 Thanks for your time, Jack. Coach Vrable was talking a little bit earlier about your effort, your high motor. He says you've been impressed by that. I wonder if that's helped you catch up after missing some time, being on the COVID list? And do you feel like you've kind of caught up where everybody else was at this point? No, I don't think I've caught up yet. I think that it's tough because I came into a new system with a new playbook, a new culture, everything. So to have to go into a quarantine after just arriving here, I felt like I was falling further behind than I was and just trying to catch up with everything they do here. So yeah, I felt like the past couple of days have been good for me in terms of just trying to catch up and trying to go into putting extra time, whether it be studying the playbook or walking through certain plays. And in terms of effort and high motor, that's something that's just kind of, I've brought that to football since I started playing. So it's helped me. Yeah, I guess it's helped me stay in the league. It's also helped me catch up when I have to. I understand that I'm coming from a position where I'm a little bit behind. So I think that that kind of helps me probably, I guess, catch up with the rest of the team. Good follow for you. You were a guy, obviously, that played with Vic Beasley. We'd get to see him practice. But what were your impressions of him in Atlanta, on and off the field as a player and a person? Oh, he's a great person, man. He's one of the best people I know. He's a great friend, great player. He's off the field. He's always given back to the community. One of the most generous people I know. On the field, he's just very easy to work with, I think. But coming from here, coming from Atlanta, coming here, as soon as I got here, I knew that he would fit in to the culture here because he just gets along with everybody. And I think people get along with him. And I know that here they can't wait to get him on the field. I know he's eager to come back. And I think that is on the field, off the field, he's pretty similar in a lot of ways, man. He listens, he plays hard, he gives back. He's just a team guy. Jim? Jack, what do you think about the defensive line here that you're going to be playing? And some of the guys you'll be playing with it, how do you think the fit is here in Tennessee for you? Oh, I think it's great, man. I think that it's funny coming here. I'm probably the lightest person weight-wise, just on the defensive line. Like everybody's probably got around about 10, maybe 15 pounds on me. So it was, yeah, coming here, I see the style of play here. And I've worked with Coach Terrell Williams. He was my defensive line coach, my first two years in league, coming in as a rookie. So I had history with him. Yeah, I've played with Day-Kwan. I went to the same school. I went to Penn State with Day-Kwan Jones. And meeting the rest of the guys has been good. There's a certain culture on the D line, the type of guy they have, this straight-up guy, solid people. They're not hard to work with. Everybody kind of supports each other in a certain way. And I think on the field, we all value hard work. And we all value effort, things that basically help a D line perform to the level that we need to. And we all hold each other accountable. And I think that we're going to help each other progress to where we need to be based on coming into such a hard year this year, having no pre-season games and no real measurement to kind of evaluate each other by, or to evaluate ourselves by, I think it helps having a D line that we keep each other accountable. And one more for me. Are you regarded, or you consider yourself a pretty patient person? And what was it like at the starting camp where I know you wanted to be out there and play, but you kind of had to wait until you were in the clear? How'd you handle that part of it? Yeah, it was tough, man. At first, it was just tough kind of being in that position, I guess. When you told that you have to go into quarantine, it's like a shock. And then at first, you can kind of get pretty down on yourself or just be kind of worried that I was worried at first that I was going to fall too far behind. And coming back from that, I felt like I was overwarrant. I felt like I was stressing too much. Coming back, the coaches, coach rabels, they take it in stride. And they tell you, they're glad that we're back. And it made me feel better about coming back. And being able to come back from that, I felt like I'm fairly patient. But I also worry about the normal things people do when they're at work. And that's falling behind or not being able to perform the level they need to. And it's been my third day practicing now with the team. And the first couple of days is rough coming back. I haven't played football in eight months. It's the way this year has been going. I haven't been able to kind of practice football drills. But now, on my third day, I felt a lot better today. So it was nice to be back out there with the team. Darren Bochler. Jack, given the restrictions this summer, were you able to do as much MMA training as you had hoped? And talk a little bit about what MMA does for you as a football player. Oh, man, MMA is my favorite sport. A lot of my close friends are in the sport. And I love training in that area. I think it relates to defensive line and offensive line so closely that I think everybody who plays on the trenches can benefit from it. Of course, this offseason has been a little different for everybody. I haven't been able to do any of that close contact training or anything like that along the lines of that. Everyone who I am close with, who's in the MMA world, that gym has been closed down. And friends back in California or my cousin in DC, they had to close their gyms down. So it's been tough for that community. And I'm just speaking from what they've told me. But I think that the training overall is something that I hope to pick back up soon. I don't know if I'll be able to do it this season. But in the offseason next year, for sure, I'll be back at it. Terry? Jack, what was it like, I guess, trying to stay plugged in via the Zoom meetings while you were in quarantine? And were you able to work out and condition it all to try to keep that at a respectable level? It's tough, man. I'm kind of lying. I had just moved here. So I haven't actually found a place like an apartment or a house yet that I can rent. I'm just in a hotel that the team put me on. So I was actually in a room the whole time. So it was pretty tough to kind of get much activity in. All I have is some resistance bands. So I really couldn't do much. I was just trying to do push-ups, sit-ups, and things that would just try to at least get my heart rate up a little bit while I was stuck in the room. As far as keeping up with the team meetings and stuff, they would Zoom me in. They would link me in on Zoom for some of the team meetings and defensive meetings. And it's not like being here, but I would say that it helps. It helps seeing just being, I guess, involved in some way, in some form. And I would also kind of just study the playbook a little bit, just so I have an idea of what I'm coming back to. Because if I come back with no idea, then it's just going to be eventually I'm going to have to do it one way or another. Time for a couple more, Teron. Yeah, Jack, when you were in Atlanta, you were kind of in a different situation where you had a defensive head coach, but he split the play-calling duties to two other guys. How did that process work? And why do you feel, why would you say things got better defensively when that happened? That's tough to say. I can't completely answer that question, just because I'm not up there in the front office, or I'm not up there with the coaching stuff. I'm not entirely sure. And being down on the field, being especially on a defensive line, you don't always know what necessarily changes behind you, what coaches have made, what changes they've made as a coaching staff. So I couldn't really give much detail on it, just based on what they may have changed in a scheme or something like that. But I think that we had a point in the season where things weren't going well. And as a team, we managed to turn it around, defensively we turned it around, and I mean offensively too. So it was a morale boost. And it's hard to say essentially what we changed, especially being in my position, but it's just kind of like the way this game goes. And it's like playing in this league for eight years, going on nine years, it can take one thing that can change the entire season for a team. And that might be a coaching change. It might be a scheme change. It might be a responsibility for someone to pick up. But this game, one small detail can change the entire team and the culture and that can build momentum. And once you have momentum, then the sky's the limit. Thank you. Paul? Who's your football club back in London, Jack? You're a Chelsea guy? No, I'm an Arsenal guy. Can you tell us a little bit about your connection to the team and how much it grew up with them? Well, it's funny because my brothers and my dad, they were Manchester United fans. And I guess I grew up in Northwest London. I guess the closest team to me was Queens Park, but I'm not going to support them because they're not really in the Premier League. So the closest team to me was really Arsenal. I'll talk to them and then I guess most of my friends are just Arsenal fans. I kind of just caught on with them early on. And then I haven't followed it as closely of late like recently, but I mean, I just claim Arsenal, man. I've always been the Gunners fan. Gentry? Yeah, Jack, how old were you when you moved to the United States? And how did that come about? When did you pick up American football? And I think I read somewhere that you used to be in a class with Daniel Radcliffe, the Harry Potter actor. Is that true? Yeah, yeah, it's true. Yeah, it was true. For a little bit, I was in school with him. He was always acting, so he wasn't really there the whole dinner that much. Yeah, I came over to the States when I was 16. Originally, it's played basketball. And I went to St. Augustine Prep in New Jersey. And yeah, I moved in with a host family. They took me in. Yeah, man, when I was 16, and then that was my sophomore year. And then my junior year was my first year just kind of playing American football. I had never played football before. So I just kind of went to the high school. I went to the games after school. I watched it. I grew up playing rugby a little bit. So I felt like the contact wasn't the problem for me. I just had to learn the rules, to be honest. And then so my junior year, I just went out for the team. And yeah, it took me. I probably didn't get the rules down while I was in high school. I really didn't understand all the rules until I got to college. But the coach just kind of lined me up, told me what to do. And that's kind of how I got introduced to it, to be honest. Last one, Eric. Hey, Jack, I just wanted to ask about your accent. How much is it a point of conversation with a new team? And does it sort of tend to take new teammates by surprise? A little bit. I think it's tough, you know, because my accent kind of, sometimes people will catch onto some words I say. And they'll be like, what? They'll say, what do you say? And they won't understand what I'm saying. And then I'll have to kind of almost adjust my accent. So they understand what I'm saying. So yeah, it's always been an issue for me. Even, you know, obviously, since I came to the country, my accent was a lot stronger. And then over time, it kind of faded a little bit. Now I go back to London and it's like everybody says I'm American. So my accent's kind of caught in the middle where it's, yeah, I go to London, I'm American. I go to, I come over here, people say I sound funny. And then, yeah, man, it's stuck in a weird place. And I'm just trying to hold on to what little bit of accent I got left.