 Michael, thanks for taking the time. Just was curious how you felt about your first outing of summer camp. Yeah, it felt great. It's a weird routine, obviously, even just showing up later than everybody else and not having a full locker room. But you got to do it. And I felt great out there. It was nice to be back out there competing and then facing such a good lineup. It was fun to test yourself a little bit. You said showing up later than everyone else. When did you show up? I got here right at 5. And we had the earlier workout, so it staggered. So guys were here at 2 when they were all out of here by 4 if they weren't in the game. So coming into an empty locker room was kind of weird. Was there anything in particular that you were working on while you were out there, or was it just a matter of getting reps soon? Majority of it was just getting reps. But I actually was working on an arm-side foreseam that Ineta actually sprung on me. I told them towards the end of my bullpen that I'm fine doing it, but we can do it later on once we get more comfortable. And first battle to Hicks, I go up. I think it was 1-2 on him. And he calls foreseam away to him. And I executed it, which was great. And then because I executed it, he called it a bunch after that. So I was happy about it. And obviously, just any time you get some work in, it's good. Thank you. James Wagner, if you can unmute, there you have the next question. Hey, Mike, I hope you're doing well. Just out of curiosity, yeah, because we don't see the setup. Are you in the visitors' clubhouse? Yep. How is it spread out? How does it look to you? How is everyone else positioned against it? Yeah, we're all, it's every other locker. Every time we're in the clubhouse, we got to have a mask on. It almost prevents us from talking. You feel uncomfortable talking. So it's a little silent in there until we get a few guys in there. But because it's so scarce, it isn't a full locker room that you can really be talking and kind of hanging out like clubhouse. So it's definitely different, but we're all figuring it out. Take the next question from Ken David off. Ken, go ahead and unmute. Hey, Mike, just wondering if you have any sense of what your role could be, obviously, with expanded rosters? And do you feel like starting a spot in sovereign irritation and possibility? Yeah, I really don't know. I'm kind of taking it day by day, doing whatever they say to do. I know I went two winnings today. I love starting. I know I can probably do both. But I would love to stay on that path and build up, because I feel like you can always jump back to a relief role, because you can always go back in innings. So I wouldn't mind building up. And if they need me as a reliever, that's my role. But for now, I'm just kind of taking it day by day. Thanks, Mike. Take the next question from Eric Boland. Eric, you need to unmute. There we go. I think we got it this time. Hey, Mike, thanks for coming in tonight. Curious as a fellow pitcher, what did you notice, admire most about Eric Cole when you saw him for three weeks in spring training, and obviously, watching him out here tonight? I know you had your job to do, but I'm sure you snuck a peek of what he was doing occasionally. Yeah, yeah, of course. Honestly, his intensity. He does not take a pitch off. And I talked to him about that in his pre or his in-between start routine, where when he throws bullpens in between, it's max effort. He doesn't want to overdo it. He doesn't want to throw 50, 60 pitch bullpens, which I actually like doing because I like throwing as much as I can. But he said he wanted to be game-like every time he was on the mound. So when he was on the mound in his bullpens, even if it was only a 15, 20 pitch bullpen, every single pitch was full intensity. And then you see that out on the mound. Even in these inner-squads, first one of spring training 2.0, and he's mad at himself for missing pitches, mad at himself for not executing. So it's that competitive miss and intensity that he brings that I hope to do the same. Thanks, Mike. Take Sweeney Murdy next. Sweeney, you can unmute. Hey, Mike, was the force you were talking about a way to the lefties? Is that in place of some things and trying to counter something else in the record? Yeah, I always feel very comfortable throwing away to righties because I can kind of backdoor a two-seamer where I started away. And for the most part, if I execute it, right-handed hitters are just going to give up on it. And it's kind of a free strike for me. When I do that to lefties, I have to throw a two-seamer middle and have it trust that it's going to break away. And I've come into a lot of problems with lefties that, oh, oh, if I'm trying to steal a strike, they just stay on it and take the freebie with a little single left field. Not every hitter does that, but I know a Brett Gardner, he would take that every single time out. If it's an OO fastball away and he knows that I like doing it, he'll just slap that thing the other way. So for me, I just wanted to get free strikes, or as many as I possibly can. And so I know me across my body, a little bit different slot, lower slot, if I throw that thing and kind of stick it on the outside corner, it almost stays like a freeze fastball, where it starts over there, expecting it to continue to break away, and then it just stays there. I wasn't planning on using it in a 1-2-0-2 count. Ionetta wanted me to. I threw a couple to righties as well, one to Voight, one to Judge, that I ended up kind of running too far in. I just started it too far in. But for the most part, I want it to be just like an OO fastball that I can get ahead early and be confident that it's almost going to be out of my hand, no one's going to swing at it. And at what point did you feel everything was good health-wise for you this spring? It's been healthy the whole time. Once I was back last year, it was really once I got back to Scranton last year. I think that was in August. That's when I felt full go. Thank you. We'll take a final question from Brendan Cuddy. Brendan, go ahead and unmute. Mike, good to see you. Thank you for taking the time here. If you had to dial back, and if the Yankees needed you in a relief role, how would your approach change? Would your repertoire change? How would you attack that? Totally would change. Because as a starter, I want to get out the third time through the lineup. So there are a lot of times where I will not throw in spots that throw pitches in spots that guys normally like. So I will set guys up in starts in their first or second at bat to then expose a hole in their swing later on in the game, because those outs in the sixth, seventh, eighth inning are a lot more important than the first, second, and third. We can come back from a 1-0 deficit if a guy gets me in the first, then we could in the seventh or eighth. So I would have to totally go right after those holes immediately, and I'd also have to be studying hitters a lot more in the game. Because you can see how hitters get set up for their later at bats on pitchers earlier in the game. So if I'm watching, even if it's a pitcher that is nothing like a Cole, if Cole's blowing 99 by everybody with a knockout slider and everything and I come in there with kind of sink and finesse, it's totally different. But I can still see the holes that he was exposing, that then he was kind of leading a reliever towards. And I know the best relievers do that. It's not like they're just going at them with their best stuff. They know exactly how to get these hitters out. And that's kind of what I would do. Not be easy for you, difficult. I'm sorry I didn't hear that. Would that be an easy adjustment for you, difficult? It'd be easy because I love watching video. So it's now just live video that I'm watching. The only difference is I'd have to do it every day instead of every fifth day. Where I always say that a starting job is easier than a relief roll because I get four days off in between and relievers have to be ready every single day. So that'd be the only difference is I'd have to be ready every day and do it every day because you never know when your name's going to get called.