 All right, let's go right to it. Let's go. It's all good. I knew I was waiting for you, so totally fine. Well, you know, overall, it's just we had to have better execution of ball placement, being able to get off blocks, avoid to the kick side. Now, when you talk about like the run game, okay, kickoff is a big run play. There's gaps. Everybody's responsible for a gap. You know, when leakage happened, explosive plays happen is you either have too many guys in the same gap, or you don't have somebody in that gap, and that's where we got exposed. So we have to do a better job, one, executing, getting our guys in a proper position to make plays and be gap control so we can force the ball care to go east and west. And that's, you know, my responsibility and I take blame for that. Again, we talked about ball location, being able to execute one from the kick all the way down field to the coverage, stranding coverage, and being able to get off blocks. And we have to do a better job. Again, overall, our basic fundamentals when it comes to that, making sure we're in the proper lanes, playing the proper gaps, and then finishing on the football. I didn't, we're missing somebody in their lane responsibility. You know, so, and then again, it starts with the kick, and then it correlates down to the coverage. You know, wherever that ball is being placed, obviously, we want our kick or our punt to complement our coverage, and we want our coverage to complement our kick. And on that play, particularly, we didn't have, we didn't have both of those. So we have to do a better job of that, Mike, of, you know, making sure because, you know, before that, our guys have been covering pretty well and doing a good job getting on and getting off blocks. But as you more you cover and you only get better reps, sometimes they'll hit an explosive one on you, but we have to do a better job finishing on the football and given our chance, given our chance of opportunity to finish on the football. So we had to clean that up and we look forward to the challenge this week versus the Jets. Like, you're not going back with us, but like, how do you teach that? How do you? Like, is that just a complete mental thing? Or is there something physically you can teach, say, hey listen, don't get out of this way and don't ruin integrity? Oh, we work that, you know, every day we work kickoff coverage, whether it's in the jog through or whether it's in practice, we're working those basic fundamentals. One, idea in who's probably going to block us on a particular return. We have certain keys from first level back all the way down to the returner. We have particular keys that we're reading when it comes to kickoff coverage. And then from that perspective, once we identify who's blocking us as we're running downfield in coverage, we have to defeat that block one with speed, all right, putting stress on the return team. And then also, you know, using some, you know, wiggle to make a guide miss and then using our, our hands being having upper body violence to get off the block because the longer in the block, that's going to give those guys opportunity to rebound and make sure they get in proper leverage. So we got to do a great, better job of a D in the blocks. All right, defeating the blocks and then finishing on the football coming up with, you know, either a body part or the football. April Williams, obviously, may have to play more nickel in the absence of Isaiah Oliver. How does that kind of change your game plan at all in terms of what he would do on our return to Georgia? Well, you know, well, teenager, you know, one losing a player like Isaiah is a is a big loss for us. And, you know, he's very reliable and he was a great player for us, you know, defense and special teams. Again, it's next man mentality. Now with that, you know, every his role may change on defense and on special teams. So we as a special teams unit, we rep a lot of different guys in different positions because we believe in small menu, big understanding that we have a smaller menu that allows our players to have a bigger understanding conceptually of what we're running and what we're trying to accomplish on every particular play so we can move different pieces in the different spots. So excited for Avery. Avery is always going to have a role on special teams. And it's opportunity, whether it's an offensive phase on special teams or defensive phase on special teams, it's an opportunity for him to go out there and make plays. You know, I we believe on special teams in our room, you know, the smaller the menu allows our guys to have a bigger understanding of what we're doing. So we could go in there with we could go in there with a big game plan. But those guys might just have an understanding of their particular role rather than having to understand the whole concept of what we're trying to accomplish. As a player, if you understand the bigger picture, it allows you to be more aggressive and more detailed with your particular role of what you're doing. Whether I'm a two on kickoff, if I understand I got to contain the football to my threes, fours and fives that are playing inside of me, I could be more aggressive that setting the edge of our coverage unit. As a returner, if I understand what the jammers are doing on pump return, whether a single press, double press or trying to invite the inside outside release, I could be more aggressive as a returner when I'm catching the ball and getting upfield and getting vertical. So that allows our players to special special teams. We have different players playing different positions, or they might be playing one position, but backing up another position due to injury just like it happened on Sunday. So we have an injury, we can move different players to different spots. And since we have a small menu that allows them have a big understanding and go out there and execute and perform at a higher level. We have we have multiple guys represent at that position. Whether it's, you know, it's based on body types too. So you're looking at the DB room or the receiver room when you're looking at those type of body types when playing that position, whether it's on kickoff coverage or pump return. Throughout the week, we rep various players at those positions and we rep in a this happen, this may happen, who would play that position or if that may happen, who played that position. If this safety is getting more playing time or this receivers getting more playing time throughout the game, we expect that happening who would go in and fill that role. So those in game adjustments goes back to small menu, big understanding to nature. It allows us as coaches to be able to make those adjustments. And we feel great. We feel good about those adjustments great about those adjustments because they understand what they're doing rather than trying to survive it down. We want them to excel on the down. It's just more so like where he feels comfortable directionally when it comes to punting the football. He's a seasoned vet. He's been doing it for a long time. He's been successful at doing it. And he's already been in the building, which is awesome. So him and coup and Josh getting on the same wavelength and rhythm up with how we're operating on as a special teams unit has been great for our room. So it's great having them in here. He's already been here for a while. And we're excited for the opportunity for him to go out there and perform on Sunday. Well, we prepare for, you know, worst case scenarios, whether it's the snapper situation, if something were to happen to Josh, or if something happened to our punter, something happened to our kicker, or even our holder. So coup, he does get those reps in on the special teams field on the side, getting his reps in getting contact on the football. But at the end of the day, whether you get it with the pun team at practice or in the game, that's a totally totally different beast. So I really appreciate an applaud coup for, you know, just being just a ball player and going out there and being able to perform. And he did a great job on his last punt getting that ball inside the 25 for us and allowing that ball to be in the field of play so we could bleed the clock a little bit. Yeah, we do rep just, you know, worst case scenario because things can happen in game. You'd rather be prepared without the opportunity than unprepared with the opportunity. Were you all telling coup to avoid the returner because you were worried about his hang-down on those two punts? It was more so worried about the direction. Just the direction of the punt, you know, making sure we can get the coverage to where it needs to be because if we say, hey, coup, punt the ball right, and then he punts the ball right, or he goes to punt the ball right, everybody's avoiding and trying to get to the right and the ball ends up left, now we have poor leverage on the football. So it was more so, hey, which way do you feel comfortable with punting the ball? So we could, protection's going to be the protection, but getting the gunners and the rest of our coverage team to get to where they need to get to, we weren't necessarily worried about the hang-time because coup can hit a decent hang-time on his punts, but the direction on that last punt was awesome and is exactly what we needed for that situation. No, he won't kick off. Oh yeah, I mean, Boyer is heavily respected. I think he's been there, he's been there with, this is now his third head coach, he's been under there, former player, played in the league, and they're a big representation of how he is as a player and now coach. They play fast, they play physical, they're disciplined when it comes to how they rush after the punter and how they cover in the coverage game. They have Tommy Morse out there, he came, he's with the Saints, we're pretty familiar with him being in this division with Morse, a great directional punter, he's been doing a great job ever since he's, you know, he was a newly acquisition player when man went down as the punter and then Matt Amidola, strong late kicker, but they're return units, they're solid barriers, they're aggressive, they're going to attack and it's a great opportunity for us as a special teams unit to come back this week and perform at a high level versus these guys, but Brent does an amazing job with those players out there. Yeah, if you have to fix the problem that you had on the kickoff attack, you know they're going to see that and try that. Oh yeah, you know, again, it's basic fundamentals, lane integrity, being disciplined, you know, in order for us to be aggressive and physical as a coverage unit or as any unit on special teams, you got to be disciplined with your technique and your approach and your assignment. So just being consistently disciplined when it comes to whatever our technique or our assignment is, so we could be physical at the point of attack, whether we're blocking, whether we're tackling, whether we're getting off blocks. So those are things that we look at every week and even if Richie makes that tackle, we're still coaching the same stuff up. We're still talking about the lane integrity because that's all it takes is for one person to miss a tackle and then your one play away from either a touchdown or a tackle inside the 20. Where does pursuit come in on that, you know, on a running play, you're like, if I get to the ball. Yeah. Where does that come in on a coverage? You know, pursuit usually comes in when you're forcing a returner to go change the direction, you know, the more vertical penetration you get in the coverage unit, you could at least make that returner to either not allow him to get vertical or you stop his vertical penetration, you create him to go east and west and now you can pursue to the football still while keeping leverage on the football. No, we get my hard time. I've been getting my hard time the last couple of weeks. You know, I know that I was getting hard time like, hey, how many tickets are you guys having for the London game? And he's like, oh, my brother has me in charge of all the tickets this year. So I thought that was pretty funny. Yeah, that's the plan. You know, we're excited for him. He's been doing a great job with decision making. He's been playing multiple roles for us and he's been stepping up to the challenge and he's a good ball player. It has a lot of room to grow as a player and you only get better reps and you get better being exposed to different things, whether he's playing on defense or on special teams. And the cool thing about it, he's very humble and he has a willingness to grow. So, you know, experience to me is defined with what you're exposed to and are you willing to grow from those experiences? Thank you. You guys have a great day. Take care.