 This Mets team, eight and one's pretty good, E.K. You come off a sweep of the Nationals. Will they never sweep there? You buying? You buying the Mets right now? They have staying power? Yeah, I think they're staying power. If there's any team that is susceptible to health, which everybody is, I think they're the most susceptible to it. Obviously the pitching staff, you've got a lot of injury history there. And then, you know, the age of their everyday guys. You know, you have some guys that are over 30 years old. So, like I said, every team deals with that, but those guys can stay healthy with that pitching staff. You know, this can be the quickest turnaround as far as what they had last year to this year. And that's why the hiring of Cal Way, his manager, brilliant because that is a pitching coach. And that's, you know, that's what this team is going to be based on. For me, Sessmons has to stay healthy, majority of the year. Every year, he seems to have an injury, misses a ton of games. Him and that lineup, it makes that lineup look like a post-its-in-type team. And it takes the power pressure off everybody else. And everyone else can pick their spots like J Bruce and company, and they can do what they can, but they keep them in a lineup. Me, as a starting pitcher, that's the guy that I'm circling. He cannot beat me, and I have to pitch around him. But once he goes down, you see the offense go down, and it puts more pressure on the pitching staff, and it makes them have to pitch perfect, and they start to make mistakes. So it's a domino effect, but he's the main guy in that lineup that needs to stay healthy. To your point, sorry, he missed 73 games last year. You gotta have him. Well, I mean, there's no right-handed power. I mean, he goes out, you're good. I mean, you could say Frazier, but you know, at least from the left-handed side, you've got Bruce, you've got Conforto, you've got Gonzalez, you've got some threat, but if... They might face a detrain, no. They might, let's side, let's shut them up, you know. Well, that's the thing, if you lose Cespidus, it's no bueno. Hey, how about the way, you talking about Calla, the pitching coach, how about the way he's handling these guys? Cindergarde, look, he could throw 150 pitches and be fine. 90 pitches, could have probably gone far. He's like, you know, come on out some, we'll take what you did, you like that? I do, and that's why I say that that hiring, you know, for the Mets, where they were last year, if they could stay healthy with their pitching staff, they could turn it around in one year, and that's why, you know, bringing Calla away from the Indians over, he knows pitchers, and he's going to err on the side of the pitchers, the health of the pitchers. You know, sometimes you get guys in there that, you know, they aren't former pitching coaches or they're everyday guys, and they're like, why can't the guy warm up? Let's just get him loose, or what's wrong? Just throw it back when I play. He's very cognizant of that health down there. All right, so meanwhile, well, the Mets flying high, the Nationals just got swept. Strange thing is though, their offense has not been bad. It's been horrendously bad. 159 batting average coming in, worse than the league in slugging, time for 26 and runs. I don't think that pace will continue, but are we a little worried? They lost some guys in the off season now. Is this, they have enough on offense, E.K.? Yeah, they have enough. It's early, right? And it's cold and all those sort of things. Obviously Santana and Jay Bruce, they're going to miss those guys. Santana, for me, lengthened that lineup, saw a lot of pitches. So then, you know, other guys, they benefit from that. But I think Zimmer is going to be, he's going to have a breakout year this year. I think he's going to separate himself. And then Karnas, you want to get, you know, Frank, Frank could tell you, if he were here, he doesn't do anything in the cold. But when that, whether or not he's going to be, yeah, he's going to be. He was right. Again, you know, Lindor, I don't, I don't worry, especially in that division too. I think they're going to be fine. I just wish they kind of would have stayed in his fleet takes for Santana or Bruce, especially Bruce coming off one of his better years and the number that he signed for wasn't really that high. So when you lose two guys like that, they might swing through some baseballs, but those guys are RBI getters year and year out. I agree with you, K, they elongate that lineup and they take the pressure off it. You have one guy that switches and it's a left-handed bat that they need. So I think at the break and at the also break, they need to go get somebody to really kind of solidify that lineup. They'll stay in the race. And they did last year, obviously with Bruce. They were a 500 team through May last year. They weren't a great starting team last year. And look at this historically bad offense through 10 games. EK, we talk about all these games being the cold. Okay, you just put that into words. Like, oh, it's cold, it's cold, but it's hard to judge hitting in that. I'm talking 25, 30, right? So think of it this way, when you go up to the plate, I mean, first of all, when you're facing big league pitching and you're facing guys like Don Trell or guys that are throwing 95, you know, it's like, okay, I got to motivate to get into this box. Well, then now you add into the thing. If I don't square it up, I'm going to be here. My hands are going to be hurting like you would not believe, whether it's off the end of the bat or getting jammed or anything. If you don't hit it perfectly, your hands are, and they feel like they break. They honest to goodness feel like you can break your hands. There's nothing good about playing baseball and cold weather. Yeah. Nothing. I think that's why a lot of these teams, a lot of these numbers are a little skewed right now. Plus it's early. It's 10 games, 12 games into the season. That's the bottom line.