 You know, he's won two MVP awards. He's finished second in the voting four times. I mean, so he's always right there. His greatness was, what does it remind you of? Who does it remind you of? If I had to pick a player, I would say Barry Bonds. Absolutely. And Barry, and I would still even say that Barry is up here. Okay. And then there's Mike Trout. For now. For now. And I'd even, look at Barry Bonds, you go back and you look at the numbers. I mean, that's a career, over a thousand OPS. He'd have seasons where he'd walk 200 and some odd times and strike out 40 times. He'd hit more home runs than strikeouts. That's Joe DiMaggio's. And the thing about to Trout, Trout still, like if you're trying to pick holes, 170 strikeouts or 140 strikeouts, he doesn't run as much as Barry. Now, as Mike Trout, you know, look at, he's the greatest player of our generation and he's young enough, but you still, Barry Bonds, again, those numbers and what he did. Absolutely. I never saw Ted Williams, but I don't know that there was a greater hitter ever than Barry. Yeah. You both for a while, you jumped right out and you pitched against him. I tell you what, he was a man amongst boys. There was nothing he couldn't do. You had the game plan to stop him and you still couldn't stop him. The league couldn't stop him. And he understood. He picked his spots when he can affect the ball game. He was a defensive monster as well. But if you made one mistake over the heart of the plate, he was going to hit that ball on the stands. And that's why I see Mike Trout. Mike Trout, you make a mistake to him in the heart, he's going to hit that ball on the stands. And the one difference, nobody pitched to Barry, and he still put up. He still put up. They didn't pitch to him. And then when he did get his pitch, that ball was in the water. Yeah. He had a great eye at the plate, too. Yeah. And by the way, his 55th birthday today. So happy birthday. Happy birthday, Barry. Mr. Bonds. I'm sure Trout loves to be spoken of in that company. What do you take most from this clash of division leaders in late July? Well, I still, the Yankees are the much better ball club. I mean, I don't care what happens in this series. They're a deeper team. And just the other night, you know, the twins had an opportunity, I mean, they were way out in front, then they had an opportunity two or three different times to put the Yankees away and they weren't able to do it. And, you know, the depth of this lineup, the fact that, you know, the twins right now, while they're playing them well, we don't even know if the twins are going to be in the playoffs. I mean, they're fighting for their life right now. Right. Only a three game lead. With the clean in the Indians, right? And so this Yankee ball club, though, they can beat you in so many different ways. And offensively, they just continue to wear you out. And again, tonight, you see what they're doing. I don't think you've ever seen in the Yankee history, and they've had some mega lineups. Don't say Yankee history. Don't say Yankee history. Don't say Yankee history. This might be the best. This might be the best. I mean, one through eight. This might be the deepest lineup. Well, you don't remember that year of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig? No, with this baseball and this era, I mean, it's a different, not the players, I would think. You ever been on the mound? So. You've been on the mound? So. This is a deep lineup. This is a tough lineup. Tough lineup to pitch to. I can't figure out one guy in this lineup that I feel like I can take a deep breath and work around. Every guy in this lineup, you make a mistake to, they can hit the ball out of the ballpark. And the one thing about this lineup, they're not swinging and missing. They're not chasing. But the twins do the same thing. Yeah, yeah. But this is different. But this is what I'll say, though. I agree they're a deep lineup, but they'll pulverize mediocre to average pitching. But you put a horse on the mound. There's a lot of swings and misses. Like a Bueller. Like we talked about. Even a Kohl or Erlander, I think it can still be navigated because there are a ton of swings and misses. They swung and missing two weeks. All right. So you're not taking this lineup over the Dodger lineup. See, you guys are some Homer's ducks. Don't try to set me up. I just wanted somebody to balance this out. I like them a little bit better. I would say the Dodger lineup controls home play and is much more disciplined than the Yankees. But against a good pitcher, I think the Dodgers give a ball club more trouble. Mediocre pitching, they'll absolutely, the Yankees will absolutely discipline. We may see the Yankees at Dodgers or the World Series decide this, which is the way you're shaking it. So the Yankees are who we thought they were. The twins are not on their level. They're a notch below. The twins can't pitch there. And that's a big problem. That's the bottom line. They can't navigate through the lineup. The rotation can't navigate. The whooping can't. So that's very concerning. There are definitely a couple notches below the Yankees. And I'll say this, the Yankees, we were looking this up, 101 games, only nine times, nine times in 101 games have starting pitchers gone seven innings. That's amazing. I mean, that's crazy. That just tells you, as you mentioned, the lineup just continues to wear you out. Yeah. The starting pitching for the twins in this series, look at the home run ball that we've talked about. Look at the pitch count. That's the crazy thing. Five innings, 101, four innings, 102 pitches. And then the bullpen, oh my goodness. Every pitching you saw out there for Minnesota, they were sweating like they were working out there. Right. And they couldn't hold last night at home. Couldn't hold an 8-0 lead.