 Spencer, in your mind, just a big picture, what would it be? A lot of you guys just kind of clamped down defensively after whatever you gave up on 60% shooting in the first half. And then you guys clamped it down the second. Who allowed you to do that? Honestly, I think just a focus and attention to detail. I mean, we went to switching 1 through 5 and relying our guards to kind of hold up Rudy a bit, which had pros and cons. But Nick's obviously phenomenal on the perimeter as well. He always holds his own regardless of matchup. It's on us to help him. But for the most part, regardless of the defense switch, it really had more to do with focus and attention to detail because 68 points in the first half is just far too much. I don't care, you know what I'm saying, who you're playing. In the overtime, what did you see from their defense that allowed you to manipulate the way you did in overtime? I mean, I think you were responsible for more than with it. Well, yeah, I mean, I think what happens in the half court is you kind of start to go a little bit of elephant hunting and you just try to manipulate the game. They have some tendencies on their team that we felt like we could exploit. Shoot me and Doe played Rudy in the playoffs last year and phenomenal rim protector. If you can bring him away from the rim and then he's got to come kind of chase the block, then that means you can kick out to the shooter. So just being familiar with that and understanding how to kind of orchestrate things in the half court, because obviously in overtime in the fourth court, it just kind of gets slower. You know, guys doing a, we're not getting as many transition buckets. It's just kind of the way basketball goes. Five stars in double figures, are you guys going to stop Slade? I mean, is this kind of the way the team was envisioned after Kevin and Kyrie, kind of the formula most with the balance scoring, the defense way of games? Defensively, I think so, for sure. I think you look at our lineup. It's 6-6 to, you know, what is clack, 6-11, right? Long, switchable, everybody can guard on the perimeter. You know, then bringing in a guy like Royce, who's a great defender, obviously, off the bench. So defensively, I'd say like we knew this was our identity. I don't think anybody knew that Mikhail was this amazing offensively, just being completely real. And, you know, it's our job to make sure that, you know, he can get to his spots and get his shots and continue to shoot stack up these 30s as much as he possibly can. We got to feed that and encourage that as much as possible. And then for me, I mean, the coach wanted me to just get in the paint, let the game dictate, you know what I'm saying, what the read is at the time. And, you know, sometimes I make mistakes and shoot when I should pass, or pass when I should shoot. But overall, the mentality is just getting the lane and break down the defense, however we got to do it, whether that's, you know, with pace, whether it's Elfin hunting, whether it's pick and roll, whether it's whatever it is, and just kind of generate our offense that way. You're talking against Rudy in the playoffs, that's obviously a voice for that series, you know, he told me for team night. Great time. He said, what have you just started in since you became his teammate after playing against him and so on? I think we already knew he was a great defender. We knew he'd do all the hustle things, rebounds, et cetera. I think he's a far better playmaker than we knew, just because obviously Donovan had the ball so much and they also had Bogey and Connolly over there. So I think that's another credit and tip to his hat. But the three in D tag, I mean, we already knew he could do that and play against him. I mean, he's, we knew that. Your advantage, you got, I think they credited you with a block on that last one. Yeah. Was that, now I remember with Trey, you were afraid to go in too hard because of the foul. With that one, where you, how did you not kind of get caught in between being afraid to get on? Oh, with that one, I was in front of him. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? So with the Trey one, it was kind of a swipe from behind because you got a little bit of space on the pump there from Mikhail. So it was really just kind of like a, ah, let's try it. You know what I mean? Cause I saw him open with this specific play, you know, they're obviously gonna try to get to Ant. That's, that's their guy. So it was kind of a, you know, delayed double because he likes to go left. So just kind of speeding him up. He had Connolly in the corner. CJ stabbed at the ball. Connolly had to take a reset dribble and he was right in front of me. And so I just put my hands up. It wasn't like I was trying to like, you know, get the most phenomenal contest in the world because again, you don't want to foul. But when somebody's right in front of you, it's easier not to foul versus when you, you know what I'm saying? Like you swiping from behind, anything can happen. You could hit his hair and it'd be, you know, a foul.