 Hey John Carlo, it seems like you're heating up at the plate a little bit. What's been the biggest difference for you when you step into the batter's box? All of a sudden, you start to drive. I keep them with my plan and I'm having a good plan, actually, and keeping them safe. And just being on time. Being on time for you. The course of starting rotation is easy to do. Adjusting to everything. You mentioned having a good plan. What's the difference between the plans you had in the past and the one you evolved to? Let me rephrase, sticking to my plan instead of going back and forth, letting him dictate the switch as opposed to me dictating the switch of my plan. You guys know you have a lot of talented hitters in this lineup and always have said you guys are getting close. It's a matter of time. But is there anything to the last couple of days being able to put it up to the Cleveland series and then, obviously, today being able to hit the ball out of the ballpark a little bit? I think having good at basketball is contagious. So you see how the pitcher and the opposing team in general is attacking us and taking their best pitches and squaring their best pitches up is good to feed off of. So I think a little bit of that and it's warming up in general. So we like that. Next question from Marley Rivera. Hi, Dancarlo. What do you do specifically to stay patient? Obviously, you are performing very well at the plate right now, but that took work and patience on your part? Just understand, I mean, something you constantly have to be reminded of and you fall out of it. Sometimes when you get out there and the game speeds up, but it's really knowing that it's his job to make me come out the strike zone first and then to come in the zone. So just tightening it up and being on time when it isn't there is the biggest key. When we talk to Marcus Thames, one of the things that he told us for you, the key is pitch selection. Do you feel that that has been the biggest improvement, especially as we see you? Yeah, yeah. Tighten up the zone, swing it, swing it. Good strikes, not pitchers pitches and good things will happen. Go next to Eric Bowlett. John, I know you're not facing him, but when Domingo was on the way that he was the last five innings against Cleveland the way he was all night tonight, what do you think makes him such a tough at bat? I'd love to see it. The ball's going all over the place and he's throwing mid to upper 90s. So just the reaction time and the pitch selection they got to deal with is very tough. You can throw four pitches in the zone and starting in the zone and breakouts very difficult at bat and he was on all cylinders tonight.