 You're not saying, at least you weren't in Whitmer meetings, that MLB went out of their way to like really do this, like they didn't design the turbo ball, it was more negligence and just happenstance, like this happened, this was, they fucked this up, but they won't admit that, instead their No, we didn't find anything, people are just changing their swing and it's this and this. Not like Manfred assembled a team and was like, let's make a super ball, it just kind of happened, right? That's what you found? This is one of the reasons that I find the entire situation strange, is that every single change we've seen, including the whole, yeah, let's randomly mix baseballs together for the postseason, is related to some kind of economic decision. The thicker laces that led to the 2017 home run surge look like it was just a supplier change and I've since gotten sort of anecdotal confirmation that, yeah, they did change their laces supplier around them, so there you go. The 2019, the turbo ball, the reason it looks like that that became that sort of rounder ball with these like seams that didn't exist because they were so flat, that looks like they actually changed the drying process. Before then baseballs were air dried, because think about the leather has to be made wet so that it will conform to the ball. And air drying takes days. Well, if you suddenly have to make a couple hundred thousand more baseballs for AAA, if you actually speed up the drying process by using say the equivalent of a blow dryer, that might make it easier to make that many more baseballs. So again, reasonable economic decision. It gave you a ball that the problem is that it's like throwing your t-shirt in the dryer so that it shrinks back to normal. And the problem became then that the laces that normally would have stretched didn't. So everything stayed round and those those laces stayed literally by not stretching kept the seams flat as well. So you got the turbo ball. What ended up happening for the postseason and I was able to find numbers that were really was pretty cool that that I was able to track them down. Baseball usage just went way up. All those extra balls you're talking about Trevor that ended up going to batting practice or to spring training or getting sent down to the minors. Those just didn't happen. Normally usage would have left by the end of the season, something like 300,000 extra baseballs. And those were literally would have been surplus. The usage went up so much and Molly Knight actually wrote about this. These are her numbers, not my numbers, that instead of having 300,000 extra baseballs at the end of the season, they had 60,000. So they somehow went through an extra 240,000 baseballs. Zach Campbell. And these are these are her numbers. Yeah. And there you go. It's all Zach's fault. I'm trying to think why that would be like there's got to be. Do you have. She was able to track that down, actually, because it obviously couldn't have just been homeruns. It couldn't have just been the Garrett Cole discards. What she found was that the whole game ball authentication thing. Again, awesome cute little sticker there. Got just they just basically did as much of it as they could or they really upped it. And the way it was described was that every ball that left a pitcher's hand that made it back to the dugout. And per what Trevor was saying, you know, those are balls that would have ended up being used somewhere else in a lot of cases, instead of going into some bucket to then go somewhere else. They were literally being taken aside, labeled, authenticated, and removed from circulation entirely. So we have like a Ronald Serena's butt ground out authenticated ball. Yeah. Some of them are really funny, actually, like one picture in in the article. And it's just one that I took that was related to the Astros fan fest and and they'll label like, you know, what happened to the ball. And in that case, it literally just has that the ball was thrown two or three times for a ball. Yeah. And it was removed. Yeah. Like it wasn't even probably part of an at bat. Yeah. Yeah, thrown from the pitcher to capture three times and then got pulled and authenticated.