 And Andy, I want to start at the beginning. You and Derek were teammates on a single-aid team in 1992. Derek said he weighed about 156 pounds at the time. What were your first impressions of Derek Jeter as your teammate? Yeah, I mean, I know he loved this story. He got called up to A-ball the first time I had met Derek. I was in low A. He came up kind of late in the season. I was having a real good year. And he made a few errors in that game at shortstop. And he told me that I was kind of big league in him because he made a few errors. But hey, he had a clutch. I know a clutch home run in that game late in the game. He hit a home run there, I believe, in his first game in Greensboro, New York. And real quick, you knew he was the guy that carried himself with an awful lot of confidence every time he stepped to the plate and was an athletic guy as there is. And I'd be lying if I said that you thought he was going to have the career he had in A-ball when I saw him play. But he was just a steady guy. He was a guy that worked hard, steady, great teammate. And you could tell he had an awful, awful lot of talent. Of course, like you said, he weighed 150-something pounds. And he filled out, got bigger and stronger. And really, when you've got a guy that has the makeup that he has, the mental fortitude that he has, the ability that he has. And then like Scott Roche said, he's got a clutch-proof swing, we think, or a swamp-proof swing. You end up with a Hall of Fame player. You look at him getting a taste of the majors in 1995, but really establishing himself in 1996 when you guys won a World Series title. David Cohn has told me that throughout the season, he saw Jeter grow from this rookie player into one of the leaders on that team. Did you feel the same way about Jeter that year? Yeah, for sure. I mean, he's just got a kind of an air about him. That special players have, again, and it's not a cockiness, but I'm going to get the job done. I should be here. I expect to be here. I expect to do great things. And Derek carried himself in that way from the time that he got up there. And of course, as I've mentioned many times, he had success early in his career. And when you have success early in New York, you can kind of build off of that. And I think the confidence, we won championships early. And we just, you know, he built off of that. And I think his confidence grew and continued to grow. And again, he obviously turned into one of the greatest players of our time. And he was so humble, he was so consistent, he was so steady, he was so successful. But he also survived and thrived for 20 years in New York, a market that has swallowed up a lot of other superstar-type athletes. How did Derek Jeter do that? Yeah, I mean, I want to say it just goes back to his roots, right, to his parents, the way he was brought up. And you know, you just said everything about him. He just, he didn't want a whole lot of attention. He just wanted to go out and to do his job. He prepared every single day. He was just so steady. I mean, just, you know, just a lot of guys, just it's an emotional roller coaster, right, the ups and downs. And Derek was just so steady, no matter what. I mean, he didn't go in a whole lot of horrible swamps. I mean, he may have went for an 0 for 20 or something like that, I think, maybe a little bit more than that. I don't recall him really having a long, long drought. And you know, it's a lot easier to be steady whenever you're that consistent as this guy was. Andy, I remember doing an interview with you where you said you felt pressure and tension before every start. Yet Jeter had this carefree attitude about every game. You couldn't tell if he was playing a game in May or a game in October. Did it, as a teammate, did you ever marvel about that side of his personality? I did. And I mean, you know, being a position player, I think it's probably a little bit easier to be able to do that. But what Derek was able to do, and again, I've said it before, if I needed a clutch hit, a clutch person, I wanted at the plate a guy to give me an at-bat in a big situation. Derek is number one for me. I've played with a lot of great players. He is number one on the list. I'd want him at the plate. And he has a unique ability to be able to slow the moment down and to just slow the whole thing down, be able to breathe, be able to relax. That's where the success comes from. Most guys get in their own way because they can't mentally get where they need to be to perform at a high level. And a lot of times, the nerves get to them, and they can't. They might have the talent, but they can't perform the way they need to because of that. Putting you on the spot, you probably haven't even looked at your calendar yet, but you were there for Mariano last year. Do you anticipate being in Cooperstown for Derek's enshrinement? Well, I do. That's sorry, sucker. Better invite me to come. Mariano asked me to come. So I plan on. I would love to get there. I mean, I'll, you know, I hope so. Andy, I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you about your own candidacy. Your second year on the ballot, how have you viewed your own chances for the Hall of Fame? Yeah, you know, I haven't paid a whole lot of attention to it. I, man, what an honor it is just to have made it last year and to be able to stay on the ballot.