 Try to get a win at this point. Sure, I mean, that's what we try to do every week. And I know that that sounds cliche, but it's one week, win or lose, you move on to the next one. You try to do everything you can to fix the mistakes and make the corrections, get the players to understand, get the coaches to understand what the players are learning and how they can execute it during the game. And then look at the good stuff and say, guys, we have to continue to try to do this, build a game plan, and try to get them prepared. And we're going to start that on the field here in a little bit. What's the precedent for somebody like Mahomes? I mean, he's a really exceptional talent. Is there anybody who his game reminds you of? Again, the comparisons in this league are always difficult. He's a fantastic player. It does a lot with the football, very quick with the release. Makes a lot of great decisions in the RPO game. Very accurate outside the pocket, can create, keep plays alive. I think the longer that he does that, then there's more opportunity for those guys that can run to get downfield. And that's where the play extension is critical that we try to limit that. Game against Evans, where LaShawn was called into action, maybe didn't go as well as LaShawn hoped now with Butler out. Where do you pick things up in the secondary? Well, I would say that that game, I don't think anybody. I don't think LaShawn was responsible for 198 yards. Again, you try to look at match-ups and you try to identify when you can play man, when you can play zone, when you want to try to have eyes on the quarterback, when you want to try to have help, how to play guys that are big receivers, such as, let's say, Sammy Watkins this week, a bigger player with speed, but then guys that have speed or are smaller and quicker than guys and how you play Hill and Hardman and Robinson. So there's a lot of challenges. They have a few backs that they run the football with, not to mention probably the best tight end in the league. How had you felt about where Malcolm was? The thing I always appreciated about Malcolm was his competitiveness. And I know it wasn't perfect, but certainly always appreciated his competitiveness and how he attacked and how he finished plays. So wished that he hadn't got hurt, but we understand that that's the unfortunate part of this business. How much confidence do you have in Sims to take that next man up mentality? That's, again, why guys are here on our roster is so that we have confidence in them that they have to go in the game and they have to play for us, that they'll be ready. And that's why they practice. That's why they try to improve each and every week. And so there's a lot of guys that get opportunities in this league and do some really good things with it. And then we're confident that that's what La'Shawn will do. Didn't Jawn just chill in concoction protocol? Or is he good? No, he's not good yet, but I say that he's progressing well. There's a lot of things that you have to do the last couple stages to pass through that, you know, the entire protocol, but he's working on it. Again, we'll find out here in a little bit. Usually they don't do a whole lot on Wednesday anyways. So based on how they feel, we'll see where they're at towards the end of the week. For Jeffrey against the Panthers, does he continue to respond well to the increasing workload? Yeah, I mean, I think physically, yes. And to just think he's only had probably a handful of practices with us, there's a lot of things that come up in the game that can be better. There's a lot of just checks and communication that he's getting for the first time. And that's, we're kind of just throwing them in there, not having had training camp and a lot of practices, but I'd say his attitude's been fantastic. And again, the most important thing is that he's able to continue to add those snaps and that workload that you mentioned and factor in some plays. And then, you know, I know there's a lot of plays that he would like to improve on and some techniques that he'd like to improve on. Ryan Tannehill suggested that maybe the time that he had with AJ Brown in training camp when kind of both are on the second team might sort of help their chemistry a little bit, the fact that they played a good bit together. Have you seen some evidence of that in the games Ryan has started? I think the quarterback's job is always going to be the same. He's going to try to get us in the right play and throw it at the guy that he feels like is open and gives him the best chance to gain yards. And whether that's AJ, Janu, AJ, Tajé, Corey, you know, that's, you know, and again, I think that they probably have had thrown the ball more to him just because that's where they were in preseason. But, you know, I hope that Ryan feels comfortable throwing to anybody that's open out there. With that ball down the sideline, the long ball to AJ, pretty good coverage. What does that suggest about, you know, maybe his trust in AJ to go up and get those kind of catches? You know, I think we have to be able to try to hit some of those. We have to be able to, you know, get some of those plays downfield and try to let our receivers, like Tajé did at the beginning of the game, draw a penalty, or like AJ did on the play that you're mentioning, you know, go make a play. We have to be able to do that. And again, that's giving them a ball, giving them a chance not to, you know, throw it out of bounds or, you know, put it too far in the middle of the field, or, you know, I think just giving them a chance to make a play, and that's what AJ did. What do you think gets outside the pocket makes plays on the run? I mean, what are the challenges you're facing? I think that you just have to say that you have to cover them a little longer and until you hear, you know, the whistle or the crowd or something. I mean, it's just that, you know, watching this third down, you know, guys will take a peek back and then somebody uncovers, and, you know, the quarterback's still alive and he makes a throw, he could throw across his body, he could throw it downfield. So you just can't ever relax when they go out there and, you know, the route may seem to come to an end and they kind of relax, and then all of a sudden they burst on you. And I think that when you take that sigh of relief, you know, sometimes it was when they get you. And hopefully we can limit those opportunities just by being able to coordinate the rush and keep the quarterback, you know, from throwing from a well. How does that change the game for you? Well, I mean, I think you have to be conscious, you have to be smart of, you know, where you're at and the shots that they like to take and, you know, making sure that you play with, you know, proper leverage and that you're on top and that, you know, we understand that they have more X plays than any offense in the league. And that's, you know, when they're able to hit those, those chunk plays allow them to change field position, gain momentum. And so he's a large part of what they do to get those explosive plays. He attacks the football when there's coverage and just, you know, like John mentioned, a trust that the quarterback has to throw it up to a certain player, knowing that he's going to come down with the football. What's there? He's running more than just full routes. Long development routes, double moves. Is his ability to run those routes at that speed unique? Unique? Sure. I mean, I think that, you know, some guys are straight line fast. I think that when you're, you know, you're a punt returner, I think you have agility, quickness, explosion, but also speed, straight line speed. And, you know, that's always the challenge when that guys can go sideways just as effectively as they can gain and build speed down the field. They're always hard to cover. What's Derek like as a leader? I think that Derek, you know, by being, I would say good, very good. You know, and I think that I try to get him to understand that, that by his, the way he practices, the way he finishes, the way he conditions in the off season, the amount of time that he spends, how he performs in conditioning and in a weight room, you know, the toughness in which he plays with. I think that that's how he leads. And, but we all have different abilities. And I know that when he does those things on the field, or you watch him in the off season, to do those things, it certainly would inspire me if I was a player. What do you guys as coaches want the identity of the offense to be? Well, we want to be sound. We want to be physical. We want to be obviously effective. We want to be able to take advantage of team's mistakes. I think sometimes I talk to the team as much as I can about being a football team that takes advantage of mistakes that they make in the run game and in the pass game, if they're a gap short that we have to take advantage of it. If they're, you know, void in a zone in the passing game, we have to be smart enough. They uncover somebody and we have to be good enough and effective enough to take advantage of that. I want to play with an urgency. I think that we have to play with a sense of urgency and dictate the tempo. And, you know, we have to continue to try to be more consistent with when doing those things because I think there's evidence of a lot of those things. I think a smart football team, a smart offense, a fundamentally sound offense. And when you aren't some of those, that's when you create those longer yardage situations and that get back on track. You need to win a football game, obviously, which should be motivation enough that is there a challenge that goes with having a bi-week on the horizon as far as keeping guys focused, making plans for the bi-week? And do you fight that as a coach to make sure guys are locked in the week before bi-week? Or is that even an issue? I mean, I hope that we're focused on trying to get to five and five against a tough opponent. You know, I think it's been long enough for us to have not have a bi, so, you know, one more week. I just, I'm not sure if the emphasis on that, the emphasis is on trying to prepare in the meetings and have great practices, play a game, and then try to recover the best that we can. I think it is about Taylor Luong's playing style. There's led to so many face mask penalties and how can you counter that? What do you think is happening here? My son plays left tackle. Taylor plays left tackle. You'd have to ask Taylor. I tell him not to grab the face mask. Like, that's all I can tell you, you know? Set out to, no, no, but I mean, again, like, what? John, I wouldn't know where to begin to tell him, try to teach him not to grab the guy's face mask, stay in front of him. And then you won't have to grab anything on him or hold him or grab his face mask. Some of these things I think are comical that you could expect me to coach a guy. Not to, no, that's the question that you asked me, so I'm trying to help you. I can't, at some point in time, like my hands are up, I can't teach you not to grab the guy's face mask. Just like I'm trying to teach Kenny and Kevin relentlessly about how to be able to dislodge the football down the field on a defenseless receiver, not hit him in the head or neck when that player is still protected when he lowers his target. And Kenny looks at me and he's like, coach. And I'm like, Kenny, if it's lower he goes, the lower you gotta go, like, I'm with you there. Like, that one, there's some tricky ones that we're trying to work through as we teach penalties. But I would say that grabbing the face mask is one I'm not gonna spend a whole lot of time on other than trying to stay in front of your guy. Outside of face mask, because last year, this team wasn't really penalized that much, but this year it's kind of changed. So outside of the face mask, where is the breakdown? Is it technique? Is it fatigue? Where is the breakdown? Well, if we go back and just look at Sunday, you know, I know that, you know, we had on special teams, a tough call, you know. And again, when we watch and we break down these special teams, whether it's against us or on another team, when guys fall down, the guy that you're blocking, that when he falls down, that's a big red flag to those guys. Because on special teams plays, 20 guys, 21 guys minus the kicker are all running around and they see a lot of bodies and sometimes they don't really see a hold or they're not really sure. But when guys fall down, you know, it kind of draws a red flag. And whether Bates held the guy or not, I know the guy he was blocking fell down and they called a penalty. So we try to say, hey, Bates, you know, try to keep them up and keep your hands inside. Fall starts, you know, we have to use our cadence and we practice our cadence and practice something that when it works and it goes well, we're able to get yards and we're able to be disciplined. We're able to get free yards or take shots down the field on free plays. But when we don't, our excitement level or whatever it is to get into that block when we move off, we move and we flinch, that costs us five yards. Holding, you know what I mean? Again, I don't want to go through all the things that we turn in and the results. But I would say that most of the things that we turn in are pretty favorable to where, you know, we're doing it okay and we have to do it better and then we understand the penalties hurt us, but some of them, you know, I get the aggressiveness, Bates had a use of the helmet. We teach that extensively. John, to your point, that's one that we can coach. That's a player safety issue to try to be able to play with our faces up and not in a posture that would be linear with our head down. And so that one got coached at length and showed at length about how we need to try to properly play one so that we're safe as we possibly can. And then the other one is that we aren't getting penalties. And Bax gets the wall, sees another line, there's a just the next game. It's in the National Football League, every game is probably as must win as you can get. It's the next one, it's a great challenge, it's a heck of an opponent. Our guys were focused this morning already. I'm hopeful that when we go out to the practice field, we can carry the meetings out to the field and be able to start the week off on a great note. Thanks guys.