 Jason Dominguez, the Martian, and Anthony Volpe. Both guys not on the 40 man roster, so it would take some clerical work to get them on the roster if they broke camp with the team, which let's be honest, both of us don't think either one of those players is gonna make the team unless something happens in your lives. It sure would be fun though, wouldn't it? Wouldn't it be a great story to do? It would 100%, but here's the thing, Saturday first game against the Phillies, a moonshot, or if you wanna say a Mars shot for the Martian, and then Volpe's debut in the split squad in his first game, I mean, he has two hits and two stolen bases, so they're not gonna really make it easy on the Yankees if they keep playing like this. And that's the thing, both of those guys, you talk to the veterans who are around, the coaches, and they both say they're so coachable, they're here to learn, saw yesterday or the other day that Dominguez was on a backfield working out with Bernie Williams, and as a switch hitting outfielder who's intending to play center field in a Bronx, who would I rather talk to than Bernie Williams? That's the guy you wanna learn from. And so I feel like it's a real opportunity for both those guys to get their feet wet, to come into big league camp here. Volpe is 21, it's his first big league camp. Dominguez is 20, he's the youngest player in camp. So, yeah, to say they're both gonna get on the plane and head north, I think that's a long shot. Volpe, I do believe, could be in the majors by the end of the season. Maybe if he goes to AAA, he's only got 99 plate appearances at the AAA level. So I think you have to factor that in that maybe you start the year with him at AAA and then he can move up later in the year. But I think that they are both so impressive in different ways. Volpe, I hate to use this comparison because it's really not fair, but I get a lot of Jeter vibes out of him. I really do, I feel like you're almost seeing Derek in 1995, he's got that kind of demeanor where he's in the clubhouse, he's not Derek the captain yet, but he's kind of got that very, I'm here, I always wanted to be a Yankee, I'm living my dream. And as he's walking around the clubhouse, definitely he's got a magnetic personality where people want to be around him, they want to talk to him, they want to kind of take him under their wing and say, all right kid, here's how you do it. And that's been a great thing in this camp too, that Willie Randolph is here and Willie has really served in that mentor role for Volpe and telling him what he needs to do. They've been sharing YouTube videos. You remember those videos from the 70s where Willie was getting taken out by the Kansas State of Wales in the post season. He was showing them those videos and saying, this is how we did it in my day son. But there's a lesson in there in that if Volpe is gonna be a second baseman and he's gonna play some second base here in camp too, get out of the way when the runners are sliding in. Even though the collision rules have changed since the late 70s, there's still things that Willie Randolph can teach you. Man, that's a guy I would want to learn from if I was a second baseman. So I think that's a great thing about the Yankees and one thing they always have done well is keeping that alumni, the guest instructors around guys who have been there, done it, did it in New York, won championships. I think that's so important because one thing the Yankees do better than any other professional sports team really is celebrate and live their history. And when you have 27 world championships to call on, you can have a Willie Randolph, you can have a Ron Guidry, you can have CeCe Sabati and Nick Swisher, these guys around Yankees camp, Bernie Williams, to show the next generation how it's done and what they need to do to get there.