 You thought someone getting out here as a rookie and what do you want to do to impress the coaches that are in your team? Yeah, I mean, just play my game. Just play the game that I've been gifted to play. Don't overdo anything. I've been blessed to come out here and be with the guys and to show the teammates and the coaches what I can do. But for me, I just look at it as just getting better every single day. Nothing crazy. Obviously, you want to impress everybody, but you still got rules and you still got plays. You got to execute. And for me, I'm just being a good teammate and going out there. How exciting is it to come to your rookie season? Last couple of years, they've spent high quality draft picks on offensive players. You'll be playing with Kyle Pitts and you'll be playing with Drake London and yourself and Desmond Ritter. You're also just coming to a team that looks like they are focused on making sure the offense has all the pieces it needs. Yeah, I mean, it's exciting, man. And for them to give me a chance to come out here and to show the abilities that I've been given, I think it's pretty cool because Drake and Kyle, those are obviously two great players for the team, for the NFL. They do things the right way at their position. So hopefully, I can learn from them in practices and even off the field to see how they became successful in their game. So I become successful in my own. Kyle, what should I have to say that you are a home run hitter? That comes with certain expectations, right? How do you feel about the expectations that you're going to be a home run hitter? Yeah, I mean, obviously, I'm going to have expectations. But for me, it's just another opportunity to be the best player I can be. Obviously, there's a lot of eyes and a lot of people. But if I just focus on being a good teammate and understanding that to bring my expertise and my skill set to this offense, then I think everything will take care of itself. So I'm really more excited to show what I can do as a good teammate and then let everything else go from there. What's been the biggest transition for you so far and just like between college and now? I know it's early, but what's been different about it for you? I haven't seen nothing yet. Obviously, this is a professional game, the business side of things. But for me, it's kind of the same as college. For me, as a freshman, I came in, had a backpack on, stayed in the dorm. It's all the same thing. Met new teammates, met new guys. And all the guys here are really cool. So we got along super quick and just laughed and had a good time with each other. Because obviously, there's a lot of guys in different positions. But I think that I don't care what position you're in, whether you're a high picker or whether you're not. I think everybody has to prove themselves on these days. And just be good people. Like, don't be a guy that wants to boast or all that. No, hex, no. For me, I just look at it as being a positive teammate and making sure everybody's getting better. How are you managing the outside expectations, though? I mean, somewhere, are you predicting you could be the rookie of the year offense? How are you managing that? Yeah, for me, I don't pay attention to it. It's really easy for me to just not pay attention to that stuff. I know that God has a plan for me. And if it's to do those kind of things, then that's what I'm going to do. But I do know that I'm going to work as hard as I can to be the best football player, best teammate I can be. And then, obviously, get everything down the right way when it comes to the playbook and my assignments and what I'm supposed to do. And then after that, then hopefully those kind of things will be in my life. What would be your ontarian ultimate draft? You talk so much about a person who's more of a fake and a culture of what happens. Since you've been here, how are you fitting into a culture of your own opponent? Yeah, I mean, just being a good person, first of all. Being a good teammate, I think that all that ties in to who you are as a football player. Obviously, God gave you talent, like I've been saying, to be out here to show what you can do. But I think that if you're a guy that does it the right way on and off the field and that respects your teammates and doesn't want to come in here thinking that you're all that just because you're a high pick. For me, I just want to learn to get better. And then, but everything else, take care of yourself. Jen, how do you feel having contract negotiations out of the way and that way you can just focus on? Work your minute camp and what you're doing on the field? Yeah, I mean, it feels good. Even before, if I didn't get it done, it's not a thing that will cloud my mind. I know it'll get done when it gets done. Obviously, it was yesterday, but it's a good feeling just to go out there and to not worry about anything else except playing football and just doing what you love. And speaking of yesterday, being from Arizona, have you circled week 12 on the schedule and having the opportunity to play in front of that home crowd? Yeah, I mean, that would be pretty, I saw that game. Just playing over there, all the family and everybody from Arizona watch that game. But I'm excited to play them for sure. Can you talk about how you got number seven? How did you get it from Koo? And then, do you know what comes with that number here in Atlanta? Yeah, I mean, so for me, obviously my faith is so big. So it's a biblical number. And I think that that's why I chose that most importantly, just it's in the Bible. And then, obviously, some great, some legendary players played here with it. And when I asked Koo, if I can wear it, he was super cool about it. And obviously, we want to do some of my cool things. Obviously, with the number, me and him, and then the coaches asked if I can wear it. And he was super excited about it. But I think it's pretty cool to continue on such a great number. I know when I was thinking about the number, I was like, I don't know if I should do it, because there's some good players that work. But I know it means a lot to the program. And hopefully, I can ride with it and wear it the right way. Regent, Chris, let's talk about one thing that you'd like to know. I would say there's so much on the fact that it was on ATL, we can see that. How do you feel about, of course, so far as he's the mark, what do you expect from him? He's on a lot of expectations for you. Like, what are your expectations from him as a play-com and coming in? Yeah, well, obviously, the first practice today, he uses me everywhere, from receiver to running bag, and he lets me do my abilities and skill set the right way, whether it's catching the ball, running routes, obviously running the football, blocking, doing it all. And he told me, I'm going to coach you hard. And I'm going to expect nothing less, because I need him to, he has a plan for me and with his coaching style, and making sure that I'm doing the right thing on the field and always pushing myself to new limits, new heights. I got to match that. And obviously, come 50-50 with him and give great effort, be a good leader. Obviously, I'm young, so I'm trying to learn how to be a leader and how to be a guy that can do things well for my teammates, but he going to coach me hard, and I'm going to expect nothing less, because we're all trying to do something big here. And that's what's got to happen in order to do that. How important is it for a coach to be so young right there? Just overall, not going to coach me up just overall as a player? How important is it for your coach to be that way? Yeah, I think it's very important, because you need that kind of coaching, I think, to become a great player. And if you're a direct coach, you've got to be a coachable player. You can't be a player that can't take it, or that's going to pout and get sad. You've got to just pick your head up and just say yes, sir, and then just keep on going. Because I think if you're a guy that starts getting into what coaches say, or if it affect you personally, then you're showing you're pretty much not a coachable player. But for me, Coach Smith, Coach Petrie, those dudes are obviously guys that just want me to get better. And that want me to go out there and succeed for the whole team. Football again. How do you see yourself fitting into this deep? Wherever I'm needed. I definitely feel like that's what makes me the player that I am, is that I'm open to learning, open to doing whatever for the team. So I'm definitely open to doing whatever the coaches need me to do. Coach had said that there's a lot of versatility on both sides of the ball, and players being able to do multiple things. And you see that as a good thing for you as a good fit? Yeah, I definitely see that as a good fit. Because at the end of the day, the most important thing is being on the field. So whichever way I can get on the field, I'm open to that. One of the things that I'm fascinated by as far as how guys are being used in the league now, you have the hard hitter safety. These guys come in like your head up, come across the field. But now it seems like those guys have to be not only playing box safety, they're playing one-eyed safety, or come and play in the slot. What do you feel? Do you feel like your game matches? Like the modern-day safety in the NFL? Yeah, I feel like my game matches whatever is needed. If you need a hard-hitting safety that can play in the box, I can do that. If you need a safety over the top, I can do that. So I definitely feel like the game is changing. But that's where players like me come in to play, guys that can do a lot of things. How do you feel about Nick Savoring? How influential was he with you as far as your development as a player when you got to Alabama? He was very influential in my development as a player. I definitely credit Coach Savoring a lot for where I'm at right now. He definitely helped me a lot on the field, helped me grow as a man off the field. He taught me a lot of things as far as maturity and being ready for the moment. So Coach Savoring definitely was a key cornerstone in my development. I definitely appreciate everything that Coach Savoring and Alabama did for me. And have you ever got a chance to talk to Coach Nielsen yesterday and where his expectations are for you? Not fully yet. We're just taking some coaching right now. I'm really just more interested in learning to play, but getting that down pack first before I really talk about what I'm needed to do. I was talking to Zeck about, have you ever been like a world where he's got down here and have to be here? He said, yeah, I got a chance to find a place to stay. Have you? Not yet, not yet. Football is my biggest focus right now. I want to learn a couple of plays first before I figure out where I'm going to live it. I talked to you a little bit about that. So one question after you got drafted, but just learning from Larry Johnson on Ohio State, how much do you feel like that helps you kind of adapt when you get up to this level? Yeah, you know, like I said, the stuff that he teaches works and it's proven. So, you know, just be able to take that and refine it and bring it to this level, you know, something I'll have to do. Is there any kind of fraternity among the Ohio State defense alignment that have, just because there have been so many, especially inns that have kind of come up to the NFL and been really productive? Yeah, it's really not even just to do line, you know, it's everybody on Ohio State. You know, we got, you know, Liam's here. You know, we just signed Jeff. So those guys both already reached out and we already talked. So, you know, just kind of having guys who come from, you know, where I came from and kind of, they're always, they're on my corner. They're gonna help me out because they're a fellow Buckeye. You know, something that I appreciate. So you asked us before, sorry, but how was day one for you to be here? It was good. It was good. It was definitely, definitely the first day. And definitely some things you got to go coach up and, you know, learn from and grow from. But, you know, I feel like I did a pretty good job. What made you kind of feel like, okay, I'm in the NFL. Now this isn't just another college practice. Really, it was just new. Like, it was just new. I didn't, like the format of practice is different. I'm not, I don't know how it's up there for four years. So, you know, I know how practice runs. I know a period one, two, three, four, all the way. And I know exactly what they are. I know exactly where to go. And now it's kind of like, okay, I got to kind of relearn all those little things that, you know, I didn't, I don't necessarily know right now. I know it's only three days, but what do you hope to accomplish by the end of it? What will you be like after you go good now? Yeah, really, I kind of want to get a mix, make sure like to have the install down, just automatic. That's kind of the one thing, you know, I just want to make sure I keep going hard and make sure, you know, I kind of get in that, getting that football shape which is different than, you know, running gassers and doing things like that. You know, it's very different. So, you know, really just to make sure I got the install down and then, you know, football shape. Early impressions of Bijan, just what have you seen, what do you think of him? I mean, that's a question for coach. Who have you seen him out there and playing? I mean, like, okay, I'm glad he's on my team. Like, you know, but you're gonna have to face, no. I gotta drive.