 John, this is your fifth Combine as the Titans general manager. Has your approach changed at all since you started in 2016? Well, we'll see. This year is a little different format-wise, but I would say what we try to get from the Combine is the same. You've got to get the medical on the players. It's our first exposure to a lot of these players, engaging with them, talking with them, and then their performance on the field, which kind of really equates to their athleticism that we see on tape. You mentioned that the format is a little bit different this year. Of all the changes that are happening, which one impacts you the most? Probably the formal interviews. Those are really where they used to be at night. Those are spread out throughout the course of the day, and some go into the night until the workouts start. The workouts are in prime time. That's going to be a change for us. With all of the accommodations that were made for TV, we lost 15 interviews. So there's 15 less players that we get to talk to. So we'll have to roll our sleeves up and hit the road this spring and go see these guys at ProDays. Throughout the month of February, I don't know if you're aware of this, but the Tennessee Titans have been a pretty widely talked about franchise. Do you notice that? Does that bother you? Does that impact the way you do business here? No, it's great exposure for our brand. It's great exposure for our team, for Amy and her family, what she has done, what their family has done for the organization, for the city of Nashville. It's fun. We're looking forward to retooling this roster and get ready for the 2020 season. With the Titans being such a topic of conversation and with every word that you say being parsed everywhere, do you feel like you have to be careful about what you say, particularly at places like here at the Combine? Yeah, it's all about having a poker face. You can't give any tales. We're working hard. The 2020 Titans are going to look different than the 2019 Titans. Every team is going to look different. There's rookies. There's free agency. There's a lot of stuff that goes on, and the decisions that we make are going to have a pretty important impact on our football team next year, and we don't want other teams to know what we're doing. A lot of talk about the current CBA and maybe another CBA, and it changing some of the terms of free agency and elsewhere. That pending slowed you down at all in terms of what you've been doing this off season. Are you having to wait? Well, whenever they tell us the CBA is done, like I'll read it on ESPN, and it felt in that work like everybody else, but until then it's business as usual. We've got some meetings with agents that represent our players here this week at the Combine, and we're continuing to work through the roster and have discussions about how we're going to retool it. Your first two moves of this off season were resigning Anthony Firks or the tight end and wide receiver Cam Batson. Why were those two first? Those deals were a little easier to do. They were a little less complicated, so glad to have both those guys back. Unfortunately, Cam missed most of the season or all the season with that injury, so look forward to having both those guys back next fall. Lots of reports and lots of people saying that it's a great year for cornerbacks, defensive backs overall, and wide receivers. From your initial look at this thing, do you agree with that? Yes. Bottom line, you're pleased with that air. No, there's a lot of positions that have good players at it, but there are several receivers this year. I think you can get good players throughout the course of the draft. Just looking at our board, that's a pretty deep position. And the same thing with that defensive back group, a lot of really athletic guys, a lot of long corners it seems like in this draft too. Of all the workouts, is the 40-yard dash the one that you pay the most attention to? From a timing standpoint, I think it's certainly a pretty important factor, but for other positions, it's vertical jump, you're checking their explosion. For certain positions, you're looking at the short shuttle, how can they bend, how quickly can they get out of cumbersome situations, so everything plays a role. All right, so let's talk about interviews to wrap up for just a second. In all your time being here in Indianapolis, do you have an all-time favorite interview? Absolutely. Okay. So there was this player, I won't tell you who it is, and I'm asking him the question, so how's school going? How far are you from graduating? And he says, well, I'm so many hours short, and I was like, well, what are you getting your degree in? He says, general studies. And I say, well, what do you want to do with that? And he goes, I want to be an architect. So I'll say, why didn't you study like architecture? And he goes, that's what I told my advisor. How is Vrable asking the questions in the interview room? Is he one of the all-time greats? We play off each other. It's a little good cop, bad cop. We'll stand up and let them punch us sometimes, not in the face. Use their technique, like how are you going to play this if I'm, if you're a gunner, and I'm a vice, and I'm lined up here, how are you going to play me? And then we'll punch them a little bit. Let's try to get them off their 15-minute can spiel.