 And you've continually said all season long, you don't care about the home run numbers necessarily during the season, you just care about winning, but are you having fun at all out there? Are you enjoying this? Yeah, when we're winning in the first place, you know, it's always fun, especially coming to the ballpark every single day with these guys that continue to, you know, push each other, motivate each other, and even through the tough stretches, you know, guys still show up ready to work, so it's definitely been fun this year. And you right now have 20 home runs more than your closest competitor, which is Coach Larver. Do you think you've tried in that, you know, if you're dominating the long ball this year? Nah, you really just don't look at it. You know, if you're checking the numbers, you're gonna get caught, so I just, you know, just keep trying to do what I can do, and, you know, the numbers will take care of themselves. I have a good plan, I have a good approach to what I need to do in the box, you know, all that other stuff will show up. I know we've talked to you about being patient when teams aren't pitching to you, but are you at all surprised that teams still are pitching to you? I got no idea, I try not to think about it. You know, I'm so focused on what I gotta do in the box, you know, I can't be thinking about if guys are pitching to me, not pitching to me. You know, a certain situation when I'm hitting, you know, you can kind of see what maybe they're pitching around you, but, you know, I still gotta stay locked in on my approach, so I started thinking about it. Am I gonna get walked here, they're gonna pitch around me, then it's just gonna take me right out of, you know, what I'm trying to do at the plate. What is it that you like about Larver, and that's what he had in the 10th inning? Well, he's a guy consistently over, you know, his career has come up in clutch situations, and that was a situation where, you know, tie game there in the 10th, and against a tougher lever, that's a good, you know, sink or splitter combo, you know, someone had to do the job, and you know, no better guy than him to go up there, and he took a couple pitches, and then took a great swing when he's using, you know, a right center, right field. Consistently, he's one of the best players in the game. Aaron, he had a tough August. What looks different to you now when he's at the plate? He's just getting started earlier. You know, he's trusting his load, you know, not afraid to start a little earlier, and when he starts early, and he's in that back leg, you know, anything's possible. You know, he can sit on posby pitches, he's ready for the fastball in, fastball away. You know, at times just like any other, just like me over the years, you know, if you feel rushed at the plate, or you're not getting your load off, you're gonna be in a bad spot. So he's just been consistently getting, you know, good timing, and it's worked out. Aaron, how significant is it for you to have a 300-plus average this late in the season? That's always, you know, as a kid, you know, you look up and you see Albert Pulhouse hitting 330 every year, and, you know, consistently putting up the RBI numbers and stuff like that. So for me, so for me, grading the hitter, it's always been about average. You know, it might be a little old school, but, you know, can you hit or can you hit? So I just, it's always been a goal of mine to, you know, try to get to that point and do that. So I forgot what she asked me, but I kind of got out there, yeah. The significant zone, 300-plus average late in the plate. Yeah, it's just, I feel like if I'm able to do that, hopefully the team's in a good spot, we're winning games. So. Aaron, this was your first home round of a knuckle curve this season. I mean, are you just seeing everything? Like, can you walk me through just getting that curve? Yeah, just got to see it kind of pop in the zone. I think that might be my fourth or fifth off the curve ball, knuckle curve, but they all say it's a different curve, knuckle curve. I feel like they're all the same, but you just, those pitches, you know, they're pretty slow. You just got to try to see it pop above the zone and, you know, try to let off the nasty one. It kind of looks like a heater coming in and it kind of drops off. So it's, in that situation, you know, seeing Pavetta, you know, quite a few times this year, I just saw something pop and tried to take a good swing on it. Is the triple crown mean anything to you? Yeah, some great, great guys have done it. You know, I think, thinking back to Cabrera, who did it last, I believe, it's pretty special, but I think I'm a long ways away from that. So we don't need to talk about that. You could see on the TV broadcast that, when your second home run, that there were even Red Sox fans cheering for you. Does the fact that the, kind of the history that you're making, turning against people that have been rough on you before, is that, is that say something? Man, they were wearing me out on deck. I don't know. I don't know if they were cheering or not. They were wearing me out, but it's a nods. I love baseball fans, you know, I think just fans all over, you know, Red Sox, Yankees doesn't matter. You know, they came here to see a good game and see a show and, you know, both teams tonight, they put on a good show for them. You kind of, do you enjoy that with the back and forth you've had here with Red Sox fans before? Oh, it's the best. They're some of the best in baseball. You know, they're gonna boo you. They're gonna, you know, say some things. They're gonna make you laugh. It's, you know, it's all part of it. You know, they, a lot of great history here and, you know, this is one of the best places to play. So it's always fun going out there and trying to put on a show for them. If it doesn't work out for your agency, either of the Yankees, is this a place you'd consider? Oh, we'll talk about that in a year.