 How was he probably different than a lot of pitchers? Because he was a smart guy. He was a warrior. I mean, and he didn't have to show you. And he still doesn't have to show you how smart he is. You know, when he's talking to you, trust me, he's working on a little different level than most people, baseball and intellect, too. And but he was just, he never asked, how many pitchers do I have? Am I supposed to be tired? What inning is it? Who you got in the bullpen? David Cone was there to finish what he started. And anybody that had him cross their paths were better as a result of it. And he'll tell you, he stepped on his tail. And you know, we never want to have our lives judged by our worst decision. Well, David's learned from whatever it might have been as I have. And I swore I would never get in that situation again. We were playing the last game of the season. But then I got a guy named Randy Johnson in Arizona who was just breaking a sweat at 120 pitches. And it had to change again. You know, it's interesting. We always say you're never too old to learn something new. And you look at this book and basically every story he says, I'm going to show it again just for Jack and David's purposes. Show this too, by the way. I've got all kinds of props on the set. Oh, here we go. Here we go. Yep. That's what people want on TV, my head between two things. Like, that's a bad TV. I love the fact that he said the last pitch I threw, like nothing he doesn't remember. You know, watching some of that tape today, watching how late his breaking ball was. You know, people say, why is his breaking ball there? He had great presentation. But it's a fast ball to right in front. It's so tight and it's so late. Watching the first inning, I would have said to myself at home, this guy's got really good stuff. It's going to be hard to score off him. Do you remember the first outing he made that got him from Toronto? It was against the twins. What was that like? Well, we didn't have the finished product. He actually had some physical issues. And that's why a guy like him is available. You know, you don't get those guys when they're healthy and winning the Cy Young Award. It's kind of like when we got Kurt Schilling in Arizona, he was hurt. Yeah, and as I told our general manager at the time, Joe Guerrero, the junior, he's not going to be available when he's healthy. You know, now's the time that you can get him for Omar Dahl. Not that I remember. But I think Travis Lee was in that deal. But so David wasn't the finished product that he became in the perfect game years. But he reinvented himself physically, too. It's a lot of torque and a lot of wear and tear on the shoulder pitching every fifth day in the big leagues. And there was no, we're going to bump you. We're going to give you some rest. During a break, you'll be the fifth starter out. Those days, you took the ball every fourth and fifth day. And no questions were asked. Yeah, you know what's always amazing to me about David, and it speaks volumes again. Can you play in New York? Can you play under the bright lights, the big games? Every time he got traded, I mean, he, by his own words, was almost like a mercenary sometimes at the trade deadline. Teams wanted him because they knew how good he was in the crucible. And somebody along the way did a great job. And you come out of Kent, the Kansas City Royals, great organization, great part of the country. But it's not New York City. And to someone go, can he, that question was asked. Can he pitch in New York City? And someone says that they don't have a corner on there. It's just a different drama there in the day-to-day intensity. But the beautiful thing about playing New York is as hard as it can be, there can be no greater place to play. And if you can get through your failures, the success is that much sweeter. That's pretty good. Yeah, it was. I like that. Wow, that was neat there.