 All right, here we go. We got more drama about the baseballs in MLB. Apparently, they used two different balls in the 2021 season. The reason being, they were going to change the ball altogether in 2020, 2019. It was tight, and it was heavy, and it was flying like crazy. And they said, you know what? In 2021, we're going to go back to what we think is the best performance. It's going to be a little looser. It's going to fly a little less. One flies, the other dies. We're choosing die in 2021. We got you. But in February of 2021, they reached out to the Players Union. Apparently, MLB says they reached out. And they say, hey, guys, you know what we told you about only using the new balls? Well, COVID happened. Rawlings factory production halted. We don't got enough balls. We got to dip in to the batch from 2020 to get us through this season. So it's going to be a bit of a grab bag, our bad. Next year, 2022, we got you. It's only going to be the new balls. Apparently, they told the Players Union about that. A lot of players say, I didn't know that. Also, the balls fall into the approved amount. So one's heavy, one's light, one's loose, one's tight. They are all in the window of approval, just on different ends of that window. And they didn't like, apparently, we don't know. We don't know anything about this. But the report doesn't say they were like, hey, that's a game that we need some eyes on. Use the good balls and use those balls. There was just random because they didn't have enough. But the true weird part is that Dr. Meredith Wills, who's been studying the baseballs and doing research on them for years, we had her on the podcast. She puts a lot of hard work into this. She's been cutting open balls. And she says, per her research, that Rawlings was still producing both versions of the ball after the February memo went out, when they were like, sorry, production's been halted. We got to dip into the old ball. So some of the flying, tighter, heavier balls were still being made after COVID, after the memo. They were still producing both balls. I don't know. NLB owns Rawlings. So they can do whatever they want. And then according to them, they told the players union. So they covered their butts that way. And both balls fall into the approval window. So they probably are safe there. But is it good that you got one ball that flies and the one that dies and the pitcher doesn't know which one he's holding? No, it's not good.