 Certainly the plan and the return to play. So we'll see how he continues to feel what his conditioning level looks like. But that's good. You have to be able to get out there and feel the pain of some of those routes, especially down in the red zone that you talk about it, and you coach it, and you teach it in the meeting room. But then to be able to come out here and see it full speed, I think that's a good step that we'll have to make those corrections and see where he's at tomorrow. What do you hope to see from Matt as he starts from his competition? You know, I mean, John and I have a lot of different personnel decisions, and I wanted to get a guy in here that we felt like would continue to compete with Logan. That's what we expect Matt to do the same thing that everybody else does, show up, know what to do quickly, make a positive impact on the football team, and try to find a role and compete for a job. Come out here and sum it up the mistakes that may happen. How important is it for you to just keep respectful that his training camp is things that he's trying, but also balancing off it actually being a literal mistake? I mean, I get trying to make new mistakes. I get that. I get the idea of practice. But again, we have to execute, and we have to be smart, take care of football, and get guys that maybe don't have the same knowledge as we do, or he does in this particular instance, to try to help them do their job better. So practice when you're trying to get the offense better, but certain guys aren't out here. I know each guy is on an individual plan, but how does the offense as a whole get better when so many pieces are missing? I mean, there's going to be times during the season where we don't have guys, and we've been through that. So we've got to get the next guy ready and continue to push through and see who takes advantage of their opportunities and who goes back out there and who works with whatever group. So we'd like to have everybody, but the reality of that happening throughout the year is probably not likely. So we'll just coach the guys that show up and that can practice each day. I know there weren't similar situations in that when Brady hit guys, it was more of a defenseless receiver situation. But Rodgers took two shots that seemed way more substantive in terms of the potential damage to the head. And there wasn't much of a reaction to that. I just wanted to talk through kind of assessing them. I didn't feel like those plays, I didn't feel like there was a shot at anything. I thought guys were playing defense and unfortunate that Chester fell down, but I didn't feel like Chris Jackson did anything malicious. I thought Jan Jansen hit a guy legally within five yards, used his hands, then it hit him in the head or neck. I'm not sure the other instances that you're talking about, but I didn't see anybody that was similar to what happened with Brady. To me, that's a decision. That was a decision. The other ones I felt like guys were playing the game. Is that kind of what you're looking for? Yeah. Just continue to coach him and teach him some of the techniques that we feel like could maybe help him. These are productive players, whether him or D'Nico, maybe that'd been somewhere else. These guys are productive players that have been great to have on our teams thus far and getting them out there and just working with him and showing them some of those techniques that may or may not help them. Caleb seemed to really struggle other guys too in the man-beaters period he called in. Then he stayed, worked with some coaches and stuff, came back and had a nice break up there. What would you see in that period? Yeah, that puts a lot of stress on the defense and that low red area where guys are in man coverage. And obviously, the offense is trying to use their rub system or whatever they're trying to do. And it's a communication and it's a cat and mouse game. And the offense is pretending like they're rubbing or whatever they have, they have certain plays. And so the more that you can see those, a lot of these things are the same thing that go on throughout the league. Everybody's got everybody's tape. And so it's two on two and it passed it off. Do you lock it? And I thought that was a good drill. We got something out of it. We'll teach from it. We'll come back and try to do it again next time we're in the red zone. Which is the ones that got off the field. I mean, I think that that's trying to coach and show them the competitiveness that needs to be on every snap, on every third down snap, you'll have to watch and see where we are as far as holding or contact. I mean, it's hard to see some of those things. But as long as we're sound in a rush and trying to be tight or execute the coverage, there's been some good examples of the third down, the defense. I think they're very conscious of it. I mean, I think they're very conscious of it. And I guess that's all we can ask from them. I know Shane and his staff is making it a priority to explain or show them the stats from practice, whether there was a penalty or not or whatever, but there's an awareness of it. You're going to have to talk louder, John. Hi, I'm Jesse. Jesse, Taylor, the one who was talking the other day about maybe how he kind of fought a little bit harder for the team over here, keep harder and over the line. I mean, I think that those are all things that we're all professionals. And one thing that we always strive for is we strive for creating a connection and making a connection with our players. And that's not being best friends. The connection isn't being best friends, but there's a connection there. There's a trust there. There's a willingness to work and meet halfway. A lot of these players have great ideas, and they've done things a certain way, and they've been successful at it. All we ask them to do is try to keep an open mind and be willing to change and to improve and try to think about some new techniques. And I think Taylor's done that. I think Keith's done that. And we're excited where Taylor's at right now in his recovery and where his attitude is. And so hopefully we can start to get him back out here fairly soon. I remember when you first got here, you had said that LaWan was one of the guys that you wanted to kind of deliver the message to the rest of the team. How much has his presence been felt with him being back out here so far, I can't... It's hard. I mean, I think it has to a certain degree. I think everything that we've asked him to do, he's done, he wants to continue to do more. But I think we start practice well with the jog through, and he's locked in there. There's a fine line between when you're not out there and how much you're able to say or willing to say. And so I think that he's been conscious of that and trying to lead from not being out there in the team periods. And I'm sure when he's back out there, that will only continue to increase. Pushing expectations as a whole. I know you don't really talk individual goals and stuff. But with Derek having been as good as he was last year, inside of those big team expectations, how do you set him? I mean, I think that his availability, his durability, that for his ability to carry it as many times he had and take care of the football and protect the football, that's a lot of chances that guys are coming. I think he can continue to do that. And take what they give us and all those improvements that he's tried to make. So when he gets back out there and we get going with him, we'll kind of see where he's at. And I know that he'll be ready to go when we need him. You kind of see him in old strips, encouraging other guys when they're out there. How do you like how he's kind of handled his first start to camp, even though he's not able to be out there in teams as well? I mean, I could pro. I think he's handled it. He's staying in shape. He's working hard. We ask everybody that may not be in practice that has a different plan to work just as hard, if not harder than the guys that are out there. I think that's an only a respect thing. If I was a player and I looked over there and saw a guy with flip flops on, I probably wouldn't react too favorably. And so I try to paint that picture for him. And so the expectation is that guys are working when they're not on the practice field and they're getting something done. And for the most part, I think we do that. You asked how similar this might be to Pittsburgh and said that in both cases that the goal was clear. They're trying to win a Super Bowl and that it's stated. Is that something you routinely are bringing up in terms of what the big goal here, do you even have to say? No, I mean, I think that what we're trying to do is we're trying to create a culture that's going to stand up to tough times and through the course of the season and put ourselves in and do things that are going to help us win. And ultimately put ourselves in positions to win championships, to win the division, to play playoff games at home. And, you know, he was, he was at a, been at a fabulous, unbelievable organization with a unbelievable head coach and organization. So it's fun to get those guys, I mean, you know, he's a pro and he understands what we're trying to get him to do. And I've loved his attitude since he's been here. So, you know, everybody's goal is to win. I just think that, you know, we can't just say we want to win. We have to go out and improve and show that, that we're willing to do the work that it was required to win. You know, I mean, I felt like it was okay. The intensity, you get, you get around a quarterback, you know, and it's just, those are the things that, you know, again, we're asking them to rush and affect the game, but then it's our quarterback. And, you know, I thought that there was some competitive plays, you know, there'll be a, you know, great situation that we can coach from and understand to say, hey, we're in fringe field goal range, right? We're in for, we have a time out, we're trying to get a few extra yards. And the defense conversely is gonna try to, to blitz you and sell out and try, and we, you know, we had the ball bounce off our shoulder pads and, you know, when those things happen in the middle of the field, there's bodies around. So I think that we can, we can learn from that. And we had the same situation on the first day of training camp last year. We didn't have any time outs, Ryan threw the ball in the middle of the field and we couldn't get the snap off. And so everybody was upset, everybody was disappointed. And I said, we're gonna learn from it, we're gonna go back, we're gonna watch it on tape, we're gonna see the situation and we're only gonna get better. And I felt like we did that and we won games in the two-minute situation last year. So we'll go in there and we'll look at it and we're thin. You know what I mean? We're thin up front. Those guys are working hard. You know, Ola took a tap at Logan and it wasn't malicious, but you know, at that point in time I just, I knew the rain was coming anyways. Just get us off the field. Thanks guys.