 With David Long, I know he's been in a starting role now for a couple of weeks. What kind of progress have you seen him make from an on-field perspective, communication, I guess just kind of the entire body of work through these last couple? You know, David's a very instinctive guy that also works hard in meetings, takes a lot of notes, asks a lot of questions, so he doesn't have a lot of mistakes when he's out there. He's very productive, like I said, very instinctive, has a great nose for the ball, and you know, I just see a guy that the more, you know, he hasn't played much, but the more he's out there, the better he gets. And whatever details that he needs to clean up, he'll clean up the next day. Like I said, he takes notes, he takes coaching, he does a great job. With a play like the one that Stafford had on the goal line touchdown where he, it's almost looked to be a little bit of a no-look pass, fits the ball in that tight window and seemed to move the linebackers out of position, is there really anything that you can kind of coach guys up on on that, or is that just a spectacular quarterback play? Yeah, that was just, he looked him off and he came back, and I mean, it was a nice play by the quarterback, obviously. Glennon, I think you're muted. Let's try that again. Sorry about that. Jimmy had touched on David Long again. How has he done, how has he adjusted, I guess, to the coverage? I know that's an important role now, especially with Jay on out. How has he done, you know, this season in terms of getting better on the coverage front, do you think? Well, I think he is getting better because, you know, he, like any other young guy that hasn't played a lot, his first week playing, he gets the kid from the Colts, number 21, who's really spectacular, a receiver, and he had David kind of peek back and, you know, when you're playing man-to-man and you're doing things, you've got to train your whole body, you've got to train your eyes, you've got to stay on the guy you're covering, you can't peek back and see what's going on, and, you know, I think that's the area David got much better in the second week. He improved, like I said, he works hard. He tries whatever mistake he makes. He'll work hard to fix it the next time so he doesn't do it again, and I think that's all you can really ask of a guy like that. Thank you. David, go Claire. Jim, you've dealt with a lot of really good quarterbacks in this league. Where does Aaron Rodgers, in the way he's playing right now, stack up? Oh boy, he's one of the top guys. He's, you know, we just played a great one in Stafford, and, you know, it seems like we just, we just keep getting better and better. Just, you know, played against Aaron a number of times, and, you know, besides his mobility, and his arm strength, and his quick release, he's not missing much. I mean, he can do almost anything, even as many years as he's played. You don't see a decline in his play at all. I mean, the guy's spectacular. He's just, it seems like he just keeps getting better and better every time you see him. As a coordinator, is there a game that you ever had really good success against him that you think, boy, that was, that was one for the, one for the books there? Well, you know what, we played him a couple of years ago, even in, when I was in Cincinnati, and we played really well, and then all of a sudden they got a couple turnovers, and he got on fire, and he came back and he beat us in overtime. And I think the score was like 17-0 at one time. He just gets on, he gets on a roll. You got to keep him off rhythm somehow. That's not easy. You know, like I said, the guy can make off rhythm throws. I mean, he can move his feet. He's very athletic. You know, he can, you know, he ran a couple in, ran one in last week, and he's just, you know, you don't see a real decline in his play. Yeah, just kind of staying with that same line of questioning, Coach. When you can't, when you can't confuse a guy like Aaron Rodgers for somebody who's played so much football and seen so many different, different defensive schemes to get him off rhythm, how can, how can your guys help that, that effort, that attempt to kind of, you know, disrupt him in any way possible? Well, you know, Aaron's got an answer for everything. You know, if you try to disguise, he'll quit concha. If you, if you try to do different things and like keep him off rhythm, he's got a kind of an answer for everything. He's seen it, he knows where he wants to go with the ball. I really don't know if you can, if you can trick him or whatever you want to say it. He's kind of seen everything and he's a special quarterback. And then just to bounce around with one more. Rashaan seems to, seems to play, you know, 110% or with 110% effort and energy every time he's out there. Are there any points where you have to kind of reel him back in just so he doesn't make mistakes or are you comfortable with if when he does mistake, make mistakes, that he's just, you know, I love, I love the way Rashaan plays because you're right, he plays, he plays like his hair is on fire and you love to watch him. I think he's at his best when he triggers, when he sees what he, he knows what to play is and he triggers and whether sometimes he, sometimes, most of the time he's right. A couple times he's wrong, but he's disruptive when he's wrong. But you know, he, he is, to me, he's one of the better linebackers in the league just because of the way he plays. You know, he, he understands the game. He plays hard. I mean, I don't know if anybody in the league plays harder than him at that position. Thanks very much coach. Jim Wyatt. Good afternoon coach. I guess David Long, I want to ask you a little bit about him. What was he like as he kind of waited his turn during the course of the season and now how was he continued to develop for you as he's gotten more play in town? Well, David's been, David's been good. You know, we, he's, he's good enough to be a starter in the league. He really is. And he's, he's proven it, you know, with his play. Like I was saying before, he's very, very instinctive football player, has a great nose for the ball and knows his limitations. And he kind of, when he, when he knows what he's doing, he just goes and shoots his gun and he's very active between him and Rashawn. They're, they're really two active players on the field at one time. So I think he's getting better and better. He takes coaching like we got a couple corrections I'll make today and he won't make those mistakes again and then nothing major, but the things to try to help him play better. And I don't think you and Kevin Green ever overlapped, you know, in Pittsburgh or maybe anywhere during your career, but as a, as a somebody who loves defense and played it and watched some of the best players in the league, what were your thoughts about Kevin Green as a player? And I'm, I know you're sorry to see his passing. That's, that's a, that, that one caught me off guard yesterday because I came in the one year Kevin was there and did a great job for the Steelers and, you know, obviously a Hall of Fame player and a great guy and I've known him for a while and you know, it's a shame. The guy, the guy was, the guy was just one heck of a football player, you know, big, tough, strong, physical, you know, between him and Greg Lloyd and Jason Gilden and, you know, you know, they had all three of those guys on the same team at one time and probably as good as an outside linebacker is you're going to get in a league, could do it all, could cover, could drop and then the best thing he did obviously he rushed so, you know, it's a shame to hear it kind of caught me off guard, you know, that, that and I feel sorry for his, you know, feel for his family and his children and what a, what a great person and great football player.