 Roger said, we are insanely confident. I imagine you feel the same. What's it like to come to Canada in that frame of mind? Well, I'm excited to get back to work. We've been away here in the spring, but to be able to play some real football again, 11-on-11, and compete, it feels good. I was telling P.O. that after that first team period, it feels good to go out and play football. We have some familiar faces around here and added some new pieces. So excited about that. But we have a lot of work to do, and nothing's going to happen before we put the work in. Ryan, what John Robinson told us before practice today that it was 90% vaccination rate for the team? Your thoughts on that number? And then you noticed you were wearing a mask and stretch also? Have you made a decision one way or another on the vaccine? Yeah, it's a high number. You look around, and almost everybody's either been vaccinated or in process. I'm currently in process right now. So that's where it's at. But yeah, I think the NFL has kind of made it clear what they want to happen. And if you don't fall in line, they're kind of trying to make your life kind of miserable with all the protocols. So I think you're seeing the trend is that most guys are getting vaccinated. You're in the process? How good to have AJ back, and how did you think you looked first time out since last year? It's great to have AJ back out here. I love throwing the ball at AJ. I love being on the same side of the game as him. He's a great dude and a great football player. So I'm excited to have him back. Obviously he's out here working, doing some new things, and excited about that. So he made me a couple of plays a day, and it looks good doing it. So that's all good. How do you feel about the competition after AJ, Julio, and Josh, and the guys like Chester Rogers, Marcus Johns, and Rasmussen's Badger, Gracie and Matt, when do you see it in those guys so far and what do you like? They're competing. It's a stacked receive room. There's no doubt about it. It's going to be a big competition throughout this training camp is to see who comes out of there. I think that's not to John Robinson and variable, for being able to put that room together and that competition together in that room. Obviously big, strong, tough, physical group. So excited to have that competition, that room, and those guys will be able to help us throughout the year. Every team goes through change. It has new players and coaches come along, but it seems like you guys maybe have a lot more than some other teams round the league. How important is it with some of these new faces, with Todd and some of the others? You won't get on the same page and it's not just sort of a collection of talent, but you're all able to work together. Well, it's crucial. I mean, that's one of our keys in this training camp is to build a team. We have a bunch of guys right now. It's not the same team as last year. It's a new team. So we have to actually come together as a team, improve each and every day, and compete. So getting that familiarity with coaching staff, with teammates who haven't been here before, getting everyone to cuss them and up to speech the way we do things, and then holding that standard throughout training camp and throughout the season is going to be crucial. So excited for that process. Daily intentionality, communication, focus on the details, being able to work through the ends and outs of the game, the details of the game, and then being able to communicate it clearly to everyone involved. Your perspective as the distributor, how do you go about making sure that all these mouths are fed? You got Ajay, Julio, Derrick, et cetera? I think just going through my process, right? Stick to the way I do things and preparing, trying to find good matchups on the field, and not trying to force the ball to anybody and a particular play. The targets will come with the play calls, and we're going to find the right matchups and find the right coverages. You can't just force them to individual. And that's a good thing when you have guys all across the field who can get open and catch the ball. Eventually someone's going to find a good matchup out there and be in a good position, depending on what the coverage is. So excited to have those guys out there. And as we continue to work, get on the same page, things should get better for us. What is the key to getting on the same page with Julio Jones? He's a guy that has always gotten a lot of targets. Yeah, I think communications is key, right? When we install and I'm talking through what I expect on certain routes, we're in walk-throughs, walking through things. He's telling me what he's seeing. I'm telling him what I'm seeing, and then obviously getting on the practice field and getting the balls up in the air to him. That's going to be crucial. How's this going with Todd, the transition to Todd? How is he different from ours? How do you think this will look different on the field? Yeah, I don't want to compare it to you guys. They're both themselves, and that's all we want them to be, is to be individuals, be themselves, and do the best job they can do. So I'm excited to have Todd on board. I've enjoyed talking with him over the past couple years as a tight end coach, and then now as a coordinator, I enjoyed our process of getting to know each other in this new role and the way he thinks about our offense and our concepts and creating matchups we like. Really excited about him in that spot. So a lot of work to do, but looking forward to it. I know you're not combing the internet reading this stuff. It's a popular thing for people to analyze you and say, rely on Henry, you know, rely on the system. It seems to me that's a good thing that you're successful in a good system. Is it funny to you the lengths that people will go to flying stuff like that to diminish you? That's their prerogative. You know, everyone's entitled to their own opinion. I'm gonna go out and do the best I can each and every day to get better and leave this team to win. So at the end of the day, if I'm leaving this team to win, that's all that really matters. Some people apparently will never be convinced that you're not injury pro. Did you have to convince yourself after those last couple of years in Miami or did you feel like that was just a bad luck? Yeah, just a couple of unfortunate situations, you know. Was really out of my hands. You know, look at my career before that. I was able to play almost five straight years without missing a game. And then I kind of had a little boot of a bad run there with major injuries. So it's kind of how the cookie crumbles sometimes, you know, the way the ball falls. Sometimes it goes in your favor. Sometimes it doesn't. And therefore a little bit, it didn't fall in my favor. And glad we're past that. Did you change the way you play at all? No, I don't think so. I mean, I still try to go out and compete and play tough, you know. Be smart when I'm running. Try to, you know, not take any dumb hits, get down if I'm in the open field. But, you know, it's a critical situation. And the first down is on the line. The game's on the line and I'm two yards from the first down. I have a collision coming. Yeah, I'm going to try to take on the defender and find a way to get the first down and keep the chains moving. So just finding that balance of being smart and taking care of yourself, making sure you're not taking unnecessary hits and also competing and finding a way to win. What's the process like for you? You've got a couple of new veterans in Josh and Julio, obviously, but also a couple of rookies in Dez and Racy. Trying to get both those guys up to speed. Maybe no one there going to be a different, maybe learning curves. Yeah, no doubt everyone's different, right? Everyone that comes in, whether you're, you know, Julio's I think in year 11 or you got a rookie coming in, everyone learns a little bit different experiences and at different speeds. So just being able to communicate, talk through the installs, each route individually, what I'm expecting. We get to the walkthroughs. Those are crucial for us. Kind of take the physical taxing off and be able to really just communicate the nuances of the route with the different leverages and the different coverages. And then, you know, take advantage of every rep. We get the rep, we're going to make a count and then learn from it on tape. And I think making sure that as we watch the tape and communicate what happened and how we either agree with what happened or want to make a change with what happened, that everyone in the room can learn from that and not make that same mistake again. Garrett said during the offseason that Raven's loss still haunts him. Going back to kind of your performance in that game, is that something that's motivating the whole team? Is how last season after, what was it, a good season, 11 season, condition championship? How it ended? Yeah, it's definitely a sour taste, you know. I think, I mean, I can say that no one in that locker room felt great after that. You know, it was a rough, rough ending for us after a promising year, being able to win the division was good, but that's not where we compete in this game, is not to win the division, that's a step. But ultimately it's to win a championship. So, yeah, sour taste in the mouth, tough ending for us. And I think it motivates a lot of the guys that are in this locker room. But at the same time, it's a new team, a lot of new faces that weren't here for that and have to find a way to come together with all the new faces and new coaches and find a way to compete for a championship this year. And one of the things, there's all restrictions over the vaccinations and making guys move right. Do you think that's influencing guys' decisions to go ahead and do it and influence yours? Oh, no doubt. I wouldn't have gotten the vaccine without the protocols that they're enforcing on us. I think it's a personal decision for everyone. Everyone has to make the best decision for them and their families. That's kind of our mindset in this building. But they're trying to force your hand and they ultimately have forced a lot of hands by the protocols, which is, everyone has their own opinions on. So it is what it is. I love this game, I love this team. I want to be able to compete and do the things that I think are important to build chemistry and win football games. So ultimately that forced my hand and to get in the vaccine. Brian, other than the protocols, any conversations in the midst of making that decision that helped ease your mind, the professional people that were brought into the team, what were the conversations like if you went through that problem? Yeah, there were a ton of conversations. You know, the team brought people in to talk to us, doctors to talk to us. There was a lot of conversations in the spring. I think our numbers were obviously lower in the spring with who was vaccinated. I had a ton of conversations in the spring, strong opinions about it as there are everywhere. And ultimately I think, like you said, we have almost 90% or close to 90% of the guys that are either vaccinated or in process. So you kind of see what the trend is. And like I said, our hand was kind of forced if you didn't want to abide by all the hefty protocols. I guess was your mind put at ease amid any of these conversations? Not really, no. Like I said, I wouldn't have gotten the vaccine if not for really intensive protocols and not being able to gather with teammates and separate locker room, separate meeting room, separate cafeteria, all those type of things where you're losing the team chemistry, the team bond, which I think is so important. So I think that probably had a lot to do with guys ultimately getting vaccinated. What was your biggest concern, Ryan? What was your biggest concern? I guess, why would you have chosen otherwise? Was it concern about after effects or what was your rationale? Yeah, I mean, I'm torn right now. Do I want to get into this? I'm going to pass. I just, you know, there's so many strong opinions on it and everyone has their own opinion on it and I'll just leave it at that. Ryan, so many high expectations for this team amongst the fans coming into this year. The leader of the team, what do you have to do to kind of keep everybody focused day in, day out, not worry about what they expected? We haven't done crap yet, you know? We got a bunch of guys out there that are competing, but we haven't done anything yet. You know, it's day one. A lot of mistakes were made today. I made mistakes today and they're made all over the field. So we have to work day in and day out, continue to fine tune the way we do things, how we expect to play, raise our standard, our conditioning. Obviously being day one is not where it needs to be. It'll continue to get better. Our focus, our mindset, we'll just continue to improve as we go through training camp. But, you know, I take the onus on me to go out there and drive that train to push these guys day in and day out on the details on the tempo and the way we play the game. And, you know, we have a bunch of veteran guys who love the game and want to get better and realize there's no front runners on this team. We realize that, yeah, we have some talent on this team, but it doesn't really mean anything. You know, most talented teams often don't end up winning a championship. It's only when they come together and form a true team and find a way to win tough games. So we realize that and are looking forward to the challenge and looking forward to the work that's going to be put in here in August.