 So Cameron Batson, Batson. Yeah, we, obviously, D-Led, like any many move we make, we're always going to do what we feel is the best interest of the team. So it's like a lot of the transactions we've had around here. Does this serve as kind of a reminder to guys that you're out in public that you can? No, D-Led, I mean, there's an ongoing legal situation. I'm not privy to all the facts, so I'm not going to get in there and comment on any ongoing legal situation. Well, on to yesterday, wrapping that up, this was going over the first drive and the last drive. What did it say about the unit that they overcame, the penalty to 1 and 18, and second and 23? Yeah. Well, unfortunately, you get off track, and you've got to be able to overcome it. I mean, it allows you to essentially get points. And so the first drive, the way the game started, I think both teams had too long a possession each. And it was nice to be able to do that, to be able to chip away at it, overcome it, go down there and score a touchdown. And then the same thing at the end of the game, be able to not only win the game, but to be able to handle that situation, forcing the user timeouts, being able to get that first down, play in that situation, and having Ku come in there and knock it through, and leave them no time to do anything. First drive, again, you get the 16 yarder. And then what do you see on the third and seven, do you get the run outside the Maljir and my passing down? Yeah, I mean, it's just trying to maintain a nice balance and not trying not to become obvious. So when you take those risks, when you're doing that, there are certain things maybe you want to attack to see what the rush plan is and keep them on us as well. So they just don't think they can collapse the pocket. So those are the games you're playing. But it's nice to be able to convert those, certainly. And two plays on the last drive, the big 22 yard run, that kind of gets your cross midfield. How big was that to kind of jump start things? Yeah, it's huge, to be able to create an explosive like that on the ground. CP did a great job pressing that, hitting that in the line. I thought they battled up front, you know, Arizona. It's a prideful group, especially on that defensive side. They were bringing everything they had up front. And it was good back and forth. I thought that was good. Our guys played physical, they had been. It was nice to see Matt Anthony get in there and contribute. And we had a lot of different guys that left guard. And I thought Matt, you know, he played well in that spot and it was good to see. And I just wanted to last drive. The third down throw, how big was that for Desmond to get a prouder, you know, third and seven? You got to get a little closer and right. We could have gone super conservative and run it and see what happens and force him to use the timeout and percentages, or we decided to be aggressive and say, well, let's trust Desmond in this unit. And I'd like the way he had been operating. I mean, it's three games in a row where I thought in the fourth quarter, when you need him, I thought he's been that great poise and demeanor. So he shows the trust that we have in him in the offensive unit. And to see a left guard, that's one spot. Eli is going to be a free agent after the season. Have you seen enough from how to see it where you can say maybe he's a solution there for you guys? Well, we'll continue to look at him all, Michael, but in the off season. But, you know, I'm just happy for Matt, you know, at the battle, you know, he started last year at Center for us. He got in a competitive battle with Drew. He handled it the right way. He's kept chipping away. And it's, you know, a position that he played a little bit early when he was drafted in training camp and certainly valuable for us. But it's too early to make any assessments like that for any off season. But I'm glad Matt's here. And I'm glad he was able to contribute. And I was really happy for him. As far as Avery goes. Yeah, we'll see you when we get into Wednesday. Nothing that today would say, hey, look, some major news, just monitor it. And we'll put it on the Wednesday report. I mean, whether it's Avery or other guys who are banged up heading into the last week, I know how you feel about winning games. But when is the last week of the season? Do you kind of say, hey, listen, OK, you're banged up. It would matter for this week, too. We wouldn't put a guy out there if it was going to, you know, cause him further damage at injury or at risk for anything. So that's whether it's week 18 or week two. We'll do what's in the best interest of the player and their health. And then obviously, you know, that's so that won't change whether it's week 18 or week one. Like I said, I was just asking if you felt like you could maybe become more cautious in. Yeah, I just go back to the same thing I just said, Michael. We're paid to do a job trying to win games. All of us, and again, we won't put a guy, a player will not go on that field if it's not in the best interest of him and the health or anything like that. So that's not going to change. This was yet another game where Michael Pruitt showed up in a big moment. This is a guy that was on the practice squad. It was a late sign. You obviously have a history with him. Yes. How did he kind of earn this opportunity? And obviously, what has he done with it? Well, we put a lot on the plates of our tight ends. They all have different skill sets. Michael was a guy that coached in Tennessee. We picked him up at 18 off. Houston's practice squad, Mike Vrable, he had some experience with him. And we had lost Delaney Walker. And we got him on the practice squad. And he had been around. He'd been in Minnesota. He'd been in Chicago. Good skill set coming out of college. And sometimes it takes a while for those guys to find a role. I mean, it's a tough position to play, especially depending on your scheme. You're telling a guy maybe you'd just be a receiver coming out of college, and you're trying to put him in line or vice versa. I think he's a very smart instinctive player. He plays some really meaningful snaps for us. He had a pretty bad injury last year. So that was part of the reason he hadn't signed with anybody yet. And he's taken advantage of the opportunity here. And obviously, we've got a lot of trust in him. And clearly Desmond does too. Going back to the second quarter specifically, when the fumble happens and then Arizona goes and scores, Desmond comes back out, connects, I think, on seven of eight of those passes in that next drive. I know that drive didn't result in any points. But what did you kind of see from Desmond in that kind of sequence? Yeah, the same things that we saw, I think, early on in his history. You know, he is a resilient, and that's part of it. You're going to have nothing intentional, trust me. He certainly, there's a lot of ways that some turnovers that guys make a play, but the self-inflicted ones, it's operationally. So he makes a mistake, and they take advantage of it. And he's able to overcome it. But that's some of the things I do appreciate about him, Tori. So he's able to do that chipped away. And we were aggressive going forward on fourth and two. That's the risk you take, and the defense can bail you out. They played the field position well. And then we were able to get the block. And that was a huge kind of offset, that turnover for us. And that was a good design by Marquis and Hoff. And if you watch that again, Hodge made that play. And then Richie did a nice job coming off, taking off the foot. So it was a well-coordinated effort by Marquis. And then those guys executed really well. And that was a huge, which kind of offset that penalty. And then going forward on fourth down, being able to play that situation. There have been a lot of big special teams moments over the course of the year from the CP touchdown, a block pun, some block field goal, and Baltimore, about what you're getting from your coaches and the buy-in from your players that are allowing you guys to make these kind of big pivotal plays. That's everything. Down to bottom, advantage everywhere. I mean, that's where you want to play in every phase, every down. So critical. If you feel like you can get any advantage in some of the stuff when you're roster building, you've got young players that may not be playing, you know, a ton of snaps. And those possessions and those snaps are so valuable. And they do change games. It's something we put a lot of emphasis in. And I think that's where we've gotten better depth this year. You know, some of the younger players we've got that are contributing certainly help. So any advantage we can get, that's all we're looking for. You know, Maverick's done a nice job with the punt returns. You know, field position there, it all matters. In terms of, I didn't ask you about this yesterday. Chris Listerman picked up this first penalty in four years. Like, what is, you were, as a former offensive one, how rare is that, and how much skill goes into having that happen just because maybe we see holding. The running joke is that holding can be called whenever you play, really. Right. Well, Chris is such a technician, you know, and a lot of the stuff in there about hand placement of where it's at, you know, that one right there. You're out in space or whatever the optics of it. But Chris does a nice job. I mean, he works really hard on his craft. He's got quick hands. And so a lot of guys, I mean, you see him, way he punches, plays his way, his hands are usually inside. You know, there's some guys that are kind of clampers and they may not grab, and they're different styles and maybe, but it says a lot about Chris, the way he plays. He was explaining yesterday that, like, he resets his hands basically almost every play. Is that, you know, this is me not knowing much about, as much about offensive play, but is that unique, or is that, right? Just depends on the player. Like I said, there's some guys that are massive, but they're able to just take guys down the middle and you can't really move them. And they may not be the perfect technicians inside, but I mean, that's what it is. A guy like Chris, the hand-to-hand combat, the stuff that happens in there. And I mean, it's good on good. So when you get into the leverage and guys are, you may get inside and they may work your hands and the quickness he has to reset them. I mean, there's an art to it. If you really get down and study it and have an appreciation for it. Always joke, if you play inside, the line of scrimmage is you're not a very well-adjusted person. And that's a good thing about football. That's why I love it. But I mean, you can't be a great guy off the field, but there's some measure of things to have inside. And Chris does a great job. I'd say he's pretty well-adjusted. Yeah, you are well-adjusted. I don't want you, when you're inside and don't want to do that job, but that's what makes this game awesome. But no, we got some great guys. I'll tell you what, when the ball snapped. It looked like Isaiah Oliver rotated between corner and safety a bit yesterday. Can you just talk about his game? It's just about the scheme and the call. It's not necessarily that he was lining up at safety. When you have a guy that can move around, that can play multiple spots, you know, we got the pressure, got the sack on the sack of play of the game. You know, as you see Zay coming back and yesterday, he had a big impact on the game. And when you have a smart player that's versatile, understands the scheme and angles, that certainly helps and I think he's gotten healthier. I'm really happy for him. He's another one of those guys who's fun to coach. Yeah, consistent. So I was happy to see that yesterday. Coach was just counting the snaps for Ritter as they build up. Is 207 a good sample size? You might get another 60 or 70. I don't know what the perfect number is. I mean, it's just, you know, the improvement, functioning, can he do the minimum job requirement, you know, delivering the football and he's called on and can he continue to improve? You can cut up stats, however you need to. I mean, I'm certainly, we want to improve in the passing attack and be more balanced. I've talked about that a lot and be able to win games. I mean, he's done pretty well situationally and, you know, we'll have another challenge Sunday against Tampa, you know, regardless of who's out there and what their strategy is. We'll see how the week goes there. We got to get ready to play a really good scheme and really good defense. You know, last week you guys played Tampa. It was, I'll call it mildly controversial at the end, perhaps. Does that come up at all this week? No, there's no bearing on this game. You know, a bit different. So I'm sorry for the chances and, you know, it's a game we're looking forward to playing and trying to get another one at home. Dean mentioned to us last week and the stack continued that yesterday that the team is only given out more than 10 points in the second half three times this season. You hear that, like, what does that kind of speak to you? I know, obviously, there's some of that players and some of that coaching. There's a lot of things. I mean, yeah, to be able to adjust, to be able to win, you know, situational football, talk about a lot, those four, you know, four point swings where you get in there and the guys are going to make plays and certainly you'd love to hold people to under 100 yards and, you know, have three outs all day, but they get paid on the other side, too. So if that guy makes a play or, you know, in a situation they get explosive off of penalty, which happens, they get out on a red zone and be able to bow up and try to get the ball back or at least make a kick a field goal. So I think our guys have done a nice job with that. Certainly, I feel like in all three phases our staff does a nice job. The players, the communication to be able to adjust. Certainly not perfect, but it's definitely encouraging.