 Yeah, coach, hope you have a good day in the snow. And I got one for you right out of the gate on Chris Jackson. I know Mike mentioned that was one of the plays. He kind of gave you a boost right out of the gate. What'd you like about what he did there? And how much can a play like that set a tone maybe for your group early? I think it's huge. Obviously, special teams get to start out every half, whether it's first or second half. And for Chris to go down there and make a great play there in space, kind of really set the tone for at least us on special teams and got our defense going. It's just an unbelievable play. A guy who wants to go out there and do his job and do it correctly. And he was ready for anything. And it was just a great way to start the game off. So I'm really proud of him, the way he played not only on the kickoff team, but on the punt return unit. We ask him to do a lot, whether it's to single or double press one of their gunners on the opposite side. We ask him to single up on one of their better gunners. And he did a great job of really fighting and finishing longer than the guy with the ball. So I was really pleased with him. Terry? All right, there we go. Craig, Chester Rogers seems to have had a couple of longer runs. I think maybe one of them might have gotten called back or something a week or two ago. But he seems to have had some bigger runs on the returns in recent games. What do you attribute that more to the blocking or to his reading the play better? How does that measure up? Yeah, I think it's a little bit of both. Chester's done a good job all year long for us. And he got the big run there in Pittsburgh. And he continues to do a really good job of just going and catching the ball and getting vertical. And along with that, I think our guys are doing a really good job of blocking for him. They know Chester's going to be aggressive back there. He's going to come up and catch all the punts and try to run and obviously get a first down for us. But we still think watching over the film from last week that we can still get more yards. So I think our players are excited that they've got a guy back there that will go up and catch the ball and will fight for every inch. So we're looking to continue to improve on that. But we're happy with what Chester is doing right now. Toronto? It goes when you look at just the complementary football formula, that field position is so critical. And you have Brett Kern who has so many punts, pinning them inside the five yard line. Can you just take me through the art of being able to do that consistently? Yeah, with Brett, obviously he's done it for a very long time. And it obviously starts with him practicing it and doing a lot of good things. But he's always known to do a really good job in plus 50 type punts. And when we get close to midfield, we usually try to tell him, hey, we don't need to get the ball at the one yard line all the time. We just need you to go and play pitch and catch with the returner. And if it ends up going a little bit deeper, we're going to have gunners that are going to go down there and help him make the play like Nick Westbrook did this past week. But it really helps out with playing complementary football like you're talking about. A guy who goes down there, kicks the ball inside the five yard line, and now defensively, they're backed up. And our defense can go out there and hopefully stop them. And then we can play the field position game, which we did early in the first quarter, where we end up taking the wind, knowing that it'll be tough for a team to punt the ball into that wind that was last week. So anytime we can play complementary football, we're doing our job as a special teams unit. And we'll hopefully continue to do that this week. Greg, as many guys as have come in and out of the lineup for you this year, have you been able to keep guys in the same roles, like in the coverage units? Or is there an example or two of a guy who was doing one thing earlier in the year and doing something different here later? And how difficult is that? Yeah, I think it's tough, because as a player, you want to get in rhythm with certain jobs that you want to do. And it is tough for those guys to go in and out, but they're professionals, and they handle it well. And we might ask a guy to move at a certain position. Nick Westbrook was playing really early on for us, and now he's got a bigger role on offense, so we've got to bring another guy in for him. We've asked Racie McMass since he's came back to do a bunch of different things on the kickoff unit, whether it's playing on the interior, the four or five spot, to now playing a two spot. And we're going to be able to move him around a lot. So I think they do a good job just understanding that we move guys around to help them. Because I learned that early on, good coaching is taking a player where he's not capable of taking himself and being able to move him around and do a bunch of different things. So we always want to put those guys in the best positions for them to succeed. And I think they're all doing a good job right now. Gentry? Are you guys having any issues today with the weather in terms of getting everybody to the facility and everybody driving in, or has it been OK there? As far as I know, it's been OK. I mean, I grew up in Ohio, so I'm used to this. So six inches, five inches, it doesn't really matter to me. But I think our players just understand that we knew there was going to be bad weather coming in. And they got to set the time in order for them to get in. But as far as I know, we're good to go. Last one, Jim. Hey, Craig, correct me if I'm wrong here. But also, Ryan Izzo has played a lot on special teams. I don't know that necessarily means he can't do it. But how do you know whether a guy is capable of doing certain things? And if you've got a guy that comes in, joins the club, do you immediately try to audition him there? Or how does that process work when you don't have a lot of tape on a guy playing teams? Yeah, I think the first thing that we do is we bring him in and we just start talking to him about what positions that he ended up playing on special teams. He was at Seattle, so I have a relationship with the coordinator there where we're friends. So you might do some background called the special teams coordinator at other places, seeing where this guy best fits, and then just talking to the player and see what he's comfortable with. And then obviously, get him in, get him on the board, start talking to him about different fundamentals and techniques that we're going to use, and then try to get him in as much in practice as we can and even after practice of working with him a few minutes here and there and just decide what he's best at, what he's capable of doing. That's how we end up going about anybody that we bring in new.