 He also has over 700,000 Instagram followers. Wow. Well, they give it to him and he'll slam that down. And will you talk about YouTube and Instagram? Out of the timeout, just one bounce and used that crab dribble to propel himself up. Here we see the Virts, the hops. Again, the size advantage. The Hoyas here, size and length. LeBlanc, six foot seven on that last basket. How about a Kinjo? Feeling it. Tickling the twine and Dave. LeBlanc did get a look at it. Here's three on the way, but no. LeBlanc again up there, beat everybody up and ticked it in. On LeBlanc with that impressive wingspan. It's 47% of his three punters. He's been quiet because they've been doing a lot of this. He passes out of the double. Blair will knock that one down from three. He's only hitting 33%. That's big if he can get going. He bounding ability. Nice hesitation for a short off the front of the rim. Big rebound by Johnson to spin and down it goes. And Appalachian State has tied it. Bibby launches. He knocks it in, Michael Bibby. It's it right back out to the three point line, so. Pick it, looking to answer. He does, all net. Pick it with the size. Up top for Isaac Johnson. Seacat, nice shot there with the left hand. Yeah, nice back to the basket, post move. Old school leapers on this roster for Georgetown. Alunowski gives it up. On target, Ovan with a score to double fingers in 18 consecutive games. He's springing up set here. Shot clock to five. Williams sees it and sticks a three. And he has tied the game. On the baseline, a wild looking shot by Alunowski. And now numbers here for the Monteneers. Williams goes by himself. He lays it in and Appalachian State has taken the lead. His personnel. Seacat picked up the foul. LeBlanc, back for Akinjo. Got it. He'll knock down a three. Great look to the backside. Akinjo had the entire side of the floor to go to work one on one. In and out, a guess who got Alain. LeBlanc flying in there for the stuff. They get into league play quite a bit from last year. Alunowski on net from three point lead. Alunowski working well without the basketball. Forest. Gives it away and a slam by Isaac Johnson. And a man down for the Hoyas. With 420 to go. That was trade morning actually. He's got a little shaking up in the play. Good drive by Forest. The dish to Johnson. And after Duncan holding on the rim with people under him. And let's go. Jim Fox, meanwhile, the Appalachian State. It goes wondering, is this a case of here we go again? And it's LeBlanc with the slam. He continues to make his presence felt tonight. He's at his best though when he's putting it on the floor, thinking aggressive drives first. Go back. Success. They still have 15 turnovers, but in crunch time, they executed and took care of the ball. So that's your final tonight. Georgetown knew they had a battle on their hands. They certainly got one. 83-73 to final tonight. Impressive win down the stretch. A number of contributors. Let's start with Akinjo, his floor game, orchestrating the offensive attack for you. He played well. I thought in the first half he did a pretty good job of trying to get everybody else involved. He came over to me at half time and said, look, now I'm gonna try and make my plays. So I told him, just go ahead and play. And I thought he did a good job. He made his shots. He also found the right people at the right time. Yeah, the big fella, Jesse Govan, a quiet night in the first half, zero points, fought through some foul trouble as well. But LeBlanc stepped up and then down the stretch, Govan was critical of some big plays. Josh, he did for us what he's been doing all year. His energy, his effort, offensive rebound, running the floor, getting blocks. You know, that's what we need for him to continue to do as his game continues to build. Jesse had a quiet night, like you said, the foul troubles hurt him. So it was back on his heel, but I thought the team, the entire team, the bench, everybody came in and did something to help us win the game tonight. No doubt, that leads to my next question. Some great sets, some alignments coming out of timeouts as well as out-of-bounds plays that led to baskets. How much of that comes from the 16 years of coaching in the NBA as well as your playing career in the NBA? Well, you know, I think all of it helps. The entire time I coached in the NBA, the entire time I played, all of the things have helped. And I think that the people that I've worked with and played for have all contributed to my success.