 Let's hear from Garrett. Garrett, you were dominant for five and then clearly ran into some trouble there in that sixth inning. How do you process this outing? I mean, I try to take the good stuff from it. But in the end, especially right now, it just feels like it wasn't good enough. I thought there was some really nice pitches tonight, some really nice sequences. But in the end, I guess, when the biggest pitches mattered, we just kind of fizzled out. We weren't able to make good enough pitches. Why do you think you fizzled out in that sixth inning? Why did it unravel quickly? I mean, the two walks just probably could have put a little bit more pressure on both of those hitters. So Mrs. lost this leverage, a couple non-competitive pitches. And then, I mean, Mon Castle did a good job on the high fastball, getting the barrel to it, staying above the baseball. Ruiz kept the ball fair by a hair down the first baseline. And those two pitches maybe should be a different pitch to Mon Castle. Ruiz, maybe a little bit more inside or go a different direction. Just turned out to be a game of inches, I guess, that kind of just blew up into a big number. And so it is. Had it not been for that error, you actually would have been out of that inning with just one run. Does that error affect you at all? I mean, not enough to be able to. I should have stopped the bleeding. I should have picked them up. Thank you, Gary. Next one goes to Eric Bowland. Gary, you're cruising through five and 66 pitches going into the sixth. Just how shocking is it to have an inning unraveled so quickly like that when you're pitching as well as you were leaning into it? Yeah, it's a fickle game. And it can change really quickly. It's a game of inches. A lot of competitive pitches throughout the night strung some non-competitive ones together, and they strung some good swings together at the right time. So it's why we don't take any pitch for granted. It's why we play one pitch at a time. It wasn't that long ago where we had an inning that broke in our favor against the Mets. Started with a shift beater and then a botched whatever to third base, and all of a sudden we scored four and came back and ended up winning the game. So we've been on the right side of it. Tonight we were on the wrong side of it. Thank you, Gary. Can you take the next one from George King? Gary, would you agree that you just used the term pretty quickly? Do you agree that things have to turn around here pretty quickly as an overall as a team? Yeah, I'd like to see us turn the corner and start going in the right direction. No results don't always dictate exactly everything that's been going on. But at the same time, whether the offense has a good night and the pitchers can't pick it up, or whether the pitchers have a good night and the offense doesn't pick it up, or whether we play well, we pitch well, we hit well, we don't play good defense, it's just like all the things just aren't clicking for us. So by and large, we need to get all three areas of the game kind of going in the right direction. If we don't rattle off five, six, seven wins in a row, that's fine. But we've got to see improvement across the board. We've got to start picking each other up.