 Luis Aaron said you had a basically a tough time loosening up. What was the problem in your eyes? Yeah, today I woke up feeling that gray, you know, like a little tight shoulder, you know, although like going to warm up, you know, doing all my stuff kind of get looser. But you know, the boot playing, it was still the same in the game. And I started like getting tired, anybody in it. Did you get tired before first pitch? I was not getting tired, just was tight, you know, yeah, it was tight, yeah. At what point, obviously, the warm-ups going into the third inning, you were able to call it a day, but was there anything before that that told you you were maybe on the ropes here and you should remove yourself? I mean, you know, first pitch, I think it was like 90-91, you know, that's not me. But I thought like, you know, I couldn't get a little bit more. But after that second inning, you know, when I was warming up, it was getting worse. So I thought myself like, before something even bigger happened, let me, you know, stop it right here. Hopefully, you know, it's not, you know, something that would take, you know, much time. When Aaron came out to talk to you in the second, what did you tell him? Well, he asked me how I was doing. He felt everything was okay. I said, yeah, everything was good because I was not feeling like, you know, I was not feeling terrible to like being the kick out of the game at that point. And at that point, I feel like that was good to continue the pitch. Just given your recent injury history, how concerned are you? Actually, the way I feel right now, not much. You know, I mean, at this point, I know my body. So I think I know if I'm just going to take long, but tomorrow I'll have the MRI. Definitely, it's going to show what I say. You threw those last couple of fastballs up at like 96. Did you feel a little looser by the end? I mean, I need to come out to be safe, but... Yeah. I mean, in the last inning, I was, you know, trying to, you know, throw anything that I got my, you know, under there. I think maybe because of that, in the next inning, I was not feeling that great. So, you know, I feel like if I would go in that inning and push it harder, it's going to be even worse. So that's why I stopped it right there. Have you experienced something like this before in your career? Not, not like this. I mean, last year I was, it was a little tight, but this is like less than that. So hopefully, you know, this was my last outing after that short break. So hopefully, you know, I can make my next start. Luis, sorry if you answered this. What was it about that last warm-up pitch that made you stop? Like I said before, it was just getting tighter and tighter. Like it was tight, you know. I don't know if, I don't know if, because I don't, I started throwing at 91 first in the second inning. I pumped back to 96. No, I rest and then I come back up to warm-up. Maybe it was because of that, but it was not right. Now you're feeling anything right now? Not right now. When you warmed up before the game, were you feeling anything in the second set? No, but you know, in my mind, you know, I was thinking about it, you know, not trying to, you know, every pitch I throw, you know, I don't want to feel it. I mean, it was in my mind. Anything you describe as soreness or pain or just more tight? I think it was more tight than anything else.