 Do we wait for D-Wed, or? Yeah, I mean, I think for him, they're such a big press for everybody. Look, pay respects here. We won't do anything. We weren't going to start. Hey, they wanted to start. I said, no way. I said, see? I created a headline right there, right? We lost against our rivals. St. Ed's beating Ignatius. Yeah, sure. Oh, that's right. I was a grader at the GCL back then. That's right. Great players come out of there, man. Yeah, Gary Jeter, that's our guy. Well, yeah, and then Villeangelo St. Joe's had all those guys come out of there. Gerbach and Howard and Clark Kellogg. Oh, yeah. Lee Kellogg played with us. I was there for him. Sorry, where's Remediesa? D-Wed and I should just get coffee some other time. I'll be right here more about this. It's more interesting than me. I can promise you that. You know when I was slimmer, yeah. Just now, you were stuck with me. Oh, that's right. Yeah, me too. I'm not tough. You were at Louisville, and they were a little good. People talk about that all the time. Yeah. Maybe not smart, but tough. I don't talk at all. How do you work on a guy with these strong passes? Like, how do you ramp that and drill that to mentally? Can that be that middle thing that just needs to get passed, or is that a physical thing that can be worked on? Yeah, I mean, again, I think in any course of any game, things happen, right, for whatever reason. I go back specifically to pass-catching, when I had the chance and opportunity, thankfully, to coach receivers in this league, and it's one where, again, it's more about the process than the result, so you go through and say, hey, fundamentally for anybody, right? We're in the right place. Eyes, hands, everything else. So it's not something that you sit there and you beat over anybody's head. You go through, and again, it's no intention for anybody to throw an incompletion, miss a block, or any of those things that happen. Again, they occur. You'd like them not to occur for every position, but you just go back and you stress the fundamentals of the position. I think that's for anything, and anything you do when there's an error. A completely different question, but when you were playing quarterback and you were getting sacked, how powerful was it when you were the ball? And how powerful was the energy for you of where maybe the defender was hitting you trying not to ball out? That's a good question. I do think, though, it goes back to the fact of it's how you train in the pocket. So during the course of the week, training camp, everything else, it's how your ball location, when someone's near you, you constantly practice bringing that ball in tighter. You're obviously aware the defense is trying to get after the football, specifically when they're around you, and maybe they can't make the sack and they're being blocked, but they try to go with the arm swipe. But the reality is you hope that your fundamentals and mechanics take over, because like at anything, when you're in position and you start thinking about things like that, you're probably losing focus on anything else down the field. So, again, it goes back to training. When you're watching film on God, as a court, again, this is more during the plaintiff, when you're watching film on God, you can say, oh, about this guy, this defender, I know if he's coming at me, I need to be even more confident that he's good at swiping the ball. Yeah, I mean, again, I'm not sure I'm the greatest playing career guy to go back to. I was really good with the clipboard there, D-Led. But to your point, when you are watching film, obviously, it's human nature to watch all the positions when you're playing quarterback. I think what you can get into a little bit of a place you don't want to go to is if you're all of a sudden get enamored with that ex-player who's making great plays and he's constantly saying, again, it goes back to the fact that you're out there to play the play. Sometimes when you're thinking about the wrong things, it could lead to the result you don't want. But yeah, at the end of the day, I think you're aware of what's around you, but you don't want to consume you. I know. Last time I checked, you were pretty good at college. Yeah. I think you and my siblings and my kids think that. Everybody else is like, who is that guy? So I'm well aware and OK with it. Yeah. We're rehashing stuff. Look. What do you see when you and Coach are getting ready for the jazz defense over there? Yeah. So again, I'm not trying to be a broken record, but when you put that film on, you get 11 guys who are playing extremely hard. And it's not just one section of the defense. It's all levels of the defense. They do a great job of playing fast. So it's one thing to play hard and physical. No doubt about it. That's obviously, I'm sure most defensive coordinators would like their defense to play that way. But when you see the speed off the ball, how they react to things at all levels have a ton of respect for what they're putting together, what they're doing. You know, I've known I've known their head coach for when I was a player back in Houston. I mean, it goes back that long. I have nothing but respect for what he and their defensive staff is trying to build there and what they're putting on film is, is obviously they're doing a great job and situation of football first and second down. And they've got those guys playing at a pretty high level right now. You took a close up on the coordinator, Rush, and then Rankin's talking about he's Batman when he gets on the field. Sure. That's a global pride right there. Again, I think you can go down the list of guys through the defensive line, the linebackers and the safety and corners position, especially the nickel when they go in the sub-defense. And again, I just think it's a mindset they have over there and how they're playing. They're playing confident. You can tell that in the last week's ball game against a very good Titans team and they played them all the way through that game and they played them tough. You guys, you go through their career with the, they never drop a ball or do you mean they never drop a ball? Is there something to have in common? You know, I've been around, you know, all different types of receivers and Titans and running backs. And I think the really good ones I've been around to the ones who don't make it for other reasons, is down to the work ethic and fundamentals. And it's a mindset. And so regardless of what position they play when they become a pass catcher, it just becomes, and that ball's in the air. It's their ball and they've worked through the week off season. It's a mindset. It doesn't mean that the ball doesn't occasionally fall on the ground. All intentions are great. But I think those guys are able to take every snap as a new one and when the ball comes and when the ball's in the air, they approach it like it's theirs. Is that a skill that you have to evaluate or can you coach it up a wide degree? I think it's part of it. If you're looking at it like an equation, part of it's an eight, sure. I think part of it's enabled by the coaches is the mindset. And then there's a third part of willing it to want to be that. And again, it's different for everyone. All guys get to different spots and all guys have different successes and they get their different ways. But usually it goes back to the fundamentals and mindset. It never entered your mind that the ball was going to fall on the ground. Yeah, sure. At the top of my head, I mean, I go back to when I was in college, it would be Deion Branch, my first couple of years in NFL, it would be Andre Johnson, teammate. And so it just, again, I'm sure I'm leaving guys out just at the top of my head. But it's just a mindset in which, you know, that ball's in the air or how they attacked it and everything else. But again, they're different sizes. Right, Andre was 6-3. Deion was 5-9. He'll probably kill me for saying that. But the reality is, you know, there's just different ways to get the job done. Yeah, I think that's fantastic. Is there any positive level of what you recognize that as you pay attention to that or do you look at it as, like, something like that? Yeah, I think, you know, each week you go into it and this is the national football league, right? So every opponent you go against has the ability to, to obviously take away the football and get to the quarterback. Each game is different. The way that teams approach different teams is different. And again, no, it's one of those where we go through the mindset of do your job. If you're throwing the football, be where you're supposed to be. If you're a wide out, tight in and running back, quarterback throw with anticipation and timing. Understand what you're seeing. And again, right, once that ball leaves the quarterback's hands, again, allow that stuff is out of your control. If it gets tipped, they're not going to tip. If it gets, you know, all things that can happen when the ball's in the air. So again, no, it's more about making sure that we focus on us. Understand what the defense is trying to do, but execute the play at a high level. Just the other offense took some strides with the, I know you needed some more, but three, seven, four, and four touchdowns. So the general, yeah, sure. I mean, again, I think it was a, you look how the fourth quarter of the Giants game played out. I talked to you guys last week about it. You know, you look how, you know, for parts of our game last week of how we played offensively. But again, I think it just comes back to the fact of us growing together as a staff, growing together with players, getting the best idea of how to use guys exactly the right way for they feel comfortable when they're out there. And then guys, obviously, ultimately having confidence that comes from success of doing it. And you've got a group of guys on the offensive side that really love playing with each other. You've got a bunch of coaches on the offensive side that love working with their players. And again, when you have that kind of mindset with the players and the coaches, you know, you hopefully continue to trend upward. And hopefully that's where we're going. Yeah, so obviously through, you know, he had the injury. He comes back. What he's done since he's been back is done a great job of bringing energy and competing and practice and the individual part of it. And I know the guys in the offense line group and other guys in the offense specifically love having them back. He brings great energy. He's a veteran guy. So again, I think it's just another piece back in the puzzle and we'll see how it all shakes out. So which way you're going, whether it's Andrews or Mayfield, but just maybe take a step back to last week and kind of where do you see Jaylin and, you know, that four people. Sure. Yeah. And again, all the, all the depth, I think I'm sure Coach myth will address. But for me, what Jaylin is, you go into the fact of what he's gone up against and what he'll go against this week if he has a chance to go out there and everything else. And to me, you know, you see strides in his game. He's going against different rushers, different guys when he's in rumblocking that are using different techniques. They're not all just the same guy he's going against. And so he's learning. And again, I think when you're a rookie in this league, it's different for everyone for sure in terms of the learning curve, but there's really, it's really hard to replace experience. And so every practice rep he gets, every time he gets out there and live, live action, the fact that he's going out there and he's, and he's fighting and he's learning from the things he does well, but he's also learning from the things that he needs to improve on. And he's got the right mindset. Hopefully he continues to grow from there. That's a great question. Look, our week is basically outside of us now flying internationally here in a couple hours. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, right, has been as if it would be a normal week. Obviously with the time difference and flying over there and everything else, you know, you adjust your Friday schedule. But for me personally, the way I've looked at this week, I try to keep the same routine of how I've watched the film and game plan and all those things. So to me, until we get over there, it hasn't been different. Was over there a couple of years ago in the exact same stadium, understand the environment. It's a great environment, great atmosphere, understand the logistics when you go over there too. It's a little different than here in the U.S. But it's a great opportunity for us to go over there and adapt and look at it as a great opportunity. Yeah, I mean, you know, that's something that I'm sure the equipment guys have hit them with. To me, it's more the environment and the atmosphere. It's a great stadium. The crowd was great when we played there a few years ago. They're into it and they're into it for both sides. So again, I think it's, if you haven't been over there as a player, as a coach, I think you're in for a great treat. If you've been over there, you kind of know what to expect, but it's an awesome opportunity for us to go over there and play internationally and represent the NFL. Well, you know, it's interesting for me personally because I had, you know, four months of NFL Europe experience, right? So I didn't play in London, but used to how the international crowds were at that time back in the early 2000s, and the obviously football has just grown from that standpoint. You love the passion tree. You love the fans that come out. They're energetic and from pregame all the way through, and it's just a cool environment. It's a cool experience. A lot of cowbells. I mean, again, you be at the home, you're a home team, and all of a sudden it's third down and they're screaming and you can't hear anything and you're almost using silent count here in international. But yeah, they, I will say this, the passion's real. I'm a huge international soccer fan. Parents grew up in Italy, so I was kind of forced to watch a lot of Italian soccer as a kid. But I've grown appreciation for their passion and how they approached sports over there. Oh, for Italy? Yeah, it depends who's winning. So my dad would go from Roma to Juventus to AC Milan. He grew up, my parents grew up Southern Italy, and they spent about 30 years of their life before they moved here, so there's definitely, there was an allegiance to anything south of Rome at times. So you didn't have a team that you were? No, it was Harris winning. Front running, basically. That's how I learned how to do it as a kid. Thanks guys. Appreciate it.