 Yeah, good morning, Kyle. Just a couple things. Dear Lando, let's better from the Atlanta Journal Constitution. And that was the one that liked your bow tie. So I got it for you today. Hey, just from back in high school, when you were playing quarterback, did any of that help you in the passing game when you moved over to receiver and they played some D-line too? I don't know. I kind of didn't like playing quarterback. But I did kind of get a feel for it and realize how they think and how they recover just so it kind of helped me, you know, realizing what I can do in certain covers, like I said. So I mean, to answer your question, yeah, it kind of helped me a lot. But I don't really remember too much, you know, in my quarterback days. Right, right. Hey, and then another thing that, you know, Coach Mullen talked to us about he said early on as a I guess it would have been a freshman you used to work out with the receivers and that really helped your route running. Could you back that story up and tell us a little bit about it? 100 percent, it was late nights. There's a lot of the older guys that, you know, were mentors to Van Jefferson, Tyree Cleveland, Josh Hammond, Freddie Swain, those are the guys that, you know, took me under the wing. And when I was playing receiver, they like we did a lot late night, a lot of nights at the end door where we were just grinding, conework. And that's how I feel that it kind of helped me a lot. So, you know, when I went back to a time and I could use some of those moves and it's like, you know, you don't see time and use a receiver move sometimes. So they kind of gave me a edge and I feel like they're helping me a lot this year. Jeff Schultz. Yeah, along the lines of working out with receivers, you worked out with Calvin. I understand, Kevin, really, this this this offseason. Could you just tell us about how that came about and specifically what you guys did together? We had the same we had one of the same receiver trainers, and that's Steph Brown, who was a top shelf. We just working on breaks and, you know, repping cone drills. But I just like to kind of see how he runs his rosemary. I know I won't be on it just like him. But you know, some some things that he used to, you know, get in and out of his breaks and then remember, you know, with all his match ups. Did he talk to you at all about the, you know, the transition to the NFL and also was there any talk at all during the workouts about the possibility that you could end up playing together? Not not yet, which was, you know, I trained. I thought I'd train with him Monday. So yeah, I'll see him Monday and we'll talk. But no, we didn't we didn't talk yesterday or today. But you know, I'm excited to get to work with him. He's a great receiver. He has great feet, you know, so just to train with him and be on the same team with him. But we have we have one conversation. He was like, you know, what's the land talking about? And I was like, I think I don't know if they're taking that thing. I need to go four or six. So he's like, you'll love it here and something. All right. So, you know, what's I got to pick now? I'm pretty excited. What's going on? Michael Rothstein. Hey, how are you doing? I want to go back to Archbishop Wood for a minute. Stocking Steve Devlin. What were those late night workouts like when he would have to like come and grab you and then off the field? Like you organize those, right? Like walk me through that. What that was all about, why you did that? When I first got there, my junior Mark Webb, he started it off. And that's where I kind of started doing it. And he showed me drills that I could be doing. That's what I was playing. I was playing tight next time. Sorry. And he was he was a receiver at the time now. He's a safety book. We were doing drills, drills, core work, you know, just out there talking, having fun. But you don't realize it's getting a little late. And that's when Cordell would come out of line. He got to go home. But we just get extra work. But he's someone that kind of helped me. I would say, like, learn how to do that because I was going to my freshman year. But when I once I learned that, you know, he helped me a lot. I feel like that's extra reps that, you know, people aren't getting people to go home and get in a shower and just talking about other things. But, you know, we're outside working. And I heard about this fairly well known tackle that you made on Micah Parsons in a title game. Oh, yeah, I scooped him. And that's something that me and Micah always laugh and joke about because we be him and, you know, he didn't rush for over 50 yards. So that's something that we always talk about. And he he hate that part of me because, you know, he's he always like to say, we recruited. But now he's had good players and it wasn't ready for us. Charles Odom. Terry Fontenot, of course, had a lot of compliments about you, but one that stood out to me was how he talks about you had unusual maturity for a 20 year old. Can you say where you think that that came from? How you develop that maturity and what kind of role will that play in you being able to come in and handle the pressures that go with being a number four overall pick? Oh, my thing is just the people I was around, the people I grew up with, they kind of, I was always the young kid that hung out with older guys and older athletes. So I kind of got a lot of wisdom, a lot of ways to, I feel like I learned pretty early, just be a flower on the wall and just, you know, soak up everything that you're hearing there. I feel like that kind of translates because, you know, like you said, being 20 years old, being a number four pick, that's kind of, that's not usually into just, it's a lot of things that are coming at me and to be able to handle it and, you know, do the right things or something that I've learned through time and it's more things to learn, but just being mature, that's something that I kind of wanted to make sure that, you know, it wasn't like a question for anybody, it was, is he going to be mature at the next level? Is he going to do anything like blow all this money or, you know, make reckless decisions? But, you know, I feel like I've got like a straight path. My parents have done a great job of, you know, just telling me and showing me the way. So I find that kind of, you know, shows. Kelsey Conway? Kyle, who have been some of your biggest influences in life? I'll say my mom, my dad, my grandfather, you know, they've been a lot. They are blue collar workers. They, you know, show me the way. I just feel like, you know, as a kid, you always follow what your dad does. And, you know, my dad isn't a man of a thousand words. So he's just head down and working and all. He's just asking me, what is it like? And he just was saying, in life, you got to get things done. You got to be able to provide for your family and just watch him as I'm growing up. I want to emulate him in some ways. And then obviously, you know, the scouts knew about you going into your final season at Florida, but that was kind of your breakout season. What do you think was the biggest reason for why you were able to reach the level that you did in your final year at Florida? Weirdly, I always say the pandemic kind of helped me a lot because we didn't have a spring. So I was able to get bigger, faster, stronger with a lot of time. And I was just, I had more free time, I guess you said, because we didn't have a spring. It got cancelled the day before spring, I think it was, or like the first day. So, you know, I had the time to, you know, invest in my body, invest in my game. And so it kind of helped me on the field because my mental, I feel like I just knew what was happening. I was watching more film. I was kind of, you know, knowing the game. So all of that kind of, you know, transcended into the season and helped me a lot. Justin Felder? Let me follow up on what you were just saying then. You had the pandemic last year and you made the most of it. So what do you do now? I mean, it's normally, it would be a rookie camp in a week or two, then OTAs. Now it's kind of up in the air. So what's your plan? Same thing, Brian, just getting in football, you know, being ready to be in the best shape I can mentally, physically. So I'm just, you know, still preparing and getting bigger pressures, Tommy. And on the same line I saw yesterday, you said, I think you said you got a chance to talk to Matt Ryan a little bit. In the past, he's had receivers out on his own in California doing their own kind of like private passing camp players only thing. Did he mention that? And are you planning on getting some time with your quarterback before the stuff officially starts? I do plan, I think we're going to catch up and get lunch this week. But he didn't, I think maybe we'll talk about what you're talking about, but he didn't mention it. Alison, Mr. Englund? Hey, I know it's only been a couple of days, but how has your life changed since going number four overall in the NFL draft? What have these past couple of days been like for you? I would say they kind of changed it because everything's still kind of slow with the, you know, with COVID. So everything's not on a regular schedule, but I would say just mentally it changed because now I'm a professional in the NFL sometimes I'm dreaming for it. So to be here and just walking the building and I was like, this is real, this is happening. So I mean, it's a lot going to change in the next, I would say a month or two, but right now it's kind of just kind of chill right now. And then we all saw that you're going to be wearing number eight, that's kind of very unique for tight ends in the NFL. Can you talk about how that went down and how you either, did you pick it or was it the Falcons that told you? What's the reaction been like to wearing a single digit? Oh, I wanted to, I wanted to keep my head in for a book. Quarter Apprentice has it and he's a vet, so I didn't want to pay for that. So I just, you know, Chris Smith sent me the picture of the numbers and I was talking to really, he said, they ate hard and I was like, all right. So I was thinking about it, I was trying to picture it. I think I wore eight one time in a bowl game when I was younger in like an OD camp or something like that. So I just went back to that picture and I was like, hmm, this isn't that bad. So, you know, while I picked it, I was pretty excited with it, you know, with what it is and to have a single digit. So I think it was good too, I've just seen it. So I'm pretty happy with it. Mark Bradley. I'm good, thank you. We have time for two follow-ups. Anybody? I'll ask just, who was one of the first Falcons players that reached out to you after you got drafted? I mean, have you heard from, you know, Matt Ryan or anyone on the phone, and what did they say to you? Matt, I haven't even sit down and looked at my phone yet, but Matt Ryan was, you know, one of the numbers that I did see, and he was just the one that I did catch. But for the most part, I felt like when I looked through it, I'll probably find more. Anybody else? Yeah, I'll just testify. I can't remember if you were asked this the other night or not, Kyle, but coming to a team that's gonna be going through some transition, new coaching staff and whatever. I don't know how much of that you experienced at Florida, whatever, in your pass clean football, but can you just talk about that mindset of a player coming to a team that basically is gonna sort of push reset here? I feel like sometimes, unlike you do need a reset, and I think for this organization with the new staff that was brought in, you know, we're gonna change some things around and get back on the map. And I'm pretty excited to see, you know, with the new coaching staff pass for us, and I'm excited to win. Thank you. Hey, Kyle, I got one more for you too. Going back to that Georgia game when you got hit, what was that whole experience like? Because that was really the first time you had, I think, ever gotten any sort of real injury. Like, what was that like that two weeks like? What did that do to you, for you? Oh, it was kind of weird. I mean, everybody actually didn't hurt. And I was like, I didn't really feel it. It just kind of came fast. I didn't even know my nose was broke. I didn't know my helmet came down. I just was like, I seen him land on me. And I was like, you know, get off of him. I'm a little dizzy. So I, you know, I got myself together and, you know, got up. But I mean, that two weeks, and when I had the nose surgery, that was kind of weird for me because I never been in so much pain. And my face was swollen and I never like, taught of surgery. And just missing those games, it was hard, you know, sitting on the sideline or sitting in a box, you know, when I couldn't be down there and playing with my brothers. But I think it was a time where I could just self-reflect and just, you know, coach the younger guys that were in the game, you know, Keon Zipper, Kimura Gamble, Jonathan Oldham, those are the guys that stepped up and, you know, for the position in the current way. You said self-reflect. Is there something, anything you learned in that two weeks about yourself or kind of about your game or that you saw that altered things? Oh, I'm just thinking maybe this was something that, you know, was shooting a bigger injury. So I was just kind of like, just be thankful that it wasn't anything worse and just take these two weeks off and then get back in the game.