 Mike, how is Will in his right foot? And will he have a chance to play this week? We'll see. We'll evaluate that through the week. We'll see how practice goes. And then we'll prepare accordingly and make sure that we give everybody the best opportunity to win the football game. So we'll see everybody's health. And as they work through treatment today and practice and treatment through the week. Do you practice tomorrow? I don't know that as of now, yeah. But it's an important thing, I guess. Yeah, yeah, I think everybody has. Everybody feels a little bit better after some treatment and some time and recovery. And we'll see who's available and where we can go. Mike, in eight-plus games you've seen Will, though, do you feel good and confident about his future here with his team? Well, I'm not ready to talk about our future or anybody else other than what's happening this week with Jacksonville. And I think at the right time, we'll be able to try to have those conversations where they just want us to finish strong. And they do everything that we possibly can to finish this year off the best that we can. That's what the focus is. If we look at, though, this week, there be any consideration of giving Malik and other shotters at still Ryan's job as the second match? Ryan would play if Will can't go. Ryan would be the quarterback. Mike, where have you seen the greatest development with Will over these last three games when he's been healthy and able to play? Again, with all due respect to our season and to the Jacksonville Jaguars and to just the season, just the reflection and the improvement. And it hasn't been there for any of us, not enough of it. And whether that be me, the coaching staff, the players, I mean, I think we just have to continue to strive to improve and clean up the things that we see that can affect whether we win or lose. And so that's what we're going to try to do this week. And then we'll be able to touch on where we feel like we're going to go after that. With your offensive line, it seemed like progress was being made in terms of pass protection in the middle of the season. Then the last three weeks in sacks have become a problem again. Is there anything that you can pinpoint that's created some of that? I mean, I think sometimes matchups in this league. And again, our ability to be able to stay out of games that turn into a drop-back mode, you guys all scoff at me when I say that. And we have to stay out of those games. We have to stay complementary to where you can run the football, you can move the pocket, you can run keepers, you can run play action where guys are creating different angles, as opposed to sitting in there in a two-minute situation and having to go on the ball and drop back and throw it and score and be down in those situations. That's just not where we need to be. And that's all of our faults for putting ourselves in that position. So there's good looks at it. And then there's obviously some disappointing snaps as it relates to protection. And everybody can help. Talk about the good looks at it. Isn't it a little bit like the airport, like the planes are supposed to land safely? And when they do, it's not the thing that you get excited about. It's when there's a crash that it's news. The plays where they block effectively is what they're supposed to do. Do you spend a lot of time on the plays where they block correctly, giving them credit for it? Or is it about the ones where they don't? I think it's a balance. I think you have to continue to show. And I appreciate such a very wordy, long, drawn-out question. You know, there's a balance to coaching and to be able to show the good plays that have shown improvement or things that you worked. I guess the biggest thing is showing everybody, or each player, or each unit, something that you've worked on that you get in the game and you're able to nail it. And you're like, OK, you put time in on it. This is something that we focused on and worked on. And then, obviously, there's the technique plays or the negative plays that we show as well and that we have to try to avoid. That's why we have to practice. And so I'm not trying to sit here and have a pizza party over the positive plays, but there are some things that you're working on and that you end up getting in the game that are positive. And it's part of development and improvement is some small victories along the way. We know that the only victory that matters is the football game. But individually, I think that there can be some small victories as you try to develop players on your roster. You know the changes in that, but you've lived through this game. Is there any time for sentimental thoughts this week that this could be your last game with 22 in the backfield? No, I think we all will have time to sort some of those things out after the season. We're all disappointed and frustrated by how this went this year. But we're just trying to make sure that it's as professional and as classy as we finish. And then we put the players in the best position to go out there and, again, win. But then also there's still a lot of guys that are playing for personal accolades as well. And I'm absolutely OK with that. Because we've always said that when you get enough guys that have personal success within what we're trying to do as a team, we're going to have plenty of team success. So those things have to coexist. And I want them to one more week. Do you feel like the message that you and the coaching staff try to send to the team, do you feel like that's still being received the same way now as it was when this team was having success in years past? The message really is try to stay consistent. I think that whether you just there's things that we believe in and there's things that we know win football games and that is clean football and winning football and successful football. So when we don't do those things, that's not getting, I mean, we're not doing a good enough job of getting that coached or taught with whatever turnover there may be or may not have been. So yeah, I mean, it all falls on me. I'm good with that. You started dealing three times to pull him. Is it the lack of alternatives that gets him back into the position? Well, we only have so many offensive linemen. And there was, but there was also trying to get jailing some work as well. And that's what you work with here in the season with who you have. You stress at all that this is a big game? I mean, this is potentially a playoff game for Jackson. Every game is a big game. And I'm in and a year ago, we were in that opportunity. We were in that spot and we weren't able to win. And we just, we need to win for a lot of reasons. Have you seen progress from Jim when his stats started to go? Well, most importantly, it's what we're going to get this week. And again, everybody's ready to, I'm just not ready to sit here and write a review. And it shouldn't be very good. So again, we're focused on what he's going to be able to do this week and how he can play this week and how he can find a way to help us win. Do you potentially look at guys like Murphy or Gibson, maybe some guys who had to play a lot this year in the final game or what's the balance like? And curious about some players but also one to let your veterans finish? Yeah, I'm going to try to be as respectful as I possibly can. I think I'd be doing those guys at disservice and not adhering to the trust that I've tried to build with those players at that position that you're talking about. It's been one of the strongest positions on our football team. It's the one that's maintained and helped us consistently. By that, I mean just being there day in and day out, we know how much Danico and Harold and then with the addition of Arden this year, that would be difficult. And I know that those guys, they want to play. They want to play well. And I want them all to get as many damn sacks as they possibly can and tip as many passes and make as many plays as they possibly can. And so Caleb has to earn a right to play. He made a couple of tackles on special teams. Didn't follow that up. So we'll see how he does this week and then we'll see how the game goes. With the Jaguars quarterback situation, how do you prepare potentially maybe having to play more than one quarterback or maybe someone who you wouldn't normally see? I think that's always probably delicate. We see the similar plays. There may not be as much movement plays or mobility. But I think as a whole, the plays that you're trying to prepare and show the players to are going to be the same, the same types of plays. And then once you figure out who the quarterback is, maybe one scrambles a little bit more, one's more in a pocket, and you'll have to adjust to that and say, hey, we've got a threat for a more mobile quarterback and how that all plays out. In the last game, Mike with a long tie-dins, healthy, active, will some of those guys be able to play this week or do you even have to go find some guys to get some depth? The answers, I think, are here for whatever we need. We'll see how those guys are feeling. Because it sucks to lose, Gentry. Trey, you ever need to show you anything? Did you have another thought or no? I'm just curious. Why? It sucks. Losing. Awful. That's why I want to win. Because you don't sleep. You want to win for the players that bust their tail. That's it. I mean, it's not about, hey, we'll go into the offseason with a good note. Nobody knows what you did on January 7th or 8th or 6th in April when you come back. But you want to see, just did all come together. And just put four quarters together, win a game like we talked about. You come in here, wow, you closed game. Yeah, we feel the same way. In that game the other day, we got to put ourselves into a competitive game where it's back and forth, back and forth. And there's some field position. And then you score. And you take care of the football. And we just hadn't done that in the opportunities that we had that were like, OK, we fought and we were close. But I think that's why. Just put yourself in a competitive situation. Come up with a way to make a play in the second half to win the game. That's what I hope for. Sorry about my language. Trey, have we got to tell you anything besides health and where to get back in a while? Oh, I mean, I think he's trying to get healthy. And the last exposure wasn't great. So given Eric a chance and SMB came back and if Trey's healthy, I'm sure he'll help us. And be ready to go in some capacity. We were talking about playing complementary offense. I'm curious, to you, does that always start with establishing the runner? There are other ways to achieve? Well, yeah, I mean, you can. There's other ways. I mean, we just make a play down the field that changes field position and creates momentum. Converting third downs, controlling the football, that's always a great way. And then finishing drives with points. And then reserving a right to punt, not putting a ball in harm's way. Being able to pin them inside the 10. We've seen examples, not enough of them, to where we do that. And then we force them to punt. We have a good defensive series, force them to punt. Now we're on a short field. But yeah, I mean, those are certainly things that you have to do. If you can bust a couple runs in there to keep them off balance so that it's not rushing in every play, I think that that does help. And it also, again, I think allows you to create some of those play pass protections that are more favorable to everybody. Four interceptions this year. More product of DVs need to make no plays. Or the pass rush needs to force more men throws? Both, I mean. Or tip some passes. You know what I mean, tip passes get picked. So that's something that we always continue to try to emphasize. But it's never going to be about one specific. And also, we've had our hands on some footballs. Yeah, you've got to make the ones that you're supposed to make. You've got to catch the ones you get your hands on. We always say in man coverage, it's not about getting interceptions. It's about not letting your man catch the ball. And then if we're in the zone, we have to be able to break and try to make a play on a football. And then obviously, the pass rush plays a part in that. I mean, we go back and forth. Is it not getting there fast enough or they're throwing it before we get there? And that's a fine balance of trying to work together to create ball disruption. We always say that. We're trying to work together. I know you missed a lot with Jeff Rial. But that was one of the things he seemed to excel at, was getting his hands up. Well, and we've had some other opportunities. I mean, we've tried. And guys that have tackled the quarterback, whether the quarterback falls on it, whether Arden hits it out and falls in the quarterback, recovers it, but you do see a lot of tip balls get intercepted. And that's something that I think is a fine line and a balance between Russian. And then also seeing that front hand, knowing that you're not there, and sliding back into a throwing lane. And when that front hand comes off, trying to go up and match. We don't want guys that just stand at the line of scrimmage and hop up and down. I don't think that does anything. But also, I think there is something that trying to work into the pocket and being able to get into those throwing lanes and try to tip a ball. So that helps as well. Mr. Buggers, at Sunday, you didn't really know about the injuries and why they've come the way they've come the last three years now. I mean, do you think that luck plays into it as much as anything? I mean, I don't know how it won it. It was some of the ones that we've had. Whether that's a guy falling on somebody's MCL, or a guy getting dragged down as a gunner and hurting his knee and Colton's instants. We don't ever want to put our players in any sort of harm's way. I mean, the injuries that have occurred to the quarterbacks are unfortunate. We know nothing good comes from when the quarterback gets hit. So again, we'll have an opportunity to, at some point in time, discuss all those and certainly want to do everything that we can to avoid soft tissue injuries. But I don't know what the answer is sometimes to guys falling into other people's legs out there on a football field or hurting something else. So we're going to continue to evaluate that and try to get the guys back as quickly as possible when they do have an injury. What do you think the rest of that is due to level out over time? I guess it's like analytics. I guess you need a lot of examples, however many examples they use to run the model. How much did Colton, I guess, improve in his rookie year? And maybe what's your message to him as he's starting to rehab? Well, he improved on that special teams. And when you have a young receiver like that with some size and some speed, you hope that that can translate into the kicking game. I don't think that it did right away. And I think that he worked extremely hard personally. I think Anthony Levine worked extremely hard. And again, anything that a player does is going to be on them. But I know that Levine spent a lot of time teaching Colton how to play special teams and how to be a gunner in this league. So those were some real positive things. And so the message is to get healthy and find a role in this football team next year.