 All right, Austin, you come from a incredibly athletic family. Your dad played football, your uncle played football, you've got baseball players in your family, your mom and sister played basketball. So many athletes. Was there ever an option for you to not play sports? Sports just kind of natural. Some I did. I enjoyed playing with my friends growing up in the neighborhood. I've got the ability to keep going after high school and here we are. If you're going to commit to something, you're going to do it all the way. So when you decided you were going to play football, did your parents kind of make you go all in on it? That's a good question. I mean, I was pretty intrinsically motivated. I mean, I've always been like a competitive person. So it wasn't something that they necessarily had to push. It's got to be nice to have people in your family who can kind of push you and push everybody. I mean, there's got to be a natural competitive aspect to that with siblings. Yeah, for sure. I mean, my brother and I were pretty competitive growing up. I mean, he was a great athlete. I could play. So I mean, he's always kind of at my hip, just training alongside me, playing with me. So it's been awesome having a guy like that. Do you feel like that gave you an advantage, especially through like high school and college? Yeah, certainly. I mean, just growing up in a house with a brother, you're kind of always on so to speak, whether it's video games, you know, jumping off the diving board who can do certain kind of crazy flip, whatever it may be. You just kind of have kind of like a competitive atmosphere in the house, so it was fun. When did you realize that you made a good decision moving not only to tight end, but that you actually had a career in this beyond just playing in college for a scholarship? Being at Stanford, just kind of the tight end position naturally gets a lot of action and a lot of the offense flows through that position. So once I was, you know, having some success out there and just taking a look at where I was at versus everyone else in the country, it was like, oh, you know, we might have a shot here. And then my junior took it to another level. You mentioned that a lot of the offense flows through the tight end position, which is true in college and it's extra true in the National Football League. Do you like that kind of the cerebral aspect of it? Because there's so much about an offense that you have to understand to play the tight end position. Yeah. I mean, it's known. I mean, you got to know the second most stuff offensively other than the quarterback. So it makes it fun and it's also, you know, a challenge. So it's a responsibility that all the tight ends get to have, you know, you kind of get to set the table out there, quarterback has a lot of stuff going on and it's tight ends we do too. So it just makes it fun to go out there with the plan and execute. Being with the tight ends group here with the Titans, what is it about that room that you like and the guys that you're kind of learning with and coming together with? Yeah, sure. I mean, Jeff's such a great resource. The guys played a lot of ball for different teams. He sees the game really well. He's been asked to be in a lot of different kinds of roles. So I mean, he's a good guy that you can lean on and ask really good questions alongside, you know, having Tim in the room, having Luke as our coaches are awesome. There's the wealth of knowledge and, you know, Chig being in the room, it's awesome working with him. He's young. He's hungry. He has great energy. So I mean, I really enjoy our room. When you signed with the Titans, you said that one of the things that really attracted you to this place was the way that other people who had been involved with the team in a bunch of different capacities had kind of spoke about the program, the organization, what they're doing. Now that you've been here for a while, was all of that stuff true? It's been fun to come out here and compete and just, you know, try to define my role in help this, help this organization in whatever way I can. It's funny how it ended up being, you know, here, just coming out here for years and finally getting the opportunity to play here. So, you know, making relationships outside the building too. So when I moved here, it's become such a more natural, like, acclimation to the city as well as this building. So I'm very grateful.