 Mike, you mentioned being creative on Monday with the offense. How much does it help having Ryan Tannehill and what he's been able to do for you these last couple of years as you tried to, you know, maybe adapt not having Derek? Well, I think Ryan's done a great job for us. I think his toughness, his understanding of our offense and what we're trying to do each and every week has, you know, been good, you know, it can always improve. And, you know, we got a lot of things to work on. But, you know, hopefully we can get off to a good start today. I mean, I think he's always run extremely hard. I think he's, you know, been decisive and strong with the football. So, you know, again, we'll see where he's at this week and work towards the end of the week and see who's going to end up helping us. We haven't been playing. How do you go about getting them in football shape at this juncture? Well, I mean, I think you hope that they've been doing some stuff and then the workout, you know, tries to define, you know, what kind of shape they're in a little bit. We'll have to, you know, work them back into shape and, you know, put some pads on them and try to, you know, give them some contact and, you know, see if they can, you know, adjust to take care of the football. Most of the guys that we have here have, you know, run with the football and, you know, in the games and especially the ones we added at Deontay and Adrian. Is there a certain opportunity right now maybe to exploit your tendencies given that, you know, you're going to have some different personnel now? For us, our tendencies, yeah. Well, I think that that's something that's always going to look, you know, we're looking at, you know, we're eight games in and, you know, so we're always going to have to continue to evaluate what we're doing in all three phases and making sure that things stay fresh. But also, you know, be able to, you know, do what we believe is a foundation for us and that our players understand. Is there an initial conversation like with Adrian about excited to be with a team, excited to help, excited to kind of get back into the footballing condition? My conversation? Yeah, just, you know, figure out what to do, go as hard as you can, you know, take care of the football, try to learn the details of the play, play with great effort and don't do dumb stuff to hurt the team. Adrian, whether it's Adrian or anybody else coming in, what's the challenge of kind of, you know, a crash course and learning an offense? Well, you know, Don Trill did that last week. He came in, met with Tony. I've mentioned that. You just have to put extra meetings in, pay attention and focus. And, you know, I think for some positions, you know, there's probably less learning. And I think, you know, not, yeah, you know, I mean, it's not like it's an offensive line where there's a lot of stuff or a receiver where now, you know, there's a lot of vocabulary that changes and formations are called something different. You know, so hopefully we can get these guys brought up to speed quickly. When you played, how much did who the running back was factor into how you reacted, ultimately reacted to play action? That's so long ago. You know, I mean, you know, that's so long ago. I think that I'm not going to answer that question as a player. I would answer it as a coach and say that the success, you know, I think that you're having run in the football. I think that the way the offensive line and everybody comes off the football, the action of the backfield, you know, are all things that I think we look at in play action, whether that's our offense or what we would look at it from a defensive standpoint. Although you may get creative offensively, how important is it to kind of stick to that identity and what it is you guys do well? I mean, I think we have a certain, you know, style that we were accustomed to and that when we win football games, we're doing certain things. You know, so it's a fine line between, you know, making sure that, you know, we're doing the stuff that our guys have been repping and understanding and that are confident in. And then also, you know, we'll always try to find new ways to help us run the football, throw the football, get stops on third down, but to what extent? Do you have any conversations with AJ about how he is likely to receive a lot more attention now with Derrick out of line up? Yeah, I mean, I'm sure AJ, you know, receives a lot of attention anyways. We'll kind of see where that goes this week. I think we'll always have to be prepared and ready for everything. I mean, he's at top of most statistical categories, great grasp of what they want to do, his ability to manage the line of scrimmage, great cadence, you know, arm talent, the way he moves inside the pocket is very impressive. So, you know, they're playing extremely well. They're playing extremely explosive and it'll be a great challenge. You talked Monday about the leadership shift that comes with the void from Derrick. You expect that to kind of happen naturally? Expect guys to talk about it? Do you have any conversations about it? How does it work? No, there wasn't a, you know, I mean, our focus was on, you know, the Rams. You know, I think some of that will occur fairly naturally and we'll see, you know, kind of where that goes. And, you know, I'm confident that everybody, the leadership will be just as strong and, you know, as we work our way through the week and trying to keep guys focused. Deontic former being at it and McNichols already being there. Do you envision possibly having a committee? You mentioned that on Monday, how you've seen the teams? Yeah, I mean, I just think that, you know, there's a lot of factors that go into that. Jeremy has done a nice job for us when we've asked him to or we've thrown him the football. Obviously, he has a role in our football team. Deontes carried it for us before Don Trell was working last week and then now the addition of Adrian. You know, we'll kind of just see where everything goes as it plays out through the week and, you know, see which guys are going to be available for us on Sunday. And with that process with Adrian Peterson, it went from him possibly visiting to him visiting and then signing very quickly. What was it that made that process so, you know, be expedited so quickly? Well, I mean, you got to get somebody. I mean, it's only, you know, you got to worry about guys going other places, you know, guys signing other places, getting ready for the week, getting them caught up to speed. You know, I think everything's determined by how they look and the workout and the physical and everything else that goes into, you know, bringing players in. Josh, got to do maybe get more involved in the offense. Is it just a matter of practicing better or, you know, anything in particular? No, nothing in particular. I mean, we are receivers after we have to block better and need to see our ability to block, take care of the guy with football, play better without the football. We'll continue to fight to get open, you know, keep working and practicing. And, you know, those are all things that they're all working on doing. You had mentioned that he's tougher than just one of his most crucial weapons. You guys have been super caught. I mean, what do you see out of a guy like that who's having that incredible year? Well, I would say not only does he lead the league in touchdowns and catches and targets, but I would say that him and Woods are probably two of the best blocking wide receivers in the league. You know, it's been impressive just to watch them, not only with their routecraft and what they do, but the commitment that they make to block in players. And I'm not talking just DBs. You know, they're trying to block outside linebackers or cut them off or whatever they need to do in their offense. What should you're facing one of those just elite players? Well, I think you want to be, you know, smart. I think, you know, again, I've never thrown a pass in any sort of competitive football game. So my guess is you would want to be smart to where you're throwing over there with someone that that's that good. You know, and then kind of see where they're playing them. He's played all over the place. They've blitzed them and he's played in the slots, played on outside. He's matched player. So we'll have to see where he's at on Sunday and then adjust accordingly. I mean, I'm always optimistic. You know, I mean, about the guys that are weren't with us last week that they're continuing to improve and continue to be available. And you know, we'll see, you know, obviously how he responds here the next couple of days of practice and, you know, got some other guys that are in that same category. Which of a problem is Aaron Donald for any offensive line? And you could ask anybody that question and they would say a huge problem. I mean, just again, when elite players, talented players play with great technique and effort, they become, you know, hall of fame players. And that's what that's what Aaron's done. He's got explosiveness. He's athletic. Very flexible, obviously, to be able to bend and he's quick with his hands. But then when he plays the run, his hands go right in the guy's chest. His hands are above his eyes and he's playing with great pad level. So, you know, there's there's a lot of problems there. And then obviously the effort that he plays to be able to chase down plays and disrupt them. Coming out the first straight wins against very good teams. How much do you feel this last month, the last several games have kind of prepared you and your team for this big match up on Sunday night? I think they all prepare, you know, I mean, I think you have to try to hope that that every game is going to prepare you at some point. The things that come up, you know, we've been fortunate enough to win, you know, win those those games that you've mentioned. So hopefully the some of the situations that have come up or, you know, things that we needed to improve in on those will have a chance to improve if we face them on Sunday night. You know, maybe, you know, the fourth in goal. And, you know, maybe we get a stop this time instead of, you know, giving up the touchdown that we gave after playing three really great plays inside the two yard line or whatever it was. Maybe, you know, this this time that we can find a way to get a stop or, you know, be better in short yardage or whatever it may be penalties. Hopefully we can we can learn and stop killing ourselves with some penalties. Generally expected that like a rookie offensive lineman improves quicker as a run guy as opposed to a pass guy does it take? I don't have any general. I'm not even sure what you said expectations or general for like a rookie offensive lineman. Is it easier to get adjusted to the run game? Well, I think probably the only thing I can relate that to is, you know, Tyler's high school threw it 55 times a game. They ran it whenever the quarterback scrambled. So when when he made that transition, you know, run blocking wasn't something that they necessarily did. And so that was probably something that he wasn't quite as proficient at and had to improve. We would hope that they would all every player would improve in all aspects of their position, whether it be run blocking or pass blocking, working off of press coverage as a receiver, you know, man to man coverage from off or from press. So there's a lot of things that that we hope that they improve on and I don't I've never looked at it like I'm going to categorize or prioritize, you know, one or the other. There's a certain skill set that they all have to do at every position.