 Great, how y'all doing? Doing good. Talking to Tyler Davidson a couple days ago, we were talking about run defense and kind of just, he said he was like, you know, I feel like we're right there and it's kind of like the details of the small things. Yeah. What are those details? What are those small things in the front games where it's like if we do this, the difference in the game? On yard game versus a nine? Yeah, I think when you talk about run defense, you're talking about everybody maintaining their gap. For the entire play. And it's one of the toughest things in the world, right? Football hasn't changed for all these years, but it's so like us as pro football players, right? You get your gap and then as soon as you peek into the other gap because you feel like you have a little bit of leverage or you feel like you got that man in front of you controlled, as soon as you peek into that other gap, a good running back finds a way to just jump right back to your gap. And that's the details, right? That's the toughest thing. You know, it seems easy to a lot of people, but you also got to realize that there's people in front of us who are a little bit bigger, you know, and also they're paid to just try to make you second guess your gap and make you miss your gap and stuff like that. So that's it. It's really just staying strong in our gap, trusting everybody to fill their gap and do their job and just maintaining the gap throughout the play. Yeah, I mean, I think every opponent is a unique challenge, right? And every football team, while you know what they're gonna do every single week, they're paid to sit in their building and come up with a new scheme or a new wrinkle that you haven't necessarily seen before. But that's when you got to realize as a defense, it's all about you, right? And you have to really hone in on your details, your fundamentals and be the best players as individuals we can be, but then obviously being the best individuals we can be will ultimately make us the best defense we can be. So I think as you're saying and as you're alluding to, it's really about us honing in on what we need to do, holding each other accountable, making sure we all are stepping up to the call of playing sound, run defense, and sound defense overall. Yeah, I mean, I joke with him, I think he's like a 40-year-old rookie. He kind of reminds me of my grandfather in terms of just a tall, lanky presence. That's my grandfather, he's 6'6", and he played with the Falcons as well. So he just kind of walks like my grandfather. But it's just more, Adé's a quiet guy, but he's so mature for his age. And so, you know, he's stepped into his role and his position on his team, and he's answered the call, and he's a leader on this defense, you know? And that's the beautiful thing about him. He doesn't bat an eyelash. He hasn't changed his mentality. He comes to work every single day, and he continues to push us all to be better. And it's on the older guys in the room to continue to help him, groom him up. But like I said, he's stepped in day one and has been a leader in the integral part of this defense. Say it one more time, sorry. You got me able to get home in the end zone. I think it was a stunt guy. You had room with the Falcons. Like, was that a stunt? It was just, I just saw the inside open and just took it. Yeah, yes. Okay, so as far as we've run those stunts with guys that he hadn't necessarily played with, like, how important is that to just really get a feel of how the person playing the next team? Yeah. And the second part of that, as far as how important is it to get a feel for each other as far as keep the time and support of that field to just be coming back and how important that can be for you guys. Yeah, I think it's a big trust thing, right? It's like understanding, like you said, it's chemistry, you know, and everything. It's just understanding, okay, hey, I'm with Grady right now. Okay, what is, do I know Grady's strengths? Do I know Grady's strengths? Do I know Grady's weaknesses? It's not too many weaknesses that Grady has, right? But like, do I know what he likes to do? How he, you know, do I know the man next to me? And if we are working together, because there's certain plays where it's not, we're not working together. I'm just doing my job. But if we are working together, then I know what I can do to be a better teammate for him to free him up. And the same thing, it goes vice versa. So, and I think that that's, that's just, I think that's the next level step for not just veteran players, for just players in general. It's like, you know, when you come into a building, you come into a new system is learn the system first. Okay, boom. Now, learn the people next to me because everybody, every player is different. You know, you can write the playbook out, you can put the X's on the page, but the way people get the job done is different. So if I know the person next to me, and I know that, hey, he ultimately has that gap, but he might get to it a little different. It might not be exactly when I thought he was going to get there, but he might be coming a little late, but he's going to get there. Then it might change up the way I have to handle my business as well. So again, it's different for every player, but it comes as you continue to play with each other and see each other on film. It's a new scheme. There's so much new. Yeah, I think it's, it's like you said, it's something that you see as we continue to move forward game by game. But I think it's also, you know, what I personally learned, this is my 16, you know, what I personally learned is sometimes you just got to, we all got here playing football, right? And at a certain point, you know, regardless of scheme football is the same thing, right? If I got to get to a certain gap, well, I just got to play football and get there. Ultimately, we got to get the ball down. So I think I just don't want to, there is an emphasis on chemistry and knowing the person next to you, but sometimes it's about you as an individual doing what's best for you to get the job done. And I think that that's where you see the, the leaps and bounds and defensive football. I don't think a lot of people understand how difficult that is, but you talked about how, you saw an opening, right? You took the jump inside. How important for you, how important for you to be able to really determine whether or not you're going to do that and that's the only blocking scheme that's got to be on you. And then you say, you try to shoot inside and then running back is going on the other way. Yeah, it's called gambling. It's literally just, it's literally just investing in squid game coin and all of that type of stuff. It's like, you know, sometimes you're going to be right. And when you're right, you know, you look like the smartest and best player on the field and every once in a while, you know, when you play with fire, you're going to get burnt. And so I think that it's, I'll talk for me, for me as an edge player, there's a certain time where I know I have the tackle or the tight end, whoever's blocking me, I have him far enough up the field, for example, where his body has set the edge. And then that's when I can fall underneath. The hardest thing is, like there's a fine line and a balance though. Like if I have him so far up the field, then now I've just made that B gap or that C gap wider for the person inside of me. Right? So now it's, it's literally like we're all, like you can, there's times where you feel like you've just worn your guy out, but you've really worn him out too much. And now you've just made the middle linebacker's job a lot harder because you've just widened that B gap. So it's, it's a, it's like a, what is it, accordion? Like we all are working together, so to speak. I don't know if that's the right analogy at all, but you give them a, thank you, give what I'm saying. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Cool. I'm good. Cool. Thank you. Appreciate y'all. Thank you.