 Yeah. Hey, Frank. How excited were you to get the call today from the Atlanta Falcons? I was super excited. You know, I can't even explain, like, the emotion that was going through my body at the time. It was just like, I was on a phone. They tell me, like, you want to be a Falcon? I'm like, yeah, I want to be a Falcon. I see I got the red one. Like, you know, like, it was just something, you know? So, you know, it was just like, it was just, I was just excited. You know, I've been waiting all day, you know, just trying to sit here, you know, you hear from so many teams, my phone called ring one time before and it wasn't even a, they were just a person to talk to me. I was just like, no, not now. So I hung up on them and then y'all called. Then they let it go. I said, yeah, y'all been waiting all day. I was like, thank you. But yeah, that's the emotions I was going through. Okay. Appreciate it. Hey, you know, after Mikhail and Brandon, you're the third one coming out of ASU. You know, how do you hope to, you know, continue to play and make it in the lead? You know, and that's one thing, you know, me coming behind them, like, I felt like my last year, I couldn't show how much better I had gotten from 2019 season. So me coming out of land now, I just feel like, I feel like I probably was the best still ever. You know, I feel like I was the best still ever this draft because I got so much better. You know, I learned from the kids, learned from IU and you see what IU doing. That just came in. So me, I'm just going on fizzes and show them that I could play. You know, I could play right away if y'all let me. I could play specialty and I could do everything, you know, and I'm just excited. Jeff Schultz. Yeah. I mean, just following that up, you, you, you seem also genuinely surprised. I mean, were you not really sure what Scouts thought of you, whether you would get drafted or not? Or were you not sure whether you, where you would go? Where were your thoughts going into the draft? My thoughts, my, well, my agent was telling me, you know, he was just saying like, it's a positive change. You could get drafted, you know, and I was just like, okay. And when he said possibly I was just thinking like, you know, everything happened and a lot of things happen, names change, you know, anything happened in the draft. So I was just looking, you know, at first I really was just looking for like even like later, like six or like, you know, like seven or like probably because everyone coach told me it was like, you probably go undrafted, you know, and I just let that stuff like that get me down and nothing. So I just like, all right, you know, it's just gonna help me. Now they just gonna bring like a demon out of me to come up there and compete, you know. So, but it was surprising, like I'm like 184. I was looking like maybe like the 200s, you know, maybe, you know, just because I ain't get the opportunity to show so much. But if like 184, you know, just being able to go like around early, there's summer cats, some guys that's out there still waiting to be called. You know, it was amazing for me. Michael Rothstein. Hey, Frank, congratulations. Where do you feel like your strength is as a receiver? One day, I would say going vertical. But one day, I would say like first time, like I'm gonna, I feel like my strongest thing is going vertical. I feel like I could change like the tempo of the game. Like, you know, I go out there and make a big play, you know, and that's one thing that also just me, my toughness to and my energy, you know, I go out there with energy all day. I could have this high energy for four quarters and not every play that some people be tired after the first half. And I got that all, you know, all four quarters. So I feel like another strength of my energy and the people around me, that's, that's all my team, they're gonna feel, they're gonna fill up it too. They're gonna eat up my energy too. So I felt like I'm also like a good person to be around, especially a team player, you know, when people get out the whack, I'm on the sideline pushing everybody, getting everybody going. So that's another like major strength I have because I see, you know, being on a lot of teams, I'm giving them energy. They start doing a lot of great things. So I'm looking forward to coming out there with this energy and show I know it's going to be other cats that I already did a lot of things and everything, but I'm just hoping they just come and let me just, just talk a little bit. A little bit energy after I get everything down pack. So all right. So you've said energy about 30 times there in the last like five seconds, like where does this energy come from? You know, it's just, it's just, it comes, I just feel like it's just me, you know, it's just me, you know, why wouldn't I be this happy and always have this energy if I just made it out of Jersey City, New Jersey? If y'all know what Jersey City, New Jersey is, it's crazy, you know, everybody don't get this opportunity and everybody don't even really get that opportunity to go to college out of Jersey. So I mean, like, why wouldn't I be happy and always positive with this energy if I'm doing better than most of the people who grew up way out of the city? No. Appreciate it, Frank. Thanks. Congratulations, man. Thank you. I appreciate it. Charles Odom. Hey, congratulations, man. You mentioned the concern about because you didn't get the opportunity to show too much. Can you talk a little more about that? I know you limited opportunities due to the schedule. So the rib energy, rib injury held you back. Yeah. Excuse me. I'm sorry. Yeah. Can you just talk about the things that help that that that limited the opportunity to show too much? You referred to that. And can you talk about, you know, what that what that was like, you know, in this past season, having the rib problem and then not having too many games to play anyway. Okay. Well, I would just say, like, it was stressful for me, you know, it was really stressful for me because when we were when we were first was training during the offseason, I took that offseason like one of my best overseas ever, because I knew the expectation that was needed for me of becoming a go to God, you know, and that's what coach Herm was already preaching on me. So I was working hard each and every day, you know, each and every, like putting in the extra hours, like, um, showing my teammates how to do certain things because they was young and I needed them to help me to be great. So and when I go, then we have our first game, I go out there and I hurt my ribs. Oh my, like, it was just like a lot of stuff was just going through my mind at the time. It was just like, wow. Like, and that was one thing, like how I got over it, you know, like, like how I do adversely, you know, I would just, I just got hurt and I'm supposed to have the best season of my life, you know, and I can't play no more. I can't go back to the game. So it was, it was really hurtful for me, but me being a leader at that time and the captain team, I couldn't go to the sideline and power because I can't go back in the game, you know, because my my rip hurt, I was still on that sideline pushing the younger cats to go out there and do better, you know, telling them like, it's next man up. Like this is how we got to be. I can't go in there right now, but I need to, I need y'all to be great. So on that sideline, when I got hurt, it was just, I'm on the sideline, took it to Jaden. I'm on the sideline, took some young cats go out there. I see this. He ain't going to beat you. He ain't going to beat you this, but you do this on that. So just me being that guy all the time, you know, and like I'm saying, like, I'm just happy that, you know, I got to this point, you know, because I did get hurt, you know, I did get hurt. And then we only had like Lonnie play like two more games after that. And it was just like, dang, did I even like do enough? You know, it was just a lot of stuff I was just worried about going into this process. You know, if I took my time, you know, I talked to a lot of people that helped me and support me. And I would not then, you know, and I just wish my mom was here to this day right now. You know, she'll be jumping and screaming right now. But it's all right. I know she's watching down. And how long did it take you to get to get past that injury? So it's actually like, you know, it actually worked out for me because after that game, ASU ended up having an outbreak of COVID. So we had to sit out for two weeks. And so we all in the house quarantined. And then by the time we got out of quarantine, I was back to practice full speed, you know, ready to play. Awesome. Kelsey Conway. I can't hear you, Kelsey. Yeah, you're muted, Kelsey. Can you hear me? Yeah. Yeah. You talk about all this energy that you have, but where does your source of motivation come from when you're playing the game of football? That's another thing also just like my city, you know, it's my motivation, especially for my mom, my mom and my little girl, you know, it's just like, especially when my little girl, you know, I've worked this hard, so she won't have to grow up in Jersey City like I did, you know, and I can make her life better. And also my mom, you know, in this process, I lost my mother about a month ago, you know, when I was training before my pro day. And I felt like her energy, it came in more into me. Like she gave me something like just keep going for me, baby, you know, and that's why I feel my motivation, you know, each and every day to this day right now. Like I got to keep going for my mother because I knew just what she want from me and it's nothing else out there for me, you know, it's all about football. So and then, and then my city, you know, I'm showing that I'm showing the younger guys, you don't have to go to the streets. Let's lock it in, you know, train, get better, go to the football fields and just keep working on your crab. And maybe you maybe you get the opportunity to go to college and go to school, you know, and go out there and do big things. And I'm just showing them that you can if you just stay focused, work hard and it's all going to pay off. Thanks. Thank you. Do we have any follow-ups for Frank? Yeah. We'll do D-Led first and then Michael. Yeah, Frank, sorry to hear about your mom passing, but you know, how tough was that? And what did she pass that? And how are you trying to deal with that now? It was really tough for me, you know, when you when you doing a lot of things and you doing everything for her, it's like, wow, like, I've been doing, I've been working this hard for you to help you, mom, you know. And when it happened, it was just like what I'm doing it for, you know, and that was like the big toe I had to get over, you know, it was tough for me because I was just like what I'm doing this for. And it was all about her, like I'm going to do this and she not here with me. It was like no motive, no happiness or nothing. But when I just got that's like my inner self all the time, just telling me like, you can't stop here. You want to live back in Jersey City, you want to keep you going, go back and do the things your friend is doing. And it's like, no, so that's why it just pushed me each and every day. But how I got over it, it was just one day at a time. And I feel like that's how it had to be for me. Just one day at a time, I went back down to the house of athletes, got around positive energy, the guys I was training with for my pro day. And they just they lift me up each and every day. I come in here, they don't they don't talk about my mom. They just say like that's work. It's time to work. It's time to get better because like I was saying before, like my energy affected a lot of people. They would just say like, we need your energy, Frank. So we can get better today. So like how I was able like to get over it. You know, I'm still taking, you know, I'm still slowly, but it's okay. You know, I just know I got here. This was one point I got to keep going for her. And that's what I'm saying. Like I felt like when she left, she left that energy, more energy for me, you know, to go out there and keep being great. What was her name? I'm sorry. My mother's name was LaDawn Gurley. Could you spell that for me? Capital L, A, capital D. No, not the capital L, lowercase A, capital D, D-O-R, N-E. N-E, okay. And Gurley, G-U. G-U-R-L-E-Y. L-E-Y, okay. Like Todd, okay. All right, thank you, Frank. Appreciate it. Thank you. Michael. I kind of want to follow on that. What was what was your relationship like with your mom? We was tight. We was tight. We was really tight, you know. And I just said we was tight on, like, as if, like, when I got to college, you know, that's why I say, like, we got really tight when I got to college, because it was like now that she don't see me in the house no more, you know. And I felt like it was different for us. So, like, we had a talk all the time, and, you know, and communicate, you know, about everything, you know, about everything. That's how close we started getting. You know, at first it was like I was just young and she was working every day. She was a single mom that had to go out five in the morning. And I'm, and I'm, and I'm already going to school. When I come home, she come home from work straight to sleep. So at that time, when I was like in high school, we really couldn't communicate that much, or I couldn't really talk to her about football. But every morning she would call me when I'm in class because she ended up picking the Jersey Jordan one and read about me. And she was like, oh, wow, baby. Like, I didn't even know he was in the paper. Anyway, I said, my, he was, he left. So I just know when she seemed to pay for the more, she always called me and told me how, like, proud that she was me and how excited that I'm actually doing everything that my other brother's not doing right now. What did she do? What you said, what did she do for a living? And also, I think D-Led asked it, but you didn't answer. What, how did she pass away? My mother was a home health aide lady for 18 years. And she passed away from a heart attack. Yeah. Sorry to hear that. No, it's okay, man. It's all right.