 First, I want to play the audio we teased of A-Rod today during the call of the Red Sox Yankee game on ESPN. One thing that really has upset the fans is you cheat, you win a championship, there is no suspension, and then there's no remorse. And the last one I think is probably the worst one because people want to see remorse. They want a real, authentic apology and they have not received that thus far. And I can just tell you this, Matty, from a guy who has made, you know, as many mistakes as anybody on the biggest stage, I served the longest suspension in majorly baseball history. You know, it cost me well over $35 million. You know what? I deserved that. And as a result, I came back, I owned it after acting like a buffoon for a long time. I had my apologies and then I went dark. And I wanted my next move to be contrite, but I also wanted to go out and play good baseball and change my narrative. And the way you change your narrative is you have to be accountable. You've earned all this negative talk. You've earned whatever comes your way, including whether it's hit by a pitch or negative press. You have divorced yourself from having the ability to protect yourself. That's about as forthright as he's been about. I've never, never heard that much depth. I mean, we have heard him pinned at it, not like that. And also, when you consider it, he got suspended and lost $35 million. I mean, who's ever been fined $35 million? And these guys, who all of them cheated, they got nothing. They were granted immunity. They got nothing. He got $35 million taken away from his bottom line. In a year. He deserved it, too. And he did. He lied. He did terrible things. And he took it. But he's never really come out and said, in those stark terms, I'm impressed. And he really hasn't said anything about the Astros situation. And he knew that in his situation, he couldn't soft shoe it because he looked like a phony. And he's right. If you show contrition and the public believes you, they will forgive you. Now, it would have taken a heck of an apology from the Astros, but if they just tried, more than just, oh, they're forcing us to do it, if they just seemed like they really meant it, maybe they'd be able to get up from it. I think the great story from 2020 is going to be, do the Astros use the fact that everybody hates their guts? And I mean, all fans other than Astro fans and all the players, do they use that as a galvanizing thing and they go out and they tear it up? Or do they just give up? Yeah. That's what I was going to ask you. I don't know what they're going to do. Yeah. It's going to be one or the other. That's the narrative. It's going to be that it killed their season or they rallied around it. And that makes it worse if they win, because if they win, then it's almost going to be like they were the victims and they overcame it. And that's going to change like the narrative of their story to it led to another championship. So let's get this straight. You cheat to a championship. Some players hit you, all right? You get abused by the fans, you get booed, but you spin it into another championship and we're supposed to reward you that you face this adversity, that you overcame this obstacle in one another title, right? And all of it's going to make people hate him even more.