 We got stops when we needed credit to England. We had a great game, made a switch up our game plan just a little bit, but we did these necessary to come up with the win. And a balance effort to how much did that balance effort and the scrappiness overall contribute to the end result? I mean, we showed a lot of resiliency, played together, his shots when we needed, and made all the right plays in the end. What was the feeling out there among everybody? I mean, no, never. No, we don't feel desperate. We just, it's part of being a pro, part of picking up what you need to pick up. We got the stops at the end of the game and we won, so that's how that matters. A few things you guys want to clean up. Obviously, 23 turnovers out there, and it seems like it was even. Everybody had two or three turnovers, it seemed. Where do you guys begin to cut those down? How do you start? This just comes with playing together, just doing, just playing together and then figuring each other out as much as possible, knowing what players do when they drive. So us, the shooter is just being in the right position to give them out of that when they drive and don't have a layup. That just comes with time. In terms of learning each other and kind of developing chemistry, does that, in your mind, in your experience, does that come faster on the offensive side or on the defensive side? I mean, you have a bunch of new guys that have to learn each other. It depends on what you need to come together for. If it's to get a stop, then it's on the defensive side. If it's to give Spencer or Kyrie or Karris or Penetrators an outlet, then that's up to me, Joe Harris and Gary, to be in the right spot for them, knowing where their outlets would be, depending on the position they drive in. But I feel like experience is the best teacher. So we just got to keep playing, keep figuring each other out as we play.