 With the offense, now that you've had two games with Tanny Hill, what do you want to see this offense maybe develop or improve on at this point? It all comes down to the consistency. I mean, I think that going back through the film, there's really nice plays, really good plays against running and pass against a really good run defense. And so we just have to be more consistent. And, you know, we have to try to get everybody operating, the play all 11, the quarterback getting us in the right play. The line, you know, getting us started on a run or giving us a pocket or protection in a play pass or drop back or screen or in the keepers or whatever we're doing. You know, receivers running routes and identifying man in zone and running good routes and then the quarterback being decisive and operating in an efficient manner. But we continue to score touchdowns in the red zone, which has helped us. So with Kalu, I guess that opens up the window or whether or not you decide to bring him off of our own to the roster and have a lot to depend on what you see from him this week or what's kind of the thought process there? Josh is going to be practicing today. That's all I can tell you. After that, when something else happens, when he goes from being able to practice to whether being on active roster or not, then we'll try to keep you updated there. He'll be practicing today, too. Is he likely to kick, you think, on Sunday? Is he to the point where he's likely to kick this week in a game, you think? You know, I don't want to put any percentages on it, but that's why we're practicing him to evaluate him to see how he feels, to see what he looks like and then make a decision. Be your feelable kicker, but you might have somebody doing kickoffs for him? You know, I don't want to talk about potential scenarios. I think there's a lot of scenarios that we try to work through each and every week. You know, the idea is that we evaluate Ryan and see where he's at and see what he feels like. And I think that with a lot of veteran players, you rely on them to be honest and truthful on how they feel in order to do their job. I think that's something I've always appreciated. It's something that I always try to do when you're working your way back from something. And so we'll continue to talk to Ryan and see how he feels. Over on TD score percentage, what is behind that? Just guys operating efficiently, being decisive with the ball, guys making good plays, you know, catching a football. The past of Johnny was decisive, wasn't completely accurate, but the receiver made the quarterback right. The one to AJ, I would say, would fall under accurate and in a great route and a good catch. The one to Taj, I would say, that was well thrown, well executed, well caught. You know, going back to San Diego, decisive to Corey and just need to continue to carry over that consistency and decision making and the confidence that we have down there to the rest of the field. When you see decisive like that, and Pat O'Hare mentioned it gives me too, is that just a matter of processing quickly? I'm sure there's a lot of things involved with trust, having never played the position, but trying to understand it and gain an insight and to help, whether it be the quarterback or receivers, trying to figure out what the other team's job is and how they're attacking you. Is this a team that we see that's going to inch into the end zone? Are they going to undercut you at the end zone? How do they play zone? Are they going to play inside leverage? Man, there's a lot of things that go into it, and so I think there's some decisions that have to happen pretty quickly, especially down there. Since we're on the red zone where the windows are tighter in the area and the space is much shorter. Are there times that maybe in some of those circumstances where Corey and AJ still maybe don't get into things fast enough, route-wise? Which just be more specific, whatever's on your notes, just give me the specifics and I'll try to help you through there. I don't want to speak on what you're trying to ask me about. If there were to more it seemed like Ryan had already made a decision to throw the ball somewhere else where they hadn't yet, finished doing whatever they needed to do to get to where they needed to be for him to be an option. Yeah, and I do. That's a great question because I think people watch that and I even ask that sometimes of Pat and the quarterbacks and Arthur. And as a quarterback, you're going to start one way. There's route concepts on either side and so you're going to start one way. In this league, it's not come back and just kind of scan it as guys are smoking it in there. You have to have some pre-snap awareness of where you want to start and which side you want to work. Is there a man side? Is the zone side? Is it an all-purpose coverage beater that may work against man or zone? And so sometimes those are yes, no, by the quarterback. The quarterback has an opportunity to say, this is where I'm going. I'm going to take a match up. And some of those other instances I think that you have talked about, that would be if I would progress through and I would come back or if we got a different look, if that helps. How do you find a balance between wanting to get prepared for Sunday but also trying to watch the healthier team and not overworking guys? I think, Jim, that's obviously a veteran sportswriter thinking about things because I think about it as soon as our game was over. And I know that we're not operating at 100% and neither is everybody else. And you have to find a ways to improve. I talked to the team this morning and explained to them what it looked like after week eight last year in the National Football League. The teams that were three and five, that finished ten and six. The teams that were five and two, that finished seven and nine. The teams that were three and four that ended ten and six. Teams that were three and four, maybe four and three that finished 12 and four like the Chicago Bears. And the ability to improve over the course of the season today. And I think a lot of that has to be through the details. If you're not able to practice at the speed or the tempo that you normally would giving a healthy rested full roster, we have to lock in on these details and allow the details of the play and what's being asked of me. That's where we have to focus in right now, I think, on today. And that's what I talked to them about this morning, is being able to practice at a tempo that lets us try to get our bodies back by Sunday, but also understand that the emphasis and the focus on the details have to be off the charts. I'm hopeful. It's been, I would say, agonizing and a fun few days to watch just how dynamic of a player he is, his quickness, his toughness, his ability to make people miss in the open field, his ability to catch the football. Somebody makes up 56% of their touches and 46% of their offense. And you know he's going to get it, you know he's going to run it, you know they're going to throw it to him and he's still able to be productive. We're going to have to get a lot of people to the ball. We can't throw off in a run game and guess because when you throw off, he'll just come and he'll wait. He'll be patient and he's got to burst to hit the hole. If you over pursue, he cuts back. If you come in there light on the sidelines, he's going to stiff arm you. So it's got a lot of tools and he uses them very effectively. See one of those guys where it's maybe especially important to wrap up or is there something else going on with him? Well I mean wrapping up, it's like you got to make sure that you fight through the stiff arm. I would say that leaving your feet is not the best idea against a runner like this or any runner in a national football league because what happens is when you leave your feet, they got a couple choices. They can stiff arm you, which then you belly flop on the ground. They can cut back and you have nothing, you know, no opportunity. We start hopping and when our feet are off the ground, as much as we want to make a decision to change direction, we physically can't. And those are all things that we've been working on since April. And I do think that it's improved. It'll never be great but good defenses are good tackling defenses and they're ones that when you see guys, I love when you see guys breaking stiff arms down and guys that stay on their feet, you know, you may even miss them the first time but you have the ability to come back and if guys are hustling, you have the ability to make a tackle two or three yards later. So all those things that we've been working on are going to be critical when you're talking about McCaffrey and I would add in more Samuel Wright. I know what Curtis Samuel is and I know DJ Moore. I've watched those guys and, you know, they're all kind of in the same mold. They all essentially carry the football at or near the line of scrimmage in college, in space and that's what they were recruited for and now they're developing into NFL receivers but with that same skill set of, you know, being a slot running back a, you know, Percy Harvin however many years ago but these guys, you know, they got a lot of juice, you know, underneath when they catch the football. Get the quick hand check and get to the locker room to check everybody's hand as they come in. Again, I've never, nobody ever told me how long I was supposed to hang out there and congratulate the other coach and thank them or whatever I'm supposed to do. I just try to be respectful and say good game either way. One of us isn't probably very happy so to sit there and I know I'm going to work my way to that. That's the first thing that you asked about and I'm trying to get to the end of the answer is just I feel like guys put a lot of effort in. I try to have a relationship with everybody on this team that helps us throughout the week. I understand how hard it is sometimes out there in the game win or lose. I just want to thank them for their effort. Check in on them. It's my first chance to really see, you know, how guys are. I know, I mean, you see some guys coming up that tunnel that are, you know, they're battered. I mean, they're coming off of a game of three and a half hours or physical contest. You know, and you just kind of, my first chance to be able to check in with each of them and thank them for their effort. What did you think the week helped the lady last week? Well, I think it helped. I think he's progressing. You know, we'll see where he's at, you know, and his availability for this week. That'll probably take place here in the next couple of days. More so tomorrow than winter today. What made the answers pass rush so effective? Sorry, JV. Good players. Good players. Tight coverage. 50 quarterback hits, 30 sacks. I think the thing that's most impressive is that it's not just, you know, one or two guys. It's a group effort that they have, they all have the ability to rush. They rotate them through, you know, Addison and Burns, Irvin, you know, Poe, McCoy. They just, they have a lot of guys that have the ability to rush and rush with great effort and relentless effort. Mike, that sounded like you don't expect the lady to practice today, maybe? Yeah, I probably would imagine that we'll try to get him out there, you know, one whenever he's ready. I don't know if that'll be today, but, you know, we'll have the ability to see how he does on third down day, which is normally tomorrow. And then we'll make a decision on the game. You guys are again defensively really strong at keeping the opponent out of scoring position. Is that difficult to replicate year over year with defense being, getting necessarily reliant on things like turnovers? You know, I think that that's the number one objective. You know, you'd like to dominate in all phases. The run game, pass game, third down, how's your short yardage, defense, red zone, but ultimately having the ability to limit points is going to keep you in every game. You know, we're 10-0 when we score 21 points in the last two years. So just every week's a new week, every week's a new challenge. Understand that, you know, whatever you may have done in that drive that you didn't really like or wasn't very good, you always have the opportunity to make up for it down in the red zone with a sack, with a fumble, with tipping a ball. You know, you just, you have to just try to forget what got you down there and how whatever mistake you made or whatever the quarterback did to get him down there or whatever the runner did and try to regroup and play really, really good red zone defense. That 21 points should be easier to come by, not that big a number? Oh, I just was throwing a stat out there. I figured you guys probably already knew it. You guys, you know, you guys are great at your job. So I just was making a point that, you know, the defense has done a good job limiting points and when they haven't, it hasn't been so good.