 We know that he's been one of the most explosive playmakers for the Falcons throughout the entire season. He ends up with 14 carries for 105 yards in that game. He also has five receptions for 32 yards, but he ends up being the difference maker offensively. They're going to have to start putting some more pieces around him consistently. Otherwise opposing defenses are going to say, let's find number seven and let's make sure that we slow him down. Off to a great start this season. I love what he's been able to do when he gets the football in his hands. We got a really cool chart that we put together that shows some of the runs that he had against the Jaguars. It's almost like a spray chart. Here it is. Yeah, so think about a spray chart from Major League Baseball. Well, this is a carry chart, courtesy of Next Gen Stats. So if you look at the yellow line, these are all of his carries that were from zero to five yards. The green line was five plus yards. Of course, he did have a long of 38 in that game you see over on the right-hand side of the screen. Just one time when he was tackled for a loss, that's the red line that you're seeing. But it's kind of cool to see Bijan Robinson how he's using the entire field. He's got that escape ability. I call him slippery, ability to get out of tackles. And it seems like the big ones, Taylor, come to the right side of the formation. Yeah. Maybe we should take that screen off. Don't show that to the Texans. We don't need anyone to see that. Don't show that to the Texans. But he had some good runs to the right side. They're going to need his production and performance once again today. Yeah, that's right. When I watch them, I look at that chart, that carry chart, if you will, I say spray chart, but that's my MLB mind coming up. But when you look at that carry chart, it kind of reminds me a little bit of like a madden route a little bit. Yeah. Like when you're checking out which runs you're going to do. Sure. And earlier this week, I sat down with Arnold Abiketti and outside linebacker for the Falcons. And I played madden with him. And I wasn't too shabby. So go ahead and take a look about our conversation with A.K. Falcons. Falcons. Yeah. You're getting into, like, the nitty gritty of him. I'm doing whatever the coach suggests. Oh. Oh, damn, I never had time to choose my boots. Let me walk in really fast and just get in. This is the madden stuff. Oh, you know what I'm about to do? Oh, no. Come on, A.K. Get a sack. Oh, no. Oh. Yeah. You just gave yourself a sack on my team. You know, either way, just as long as you get a sack. All right. Obviously, you guys just went to London. How was that your first time? First time in London. How was it? It was dope. You know, just, I always heard about a U.K. and I always wanted to go. So it was special to actually get the chance to go. Yeah. It's going to be open. So. Oh, gosh. So it was special to actually go to London and just experience it. So I think we went to the city. Mm-hmm. Went to, I don't know if they called the downtown area. Don't pick it. Thank you. And you love soccer. Yeah. Because you're very open about how it was really your first love and how much you really enjoyed playing it. Why, like, how did you get into it? What did you love about it? Well, I was born in Cameroon. So soccer, football was really, like, the main sport. I played soccer for the most part and it just, you know, U.S. soccer not really the main sports in terms of being in middle school and high school. And as I got older, naturally, I transitioned more into basketball and football. But I still, I don't watch soccer as much as I used to. I'm still in tune. He bought it. It must be that 17. I was flying. That's the first time using myself in this new man. Okay. We're going to go for it, you guys. I'm not shooting for it. The dog in there. Oh, go. Go, go, go. Go, go, go. There we go. First down. Here we go. Kind of tie it back up. But I want to talk about the league initiative that you went on, which was in NFL Africa. You guys went to Kenya. What did you guys do? And it was mainly y'all at the football camp, right? Yeah. What was that experience like for you? It was dope. It was my first time back in Africa since I left. So it was dope. And just going back to Africa, like it also opened my eyes by a lot of things and how good we have it. All right. We're at the two-minute morning. What's this two-minute morning? It's tied up. I'm going to ask you some rapid-fire questions. So what is your favorite African food? What's your go-to? You know, it's actually these days, I'll go with your love rice. Okay. Beef, soya, and plantain. Oh, no. Oh, no, no. Okay. Not the flex. All right. What's your favorite artist right now? A little baby. I have a question. Sweet or salty? Sweet. What's your go-to? I used to be big on Kit Kat, but, you know, I'm not big on chocolate as much no more. Are you like real, like candy candy? Yeah. Okay. Are you like a sweet or sour kind of candy guy? Like a perfect mix. Okay. So what's your go-to? Like if you go to the movies, what are you grabbing? I like the life saver. Do you have like a favorite flavor of life saver? Oh, yeah. Really? Okay. All right. Let's just call it a tie for time's sake. I want to say this is the one for me, because I didn't get, you didn't like kill me. I'm not giving it to you. I'm not much of it. But maybe a rematch later in the season. Okay. Well, this was fun. Thank you for coming. This was a good time. My pleasure. All right. I appreciate that. Thank you. I get a chance to see a player kind of with their hair down a little bit and having some fun. Number two, I don't play video games and I'm blown away at the graphics of what Madden looks like now. That looks crazy real. Isn't it insane? It's insanely real. Body, the number, I mean everything, that blew me away. Right. Third thing that stuck out, challenging your broadcasting skills, not only trying to do an interview, but play a video game at the same time. I was tired. So learning along the go. I was tired after that one. Pretty good. Let me take over for you. Let me ask you a question. Sweet or salty? You got to ask that question. So I'm a salty person. I don't love sweets. I'm always reaching for the saltiness. Which is what? What's your favorite? Oh gosh. Like chips. Like chips are my thing. Or like at the facility, we have Brussels sprouts for lunch sometimes. That sounds so ridiculous. We talked about salty and she goes to Brussels sprouts. But they're so good. They are phenomenal. They are the best thing. What's your thing? Sweet or salty? Sweet. He mentioned Kit Kat. I like Kit Kat. Oddly enough, one of my favorite candy bars is a Whatchamacallit. Do you know what a Whatchamacallit is? No, those are Toblerones I'm thinking of. I have no idea what that is. It's a Whatchamacallit. That's the name of it. Maybe we'll bring him next week or something and we can try him out. But speaking of, let's turn from the defense to the offense. Desmond Ritter spoke to the media earlier this week about the progression of this offense and how he thinks he can turn the chip around. Take a look. Yeah. When you look at that, you know, we talked about it goes down to just a few simple things. One is that, you know, it's an inch or a guy away from a play break in or busting from us being able to carry that momentum and keep the drive going. So it's just a play, a thing here or there, you know, whether it's a miss block, a miss read, a bad throw, whatever it may be, it's just one little thing here and there on each of those plays, whether it's the start of the game or whether it's a low on the middle of the game, whatever it may be, that, you know, it's keeping us from keeping that momentum going. So for us, it's about executing every single play. It's about all 11 guys on the field, you know, doing their job and doing it to the fullest and making sure that when we go out there, you know, we're playing as all 11 and not just 10. Playing as all 11 is what Ritter and Coach Arthur Smith are wanting to do and Arthur Smith made it very clear earlier this week that Desmond is still going to be the starter and he's going to be the starter for the foreseeable future. But when you hear Ritter and talking about minimizing these little tiny plays and these things that don't go right, how do you do that as a quarterback? Yeah, so he's talking about, you know, being an inch away and for those that don't really know what that means, I'm going to kind of go granular a little bit here. So even though I was a long snapper, my primary, I also was a backup tight end. So my six years here in Atlanta, I spent all of my time in the tight end meeting rooms, which a lot of times you're doing it in the offensive line meeting rooms as well. So when you talk about an inch and it's hard to explain without actually doing a demonstration, but for instance, like an offensive lineman, if they're trying to get out of their stance to block an edge rusher, which by the way, you got some of the best edge rushers in the NFL. If you take a step underneath yourself, let's say you're left tackle and your left foot ends up going underneath the middle of your body instead of stepping out, right? So Desmond Ritter talked about an inch. This might be more like four to six inches. At that moment, you're beat in the NFL because the guys are so quick coming around the edge. And if you have a combo block, let's say a center and a guard working together. If they're not in perfect tandem, meaning meeting at the right time, pushing together and one of them doesn't come off too soon, then that guy's going to split through that block and he's likely going to make a tackle for loss, maybe a sack in the backfield on a guy like Desmond Ritter. Or maybe even at a wide receiver position. If they end up cutting their route off one step early, or they take an angle that's a little bit more to the inside versus back to the quarterback and that's not what Desmond Ritter's anticipating, you're going to have a throw that's offline. Right? So those are the small differences that maybe you can get away with in college. Maybe Desmond Ritter gets away with that Cincinnati. Maybe CJ Stroud gets away with it when he's at Ohio State. You're not going to get away with it in the NFL because the technique is too good in the NFL. The players are too smart. They've seen too many things throughout the course of their career and they're going to make a break on it and make a play. Desmond Ritter probably would tell you that the mistakes that he made throwing interceptions last week were his fault, but sometimes it's just a guy comes out of a break at the wrong angle than what he's anticipating and you have an interception. Whereas maybe in college the ball's just deflected or maybe it's an incomplete pass. But those are some of the little examples when you dive deep into it. The average fan just looks at it and says, oh he dropped back and he threw an interception and it got returned for a touchdown. It's all his fault. Maybe it is his fault. Maybe it's 80% his fault. But maybe there was something else that happened on that play that two people weren't on the right page that he's talking about in that interview. That we're an inch away. That we have 10 out of 11 that's doing the right thing and one person maybe not. Maybe it's not a mistake. Maybe he's just not in perfect tandem with everybody else on the offense and that's when things go awry. The best offense is where everybody's working together. Offensive line, tight ends, backs, wide receivers. That's when you see these offenses going down the field because everybody is working on the same page. I learned so much from this guy. Every week he did just me something new. I could listen to him like for an hour I'll talk about football. It's so insightful. And also something that I took away from what Des was saying was starting fast. And he and Coach Arthur Smith have been so forward about starting fast and how important that is. And the last four games for the Falcons, they have gone three and out on three of those first drives for obviously three of those four games. And on that, the only game that they didn't was Green Bay. They had to turn, they turned the ball over and got on the third play obviously. He doesn't throw an interception. On the other hand, though, with the Texans, the last two games, they have scored on their first drive. How important is it to start fast and not just start fast, but to score fast as well? Extremely important. You talked about some of the stats with three and outs and everything. How about the fact that Atlanta scored three first quarter points this year? Three. So they're not getting off to a fast start. So what happens? You play either behind the change or you're playing behind in the scoreboard? Yeah. And now you got to play catch up. And in the NFL, playing catch up is one of the worst propositions that you can have. You want to be out front. That way you have the luxury of playing and executing your game plan. When a coach is standing on the sideline and he's going like this and he's got his play sheet and he's got his script, he wants to stay on that script. But what happens if you get sacked, you get three and out, you get behind on the game, now as he's following the script, he's got to like go to the other side of the page because now we're completely offline of what we had planned on. Not to say that doesn't happen. Every coach in the NFL has to be able to think on his feet, think quickly, but you want to be able to stay on schedule on your play sheet and once things start going badly, you're not able to do that. So yes, they got to find a way to get this football down the field, put points on the board early. Maybe it's a field goal, but you got to start putting seven points on the board early in the game. And yeah, I could sit here and I could get into all the details. But at the end of the day, somebody just needs to make a play. A wide receiver, a tight end, maybe even somebody on defense. Maybe it's a pick six. Maybe it's a special teams block punt or a touchdown, but somebody needs to make a play. Yeah, you could sit here and dissect it all you want, but sometimes it's just somebody, I'll use a Falcons phrase, rising up and making a play for this team and getting themselves out in front. If they can get themselves out in front, you might see a completely different Falcons game in this one against Houston. Yeah, I would love a pick. I would love a pick six even more, especially against CJ Stroud. Has not thrown a pick yet. He has the record right now in the NFL for the most attempts without an interception. Right now, he has 151 attempts. As he continues to progress, he's going to be lengthening that record more and more as we go. Speak to how this rookie, I mean, what a guy. He's found his rhythm. He's found that offensive cadence that starting quarterback needs to have and to have that and find that rhythm in the first four games. The rookie is pretty incredible. Yeah, so think of this kind of a tale of two seasons already for the Houston Techs and started 0 and 2 with two double-digit losses. And you're starting to think if you're a Texans fan, here we go again. We're struggling once again. But then the last two games, they have essentially two blowouts, a 20-point win over the Jags on the road, and then they beat the Steelers last weekend, 30 to six, like blew the doors off the Steelers. Okay, and the difference has been, CJ Stroud, you're seeing him right here, 11 sacks. He's been sacked 11 times the first two games. They had injuries on the offensive line. They weren't able to find that continuity. How about the last two weeks, zero sacks? So he learned through the first couple of weeks in the NFL. What am I going to have to do to be successful with this team? Maybe it's get the ball out of my hands quicker. I got to anticipate sooner. But he has been an absolute tear this season. He's already got over 1,200 yards passing. So for the math majors out there, he's averaging over 300 yards through the air. He had a career high of 385 yards a couple of weeks ago against Indianapolis. And to your point, he has not thrown an interception yet this year. So that's the reason why the Texans are coming into Mercedes-Benz Stadium probably with a lot of confidence because their quarterback number two overall pick is playing with a lot of confidence. They're going to try to run the football, but they're going to say, we're going to let this kid right here throw it. Because he did it when he was at Ohio State and he's kind of starting to find his rhythm here with Houston. Yeah, and also the less that you get touched, the less that you're pressured as a quarterback, especially when you're a rookie, the more willing that you are to give your wide receivers a minute of a way downfield and make those really big explosive plays that can be detrimental to the opposing team's defenses. You know what's interesting to me, I just realized this, too, is the leading receiver this year is Nico Collins. Do you know where he went to school? Michigan, right? Michigan. You know where CJ Stroud went to school, right? Ohio State. Oh, wow. Do you think they have like a conversation of like, like, let bygones be bygones here? We're going to have to put all that stuff to bed because we need to work together if we're going to have some success. And to their credit, they've been able to do it. Nico Collins, it was the third round pick a few years ago, and he's got actually got a chance today with catches and yards to surpass his season totals of his first two years in the league. Now to his credit, he had really to have a quarterback his last two years and he's finally got one. I got a chance to call a couple of his games when he was at Michigan. I thought he was a really good player, but I didn't necessarily think he was going to turn into this type of a pro this early on in his league. But again, sometimes when you find that connection with a quarterback that sees your talent and he's got the ability of finding you, Nico Collins off to a great season. Had a couple of touchdowns last week in their game. He's got three on the season and he's averaging over a hundred yards receiving each game this year. Yeah. And someone else that has clicked with our quarterback and does murder has been John Smith. He's the leading receiver on this team. He's willing to go out there, be in the slot, be way out, way out on the route. Like he's been doing such incredible work for the Falcons. And can you speak to how, you know, it's a different age range between John and Des but to click that quickly and have that much faith in each other is pretty remarkable. Well, obviously there's the familiarity with Arthur Smith and his time together in Tennessee. That's the reason why he's here because Arthur knows what he's getting in this guy. And coming into the season, you might be thinking, okay, this is going to be, as far as the tight end position goes, the Kyle Pitts show with a compliment of John O. Smith and it hasn't really turned out that way. Again, you can't really script the NFL. You just have to take it as it comes. But he's got the ability to do a little bit of everything. I'm impressed by when I see him on the line blocking. He's got the physicality and the strength to be able to move people in the run game, which is part of the reason why Atlanta's had success running the football. But what maybe is a little bit more surprising is the effectiveness that he's had in the passing game. One of the leading receivers for this team this year. He's kind of found that connection. Sometimes your tight end can be that security blanket for your quarterback. And right now Desmond Ritter seems to be finding 81 in the routes a little bit more than he's finding the rest of the players. So, yeah, it's great that we have him. Now we kind of need some of those other guys. You need the Drake London's, you need the Kyle Pitts to have those breakout games to get the confidence because those are the difference makers that this organization brought in to help them win football games. Hasn't quite happened yet, but it could happen in this game. That's right. It's been a positive week for the Falcons. Obviously, if you watch the injury reports at all during the week, but they didn't have one person on that injury report throughout the week and throughout practice, which hasn't happened at all this season yet. Yes. It's been a great week for the Falcons. And obviously you have the standard elevations and the standard people that sit on inactives when you don't have any injury. And we'll look at those right now for the Falcons, what their inactives are. I know that Logan Woodside is on it. As that third quarterback to Kwong Graham, Xavier Malone was elevated earlier this week as well and Andre Smith and Jevon Gwynne. So, just some standard elevations that obviously you can't dress every single person out. Yeah, this is one of those luxuries, if you will, in the National Football League because I get the emails from Atlanta as far as the injury report and to see that it says N-A-N-A-N-A, as far as limited, did practice, or full participant or did not practice, nobody listed. So, it's a great point. When you get to this point in the season, you're through four games into your fifth and there's nobody on your injury report. So, these guys here are just guys that are going to be inactive today. They're healthy, very rare that that happens throughout the point of the season. We're going to get to Houston in a minute, but I looked at their injury report, started the week with 14 players listed on their injury report. Only seven of them had designations as far as status on game day, but completely different story for Houston than it is for Atlanta. Yeah, it's been a huge story for Texans, especially with the offensive line being banged up a little throughout the first four weeks. And obviously they have another, a guard that's inactive today if we can show you guys those inactives for the Texans. Josh Jones, obviously the guard is out and then Christian Harris, the inside linebacker, Christian Harris, excuse me, the inside linebacker also out, two starters for this team. What do you make of this? Yeah, Christian Harris, a linebacker from Alabama, played with Will Anderson Jr., who obviously was the number three overall pick for the Texans. Those two guys have already had a lot of familiarity running around on defense. Really good player. He's out with a concussion this week, so that's their starter that's not going to be. Josh Jones is actually a backup guard, but you did mention the fact that they've had so much fluctuation on the offensive line that he's played this year, but he's going to be out in this game as well with a hand injury. Really, even though their week started, as I mentioned with 14 players on the injury report, not too terrible in the grand scheme of things. John Mechie, their wide receiver, was listed early in the week with an illness. Looks like he will be playing in this game. So without having Christian Harris, that's one difference maker on the defensive side of the ball, but they've got a couple other linebackers. Henry Tohoto, the rookie from Alabama that got drafted in the fifth round, is off to a great start this year, and the team in tackles with 27, had a great game last week against Pittsburgh. He's somebody that Atlanta's going to have to find in the run game and the pass game, because I got a chance to call his games when he's at Tennessee and then at Alabama. The guy's all over the field. He can run side line to side line and he's a tackling machine. Yeah, so let's actually go ahead and talk about those keys to the game on how the Falcons can win and turn this ship and write this ship, if you will, to get back in that win column. The keys to the game today are presented by Wells Fargo, so go ahead and tell me what your first key to the game is. All right, let's start on the offense, and I think we need to stretch the field. Now, when I talk about stretch the field, I'm talking both horizontally and vertically. Okay, so how do you stretch the field horizontally? Simply, you can throw quick screens out to the wide receivers or tight end that are split off the line of scrimmage. You can run flare routes with your running backs coming out of the backfield, and all that does is you dump the ball out of the quarterback's hands into that of your intended receiver, and now you've got linebackers and defensive backs and safeties included on the defense that now have to run side line to side line. Okay, well, what does that do for the downfield pass? What does that do for the downfield passing game? Now you start to see guys running out to the perimeter and linebackers and safeties, they get their eyes in the wrong place, Taylor. They start looking at those, and then all of a sudden you get somebody to widen out, and then you get to be able to attack the middle of the field. If there's one thing that I feel like Atlanta needs more of its explosive plays and tacking downfield, they've got to really show the opposing defense, show the Houston Texans that we are willing and able to take shots downfield, and if you don't defend it, we're going to make plays. If you run seven-yard curl routes and five-yard stop routes, what happens? Now your defense just sits. They put their heels in the ground because they don't feel like you can run past them, right? And then you get all that pressure towards the line of scrimmage. So a guy like Drake Blundin, he needs to get on top of the defense. He needs to get behind the corners, behind the safeties, use that size, box out the defense, go up over the top of them, but that starts to open up if you have a little bit more lateral passing game stretching the field horizontally, you've got the ability to take some shots downfield. Yeah, and Drake Blundin played basketball at USC 2. I don't know if you knew that. He was a dual athlete at Southern California. So he knows how to block out some people as well. But moving on to the second key of the game, it's going to be to disrupt CJ's shot. Obviously, he's been on a tear recently in the last two weeks as a rookie quarterback, just incredible. Hasn't been picked off yet and hasn't been sacked in two weeks due to things that we've already mentioned. And what I think personally, what you have to do with CJ is you have to limit those explosive plays. I think that's been a key in the game for the Texans, especially with CJ Stroud. For the Texans, 29 of their plays this year have been 15 yards and more. Get this, 28 of those 29 plays have been passing plays. Those have come from CJ Stroud. He's comfortable in that pocket. And if you give him a second to get there, he's going to throw that ball and he's going to get a humongous first down. Listen, CJ Stroud is an athlete. And sometimes when you hear a quarterback is an athlete, oh, he's going to run around a little bit. CJ Stroud is not going to run around. He wants to throw the football. Now he will run it if he needs to. If the defense gives it to him. But even when he was at Ohio State, he wanted to throw the ball down the field. That's the reason why I got drafted number two overall. So yeah, you've got to disrupt him. You've got to get guys like Kaleas Campbell to compress the pocket. They've got to get offensive linemen backed in the backfield. He's got to get those long arms up in the throwing lanes. Deflect passes or at least deflect the division of CJ Stroud trying to look downfield to find his receivers. There's a number of different ways to disrupt him. You can deflect passes from your linebackers. You can get interceptions. Maybe Jesse Bates gets number four in this game. You've got to find a way to disrupt him because if he continues to play with the confidence that he is coming into this game with, he's going to be able to pick you apart. He's shown that over the course of the season. We mentioned it. 1,200 passing yards so far this season. He's averaging over 300 yards. Grady Jarrett needs to push offensive linemen in the backfield, get in his face, make him uncomfortable because they're going to try to run the football. But Damian Pierce, their leading running back, has got 181 yards through four games. So they're not a dominant running football team. They're going to use it as a compliment and then they want to put the ball over the top. So how do you stop that? You've got to disrupt things from the jump. Yeah, as I mentioned earlier, the longer he goes without getting stuck, without getting those big pressures on him, the more comfortable he's going to be of staying in that pocket and letting his wide receivers get out, get far down. He has the ability, like I just said, to make those huge explosive plays. Oh, definitely, definitely. So let's go ahead and look at key number three, winning the turnover battle today. Maybe the most telling stat in the National Football League is which team ends up winning the turnover battle. So far this season, Atlanta minus one in the turnover margin and Houston coming into this game plus three. A lot of that is due to the fact that CJ Stroud has not thrown interceptions. They've been able to take it away on the defensive side as well. So how do you end up winning the turnover margin? Got to be much better on offense. We've seen a couple of interceptions the last couple of weeks. Got to be able to protect the football, whether it's through the air or it's anybody running with the football. It's just got to stay in your possession at all times. There's very few times in my eight year NFL career that I ever heard a coach say on a turnover that that's okay. Yeah, it's just, it's never okay. I don't think, I think that would be a problem. The coach says it was okay. Yeah, that would probably be a problem from your coach, right? Yeah. But the defensive side, yes, Jesse Bates has gotten off to a hot start this season, three picks in four games. Maybe he gets number four today, but there's 10 other guys on the defense and there's some reserves as well that have an opportunity to help out in the turnover margin. Maybe it's AJ Terrell's turn to pick off a pass this year. Maybe it's a forced fumble. How about a scoop and score? I'll take a scoop and score in this game, Taylor. That would be a problem. But maybe it's a guy like AJ Terrell ends up having that marquee moment this season where he gets his first turnover of the year via interception, but find a way to win the turnover battle. It's going to be difficult because CJ Stroud, as we mentioned, he is not turning the football over, but the ball carriers, you can knock the ball out of their possession. The quarterback, when he is trying to throw, you could knock it out before he gets the ball out of his hands. But again, one of the most telling stats in the NFL, you're at home, you've got the advantage, win the turnover battle. Generally, you're going to have the edge to win the game. Yeah, I would love to see Jesse Bates fourth interception this year, but I'd also love to see, like AJ Terrell, Richie Grant, Jeff Acuda get interception. Right now, Jesse Bates is the only person that has interceptions on the team. And I would love to see some other guys get some interceptions throughout the year, obviously, and maybe even a pick six along the way. Maybe I don't know. I don't want to see too much to ask. I don't think it's too much to ask, but Atlanta obviously looking to get back in the win column today. It's a beautiful day here in Atlanta. The roof is open. So maybe get a last minute ticket. If you can, there's 30 minutes left until the kick. Come on. I mean, come on down. I mean, the water is great. You see the sun beaming through the open roof behind us. Beautiful out there. And next week, we are back at home against the commanders. It's going to be right helmet. And sadly, Rackley won't be with me. He's going to be in London, but I have a special guest. I'm not going to give away who is yet. I have a feeling it's going to be a dog on good time. Just a thought. Okay. See what you did there. Yeah. Ponder on that for a little bit, but thank you guys for joining us for the Atlanta Falcons pregame show presented by Ticketmaster. It's going to be a fun one. So lock in. Let's go. Lock in. What?