 How was Traylon's week of work? Yeah, good. Still, again, needs the final blessing, but doing well. And again, he hadn't been in meetings for three weeks, so getting back into it, I would say pleasantly surprised just for his ability to go through those meetings and practice and so a lot of stuff that go in there and just glad that he was able to retain some information. So see if he clears and what role he may have in the game, but just still waiting for that final blessing from the doctor. You probably told us at some point over the years, but did you ever have a concussion when you were playing? OK. Yeah. Was it? I've said this from early on, is having played this game and having kids that play this game and still do. We understand that they all are different, just like every other injury. We've always told the players to be honest. This is not the time to try to be a tough guy. If you're not feeling right, we've had players. We've asked players to know how a guy normally acts and feels. And if he doesn't, you guys know he's closer to them than the players. So I showed an example of maybe last year or the year before with, I think, Aguilar, maybe a Patriot receiver when he was with the Patriots and helping a player that clearly wasn't himself. So try to show all those different examples of opportunities. And whenever they pass through the protocol, we check in on them. We bring them in here. That's how we handle it. We treat them very seriously. Was it different, maybe, for the concussion than the? Yeah, I mean, there wasn't a protocol. We're not going to go to what was different. And what's the same about 2002 and 2023. That's, I don't think that does us any good. Which one of you guys clears the protocol? Is it, I guess, are you ever hesitant to just give him the full load again right away? Well, based on how much time away. And in this case, this is probably an extended period of time. So I think that we just have to figure out what it is that the player feels confident in. And what we feel confident in him doing. And making sure that he knows what to do. And not putting him in situations that he may not be prepared for just because of the time off. That's something that, again, you would have to ask. I know that Luke Hickley, I remember Luke wearing it. I've seen Schultz wear it. I saw Pollard wear it. Some technology that may or may not. Again, that would be something that you'd have to ask trailing that wasn't around when I played. So the learning curve been like for Wallace and Edmunds? Do you feel like since they've been here? Good, yeah. Well, I think they're working hard. And Kavon's been in there and has made some plays and shown up and taking advantage of his opportunities and just working in there with Elijah. And then Trell's doing the same thing. With those guys being veterans, they're coming from another team in the middle of the year. How difficult was it to get them to know the signals, kind of deprogram them and then reprogram them? Yeah, I think that's the hard part. The easy part is just saying that you're playing. And they've played in games. They've tackled. They've played on special teams. Or they've played in safety. And chances are that they would know the technique. It just may be called something differently. So that's probably the hardest thing is to focus on that and those signals at home, making sure that you don't take things for granted with a player that's relatively new. Have you found anything to work better in particular situations, as far as getting them to know the hand signals quickly? Better. I mean, I think we just know all ways is to work. And I've said this since books been here. He shows up early. He's met with numerous players that we've had, whether that's rookies or players during the season, that to try to get them ready to play. And he's done that with them as well in the morning and meetings. Afterwards, making them use the hand signals and practice and the communication, the visual communication. Which was a challenge for coach and staff when the two teams know each other so well, like you and the Colts. And usually like is in all the division games. And just making sure that your players are ready to go and understand it. Just like the game was close the first time. It's just the critical situations. And at the end of the day, just making sure that the players are confident. And they're ready to know what situation may present. They could be in something different. They could do something different. But for the majority of the time, it's, hey, here's what we're doing. This is a banked rep. Had this in the plan last time. Didn't run it. Think it may apply. Showing them where we can improve. Showing them differences in technique or players that may be different. Stewart and how he is different than some of the other interior players that may be smaller, faster, quicker, just different play styles. Mike, last time you guys played the Colts, Neandre had a lot of success. What are you seeing maybe different about their back end now, or maybe the kind of rope that you're seeing? Well, they remain pretty consistent in what they do, as far as coverage. So I think that there's the ability to do the same thing not every single time, but the majority of the time. It's something that has gotten them to improve. They've got good length. I think they work well together as a unit with the attacking, penetrating front that is forcing quarterbacks off the spot, getting them to move. Limebackers do a good job in the underneath zone coverage. And they have length. They have guys with length, and they challenge. And so whether they're impressed or off, that's kind of what I've seen here. And we'll mix it up against us as well. How does your physical cornerback play against a guy's physical like Pithman versus against a guy I don't know who maybe doesn't like it as much? How does that kind of differentiate itself over the course of the game? And how much do you go into it with an awareness of the crew? Oh, well, the crew. I mean, it's the crew we had against Cleveland. They called us for a couple. And clearly, that's a factor. You've got to play aggressive, play with good technique. Sometimes I would say just the biggest thing is going back to just simple logic is if a little guy doesn't want contact, try to create it. If a big guy wants contact, try to avoid it as far as cover. And then you try to go and nail a little guy. You end up with nothing. And you go and you try to nail a big guy. And he's licking his chops and he flippers you. And that goes all the way back to when I tried to cover guys. And coach would tell me that. And I'd try to tell them the same thing. If a guy's trying to avoid contact, try to create it. If they're trying to create contact, try to avoid it. And nobody's out.