 Hey, Kevin, you guys were coming off a great third quarter where you and Kyrie were really hot, and then it just kind of turned down in the fourth. What did you think was the difference? They kind of flipped the game on you. I thought our second unit did a good job to start the fourth. You know, getting up to getting a six point lead, but they had four of their starters in to start the fourth quarter. So, you know, obviously having more talent on the floor, having their guys on the floor, that could change quickly. But I thought the start of the fourth quarter was pretty solid for us. But they got a nice groove going in that fourth, made shots, made plays, and got to give them credit. Well, you get 100, ZSPN. Kevin, Steve said if he were to take something from these last two games, it would just be that you all have to be conscious of the fact that you don't have a shared history that a team like the Bucks has where they've been running the same schemes for three years. What do you think it's going to take to kind of make up for that work around that? That is a huge factor. I mean, continuity is a big thing in this league. But we've got veterans on this team that played in different situations that kind of know pretty much every terminology that goes on in this league and every kind of set that we run on both sides. So that's in our advantage as well, having that veteran leadership. But we still are a connected group. I feel like we've been together for years, too. So we've got to continue to keep building on that. Alex Schiffer, Alex Schiffer, the other one. Hey, Kevin, they had that 18-1 run in the fourth quarter. Did you think you guys were forcing anything offensively shot-wise, or was it as simple as the ball not going in during that stretch, and you guys were getting good looks? You think we were forcing stuff, Alex? I'm asking you. I mean, yeah, I mean, you can probably, we mean, we maybe took some risks there, you know what I'm saying? We probably could have maybe made an extra pass or two, but some of those risks you got to live with, especially when guys are knocking down shots. You know, Kyrie was knocked down shots. I was making a few shots. So, you know, we could watch film and see which possessions that we probably could have been better in. But I like our aggressiveness. I like how we were trying to get into the paint and get to a free-throw line. But the team got hot. Their team got hot, and we didn't rebound enough. They shot 14 more shots than us, so a team like that, we can't allow that to happen. Christian Winfield in New York Daily News. Hey, Kevin. During that same run in the fourth quarter, Steve obviously didn't call a timeout, and I'd asked him about that, and he goes, hey, you know, maybe I should have, but also, you know, he's kind of brought it up over time and time again that he likes you guys to play through those runs without calling the timeouts that you guys could problem solve and figure things out for yourselves. I'm wondering if, A, you've played for a coach like that that's made you do that instead of calling a timeout when teams go on runs, and B, what you've learned this season through playing through those runs? Yeah, I've been around coaches that handle that situation differently, and Steve has handled it differently as well. He might have let us figure it out ourselves, or he might call a timeout. I think all coaches, you know, make that decision throughout a game, and it can go either way. But I think it's good for us to problem solve and figure things out and continue to keep growing as a unit when things get tough out there. And we still end up making it in the game after that. You know what I'm saying? We were down 11 points, I think, and we were down five, and I had the ball in my hands, and, you know, so we're under a minute to go. So, you know, I think we fought through that little stretch as well. So it's plenty of times throughout this year I've seen coach do both things, call a timeout or let us play, and let us play.