 One thing that seems very close to being completed, it was first reported by Ken Rosenthal of the Athletic, that Jay Hap and the Yankees had come to an agreement and all that was left was physicals and things like that. Then he walked it back momentarily or moments later where he said, let me walk that back, it's still not quite done, but everything that I'm hearing is that it is going to get done. And the reason that it's going to get done is that the Yankees did what they didn't want to do. If it does get done, they did what they didn't want to do, they went to a third year. And we've been saying this over and over the past week or so. They lost out on Corbin because they wouldn't go to 6. They lost out on Evaldi because they wouldn't go to 4. And if they continue to be so stringent and responsible, they're going to lose out on people they need and they probably examine the trade market for Kluber and for Cindergaard. And they're saying the price is too high in terms of what we would have to give up, in terms of a big talent switch from the Yankees to that team. Let's just sign Hap who doesn't cost us anything. And then what it keeps in play is this guys, if they have to get that big time pitcher. And I've heard walking the lobbies here guys that Madison Bumgarner is likely not going to be dealt by the Giants. And if he is going to be dealt, he's going to be dealt near the trade deadline if the Giants are out of it. So this way the Yankees keep their prospects. And if a Kluber or a Bauer or a Bumgarner is not traded now, then they might be traded closer to the trade deadline and the Yankees will have the inventory to go get that player. So you get Hap that gives you your five-man rotation. You've got the kids now in a AAA that could come up in case people missed starts. And then you have enough people like a Floreal, even an Anduhar, or some of the guys they have down in the modern league system that you could go out and get that big player. They don't want to do it now and it makes sense. Just spend the money and if you bite the bullet, you bite the bullet on a guy like Hap who has an effortless delivery whose stuff looks like it would translate maybe three years. But it doesn't, you know, so what? They lost money in the third year. It's not like they're losing, you know, what they lost with Alex Rodriguez in your seven, eight, nine and ten in that contract. So I think it's probably a smart move if it happens. The guy's proven that he can handle New York. He pitched him in the postseason. They pitched well for the Yankees against the Red Sox, but he didn't lose pitching for them after coming over from the Blue Jays in the regular season. I think it's a good move by them. People have to look at it a little differently than they are because you look at it happily. The trade didn't work last year. You traded to get them to beat the Red Sox, didn't beat the Red Sox. So what are you going crazy signing them for? Yes, you traded for him last year specifically to beat the Red Sox because you knew you were going to the playoffs anyway. Now you've signed him to a three-year deal to be what he was in the regular season when he was seven and oh. So you traded for one player. You're signing kind of the same player for a much different reason. And this is what they knew they had in their back pocket. I can't remember if it was Buster only or Todd Ferducci that brought this up. They knew and pretty much told them if you go three years, if everybody else gives me three years, I'm going to the Yankees. So they knew all they had to do was go to three years and he was going to sign with them. So that's why they didn't give the extra year to Corbin. That's why they didn't go after Evaldi because they knew that at the end of the day, if they didn't get the player they wanted for the price they wanted, they can give half the extra year. So they lived up to their expectations as far as their plans are concerned. Maybe it wasn't the plans that the fans had for them, but this is what they had planned all along.