 Opening day is finally here. We are ready to get the 2023 Major League Baseball season underway tomorrow with the first pitch of the 2023 season. And I'm delighted to be here with you once again for the seventh season on the solo shot here on the FanDuel Podcast Network at numberfire.com breaking down the slate, talking pitchers, talking stacks and talking about how to win when filling out your FanDuel Alliance. We're here today to break that opening day and the main slate for tomorrow. So let's dive on in and get you ready for day number one. This is the solo shot right here on the FanDuel Podcast Network and numberfire.com. My name is Jim Sonnis. I am a senior writer and analyst for numberfire.com here to break down an 11 game of main slate on Thursday with lock set for 105 PM Eastern over on FanDuel.com. So again, if you listen to this on Thursday after 105 PM, there is a four game later slate that we'll lock later on today. So still some action you can get, check out those in the lobby over on FanDuel. Not discussing those here on the podcast for today, focusing just on the main slate because it is a doozy. Again, 11 games there, we're gonna break down. All you need to know about that slate in just one second but first a reminder with the solo shot now being back along with PGA, UFC and NBA podcasts all in the same place. Make sure you are subscribed to the numberfire daily fantasy podcast wherever you get your podcasts, the solo shot will be here every weekday from now until the end of the year. So all in the same place, just search for it. The numberfire daily fantasy podcast wherever you get your podcasts, hit subscribe. And if you like what you hear, leave us a five star review as well because it does help us out a bunch. Grand slams, no hitters and double plays are back and there is no better place to get in on the MLB action than FanDuel, America's number one sports book. 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Louisiana is 1-800-777-770-STOP in Maryland, mdgamblinghealth.org in New York, 1-800-778-HOPENWIRE or text OPENWIRE in West Virginia, 1-800-GAMBLER.net. If you wanna listen in for some betting insights on Major League Baseball, I'll be going through that in the Cover In The Spread podcast feed, which is again now daily, talking MLB for opening day later on today. So if you want betting stuff for Major League Baseball, I'll be having that myself over on the Cover In The Spread podcast feed as always. It is an 11 game slate here for this opening day slate over on FanDuel again. Lock is at 105 PM Eastern. And I think the key thing early on in the season from across Major League Baseball is going to be weather. We can talk rule changes, stuff like that. That matters, still invasives, et cetera. But this time of year, weather matters a lot because the gap between the coldest game on the slate and the warmest game is probably the biggest it'll be until October and stuff like that. So I wanna list out the games with temperatures under 50 degrees at first pitch for Thursday's slate. And the key thing to note here is offense is more prevalent in games with higher weather or with hotter weather, higher humidity, stuff like that. So the games I will list here, lower temperatures that advantages pitching and disadvantages hitting. The games to highlight there in terms of being cold are the Giants of the Yankees, the Braves at the Nationals, Orioles at Red Sox and the Brewers at the Cubs. So again, Giants Yankees, Braves Nationals, Orioles Red Sox, Brewers Cubs. I would downgrade batters there, upgrade pitchers because the ball does not fly as well when the temperatures are colder. In Kansas City, for the Twins and the Royals, winds are out to left field at 19 miles per hour. There is a chance of rain in San Diego for the Padres and Rockies. That game should play, but it is worth noting that there's rain because a lot of times we'll see clubs willing to postpone if weather is not ideal for their home opener. So keep an eye on that for sure and be aware of that as you're filling out lineups that is one of the later games on this slate. So that's the one risky spot in terms of weather, is San Diego for the Padres and the Rockies. Now we're gonna dive in to this slate here in just one second. But first, we wanna go through the overview of the show for people who may be new. A, welcome, glad to have you on board, but B, the way this works is I will go through each day. The top three pitchers I like on the slate over at Fandwall, typically it'll be two studs and a value play in case you want to spend down a pitcher. I am typically a strong proponent of spending up because they're higher salary for a reason and easier to predict, you get that good ceiling. Also with a good floor, I care less about the floor than about the upside, but I tend to spend if a pitcher will try to highlight value plays when possible, not as possible in opening day, given the gap between the studs and the rest can be pretty large. But that'll be the typical outline there, two studs and a value play a pitcher. I'll then go through three teams of stack. And for people who may be new to MLB DFS stacking is when you pair players together within the same offense. On Fandwall, you can have up to four batters from the same team within the same lineup. So you kind of want to do that at all times and you want to have four player stacks, maybe multiple four player stacks in the same lineup if you can because if Trey Turner gets an RBI, someone else from the Philly score and you want to get the points both for the RBI and the run scored, you get that, but also because there's no time clock in baseball, every time Trey Turner gets a base hit that ups the projected volume for everybody else within that lineup. So you want to stack, you want to stack aggressively. I know like two players as kind of a stack, but really when I say stack, I mean three to four players. And to me, I want to have this few one offs in a lineup as I can possibly get to make sure my lineup plays well together, it's cohesive and works that way. So two, four player stacks in a lineup, four player stack and three player stack and one off, stuff like that. That's the way you want to play things. That's what a stack is for those of you who may be new. And finally, I'll go through things to walk to the end, other pictures that didn't discuss, maybe a team I'm lower on than what the market will be most likely, one offs, things like that towards the end all in the same show. So we're gonna do that each and every weekday here on the number fire daily fantasy podcast feed. You'll come out every morning, probably I'll try to have it up around 930, 945 in there, depends on the timing of covering the spread for that day. It'll be up on the number fire daily fantasy podcast feed and then later on up on the Fandal YouTube page. So if you prefer to watch it in video form, you can find that as well over on the Fandal YouTube page just search for Fandal on YouTube and it'll pop up the page there to get that if you want the video version of the show instead. I will be hosting most days, but we'll also have Austin Swain and Tom Beckio in the mix if you listened last year, you know their voices, you know their thoughts well, Tom of course, the host of our NBA show, The Daily ISO, Austin doing USC and doing a lot of solo shot for us as well. So check out Tom on Twitter at DFS underscore Tom, check out Austin on Twitter at a Swain three, if you want their insights on baseball and again they will be here throughout the year as well. With all that said, let's finally dive on in and get you ready for this opening day slate. Pitching preview for opening day over on Fandal, Corbin Burns comes in with the highest salary on Fandal. He is $11,000. Garrett Cole is 10-9, Jacob DeGramme at 10-8. Max Scherzer is 10-7, Aaron Nola 10-6. Got Shane McClanhan against Detroit. He is 10-4, Sandiel Contra facing Scherzer at 10-2. Max Freed comes in at $9,800. Alec Minoa, 97. Blake Snell in the potential weather game is 95. Pablo Lopez making his twins debut at 92. Hunter Green is 91. Miles Nicholas, 91 as well. We have Marcus Strowman and Eduardo Rodriguez as the other guys at $8,000 are higher. Now this time of year, it's hard to find guys with huge projected pitch counts because they're getting ramped up, don't wanna go too hard right away and that's a thing to consider. We'll talk about Jacob DeGramme in things to watch because he is a big piece in this discussion, the pitch count discussion. But there are two guys I feel really good about and I like the spots they're in for this opening day slate. And I'm gonna rank them number one and number two. Those guys are Garrett Cole at 10-9 and Max Scherzer at 10-7. I'm gonna favor Max Scherzer at the top of my pool. Let's talk about him and we'll talk about Garrett Cole later on. Scherzer is facing the Marlins on the road. Their active roster last year had a 102 WRC plus against Wright and you can find that by going to FanGrass. There is an active roster button. Click that, it'll show you the guys who are on their active roster now what they did during the 2022 season because you wanna judge it based on that not based on what the team did last year. Lot of roster change over stuff like that. So you wanna make sure you have the active roster tab clicked when you're looking at team level stats. So 102 WRC plus in the Marlins you will notice that the WRC pluses will be above average for most teams because a lot of the lesser hitters have been filtered out, you got the good hitters healthy once again back in the pool. So a 102 WRC plus on this slate is actually a tiny bit below average which is a good thing for Max Scherzer. The good thing with the Marlins is that they don't strike out or they don't hit a lot of fly balls and that's one of Max Scherzer's biggest weaknesses. And the park helps that too. Though it's actually a decent park this time of year with everywhere else being kind of cold. But with Scherzer, he had injuries last year but when he was healthy, we saw him pitch really well. We saw Scherzer make 15 starts after he came back off the IL. And in that time, he really cut back in his cutter usage. And in those 15 starts, he had a 2.84 skill interactive ERA with a 31% strikeout rate. He paired them with a low walk rate, hard hit rate is pretty decent. And again, the one issue was a lot of fly balls but the Marlins is not a team that supplies a lot of those. So Scherzer pitched well down the stretch and this spring, phenomenal stuff for Scherzer. 17 and 2 thirds innings, 25 strikeouts, two walks. I'm gonna put less weight on that due to the World Baseball Classic by looting the player pool a bit. But it does help that in that sample, Scherzer was good. Never a bad thing to be a good pitcher. The biggest thing for me that makes Mac Scherzer a stud on this slate is pitch count because Scherzer went 100 pitches in his final spring training outing. He is fully stretched out, he is ready to go. I have him projected at 100 this year, nobody else above 90, for this slate, nobody else above 95, I want that. 100 pitches for Scherzer leads to a 7.8 projected strikeouts for me, it's a very good number. I will take it and that makes Mac Scherzer my number one starter on this opening day slate. I will put Garrett Cole seconds, the weather is definitely a thing in his favor. Only 42 degrees of Yankee stadium for first pitch and we want that for pitching and it's especially good for Garrett Cole because he did let up a lot of hard contact last year. The most relevant sample for me on Cole is his final 13 starts where he trimmed back on his cutter usage and in that time, this did still get a decent number of strikeouts, a 33% strikeout rate in that time but he also let up a 40% hard hit rates and a 43% fly ball rate. That's a big part of why his ZRA was 4.09, a lot of too many home runs. Now that's an issue because suppressing hard contact is a skill that we want for our pitchers but it's less of an issue when it's this cold out. So that's a good thing for Cole. The strikeout upside should be there. He's facing the Giants at home. The Giants have a 23% strikeout rate on their current active roster against Reidy's last year. And I think the pitch count for Cole should be there too. He went 84 pitches on Mark 24th. So I've got him projected for 93. That might be a bit conservative because we could see a 15 pitch jump in there but even at 93 pitches, I have Cole projected for 7.3 strikeouts. So when you add that to the weather helping his floor, I like that quite a bit. Now you could make a case for Jacob DeGrom, despite the low pitch count, we'll talk about later on. Could make a case for Aaron Ola. He could make a case for Corbyn Burns, a lot of guys on this slate. But when you consider pitch count, consider matchup, consider weather. I think my two favorite guys for today are Max Scherzer and Jacob and Garrett Cole. They will be my top two pitchers on this opening day slate. Now, as mentioned, I will typically try to slot in a value play here. A guy at $9,000 or lower who I think has upside and can't compete with those top end studs. Tough to do for opening day with how many good studs there are. So I don't want to spend down for the sake of spending down. I want to spend down if there is a guy down there with bankable upside I can feel good about. I think the lowest I can go and feel good about that player having a ceiling to keep pace with Cole, Scherzer, DeGrom, Nola, Burns. I think the lowest I can go is Hunter Green at $9,100. And I am fine considering him if you want to spend down a bit. And you know why this is the case. You're gonna get strikeouts with Hunter Green. Those were there all season for Green, but he was struggling big time with hard contact. He had a stretch where he cut back on the foreseeing fastballs because they were contributing to that hard contact and it helped a bit. But then he made a second adjustment in late June where he decided to go back to that foreseeing fastball and try to rejack up the strikeouts. And he made 11 starts after going back to the foreseeing fastball. And he was really good in that time. 3.05 skill interactive ERA that accounts for some of the issues with hard contact or with the batted balls. It undersells hard contact. So it does not fully encapsulate the issues for Green. Skill interactive ERA has its flaws. That is definitely the big one. Put the results were there. They were good. 3.56 ERA, actual ERA in that time too. 32% strikeout rate. He allowed a barrel on 7.7% of balls and play. We saw Green have 10 strikeouts against this Pirates lineup in a second to last start. So he's fun. He's got upside and it's a great matchup. The Pirates active roster, 25% strikeout rate last year which ranks highest on the main slate. So there are a lot of things that push us here for Hunter Green. So the question is, why is he not higher? Why am I not lea... One, why not take the savings and use Green instead of Cole instead of Scherzer? It's mostly due to pitch count. Green never went longer than five innings during the spring. Did everyone minor league start in there? So I don't know what his pitch count was in the second to last start, but it's an unknown. 58 pitches for Green is final tune up. We see a lot of teams scale back for their guys in the final start of the spring to keep them fresh. That could be the case here. Because of the unknowns, I have Green projected for 85 pitches just because I don't really know what he's gonna do. The strikeout projection at 85 pitches, that was 6.7, which is not bad for $9,100. And that's why I'm okay using here at 91, but that's also why I'm not higher. If he were projected for 95 pitches, if I knew for certainty what his pitch counts were, I'd probably feel better about him, but I still like him a lot. I will be here, but if you're giving me one lineup or two lineups, I am going to Cole, going to Scherzer because they feel a lot better about their pitch counts. They feel a lot better about their upside. They feel better about them having difference making range of outcomes on this slate. So that's the pitching discussion for today to give a talk about Jacob de Grom in Things to Watch. Let's go now to the stacking section though and talk about offenses I'm pinpointing for today. And I think that weather should play a massive factor here. Matter of pitching, but less so there because I've focused on strikeouts. Those don't change as much based on weather, but for hitting, it matters for every single plate appearance. And if you look at the implied team totals, you can find these over on Number of Fire, go to the heat map, if you look at the top implied team totals on this slate, two of the top three are in games with temperatures in the low 40s. That's a pretty big red flag to me. And we'll still talk about one of them. We'll talk about the Braves later all, we'll talk about the Red Sox and Things to Watch, but I want the top two stacks for me to come from better weather for hitting. That's why I like the twins as my top stack against that Grand Quay for Thursday. It is 68 degrees in Kansas City. As mentioned, the wind is blowing out too. Those are good things in terms of weather, much better than what you get in Boston or in DC. Grand Quay struggled during the spring that might not matter because he likes to tinker, likes to kind of mess around with his pitching coaches, stuff like that. It could be related to that, but last year for Grand Quay during the regular season when he was not tinkering, not dicking around, it was not perfect either. He made 13 starts toward the end of the year through more forcing fastballs and fewer sliders and the strikeout rate in that time, 13%, led up a 38.5% hard hit rate. The hard hit rates I'm using here for pitchers is the percentage of balls in play with an exit velocity above 95 miles per hour. So not the fan grass hard hit rates, it is the one from Baseball as well, which you can't find on fan grass as well, but in the stack cast tab instead of the batted ball tab. But 38.5% hard hit rate about league average roughly. And that's actually okay because if you let up that many balls in play and you let up a league average hard hit rate, that means we'll get a decent number of well struck balls. Now it didn't hurt Grand Quay that much because his ERA in that time was 2.50, but he had a lot of good luck with home runs. He left just a 5.1% Homer to fly ball ratio and it's pretty tough to sustain that in even if we, you know, see some flukeiness with the balls and, you know, jacking around with that. The twins offense is fine. Again, their WRC plus is 102. As mentioned, that's a bit below average for this slate. They're not on a massive power team, but they have individuals we can feel good about. The whole team might not be great against righties, but there are guys who are. Byron Buxton has a reasonable salary of $3,500. You get stolen base juice, you get power. I love that at 35. Buxton, not a lot of volume this spring because he's nursing that hip injury. You know, it'll be DHing on Thursday, but 35 likely too low for him. Carlos Correa 3000, Jose Miranda 28, not a ton of power from against righties, but, you know, still enough. I think he got better as he went along. Max Kepler is 25. So you can stack the twins while spending of a pitcher and not suppressing your upside within the individual batters. And I love that. You can still get to Byron Buxton. They're focal points while using a Scherzer or a Cole. I want that whenever I can get it. So I do like the twins a lot. I do want to talk Trevor Larnack here for a second. I would expect him to start against righties. And in the spring, really good spring for Larnack. He wasn't a lot to make the team, but kind of forced his way there. He had a 400 ISO against righties in the spring, a 13% strikeout rate for looking at spring numbers. ISO and strikeout rates are the two numbers that stabilize most quickly. So that's the only ones I'll be looking at here, but 400 ISO, 13% strikeout rates. Larnack showed good power last year when he was up, but he just struck out too much. Seems like he's healthy right now. His salary is $2,200. I don't think we'll see many people be on Larnack here, but I would like to be. I think he's a pretty good player. So Trevor Larnack, a key piece of the twin stacks if you want to be a bit different. The other good weather situation, or I should say lack of weather, is not an elite matchup. And it's a lack of weather because it's a dome. That's a Tampa Bay raise. I like them a lot, despite the lack of an elite matchup here for a couple of reasons. The first one is they're facing in Rodriguez. It's not because they're facing him, but it's the fact that he's a lefty. And the rays project to crush left-handed pitching. Their active roster had a 120 WRC plus against lefties last year. They had a very low strikeout rates. That's series number one. They crush lefties. Rodriguez is a lefty. Reason two is I think the rays are going to steal a lot of bases. They had the fifth most stolen bases this spring, 34. And they were caught just six times. And I want that aggressiveness because we could see a lot of teams running a lot this year. That's going to skew things for DFS where speed is a bigger factor in the equation. And that's especially true in March and April when power is not as focal because the weather's bad. So if you're looking at the percentage of fandal points scored by stolen bases, that's going to be higher this time of year always, but it's going to be higher this year in general as well. So I do want teams that will run. The twins won't. That's one downside for them. The rays I think will run quite a bit even against the lefty, which we'll talk about here in a second. I want that aggressiveness with the rates. It gives me two sources of upside via the power against lefties and via the stolen bases. As I said, the matchup here is not elite. Rodriguez last year, after he came back started mixing and a sinker down the stretch and he got some good bad at bald data as a result. But still in that time, the 4.25 skill interactive ERA, his ERA was 4.61. So it's not like he was a shutdown kind of guy, especially when you have to grade in a curve with this being opening day. So it's a fine matchup. The, but the rays are great against lefties, likely to swipe bags. They were in a dome, which is good this time of year. So I love all that. It's enough for me to be on the rays as my number two stack on the main slate. I would downgrade them a bit if Wonder Franco can't play. It sounds like he'll be good to go, maybe with that quad injury. But he's a big piece. He's an important player. It would impact his willingness to run two, which stinks. But I think we can be here regardless. Randy Orozarena is one of the top guys on the slates, whether in a stack with the rays or as a one-off. He had a 242 ISO against lefties. He stole eight bases against lefties. You don't see a ton of guys who will swipe bags against lefties, but Orozarena definitely did last year. So again, new rules this year, bigger bags. I think that benefits guys who run. Orozarena will and he has powered a boot against lefties. So I think Orozarena is one of my focal points at batter on this slate. I do think you can slot the braids in the third for stacking. Temperature in DC is 46 degrees. If that were higher, if it were 56 degrees, maybe the braids be first for me, but it's not. And I think we can feel good putting them third, even if that does wind up meaning that we are lower on them than the field. I think I'm okay making that trade off because weather should matter a lot. And it does for me. They're facing Patrick Corbin. Corbin struggled last year, made a lot of tweaks, never really fixed everything. The final tweak for Corbin was basically ditching his foreseam fastball, which was good, a good move, but still didn't cure his issues. It was a nine-storm sample for Corbin with fewer foreseamers. His skill interactive ERA was 4.80. He had a 14% strikeout rates. Hard hit rates stayed high at 45%. And he led up a lot of balls in play. The braids, smack lefties. Very good team against lefties. A 182 ISO on the active roster against lefties. That's the highest on the main sites against the opposing pitchers, handedness. So it's kind of the perfect convergence outside of the weather. It's a high power team against a guy who has struggled with hard contact and doesn't get strikeouts. Again, we could wind up lower on them than the market by putting them third in terms of stacking, but I'm fine with that process given the weather here. I just can't go a whole lot lower than that, all things considered. So twins one, raise two, brace three, despite the bad weather for them. I do think that if you're gonna stack the braids though, you'll want to be a bit different than what the consensus does. And I think my favor of doing that is by using both catchers, assuming they're both in the lineup and Sean Murphy and Travis Darneau. Both those guys, really good against lefties. A 231 ISO last year for Darneau. 235 for Murphy. They both have low strikeout rates as well. The downside here is if you use Murphy and Darneau together, you cannot use Matt Olson because all three of those guys are catchers slash first base eligible. So you can't use all three together. That's definitely a pretty big bummer because you do wanna get Olson in there whenever you can. But I think it's a good trade-off and it allows you to be different without being dumb. We always want that in daily fantasy. So there are plenty of routes to be different, but I think that what I would say is give a thought. How can I stack the braves while being different without being dumb? To me, this is my favorite route having both Murphy and Darneau in there because people don't like using catchers. They both are first base eligible, which means if you use both, you're filling up your utility slot. You can't use Matt Olson. There are downsides, but I think that's a good thing. So that's my route. I would just give a thought. Ask yourself, how can I stack this team being different without being dumb? And those to me, I prefer routes for doing so. Things to watch for the main slate. One guy we did not discuss in the pitching section was Jacob DeGrom, and I kind of talked about this before, but it's all due to pitch counts. DeGrom, 54 pitches on March 25th. He was at 34 on March 20th because of that early spring injury. I had DeGrom projected for 75 pitches. I think that might be a tiny bit high, but that still gives him a strikeout project of 8.2, which is bananas on that pitch count. I'm not sure how deep he will go. That's enough for me to go with Scherzer and Cole over DeGrom. I think his odds of getting a quality start here, which is a big bonus on FanDuel, pretty low. So I'd like to be here, just hard to do so, when I don't project him for a lot of pitches. You can go there, because you got a high strikeout projection, but those are the reasons I'd hire on him here against the Phillies. Similar to the Braves, the Red Sox have a high implied total in poor weather. Bason Kyle Gibson here, Gibson, was actually pretty decent down the stretch last year. The Red Sox offense is more fine than great, I would say, and just 40 degrees. So I'm fine being lower on the Red Sox in consensus. I think they make sense. I get it, if you wanna go there, not gonna talk you out of it, but there's a reason why I'm lower on them. Given the weather, given Gibson, given the overall offensive quality, I think it makes sense to be a bit lower on the Red Sox than the market on this slate. Finally, if you wanna spot with high-hard contact rates and good weather, you can check out San Diego. Again, check out the weather there to make sure that game will play, but the Padres facing Edamon Marquez, he gets round balls and he benefits from being outside of Coors Field, but lets him pull out of balls and play. Decent number of those are well-struck, so that makes the Padres okay. Rocky's facing Blake's now. He does get strikeouts, but we also know what happens when he doesn't get strikeouts. Fly balls and hard contact can be there. It's 55 degrees, not perfect weather, but I would not be super shocked if either side gets some runs here. So I think that game is viable. I do think you could justify stacking the Pirates against Hunter Green if you want to too, give him the amount of hard contact and fly balls he allows. I think that's okay. Lot of ways to play things on this slate. Finally, final thing we do on the solo shot each day is I will give out a couple of home run calls. These are just for fun. They're not based on the betting odds of Fandull Sportsbook. They could be terrible odds. I'm just gonna go with a guy I think is fun to hit a dinger and a guy who I think is boring. Basically, who's the chuckiest option I can go with for today? Just two home run calls. These are purely for fun and for nothing else. Boring one, Randy Arosa-Rena. I mentioned he does well against lefties. He's playing indoors. Lot of power against lefties, Rodriguez. Not a guy we need to be super, super fearful of. I like Arosa-Rena. He's fun to watch. Watching the WPC was always a delight. So we'll go Randy Arosa-Rena as the boring one. But the fun one, I'm gonna go Larnac. Talked about him before at the Twins. Trevor Larnac. Good power last year against righties. Good power this spring. Lower strikeout rate. I think he'll be in there. I think people will gravitate towards Buxton, Correa, probably Joey Gallo. I mean, I get it. He does steal some bags, but, you know, we'll see. So I think I wanna go Larnac. It's a way to be different without being done with in the twin stack. More power friend than Miranda against righties. So home run calls for opening day. Randy Arosa-Rena and Trevor Larnac. That is all that we have here for today on The Solo Shop. But as mentioned, we are back every weekday, breaking down that day's main slate for Daily Fantasy Baseball. The next podcast will be on Friday morning, breaking down the Friday slate. So make sure you're subscribed to the Number Fire Daily Fantasy Podcast feed to get these podcasts as they go live each and every weekday. If you've got any questions for me, I am on Twitter at Jim Sonnis, J-I-M-S-A-N-N-E-S, especially this time of year. If there is lingo I'm using, you don't understand. Feel free to ask because I'd like to know that. And I don't want to confuse you. So there were things I said you wanted more info on, general process questions. Feel free to hit me up again at Jim Sonnis on Twitter. We'll talk to you all once again Friday. Good luck to you for opening day. Enjoy the baseball. We'll talk to you once again soon. This has been The Solo Shot right here on the FanDuel Podcast Network.