 Yeah, I mean, I think it was important to get out to the, to the footing, and just obviously the, the weather, whatever happens on Sunday, we'll have to be prepared for, and just felt like just where we were trying to get some stuff done earlier in a week, that was important to get inside. Isn't it, he's your Green Dot guy, what do you do in that regard? Do you have somebody else that's designated to take that, and, you know, and how big of a deal is that to have to hand it off? Well, I mean, you have to, you know, I mean, the next guy has to be ready to go. Yeah, David won't be there. He'll be out. Dave, Dave is going to be out for the game. So the next guy goes in there. You guys, you can listen to me or type, it doesn't matter, but I'm all set. Go ahead. How do you feel like they've helped dealt with the distraction of this week as far as practice and everything else is concerned? Right. You know, I mean, I think really good. How did you manage the, how did you manage the race? Just a second. And the most important thing is, again, is our performance on Sunday. That's, you know, we've had, you know, I think we've gotten better each and every day. There was a lot of details that I saw guys fix and correct and come out today. The most important thing is how we play on Sunday. And so practice is really critical, but not as, not as critical as the game. Sorry, Jimmy. And how did, how did you handle racing and how did he kind of manage the week? Good. He has been fantastic. You know, started getting back into meetings a couple of weeks ago. We traveled him to Philly last week just so that he can get back and get around a team and, you know, start to study the game plans that are going in. And it's done everything that Todd asked him to do from a conditioning standpoint, from a practice standpoint. So, you know, we'll see how he comes out of today and see how he feels tomorrow and then make a decision. Good. I mean, there's going to be a lot, there's going to be a lot of things that they're, they're going to have to, you know, maybe not be a part of just from a volume standpoint. But, you know, the preliminary stuff, the first and second down stuff, the base stuff. Good. Reed, can you have a little versatility? Yeah, I think he could play inside and outside. I mean, you know, where we're at, you're going to have to play, you know, be willing to play a couple of different places. Some of those drills that you do with the D line, like the kickball drill, the shoot drill, how do those come into existence? I'm just trying to be creative and try to figure out, you know, things that we need to do, whether it's ball disruption and, you know, stop throwing a, you know, a football into their hands from three feet away. It's, you know, repetitive. So it grabs some dodgeballs and, you know, use those just the idea that they're on a block and the ball's going past their, their head or they see the quarterback's front hand come off that we're trying to, to mirror and match his hand and, you know, some of the other stuff. You just try to look at the positions that the players are in during the game and create the drills off of that. Is that something that kind of like you're filtering through while you're watching tape? Oh, look, they need to do this better. Maybe I can have them do that. I think that's always, you know, I mean, what it starts, I think in the off season and you build a catalog or you try to get creative, whether that's a, you know, an open field tackling drill or whatever it may be. And then as the season goes along, you kind of make modifications. There's, you know, developers that you would do each and every day based on the position that you play. There's specifics that let's say you're playing a zone read team this week. And there's a different technique that the outside linebacker is going to use or, you know, we're going to do this something different. We're going to need more of this this week and maybe not as much in the past week. So that's kind of how you decide some of those things. And then with those ideas, like let's say Coach Crow came up with an idea and he came in like, how does that whole process work? Like taking the idea from an idea to actually appearing on the field? Well, I mean, I think part of it is being creative and how you develop the players and what you use and what they need and the progression. You know, I think anytime the things are new, especially drills around on the field that there's a progression to it. You know, start with as close as you can, you back up, you put them in a position, a fit position and start to back up and start to add steps. You know, no different than blow delivery and you stand there and nobody's moving. It looks pretty good. And then as one person starts moving towards another, you're like, oh, you know, I didn't throw my hands fast enough and then you have to fix that. And then when two people start moving, it gets quicker and quicker. So I think there's a progression to it. What have you seen from Monty Rice? Yeah, his Glacier Clinic. I subscribed to him starting to play a week after with Monty Rice. There's, you know, we need to uptick here. You know, we need to see an uptick. You know, I know that he missed a lot of time and just reps, just volume of reps from training camp. So, you know, I thought he finished the game, you know, against Philly with a really cool play. It looked like an inside linebacker. I'll play that an inside linebacker, you know, would make. And so trying to get him to play like that, to see the back's path, to see the pull, to recognize the block and to slip under it and go tackle the guy. That's what linebackers do. You guys done? Autry Avery Berks Fulton Longboard.