 Are you satisfied with the way the Angels handled Jake Morissnick? Well, you had no-one's coming. I know Jake knew it was coming. You even saw after the incident, you know, you kind of kept his teammates. Hey, stay in the dugout. I expected it. But, you know, I didn't really like the location to the pitch. You know, if you're going to throw it, somebody throw at them. But, you know, yeah, a little close to the head. But, you know, years ago, the umpires knew all those situations too. And they had to know something was going to happen. You had to protect your teammates. And years ago, they used to say, umpires used to come to me and say, look, you got one shot. And let's get it over with. Make sure you take care of it right there. And that was one of the things that AJ Hinch said. He said it was too high. They need to also hit guys right away. But there was runners on in the first two at bats that Jake was up to bat. Do you hit him anyway? You hit him anyway. If I'm the manager, I'm hitting the first time up there. Get it over with. He knew it was coming. Let it happen in the first standing because this was a vicious shot at home plate. AJ Hinch knew this was coming. I mean, he was a catcher in the big leagues. He knows that retaliation is going to come sooner or later to Marisnik. In this situation, I'm going to hit him in the first didn't get it out of way. But this is not golf. This is baseball. We, I mean, everyone in the morning would make this a gentleman game. There's a there's a lot of situations that we don't like each other on the other side of that field. You know, you're going to test it out. Absolutely. Frank, and you know, you got to live with these guys. You're a family. And when one of your family members, you know, takes a beating like like Lucroy did, you're going to, hey, you're going to retaliate. That's, and you know, I said it for many times, the players will take care of business here. They, you know, they're grown men. They know the under they understand the game. And Frank was absolutely right. I do, I would do it right away. So first at bat, first pitch. You don't throw two sliders and then go after his neck. It's over. No, not at the third at bat. Look at each other. It's over. OK, let's move on. All right. So Yellich ties Cody Bellinger with 34 homers for the league lead. And look at these numbers. They are nearly identical. Bellinger hitting a little better, slightly for average, few more RBI. But there are OPS virtually the same. This has been so much fun to watch in the national league. Frank, how close would you say this NL MVP race is? Pick one. It's airtight. You got to pick one. Yellich sounds like me leaving the green room. We got to get up to the stage. Whole home. Here we go again. But I'm looking at it like this. I'm still going to go with Bellinger right now because this team has been the best team in baseball this year. That's the only advantage he has at this point. Well, I'm not going to argue that. They are the best team in baseball right now. But you just said it earlier, the Milwaukee Brewers are two and a half games behind. Why? Because of Christian Yellich. If he wasn't doing what he's doing, and you've got Aguilar who wasn't swinging the bat, you've had some other guys who have had some injuries. They have jumped on this guy's back and rode him to being in contention for a wildcard. And eventually, maybe even the division. Yellich trying to go back to back. He would be the first NL MVP going back to back since Pujolst did it in 08. And that's the impression there. You've got a guy going back to back. That's why Yelly, he could pull this thing out. It's hard to go back to back. I did it and it was like the longest two years of my life because of the focus to do that. So Yelly right now is still in this race. They can go any way it's going to come down to the media. Well, we all benefit from watching. It's been a lot of fun to watch both Bellinger and Yellich.