 Meredith, if you can unmute the floor is yours. Thanks for taking the time. How would you evaluate your start tonight? I thought it was good. It was nice to get through five. We were efficient. Bounced back from a couple of walks well. And overall, the location was pretty good. It looked like at one point in time, before they undo our home run, you went to keep the ball, but they threw the ball aside. Is that just one of those adjustments because of the protocols and because of the rules you're going to have to get used to? Yeah, we weren't exactly sure if we were supposed to keep it or not. And so we kind of made a joke about it, and it looks like I probably should have kept it. Overall, what do you take away from tonight's outing? Did hit the load really well, worked with Gary well. Like I said, had all four pretty much located well tonight. Need to work on the fastball command a little bit, but good progression. We could take our next question from Sweeney Murdy. Sweeney, go ahead and unmute. Hey, Garrett, I wanted to know how much of this was basically you treating it like a normal regular season start. Mike King was just talking about how you treat everything kind of business-like, but I noticed that before you took your first pitch, you went back behind the mound, kind of crouched down. Is that all part of your normal game day routine? Is that what you're trying to build right now? Yeah, I just try to fall into that rhythm as best I could and try to practice it early in the clubhouse too, dealing with the new dynamic here and new digs. So just trying to practice as much as I can to get as comfortable as I can. And so yeah. We can take our next question from Pete Caldera. Pete, go ahead. Hey, Garrett, yesterday, Jay Hap said after his outing that he was kind of surprised at the adrenaline rush he sort of felt and was expecting for an interest-wide game. I wonder if that was similar for you or you just had that adrenaline naturally going in? Yeah, I just tried to find that kind of middle ground between being too high and too low. I say is a little normally you kind of run into these games, and especially this time of year, and you're more often not trying to calm yourself down. This was one of those where I was trying to get up and make sure that I was focused because you want to take it as business-like as you can. But it was nice to see and feel the competitiveness on the field. And that's just a testament to the guys. Everybody's bringing it. So we're all on the same boat there. Christy Acker. Christy, if you can unmute, go ahead and ask a question. Hi, Garrett. I'm just curious what kind of feedback you can get from facing hitters on your own team that maybe you wouldn't get in a normal traditional spring training if there was anything today that you got? If there's an opportunity to have a couple of conversations with some of the guys on our side tomorrow, most likely we'll do that. I haven't caught up with them this evening. So the ability to get feedback after the fact is always beneficial. But in terms of approaching the game, it was just easy. There's two lineups. And we were just, I don't know, I was trying to win. So unfortunately, we lost. Bob Clappish, you can unmute and ask the next question, please. Hey, Garrett, can you hear me OK? Yes. I'm just curious, what it was like to pitch in such a quiet ballpark. Typically, you get a big crowd reaction. You get a strikeout, make a big pitch, get a big out. And instead, it's totally silent. And it's going to be that way in the regular season. I'm just curious if that's going to be much of an adjustment for you, or if you think it's going to be a problem. I don't know. This is the first kind of real, most game-like scenario I've been put in with it. It is certainly different, but everything's different. I didn't have trouble focusing tonight. So I'm just going to try to get in my space and just do what I do. Take another question from Eric Boland. Eric, go ahead and unmute. Hey, Garrett, we all saw what happened with Massa on Saturday. In 2016, you took a line drive off the bat of Jordan Zimmerman, I think it was, off the head. I'm just curious, as a pitcher, what's the biggest challenge getting back on the mound the first time after something like that happened? Well, I think the balance between trying to be aggressive within the zone because you want to throw strikes and the potential for that happening when you allow yourself to miss over the heart of the plate. So it's a little bit of a dance. And obviously, that was kind of a traumatic experience. So I think it kind of woke everybody up. And we'll be a little more on edge just to try to be as safe as we can as we get going, because we certainly don't want to lose anyone. Thanks, Garrett. Take another question from Marley Rivera. Marley, go ahead and unmute. Garrett, thank you very much for taking the time. We all know how much attention to detail is part of your routine. How much with those little things, like all the protocols, like you just said about the ball, learning that kind of stuff, get you off your game and get you off of that kind of attention to detail? Well, I think there's obviously going to be some added preparation in terms of really knowing the rules before we get out there. And that's kind of all of our responsibilities. So it falls under the job description of playing during a pandemic. And we'll get it done. We'll get it done and we'll do it safely. And just a quick follow up. A lot of the guys in terms of playing under the pandemic, some of the guys were saying, who doesn't want to be the coronavirus season champion? What do you think about these people? You've been to a World Series. What do you think of these people who think that this will be a start, not a real World Series with the 60 games? I mean, that's the word that they used to describe it. I feel like unique is a better. Is the word that I choose. But that's their opinion. Certainly in this clubhouse, I think our mindset doesn't change regardless of how many games we have to play in order to reach that pinnacle. And so I don't anticipate us going about our business any different than that. We'll take a final question from Andy Martino. Andy, go ahead and unmute. Jared, hey, in the first spring training, you seemed very self-aware about how you're supposed to feel at every stage, from your first bullpen to your first sim game in live BP. So how do you feel right now? It's such a weird time to be ramping up. You feel like you were supposed to feel at the end of the spring training. You already feel like the regular season in terms of sharpness and stamina, like, where in the progression of your normal season are you at the moment? Yeah, that's a good question. I would say relative to maybe a normal spring training ramp up somewhere in the second half of it, but closer to the halfway mark than the end, if that makes sense. A few days to recover after this start will maybe give me a better gauge of exactly where we're at. We did push the total pitches and the ups today. We have an extra day built in somewhere along the line to make an adjustment because we aren't quite as sure as we normally would be. But I'm doing it for the first time, and I'm just trusting really the Yankees guys and their prep, and I've reached out to a few people who've gone through a short and spring training, and they've given me some advice.