 6ft 2, 6ft 3 and 6ft 5! Bloomers [Matt Bloomfield] pushed on to float just behind me, but we were essentially playing with five across the midfield. It encourages them to pass the ball and they did exceptionally well. They should be the best midfield in the league.

We had gone four games without scoring, so it was nice to rediscover some form in front of goal, but if you score three goals away from home you should win the game.

I thought Peterborough were a good side. They worked very hard and were well organised. They have some good players, like Micah Hyde who played at Watford with me. They have done well to get him from a Championship club. That's shows their ambition. They have also spent a lot of money and I'm sure they will bring in a few more players. They will be a force next season. They like to keep possession, but they could do with spending some money on their pitch if they are to play like that.

Drawing with Peterborough sets us up nicely for the Easter period. It's always a difficult time with two games in three days. After you've played Saturday, come Monday you won't be 100 per cent.

We have Shrewsbury on Saturday - that's a massive game for us. We have to win that game. We are two of the four sides who are playing for just two play-off spots.

With just six games left, they are all huge matches, but the league table just emphasises that.

Jermaine [Easter] could be back for the weekend. His suspension has finished but he picked up an injury playing for Wales. If he's fit then he should be really fresh as he's not played 90 minutes recently.

What was it like playing under Graham Taylor? How did it feel to win the Play-Off at Wembley? You looked like you enjoyed it from where we were sitting.
Pete Young

GT has had his critics but he was a very successful manager. He was very methodical in his approach, very professional. Everybody at the club knew he was the boss and that he made the decisions. If he called you in for a chat about something, you would leave his office convinced he was right. One of the best things I could say about him is that if I went into coaching or management, then I would use some of the things he did. Winning promotion meant a lot to GT. He wanted to prove himself. Being an old England manager, you would not have thought he'd need to do that.
You would have to go a long way to beat my day at Anfield where I scored the winner for Watford - that was special for a Liverpool fan. But Wembley topped it. It was a fantastic day. We had 40,000 fans there - it was unforgettable. I have photos of the day in my study at home. It would be nice to play at the new Wembley at this year's Play-off Final. I said to the boys - what an incentive that is to do well for the rest of the season.

Being a professional footballer, you must have had some really great times, but also some pretty awful ones? What are your best and worst memories of your career so far?
Andy Wilson

I have two moments that stick out. Playing and scoring at Anfield - that's special for a Liverpool fan - and then playing at Wembley. That is every footballer's dream. It was fantastic.
The worst time of my career was probably when I was at Southend. Barry Fry had just left for Birmingham and I just did not get on with Peter Taylor. He stopped me going out on loan to clubs when it would have furthered my career. I had four months not playing, even though I had scored five goals in ten games. He did not want me in the team because he did not like the way I played. It was a difficult time. I had just bought my first house in Essex, but I was considering giving up football and going back up north. I was not enjoying it. Luckily I ended up joining Watford on deadline day and it all worked out from there.

Hi Tommy. Loving your work! Who is the biggest joker you have come across in your career? Are there any good stories you can tell us?
Andrew Yeboah

When I was at Watford, Gazza used to come for treatment after he had broken his leg at Lazio. He was good mates with Glenn Roeder, who was the manager at Watford at the time. Anyway, we would come in from training to find that Gazza had tampered with various players' underwear by rubbing in various medication or getting the scissors out on them. He just loved being part of the dressing room. Even though he was a huge star, he was really down to earth.
Dean Windass was a big prankster. We used to room together at Sheffield United. In the Wycombe dressing room, Stefan Oakes likes to think he's the joker. He's quite funny, but we try and pretend we are laughing with him and not at him.
You get strong characters in every dressing room. Clubs need them.

Do you want to ask Tommy a question? You could ask about his favourite goal? Who is the best manager he has worked under? Email your questions to editor@TheFA.com.