 Now that you've had Traylon out on the field and he's stacking some days together, what are you seeing out of him that you're liking now that you actually get to work with him on the field in addition to the classroom? You know, I think he's done a great job of playing with speed and showing that he's willing to be physical in his approach. Anytime you get those kind of ingredients with a player, you can kind of build around that. You know, I think anytime you're at this level, your ability to play with your hands along his grimages is really, really vital to survival. And I think he's kind of figuring out how he has to play at this level. And you know, because all these DBs are great athletes themselves, so very rarely you're just going to out-athletic somebody. It's going to be some fundamentals involved with that. And I think he's figuring that out. Absolutely, the physicality of it. And I think he's demonstrated that he can play through contact really well with that big body. He's got really good play strength, but I've been really happy with his ability to stress the field. You know, he shows an ability to be able to separate and take the top ball coverage, so that's best been good to see. Was he happy with maybe some of the progress you made to set him up for Canyon? You know, he did a great job of Frank and our strength lab did an outstanding job of getting him prepared. He just had to put the work in, and he did a great job of committing to that. And I think he's starting to see some of the results of how that's paying off for him. He's just a weekend. With the rookie, do you just have to stay on him, make sure they don't let up, no matter what kind of sex they may have? One thing I can say about him is he's really hard on himself. I haven't had to chase him around to do this, that, or the other. He showed some professional initiative, so that's been great. He's earned that right. He's come out here, he's made some plays. He's immersed himself in the playbook, not a bunch of mental errors. He practices hard. He has a lot of the qualities that we thought he had when we drafted him. I think anytime you get hit with that kind of situation, the reality of what the NFL is kind of sets in. I think he just had to regroup, refocus himself, and I think he's done a great job of that. Maturity. He's a lot more mature than he was when he first got here, and that shows up in everything he does. Offset, what you want there is the technique. Well, at the end of the day, it's all about, in this league, it's about making plays. But also the flip side of that is the way you're consistent in making those plays is by the fundamentals that you have. So he's got some things he's continuing to work through. He's come a long way in that regard, and I think he understands that in order to survive in this league, there's a certain amount of professionalism you have to have to sustain the success that you need. I think he's figured that part out, and he's in for the battle of his life right now. Well, I think with the amount of, I don't want to say grabbing and holding, but the amount of physicality at the top of the routes, you have to play that way if you're going to be consistent in this league, but do it in a legal manner. And that's what we're trying to instill in these guys right now. But, you know, most of these big guys aren't going to outquick some of these smaller DBs, so you're going to have to win with the physicality at the top of the routes. Picking up on that, home for Abel says the first stand. Did he say that? Yeah, I'm joking. How much do you like that? How much have you seen it? All right, we love it. We love the fact that we have the license to, you know, because sometimes you get, you can live in that world of not wanting to, you know, be overly physical because you're afraid you're going to get a penalty. That's that and the other. But, you know, at the end of the day, we tell these guys that it's about getting open. It's about creating separation. And sometimes, you know, that's the route you have to take to get that done. So, we relish in the fact that our head coach, you know, supports a physical style of play, if you would. He's playing with a lot of confidence. And I think the biggest thing that Racy has done is he's realized that, you know, not a whole bunch of 6-3, 230 pound receivers that can run 4-3, he's learned to play with that speed and really imposes will on defenders and he's reaping the rewards for that now. We're trailing birds. How have you seen them come along? Right. You know what? I think that the thing with Traylon is he actually had some of those traits. They just didn't ask him to do a bunch of that. So, we just kind of building on some of the things that he's, some of the abilities here already has. And he's done a great job of buying into that and really working on the fundamentals that come along with it. And, you know, he just has to continue to put the work in. What to say about him? That was his welcome to the NFL moment. You know what I mean? You know, every rookie is going to have that at some point. You know, unfortunately for him, it happened right out the gate. But he's done a great job of moving on and doing the things necessary to put himself in the best possible position to compete. He's in a football condition and he's in a routine that, you know, so when you put him in that environment, he just can pick right up where he left off. So, he came in, one thing about him, he's smart. He's willing to learn, he's putting in the work. So, the transition for him has been pretty good. What are you seeing from him on the field that might be able to help this preseason? He just comes out there every day, knows what to do. He's playing fast. He had an interception the other day. So, he's taking advantage of the opportunities. That's what we ask the guys do when they get a chance to get on the field. What we've seen, like Roger McCrary's around the ball about every other play, is he impressed you guys to this point? He's been good. He's come in every day and work. He puts in the time. He wants to be great. He listens to the vets that help him out. He takes coaching. He rarely makes the same mistakes. He's competitive. He goes out there every day just trying to get better. That's what he's been doing. He said that he tries to match himself up a trailer. The two of them are kind of trying to do that. Do you guys encourage that? Absolutely. You want the guys going against the best guys out there. Him and Trailing goes out there and compete against each other and they go at it. It's been good to see you watch those guys compete every day in practice. There's a lot of youth. How are they pushing each other? Is there somebody standing out in that room to help point the way? Is it Maven or one of those older guys? I think all of those guys are just pushing each other because they know they all got a chance. You come out here, what about what you do each year you come in? We've got vets in the room as far as Byrd and Hooker. But at the corner spot we are young. But that's exciting because those guys are pushing each other every day and they're coming out here and making each other work to get better. We can't look poorly. He's so talented. So I know the expectations are high. But do you find yourself sometimes having to remind yourself that he's still brand new at the cornerback position? Well, I understand he didn't play his ton of ball last year and he was coming off the injury. But he understands what the expectations are and I'm going to keep him high on him and we're going to keep the expectations and standard high in the room. So he's coming out here working every day doing everything we actually are doing just working to continue to get better. Do you find yourself sometimes having to coach him when he has a tough day like he did on Tuesday? But that's part of the process. That's part of the learning deal. If you play this game long enough, you're going to have days where they don't go well. It's how you respond to those days and you don't continue to stack back days on top of each other. And when you come out here, we go in the film room. We go in the meeting room and we learn from it and we come out and get better for it. That's what it's all about. He talks now. He definitely talks. He's doing a good job. I mean, with the leadership, crossing the lines is what I'll say, meaning not only is he talking to the defense, but he's also giving the offensive guys pointers and the good players that I've been around. That's something that you don't coach them to do. They just do it naturally. And he's at that point right now. Where is the previews this year? Well, I mean, in really every aspect. I mean, in the run game and in rushing the passer. I mean, there's never... I remember when I went to Oakland and we had Richard Seymour, who was in his 12th year, and he was always trying to get better. So these guys don't. Just because you become a really good player, the good players are always trying to find ways to get better. So I would say in every aspect of his game, he's not a finished product and the good ones never become a finished product. So I think that's where Jeff is in his mind and that's where we are in our mind. And when a player has... Well, when your best players are the hardest workers, that's a good thing for the football team. And he comes out here and works as hard as anybody on this football field and that bleeds over to the rest of the guys. So it's a good thing. No, not really. I mean, when you have a veteran group or a young group, you're still working on fundamentals. Like, that doesn't change our individual periods. If you watch us now, you watch us four years ago, you watch me ten years ago, it's the same thing. We're working on hand placement fundamentals, working on getting on the edge of blockers and the rush using our hands and all of those things. So it is great to have a group of guys that have played and played for us, which is different than what we've had. So it's been good. Yeah, I don't know who they're going to play against because you just never know in the pre-season who's going to be out there. So the one approach we have is we don't focus on who we're playing against. We're focusing on us in the pre-season. I mean, we just go out there and play football. So whoever's lined up across from them, they just got to go play with hand placement fundamentals and execute the calls. Because we're not sitting up, diving into players, so it's a little bit different than when we play the Giants September 11th. The same sort of expectations? Well, I think the beautiful thing about hand in particular is the past is the past. Whatever you do here going forward, that's what you're going to be judged on. I mean, he's having a really good camp and he's been a guy that's had some ups and downs and all those things that he's been through. But really, today, as we go out here, August 4th, 5th, or whatever the day is, he's competing and battling and doing the things that we ask him to do. So I'm excited about Deshaun Hanne. Flexibility, playing multiple positions being able to rush, play the run, doing all of those things. So I'm excited about him. He's done good, but he's also a rookie. Whether you're a first round pick or an undrafted free agent, it's just different. And the closer you get them to the football, and nose tackle, outside line, the closer they get to the football, the harder it is for them because everything just happens so fast for those guys. So he's progressing, but we've been in this situation before with Naikwon and Tarte and all of those guys where if they're ready, they're ready. If they're not, we just keep on focusing on developing them. But he's doing a good job for us now. Energy, effort, being able to play multiple positions. He can rush, he can play the run. So he's been good for us and he's a good leader. How competitive? Very competitive. They're competitive with those guys. I think everybody assumes that what happened last year is going to happen the next year. And I've been in this league long enough to know that it's a proven league. And so whatever you did the year before has nothing to do with the next year. So it's competitive with the other guys, but it's also competitive with those two guys. So...