 Hi everybody, and welcome to the Lakeland locker room. Once again, I'm John Weber, joined today by Jim Zabrowski, the head football coach at Lakeland College. Jim, as usual on the show, we like to get right to it, no messing around, of course. Well, first off, congratulations on your first victory as a head coach, first victory at Lakeland College. The season-opening win over Tri-State from Indiana, what a great game, a 30 to 13 victory. Yeah, well, it was fun, you know, almost to say I was, you're nervous, you're excited, all the above, and all of a sudden, and everything happened, and thank goodness we came out of the win, the kids played exceptionally hard. We had a few too many penalties in the game, fell all over ourselves, but the kids played really hard, the effort was great, I thought the crowd was great, I thought the excitement was there, the stadium looked great, I think it was just a fun atmosphere back there, and the kids, I think enjoyed themselves playing, which is a big thing, and we came out victorious. Of course, Tri-State's had a legendary program, very successful the past few years. A new coach this year, and Bob Fry, the former coach at McMurray College, how did you prepare going into the game? I know we talked a little bit about this on our last show. We watched a lot of tape where Bob was at McMurray, thank goodness they stayed primarily on the stuff they showed. That first couple of games, you never know what you're gonna see, they could throw stuff at you, so Bob stayed a lot on what they did on the tape we saw from McMurray, and we kind of, I mean, we're pretty good friends, so we talked a little bit about what each one of us does, so we were not totally blind on the deal, so we actually kind of knew what was gonna happen, and then all of a sudden he's got a lot of the kids playing, I didn't know if our kids would, I didn't know, I didn't know what happened, I didn't know, you can't tell on tape how big kids are, how fast kids are, and I was really pretty aware, I thought our kids played physical and fast, I think that helped us out, because once we had preparation, you know how it is in baseball too, you can prepare all you want, sooner or later the kids just gotta play, and they played it pretty well. And preparation is key, how do you guys prepare for that before the game, and this is a 1.30 start on Saturday, and of course next week versus Carter's is gonna be completely different, but how do you guys do it on a Saturday morning, what do you do personally, and what do you do with the team? Right, Saturday morning, this week we ended up, our coach was out there, Coach Crickard, defense coordinator was climbing up a scaffolding in a shirt and tie, trying to move that back a bit too close to the end zone. We had a lot of game day preparation to do before, sometimes you love playing at home, but the things you have to do before the game takes a lot of time, more than I thought it would take, so we were doing our preparation, getting stuff ready, making sure the field was ready, getting the kids at breakfast by 9.30, have a little meeting, I think what we try to do here is what we did where I've been in the past, is if you don't know what you're doing by Friday or Saturday, you're in more trouble than you could imagine, so we don't say a lot, we don't want to give them a lot of different thoughts, we just say, eat breakfast, quick meeting, we just wanted, I just told them, play our models, reach your full potential, I said, play hard, play fast, play physical, let the scoreboard take care of themselves, we didn't really give them a lot of different thoughts, we just said, go out there, I think our kids were so excited, hot day was like 87, 88 degrees I think, I think some of our kids were like, got so juiced up, they started cramped early, but I think as a game wore on, our conditioning helped us out, because I think we kind of wore on them as the game went on, but we didn't do a lot, just kind of get them loose, get them going, I think excitement just took over so fast for them. Let's talk about you personally now, where were you at as far as the game goes? In a lot of spaces, it's your first head coaching game, or first game as a head coach, so you got to feel a little bit of excitement, a little bit of nerves, but it sounds also that you were so busy, and so getting so prepared that maybe some of those things were secondary. Yeah, that's what I told my wife too, I said, I go, Heather, this game is awesome, you just show up at 1.30, the whistle's gonna blow, I'm gonna be like, whoa, it's game time, because of the preparation, cause all the things you do as a head coach, behind the scenes and stuff, you never have to do an assistant coach, you can watch tape, relax, get ready for the game, I have one little side of offense, or at that time, when I look at both sides of the ball, I make sure your special teams are okay, and all of a sudden the game just came upon me, so I don't know if I was so much nervousness, or maybe I just blew off the nerves that I won't get nervous, but it was exciting, and I think you were talking after the game, and I said, how did your first game go, so on, and it's not so much you're hoping you have more victories somewhere along the line, but just, you felt comfortable that kids were prepared, and you really said, I've done all I can do, I think, not only I just let the kids play, don't overcoach, don't get nervous, I didn't want them to show that I'd be nervous, or get too excited, or to whatever you wanna call it, so I wanna make the kids realize that, hey, have fun, I told them, I go, just have it, I try to have fun, it's tough having fun, I mean, you're getting nervous, you just have fun, it's a great experience, it's great, I'm blessed to be in this profession, I said, kids, just have fun and play, realize how lucky you are to be a football player at a college and play on Saturday afternoon. That's a few and far between to get that opportunity. Well, let's talk about the game now, you guys jumped off to a seven-nothing lead at the end of the first quarter, but obviously on your first drive of the game, it really set the tone, and I gotta give you credit, took a lot of guts to do what you did, your first, again, obviously, we said it three times already, your first game in the first series, you guys pulled off faithfully. We went three and out that first drive almost, and we got the fourth down, and what we have seen on tape was they do something where we just set up a fake, if they line up in a certain formation defensively, we just run the fake, and all I have to say is tell the personal protector, yeah or no, yes or no. I told Matt, it was like fourth and 10, I think fourth and nine, we're on our 43 or 44, so it wasn't that terrible. Whereas I said, hey, if it's there, Matt, take it. And he took it, and I think it added, I think it got the kids to realize, man, this guy is, if it's there, he's gonna take it, I'm not gonna practice stuff and I'll run it, so they pull it off, we can see how they went about, oh, great call, but it's not a great call unless a kid's execute. So a good thing I've erupted so much, the kids felt comfortable. I think we have action set up here on tape, if you wanna explain it. Yeah, Matt Bairinger took it, we had to pull in both of our big guys, Nick Zeck, who's a basketball player, and Shane Shrimp, and we gassed it for 35, and you can see the excitement on the sideline, and they were set up, they had six guys on one side of the field, and we just took it the other way. Here's the second play, right after that, you guys went to the fullback out of the backfield, why don't you go and explain that? Yeah, we were pretty successful running in between the tackles. Travis Jervis played an exceptional game, dumped in the flat, they kept trying to stop the run, got our fullback in the flat, so I gained about 14. That play was really, we probably ran that play eight times in the game. This is gonna be our fullback again, Travis Jervis on the belly, sorry about that, I forgot what I put in there. Travis gained 10, Travis had an exceptional game of fullback, our old line just played outstanding. Here's Nick Hunter, ran up with 129 yards in the game, running power for about 17 yards. Power is just our bread and butter, pull the backside guard, we down block, and like I said, I picked kids play well. We rushed for almost 300 yards, which I think was a pretty good start to our season. Here, the play, the reason I love this play, not so much the touchdown pass from Brent to Courtney Gatlin. Courtney played about five, six plays a whole game. We tell our kids, be ready. We ended up playing, they ended up blitzing. We got lucky, we got fortunate in what they did, and we threw a touchdown. Brent did a great job, but I love how our kids were always prepared. Courtney played six plays, also one of the plays got out there, you never know when it's gonna come to you. It came, but the game, it's thought we saw some of the bigger runs, and we had, I think it just went over, it's six runs over, five runs over 15 yards. We had two passes over 20 yards, we call it explosives. We wanna try to get seven explosives, we got them. Nick Hunter played exceptional, marked us down for a freshman game of almost 50 yards. Travis Jervis, our fullback game, almost 50 yards, and we're alive, and I think we averaged about 5.6 yards a carry, and rushed it for 292 yards or whatever it was, really, got the numbers right here. 53 carries for 291 yards for 5.5 yards a carry, not bad. Yeah, a lot of people laugh after the game, some of the old guys who played here, I don't mean old and bad, but the guys who've been here the last 10, 20 years came back to me, I was, you know, I was great. They guys got bummed, and what we just tried to do is instill the kids, just be physical, and just believe what we're trying to do here, and I think when I started, when I got to run for the Catery after the game, and the kids were all excited, I think that's when I kind of broke down a little bit, and I said, wow, these kids really believe what we're trying to do. I mean, I was gonna come out of victory, but the kids really believe, and they played hard, and they care about you, and you know, we care about them, of course, so. So I find this guy's really pleased with the effort, the running game, you know, we missed some big plays in the past game, we have to get better at that, and we had three holding calls by wide receiver, so I'm only gonna throw a negative at you, John, just to make it real, but we got a touchdown call back, we had a 220 yard play that's called back because our wide receiver held, so we had a chance to go 400 yards off, and it's just rushing. Well, your first score, of course, there, we saw the first two plays, I went up to it, the fake punt, and then Jervis out of the backfield, and then Lukey punched it in. Right, Lukey, for my six yards. Then Jervis, again, actually had a big hand in the second touchdown, he punched it in for a one yard run, but that kept a nice 15 play, 68 yard drive. What we're seeing here is a little bit different, and no offense, or pros or cons, what was done in the past, or what's done now, but what we're seeing a little bit, is a little bit longer drive, you get the offense on the field a little bit more, rest your defense, and I think it showed, because your defense played such a strong game. They did, they had six plays, Coach Crewe was laughing, we had six plays, Roosevelt more than summer for seniors, like, what's going on? Because last year, I think that caused the situation where they had some three in the house, they were back out there, and it's going to happen sometimes, it's going to happen this week, but I think we have the ability to sustain a drive when we need to. I think you have to, on both sides of the ball, defense needs to get in and out quick. Sometimes the offense has to go out there and sustain, and I think we ran the ball 13 times, and that drive, or 12 times, I think we threw the ball twice that old drive. It was just a Nick Hunter, Travis Jervis show, with those guys up front just doing an exceptional job, first time round, and actually run blocking for a while. Tri-state came back and scored late in the second quarter to make it 13 to seven at halftime. What did you guys say to your team at halftime at this point? That drive they scored on was, I think, and I'm wrong, but I'm going to throw out the number, I think it was 50 yards in penalties. It was two, we ended up, it was 15 penalties, like 190 or something, or 150 yards, so I thought we are disciplined, believe it or not, we are disciplined, they had two retaliation hits, we pushed the kid back, we got pushed, which is, we stopped that, there were none in the second half. Two pass interference calls, one was good, I thought one was debatable, but it happened, and we had two offsides by D-Line line offsides, we had six penalties, one drive, so honestly at halftime I told our guys, man, we can run the ball, which makes me feel good, and they have not done one thing on offense besides us giving them penalties, so I really told the kids, let's cut out the penalties, I was pretty stern, saying we can't retaliate, that it's just as bad, it doesn't look good, it's just not the way you play football. Stop retaliating, play football, it's supposed to be played, and I wasn't nervous, because I just thought we were in control. Some of the things I think we talked about earlier too is the fact that your penalties, at least they're aggressive penalties, as opposed to just dumb and stupid mental mistakes, they're good plays where guys are going out there and playing hard. Exactly, we're trying to sit back and being lazy. They were trying, our receivers were trying to get down, the other receivers didn't block a lot last year, because they were always thrown, so they ended up, we just got to work on that kind of thing, but it was aggressive, and the retaliation hits, where's the push, it was just, I just can't do it, because the second guy always gets called, and the late hit, I think we knocked our kicker out, we blocked the ball, though I thought it was a bad call, because we tipped the ball a few ago, and that was a late hit on the kicker, and then the quarterback, Nick's that question, well, got him late, but it was right out there, he is, he threw it, but you know, refs are gonna protect quarterbacks, but I love Nick's effort. We ended up having 10 sacks or something, so that quarterback, I think, might still be feeling it, come today. The third quarter, Tri-State came back and tied it up. Two things happened in this drive, I think that were very important to mention. First off, they only gained about 170 yards of total offense on the day, and I know one of them was 75 yards on one play. On that drive, yeah. Exactly, and that was one play that happened, and also I think after they scored, they had to miss extra point, which I think was very key, because instead of taking the lead, it was just 13 to 13. Yeah, because I wanted to see, we never got behind in this game. Being 13-13, I think we drove down, we scored a touchdown, which would have put us up 27, we got a holding call in the end zone, then we missed a field goal. So our kicker, a little down, they hit us with a 75-yard pass from their own, whatever, yard line, they score. So now our kicker, like, jeez, what's gonna happen now, is this, and they missed that experience, and now the kids are like, hey, it's 13-13. Doesn't sound big, but I think sometimes the player, and it's like, hey, we're still even, but I kept telling the kids, they aren't stopping us. If they were stopping us, I think it would have been like, I didn't feel like they were stopping us. When we came right back, I think drove all the way down, and that next drive, I think we scored a touchdown, the next drive, answering their score, and kind of got the momentum back, because I thought their kids were tired, I kept telling our kids, they're the ones tired, you know, we're not tired, and so that's what made me feel good. And that's hard to tell sometimes in practice, translating for practice, to game, and see where you guys are conditioned wise. But I think one other thing too, again, you mentioned that it was nice, is how you guys responded. They missed the extra point, and the very next drive, you guys came back, and of course that was the play we just showed a little while ago when Loopke hit... It hit a quarter of a gallon, and it was like a five-player, on our short of five-player drive or something, yeah. Yep, so that made it 20-13, going into the fourth quarter, and we're gonna talk about the fourth quarter here, and then talk about, of course, your standout defense on the day when we get back. We gotta go to break right now, but when we come back, we're gonna talk about the last part of the game, and then we'll talk about the stellar defense, and upcoming game versus cartridges weekend. So stay with us, we'll be right back with more on the Lake Hill locker room. This is the story about a group of kids who volunteered. Doing something nice for someone. We fixed up. Did some art projects with the kids. We fixed up his house. We worked in the woods. Made up the park. Did something for the planet. We just did it. No other reason. And you know what? It was great. At first, they didn't know each other. Well, that didn't last long. This guy is really funny. We ace our new friends. Are you into it? Call for agent, check out our website at ruintuit.com. Before you know it, she talks. Before you know it, she walks. Before you know it, she knows you. Before you know it, she has a heart. Before you know you're pregnant, when your baby's no bigger than a grain of rice. Before she's a twinkle in your eye, that's when you need to take folic acid every day. After that, it's too late to prevent some serious birth defects. Take folic acid now, before you know it. Hi, everybody, and welcome back to the Lakeland locker room. Once again, I'm John Weber, joined today by Jim Zabrowski, the head football coach at Lakeland. Jim, we were just talking about the game recap here. Let's talk about the fourth quarter. You enter the fourth quarter with the 20-13 lead. First off, what are you thinking right at this point? Feeling pretty good. And the reason I was feeling pretty good is I thought they were tired. I thought we were controlling the line of scrimmage. I didn't really care about score right at the moment. I thought we were controlling the line of scrimmage. So if we needed to do something, that fourth quarter in terms of eat up clock or get a turnover stop, I thought we could. So I felt pretty comfortable. I was always, you're always nervous when you're only up a score, because you always know one play could do it. But I really thought the momentum was on our side. I think that big play according to Gallant kind of knocked the last gasp out of Tri-State. And hopefully, we had a chance to put it away in the fourth quarter. And it looks like you did early on again. Oh, it's kind of midway through the fourth quarter. Cooked nail a 27-yard field goal to make a 23-13. I don't think that was a nail in the coffin yet, but it kind of gave you that little edge. It gave us a two-point. It gave us a two-score cushion. I'm nothing against kickers. I hate field goals, because we're kicking field goals a lot. I mean, we're not doing well in the red zone. And that drive, we bogged a little bit down there, but Matt came through. And we missed an extra point earlier, and a field goal. So I wasn't very happy with the kicking concept, not so much just the whole concept of the kicking game in that term. So we ended up getting it, though, pushed up by 10, ended up kicking off, stroking them on defense, getting the ball right back. And then we ended up with really a full-back laden. Vince Cooper, who came up for that drive, and drive and service just kind of took over. And we just ran the ball right at him. I think the biggest thing about that, too, is, again, it was just a rally-killing, game-ending drive. I mean, the fact that you scored was almost pointless, because at that point, you guys put a six-nother almost six-minute drive up on the board, and they had no chance at the end. Yeah, we talk a lot about it. There's two types. There's a two-minute off, and everybody knows you're behind, or at the end of the half, and you need a touch, and you need a field goal. And we call it a four-minute offense. A four-minute offense to us is there's between four, five, six minutes left in the game. We had the lead. Now, our job is to hold on to the ball, eat up clock. So we worked on that. We said, hey, man, ball security, and let's move the chains. And there was a couple, I think, third downs in there that we got, which helped us out. I think early on in the game, it would help us out. I think we went four-on-four down two or three times, and we got it. But that drive was just third. It was like a first and 10, second and six, third and two, first down. I kept looking at the clock, and I'm like, by the time I got inside the 10-yard line, it was less than two minutes. It felt pretty good, unless you turned the ball over and they returned it, that you were gonna get this thing done. Right. Well, let's talk about your defense. Again, just to stand out, play 178 total yards in the day, and the amazing thing is only 10 yards were rushing, which is obviously unbelievable. I think we have some highlights that we're gonna go to here in a minute, but anybody individually that really stood out for you. You know, we talk as a coaching staff, even an offensive, Andy, but we said, we're not gonna have that one. And this is no offense to our kids, we have great kids and they're a very good player. We don't have that. People sometimes call them a freak, like a Javon Curse or somebody who's just so outstanding, you gotta say, hey, what we have is a bunch of kids who are very good, that play very hard. I think it makes our whole union. The guys know, the guy next to him has to do his job. I mean, they trust each other. So, as a defense, I mean, you can go to change shrimp with three sacks. You can go to lineback in Core Rosie and Vig had a sack or two rows above more. I had a good amount of tackle, Ryan Bannaloo played well and Sam Scherner was running wild. Secondary played well, he got a couple passes in fairness, cause it hurt us, but they got nothing in the pass game besides that one tight end pop pass when we missed two tackles. But I thought, overall, you can go right down the row, I'm not gonna just list you, Joe List and Shane Shrimp and Nick Zeck and Johnny Ferguson and Roosevelt Moore and Vig and I'm not gonna just name them all, Mike Gregory came in there. They all just played as a unit very well. I just thought I kept seeing these bunch of blue and yellow jerseys just running after the ball care and seeing five, six, seven guys and the happiest I was, and this is gonna sound bad, but I always tell the guy that the quarterback makes it through the game without getting, if he wants to throw the ball without getting dinged or without taking at least punishment, you know, physical clean hard hits, you know, you're not doing your job and I think with 10 sacks and that kid ended up leaving a little bit, I had a mild concussion or we at least put pressure on him and did it clean and just play it hard, physical flip. I think that was an attribute to the whole defense. Great covers and great, we didn't blitz a ton. Yeah, but when we blitz, we got home. Well, let's go ahead and take a look at the highlight reel here. I know we had a couple of defensive plays that we put together here for you. And here's here, this is me. When you watch this, you're just gonna see 11 guys out there. I think this is the one, their play-actioning pass and they ran a lot of three-man routes on us. So they tried to max protect, here we're blitzing a little bit. We bring Jacob Vigilani out the end, right back, missed them, Jacob gets a big sack. Jacob's special with six, three, 235 pounds out there. He's gonna make some running backs missed plus he can run and run back over if he needs to. So we ended up bringing six. Okay, you know the time we bring six, we never brought more than six on a blitz. Here, great pressure, we twist. We get great pressure from the back side. David Benz running about 100 miles per hour on the back side, forces the quarterback to throw the ball into the dirt with a great coverage. Here, they're in their pro side, not a play-action pass. End up getting a, one of the few passes they completed but the second they did a great job rounding that ball mark. Edmund Mats Wayne stroked that kid. If they're gonna complete a pass, he might as well stroke them once they complete it. Here's an outside run, players say they had a little, not much success with, that's really about more. And Sam Schoener and Vandal do on the outside is making plays. And I think when he was having Murray goes fry. They're an outside zone, inside zone running team. And he came in and you may talk a little bit about this. I had no idea what he thought. Did he think that, hey, we're NAI, we're tri-state, we're just gonna be able to go in there, do what we do at McMurray and be successful. Like I didn't talk to him much before the game or after the game, it's pretty short. Just kinda like, congrats Jim on your first win. I'll see you later. So he didn't say much about the effort and so on. So not knowing what to expect, not knowing what was going on and they couldn't run the ball on us. And then they had to try and throw it. And the quarterback completed a few passes but when he completed them either he got hit, like Kido Kai took a pretty good beating. And that's what we have to do. If we can keep control in the run game, and that's Coach Cree, Coach Mateer, Coach Kalsich, Coach Roberson, the defense staff did a great job preparing. And I just say, stop the run. Let's stop the run, make him throw the ball, they want to throw it. We gotta rally the ball and get the job done. So very happy with that side of the ball. Sometimes as a new coach, you may have seen this when he came to Lakeland too, the personnel fitting the system is important too. And I think that fry was always a custom. He always had that unbelievable running back at McMurray. And it looked like this time he had the strong arm quarterback but maybe didn't have the back of the field. And that's what some of the people said last year, I talked to Coach Freyman last year, he said the defense at McMurray was very good. Very, very good. He said he had won. His passing was average. He thought last year he said he had won stud running back. So I think he'll get the stud. And we'll play him next year. I guarantee you he'll have a stud, whatever back there. But they didn't have that one guy that could just break it. Take it to the house. I think the one key to score two touchdowns was a stock year kid did a good job in short yardage form. I think we played fast. But most important present thing on defense was I felt like we were running very well and they looked a little slow. No offense to them. I just think we had more speed. And our kids up front won the physical battle. And once you win the physical battle, you got a chance. You won't always win the game. You win the physical battle, you get a great chance to win a football game. I'm both sides of the ball. That's all I tell the defense, be physical. Yep, and you guys obviously won the statistical battle. I'm gonna read some of the stats here. You guys had 22 first downs compared to 13. We already mentioned the total yardage. You guys had 410 total yards compared to 178 for tri-state. Time of possession is another one that stands out, which is something we haven't seen in the past. We had 36-24, 36 minutes to 24 minutes, which is really amazing. And of course we mentioned the sacks. You guys had just an unbelievable defensive performance. Pretty good all-around. What do you think you guys have to work on before we talk about cartage? Double thing, we got a minimum. We're like the Oakland Raiders right now. We have 15 pounds or 50 yards. We've got to minimize the stupid penalty, like I said. And that's no offense to the kids. They know they can't retaliate and they know we can't hold downfield wide receiver. We've got to move our feet. We've got to work on penalty. We can't line up off-sides twice. We've got to work on penalties. Number two is, offensively wise, we have to be able to make big plays in the past again. Because I actually believe the way the game panned out, no disrespect to Tri-state. But as the game was going, once we controlled the offensive line, we controlled their defensive line, we missed James Hayes' open up post for a touchdown. We missed Sean Barron up for a touchdown. We had guys open that could have got the quick score. Because I think to become a very, very explosive offense, which I hope it will become sometime, you're going to have some sustained drive. We also need a one or two-play ban, see a 70-yard plays to get a rolling. And we missed those. And we had chances, even the second play of the game or third play, we had four verticals. We had two guys open and Brent threw a bad ball and we didn't get a good play. We have to work on quick strikes. When we do throw it, we got to be able to get the job done and get some home run shots. Because people now have to put a lot of guys in the box. They bring guys down. We got a chance to play action and go home run. So that's a big thing. Defensively, we got to work. We can't miss tackles. It's a big play they had. We didn't miss very many, but big play they had. You can't have an offense pinned down inside the 10 and give up a 75-yard pass. So they know that. And that's sort of the thing. Making sure once we get them down there, if we don't do something well on offense, keep them down there so they have to punt. And of course, the P.A.T. field goal team. Just as a unit. And when I talk about that, you'll never hear me once ever saying about a person or a player or whatever. It's just as a unit. We got to get that whole group together and play better. Yeah, it's got to be an automatic team. Yeah, exactly. So that's it. Maybe the hole wasn't great or the snap or the protectors. There's a lot of different things. So we harped on. We thought we were pretty good at it. And we weren't, you know, we didn't kick the ball well as a group. So we got to do better with that unit. When I got a new team coming up here, you got Cartage College this week. And it's a new situation as well. You got a night game, seven o'clock, which kind of throws things off. Yes, it does. But it's going to be completely different too, because you got Tim Ruxes, the head coach down there, but he has a totally new system. He has a new offensive coordinator, new defensive coordinator. I don't know if it's a new system, but you've got to imagine that these guys coming in are going to bring in something different. Yeah, it's another, you know, crapshoot, you know, procedure. I try to say it was a little bit, we have an idea whether we'll do offense and defensively. New coordinators, they never know what they're going to do. I think what helps us, in a sense, is we're going to get better at what we do. Whatever they do, we're going to have to, we've got to get better at what we do. Now, worry somewhere. I think as the year goes on, you're going to see us not worry so much about everybody else and worry about how can we make Lakeland better? Now, how can we beat Cartage? Let's play the best game we can. The biggest improvement should come between week one and week two. Now, with that hold, I don't know. But I think we can correct the mistakes we made and we can have an opportunity. You know, hopefully play better, because I tell the kids a 10-step season. Each step is as important as the next step. So we're on step one, trying to get step two. And hopefully, as we will do it, I don't know what's going to, I think we're going to need to run the ball, of course. We're going to have to play action. These guys, I think they'll play a lot of men. Covers could open up big plays in the passing game. Offensey, we've played Cartage. We've been on that Milliken for three years. They're a two-back team, some one-back. They want to get, they're all geeked up and hyped up, night game, first game. You know Cartage, they have 160 kids on the sideline. All their black or whatever uniforms they have, all the money they have down there. They get all excited about their facilities. It's a great opportunity, because one of the goals for our program is we want to be one of the best teams in the state of Wisconsin, and the way it is, play at Wisconsin schools. So the next two weeks, we have that opportunity. So we're going to have to get ready for the first road trip, besides I think the scrimmage helped us. But a night game throughout your schedule, you've got a different deal. I think our kids will be excited to go down there and a quote-unquote power, you know how it isn't, but I apologize John. They're a CCI, they're supposed to be a power conference team. You know, and now I got to tell our kids, hey, it's a football game, let's go get some. I'll play at those guys, you know, whenever we want, the schedule and every year we'll play them. Well maybe the artificial turf will help you guys, like you said, we play fast. Could be, and that's why I think it's going to help. Hopefully that rubberized tub will make us look even faster. That's right. Well we got it, you're getting a sign here that we got to wrap it up. We're going to have to recap a little bit of what happened this week. And of course the football teams, we just talked about 130 to 13, getting off to a great start over Tri-State. The volleyball team had a great tournament. They finished in fourth place in their tournament, but they had a nice young team playing against some of the nationally ranked teams and it's going to help them in the long run. And finally of course the men's and women's soccer teams. The men's team went one-on-one this weekend when the women's soccer team lost two overtime games in thrilling fashion. But if you get a chance, make sure you join us next week for the next edition of the Lake and Lock Room and we'll see you next time.