 Hey Shane, just hoping to kind of get your overall assessment just to how OTAs and minicamp went for your bunch, what you accomplished and what you feel good about heading into the break. Yeah, I think just with all the new faces, I think getting to know each other, building those relationships, continuing to build trust in each other. I think the guys' understanding of concepts and how the guys next to them affect them on any given play. I think we've kind of progressed in that regard. Maybe we've spent a lot of time on third down, obviously. I think we're kind of getting to the point where we're more comfortable doing that stuff, all on the same page being coordinated with what we're trying to get accomplished on third down. Ultimately, we'll find outcome training camp. I mean, a lot of jog-through type stuff, obviously these past few weeks, so come training camp when we get some speed and some other things. I'm going to be a tell for some less stuff. Paul. Shane, we talked to Bayard recently and he talked a little bit about playing a lot more left and right last year than strong and free, so to speak. Could you talk us through while you guys went that way and how maybe you anticipate going forward? Yeah, I think it's all based on your personnel, what guys do, who they are, in terms of, I mean, obviously last year, whether it's Kenny and Kevin, whether it's Hooker and Kevin, they have different skill sets, so trying to get those guys in positions where we can best utilize them comes into play with all that stuff. And then, ultimately, there'll be certain calls, certain match-ups come into play when you're playing man coverage, who you like versus who. So I think that's an involving thing. I don't know if it's an all-season thing, Paul. I think it's probably a little bit more week-to-week and then really based on who's out there for us and for them. Fuck. Yeah, Shane, I know it's a small sample size, but North Jenkins really seems to fly around out there, really seems to enjoy himself. What kind of impact can that have on so many younger guys that you have in your secondary at this point? Yeah, man, I think it's huge getting him in here. He's a pro. He hasn't been here. He's come in this week and he's been prepared. He's went out there and hasn't missed a beat. Obviously, there's little things here and there. He's still catching up, but you feel his presence out there. You feel his presence in the room along with Kevin. You feel his presence in the unit, talking to other positions. He's a guy that's been around, has had success at a high level, has been on good teams, good defenses, and I think just his outgoing personality, who he is, is going to help us and be able to hold each other accountable and just the player to player demands, where everything's not always falling on the coaches. Where those guys respond to each other a little bit more so than just us all the time. Aaron. Yeah, Coach Shane, Kevin Byrd, he has said that it's important to be more aggressive and challenge receivers. I would imagine last year personnel had to do with that. So you bring in a guy like Jack Robert Jenkins. Was that something that you guys were looking forward to? Yeah, absolutely. We have our kind of identity, what we're looking for, whenever we got holes to fill, in what direction we want to go. And that's been a big thing for us. And as Kevin said it, we've been stressing to the DVs, just understanding to go out there and play with confidence, challenge these guys, make them beat you and understand who you are, understand who they are. But at the same time, we've got to put pressure on them to make some plays and not just give them easy throws. So it's been a thing and I think the personnel, like you mentioned, I think the personnel is a big aspect to that. But also in regards to scheme and some of the things we do, where we put them in positions, were they able to do some of those things. John Lennon. Shane, when we were talking to Ryan Crowe the other day about Rashad Weaver, he was kind of talking up his personality a little bit, kind of has a little bit of a swag, little confidence out there. I'm wondering if you have seen that yourself and also in terms of learning, how was Rashad doing in that aspect as well? Yeah, he's been good. He's an engaging kid. He's outgoing. I mean, he's business when we go to work, but he's not a defensive, quiet type of kid. So it's fun to coach guys like that, guys that are outgoing that want to learn, want to take things in where you can kind of mess around with him, where it's not all business, 100% of the time. But he's been good learning. Like he's doing stuff that he hasn't done in the past. Like we asked those guys to do a lot of different things. So he's kind of learning on the fly with some of that stuff. And we're just going to have to be mindful of that. As we move forward with him and with all these other guys, just what all we put on his plate in regards to those outside linebacker positions. How's the learning curve going with him in that aspect? I think he's been good. I do. I think he's picked up on things. It's different, though, being able to spit it back in the classroom and do all those things. And then you get out on the field and there's live bullets and bodies flying around and you've got to see things like there's a big time progression from the classroom to the field. And I think that's where that's where it's got to continue to kind of move forward with these rookies. Like we've got a lot of smart guys who can learn and can do some things, but being able to translate it to the field is a totally different ballgame. Paul. Sorry. Okay, Paul, you want to, you want to take your place? I know things changed this year and didn't do. Your young D.B.s probably could have really benefited from it. Yeah, I will. Paul, you want to type your question? We can ask it for you. And Jim, in the meantime, you want to ask the others? Okay, Shane, I was just curious. I mean, you've been so hands-on, you know, the last couple of years of position coach, I know you're trying to bounce around now. When you see things in practice, when you dive in, I guess through the course of camp just to make sure guys are doing it the way you want to do it. And how's that process been like for you so far this offseason? Yeah, it's been good. Like I hit on before, I think just building those relationships, making sure everybody sees things the same way, they hear it from me, how I see things in regard to their position. And we have unit meetings. We go through all that stuff. Nobody's, nobody's really, I guess, safe in those unit meetings. Like we're looking at everything, the good, the bad, the ugly in all position groups. And really just making sure we're all speaking the same language, because there's a lot of carryover. You look at it in defense, like there's obviously different positions and skill sets, but there's a lot of carryover from position to position, whether it's man coverage, those types of things. So just making sure we see it see it the same way. And then also being able to show those guys, hey, man, you've done this in individual, I've seen you do this in drills, and then we turn on the tape and it disappears, right? So just understanding that and how those things got to be able to progress from any through the team periods. And I think for me, being able to kind of piece around and jump around and see all those guys, it allows me to kind of be in the moment with them, see them do it. They know I'm looking for it. So when I go to hold them accountable for something in a unit meeting, I can say, hey, man, I've seen this before. Like, I know what we're coaching. I know what we're asking us to do. Like, we got to be able to get this done when it gets to be live bolts. And I'm going to slide one in on Roberson too. It's a guy you've worked with the last couple years. He has one guy who's back. What does he need to do to try to establish himself and find his way in that rotation a little bit more? Yeah, I think Roby's had a really good spring. I've been pleased with him this spring. I think he's came back here and he's changed his approach a little bit. I think he's been more serious about everything, more committed. I think he's getting older. Obviously, that plays a role, man. As you get older, you mature a little bit and you start to figure out what the leg is and you're not just swimming from one meeting to the next. So I think things have slowed down for him in that regard. But the thing I always preach with him is consistency. Like, I need the same guy every day, play in and play out. Like, we got to know who we're putting out there. Like, if I'm going to put you out there for 20 plays, like, I can't have five to 10, I don't know what you're going to do, how this is going to be, right? So the consistency with him. But I've been pleased with Roby. I think he's had a really good spring. I'm excited for the fall to kind of see how he keeps progressing. Paul says try him again. So let's try him again. Jane, I know circumstances change from usual. Did your DBs in the big picture miss the chance to go one-on-one with these receivers? I'm trying. One more time, Paul. Sorry. His question is asking if the DBs missed the opportunity to go one-on-one with their receivers. Did your DBs miss the chance to go one-on-one with the receivers this off-season? Yeah, I mean, anytime. I don't know how much one-on-one we've really done in OTAs in the past. Anyway, Paul, but obviously that's a huge aspect of it. No different than I was talking about individual. You take the individual and you either go to seven-on or you go to one-on-ones, right? And being able to translate that stuff to, hey, we're focusing on the technique. Hey, now we're bringing it to a one-on-one competition type setting, whether it's pass-rush, whether it's coverage, whatever it might be, and then ultimately being able to take it to team where there's a lot more moving parts, but it's going to come down to, hey, me on this guy, I better be able to continue and carry through those techniques and fundamentals that I used in Indy, that I used in the one-on-one drills. I mean, it's a big progression. I'm excited. I'm excited for the fall man when we get a go. I mean, obviously with AJ, Julio, and the rest of that group, they've been doing a lot of good things. So I'm excited for that and to see that competition, and it's only going to be good for us. So I'm looking forward to it, Paul. Last question, Glennon. Yes, Shane. Curious, what you have worked out with so far in terms of Jim Schwartz, if you guys have done a lot of talking, if you've worked at any kind of a schedule, do you go to his room and talk to him? Or does he come to you for some pointers? How does that work so far and how do you expect that to happen? Yeah, I mean, we're all in the bubble right now, so all I got to do is holler over the curtain and I can get him. But yeah, we're talking every day we talk. We go through different things, different ideas, how he sees some things, how I see things, just talking through it, moving forward. We've gotten a head start on kind of the season and how we want that to look and how that plays out. So I mean, it's been good. He's a great sounding board for me. He's done it a long time. He's had success. So being able to bounce ideas off him. And like I mentioned earlier, man, there's a lot of ways to skin a cat. And I think just here in different sides, even here in the offensive perspective, from his point of view, from being a head coach, like he's adding a lot of value. And he's been extremely helpful to me to this point. So I'm excited he's here.