 Oh, just, you know, I mean, I listen to Todd. We defer, you know, to Todd. So, you know, we all have to, we got to get these guys in here. We got to study. We got to learn what to do, teach them our program. And, you know, so if he's back out there tomorrow, then we'll coach him up. Obviously, you expect these guys to come in shape, but how much is something like that to be expected? I think it's hard to think that they can recreate, you know, with a trainer, how we do things. And we see that with guys that have come back and started with our off-season program and guys that have joined a few weeks in. It's just different. And I know that they're working, and they think that they are trying to get in shape, but that's just not the case. And so that's something that we have to focus on and try to make sure that we're getting some work in. But, you know, with all of them, trying to be as smart as we possibly can, Jim. What are you looking for, Mike? Maybe on the first day, we know these guys are going to make mistakes. You want to teach them the right way, but you know, know what has to happen. Yeah, I mean, who can keep their composure? Who can try to be poised? Who has some instincts when it's chaotic and be able to fight through some of that? And I think we all saw that in the team period. You know, it might have started out okay. And then, you know, really just went downhill from there and, you know, with the operation and the cadence and just the, you know, quarterback-center exchange. You know, that's critical, but not going to make a whole lot of excuses, but when the quarterback meets the center last night and their first opportunity to go out on the field and snap is today, you know, some of those things happen, and we just ask them to, you know, try to be able to fight through that and not stand around and not finish the play. How do you feel about the way Malik was able to, you know, kind of get the guys in and out of the huddle, get the play, regurgitate? Yeah, I thought it got better. I think it, you know, it got better in seven-on-seven, and that's all we're looking for is to make some improvements and have a great attitude, be coachable, be willing to learn, you know, it's fun to try to get this group together and just be able to coach and teach them new things and teach them stuff that we do. There was one stretch late where he maybe had three tough throws, but then he came back and made a couple really good throws, one up the middle to a tight end. He liked the way he kind of bounces. Yeah, it didn't seem like, you know, we just talked about not letting anything affect you. You're going to get in the huddle. We have done this for a few years now, so they all look the same, right? There's going to be the quarterback-center exchange. There's going to be the calls in the huddle that get called backwards and get called the wrong way. The left guard's going to go to the right when he's supposed to go to the left and he's going to run into the tackle and, you know, the play's not going to look very good. We've been through it, and I showed him examples of last year. I said, this is going to happen today. As much as we don't want it to happen, it's going to happen. We have to regroup, and I think he did that. I think that's a great example of him. You're going to have incompletions. It was good to see him take care of the football, you know, run when he needed to run, trying to show him all these things of how we want to play the game. What's the balance of him running and taking off rather than in practice, trying to make his way down the field by the guy go up and get the football, and how do you balance that? Well, I think that you want to try to practice the way that hopefully you're going to play in the game. And, you know, we want to be aggressive. We don't want to be reckless. You know, we understand how critical to taking care of the football is. And, you know, a lot of that is just risk, reward, and being instinctive. We don't want robots. We want players that know what to do in our system that can be poised. And then when it's time to be instinctive, be instinctive. Will the rookies be on their own next week and then join the veterans the following week? Or what will their plan be? Oh, no, these guys will be rolling Monday morning. Rolling Monday morning with us. And, you know, I think we'll probably have them lift early, Jim. Lift early on their own so that when the vets go and lift, they can steal some extra meeting time with the coaches. But they'll be out here on the field with us, which is great, phase two. And they'll be able to see where our guys are that have been here with us, the type of condition that they're in, what their skill set looks like, and then start that whole competition with the roster. Would you make Ryan's comment about not his job to mentor? Oh, I thought Ryan handled that very well. I thought he was genuine. I thought he was authentic. And I know Ryan is a great teammate. Everybody here knows he's a great teammate. And that is not his job. His job is to prepare, to help us win a bunch of games, and be a great teammate, and help out. And I know that he's going to do that, so that was not any sort of issue for me. How did you handle those kind of situations yourself, Mike, when you were maybe an older player? And did you go out of your way to try and coach up younger guys at your position? Or was it everybody, you know, compete? Or how did you handle that? Well, everybody competes. And whether there's younger guys, or, you know, one year you show up to camp, and there's seven linebackers that have all started a national football league. That's a competitive room. But you always try to be respectful. I was brought along by an organization with some really good veterans. And that's what I want to try to recreate, that Pittsburgh Steeler team, when I showed up there in 1997, and had guys like Dermany Dawson, Will Wolford, Jerome, obviously joined that, LeVon Kirkland, Cornell Lake. I mean, these are some guys that I will never forget how they treated me, Jerry Ossofsky, who now coaches. I mean, these are memories that I have that are very vivid, changing positions, and being frustrated. And Dermany Dawson saying, hey, bring your golf clubs over. I never played golf at a country club before. And then these guys, Mike Tomzak, is trying to take care of me. And those are things that I'll never forget. And that's what I want to try to recreate here. I'm surprised by the reaction that that comment got, the press kind of pushed specifically that phrase from him got. No, I've really been through this. I'm not going to try to take a gauge on the social media reaction, because I think that they're all like it's being talked about NBA playoff games and stuff. I don't know, bud. I mean, I really, it's hard for me to gauge. I just can go by what I know and how I feel. And like I said, I thought it was genuine. I thought Ryan was authentic. And I'm excited to get everybody working together and building competition. Everybody on our team knows that we're trying to build competition throughout every position. And we've been through this. The veteran's job is to come in here ready to go. And we're trying to find younger, better, cheaper players. That's how it goes every year. And their job is to not let that happen. Like I told them, I watched every draft when I was playing, because I knew that they were drafting players in my position. And I had to be better than them, or I wasn't going to have a job. Here on tryouts, what do they need to show you to stick around a little longer past this weekend? Well, how much information can they absorb quickly? How can they push through mistakes, a skill set maybe that we didn't see on tape? Are they better than somebody that we signed in the post draft? So we'll get a better gauge of where they're at after tomorrow. And we'll give them a full opportunity to compete. Schedule came out last night. Any thoughts on how it laid out and with four primetime games? No, I know that's an exciting time in the NFL. Exciting for our fans. I think we've gotten a lot of activity over there with season tickets. And that's exciting. So we're excited to play the Giants opening week and then see where that journey takes us. And we know that a lot of things happen along that 17 games and 18 weeks where you play on Thursday, Saturday, Sunday. The buy is early. The buy is late. It's just it takes a lot of different twists and turns. Coach, I saw Mason and Christian now. Yeah, we had four players. Yeah, so there's four different groups of players here, Kayla, this weekend. Christian Deloro, Mason, Kenzie, Shai Carter, and Rodney Clemens. So those players qualify for the rookie minicamp. So those guys have been here working. They can do the minicamp. We'd asked them to do it. They wanted to do it. They had been working, practicing. And then there's the draft picks. There's the undrafted players and then the trial players. So those are the four different groups of players that are participating. And those guys being asked that to the younger guys who are going through this? You hope so. You hope so that they can show them how to run around what the individual drill looks like, certain technique, cadence or details or any kind of tip that they can give them. I think it helps. We talked to all four of those guys, and I think that they've done that. They've been here. They can kind of explain how things go. I understand what you said about Berks and that it could happen to anybody. But it happened to him, your number one pick, the receiver. What are my thoughts? Yeah, I mean, just I don't want to really judge. I mean, they all have a long way to go. We all have a lot to improve on. And I think the great thing with this group is maybe we can only improve some of those veteran players just a little bit, man. We're searching for things. And we'll use Kev Byert example. OK, Kev, what can we do just this much better? All these players out here on that field today, there's a lot for them to work on. So they're all going to have some good days. They're all going to have some great days. And hopefully we can avoid the bad days. Get thrown right into these days. The next really the next six weeks are going to be the critical ones, right? The next six or seven weeks, the five weeks that they're going to have with the veterans, with OTAs starting really kind of seeing the speed in which we're going to operate. And then the two weeks that they have left after the veterans leave for the summer. So that's what we tell them. They got to catch up right now. They're behind and they understand that they have to catch up. So your initial impressions of Theo Jackson? You know, really positive. I've just enjoyed meeting him when he came for the local day. And just the kid that's right up the street there in over 10, just liked his attitudes, answered a bunch of questions right today, kind of shows up. And I think he's really going to be a nice addition to our team. It was really cool to be able to see him here for that local day and visit with him, watching when he worked out. It wasn't like he was adverse to working out. He came and worked out in a rain. And we were excited to be able to take him. It seemed like he had some positive words for a chig, a conco out there. With a guy like that, like, what do you like about him? And how do you bring him along as far? Because he's so versatile. Yeah, I think there's going to be a lot of things in the run game that we're going to need to improve. But all I know is that he looked like he was exhausted and he was going and he got back in the huddle and ran another route. And it's frustrating to run 40 yards and be open and not catch the ball and then not come back and be complaining to the quarterback. He got back in the huddle, ran the next route, caught the ball when they threw it to him. So I think it was a good start. What's kind of the biggest challenge is typically you see from the rookies, like right now, when they go from just being in meeting rooms to actually. I think pure conditioning, just the speed of the game, just the how, the pace that we run practice and the drills. I think technique is a large part of it. I think that the technique that used the punt team, for example, some of these guys have never been on a pro style punt. So we're over there trying to teach a kick slide and trying to punch and how we do the punt team. And so it takes time and that's why they call us coaches so that we can show them what's expected of them. And then once they understand it, then we can evaluate them from there.