 I couldn't have been more impressed with Paxton. And the one thing that I always looked for from left-handed pitchers early in spring training was the ability to get the ball in on right-handed hitters. And it seemed like Paxton was doing that so easy and effortlessly coming in on the righties and with some velocity. It looked like it beat Sanchez a little bit right there. And the other part of it, guys, this is somebody who went through a back surgery. You would, when I watched him mechanically, I couldn't tell that he was favoring anything. It was free and easy. It was loose. But the most important thing for me was how he was locating the ball on the inner half to the right-handed batters. That's impressive early on. John Cole has gotten so much of the attention, rightfully so, the $300-plus million free agent signing. Severino goes down in spring training. Paxton looms as your number two guy right now. What can the Yankees reasonably expect from him? He finished the season in such strong fashion last year. Yeah, I was so excited going into the offseason. And then some of the starts during the postseason, I felt like Paxton proved to himself that he could do it on the biggest stage. And then you heard about the back problem. Then you heard about the surgery. And I was disappointed that maybe we wouldn't get to see him perform at as full as potential. But he looks healthy right now. And I think, Jack, that first year of pitching in New York, pitching in the postseason, there are so many mental hurdles that you have to overcome. And I felt like Paxton did that when it was all said and done. So we expect great things. Again, he's had an injury history his whole career. And he's stay healthy for these 60 games and the amount of starts that he's going to get.