 To be honest, when we kind of got word of what was happening, practice was over and then we haven't seen the guys until they've just started to trickle into the building. So I haven't had any experience talking any amount, but I'm sure it's on everyone's mind that the obvious and flagrant disparity in the way these situations are treated. And I think we're all in lockstep as to how just unequal these situations and scenarios in society is, and that's why players in the league have continued to fight for change and social justice. And here we are again. So this is going to be a long fight and a long battle to reach, you know, hopefully a quality one day, but better levels of equality in the meantime, and it continues. Christian Winfield with the New York Daily News. Coach, is it at all hard or difficult to focus in on a single game when you've got something much larger than basketball, looming not over, not just over this team or over the NBA, but just over the country right now? I think it definitely puts things in perspective from as far as your workplace goes. We put our life into the game. We have passion for it and we work every day to try to give everything we have to this. And, you know, that these situations are a reminder that it's just a game and that there's, you know, so many inequities in our society and in the world that are so much bigger than in the game we play.