 Time to talk ball with John Robinson presented by Duncan before we talk ball. Let's talk new Titans Stadium earlier this week, the Titans and the city came to an agreement on building a new stadium. Burke Nyhill, our president, CEO, discussed it earlier in the show. So John, from a football standpoint, what excites you the most about the new stadium in downtown Nashville? I think I'm most excited for our fans to have a new place to come experience our game, to watch our players. I'm sure it'll have all the latest and greatest technology and new things for them to enjoy the game. And then for our players, our coaches and our staff will be fired up for the new venue to go out and play, coach, or work at the game we love. You had the buy, so you played two weeks ago against Washington. Where do you hope the Titans have improved the most in those two weeks? I think it's the details and the fundamentals that happen in every single play, the players aren't going to be perfect snap after snap after snap. But if they can understand the details of what each play is trying to accomplish and then go out and execute those plays with the fundamentals and the techniques that we coach that we know when, I think the overall consistency of our football team will improve. The Colts, the opponent this Sunday at Nissan Stadium, since you played them on October 2nd, they have clawed out, come from behind wins at Denver and over Jacksonville. What has stood out to you the most about the Colts in those two weeks? Yeah, I think it's those tough, gritty performances that they've just stayed in games and kept scratching and clawing, as you alluded to. Four of their last four games have all been one-score games. And we've talked before about the four or five plays that come up in a game that generally determine the outcome of the game. And India has found a way to make those four or five plays. Is Matt Ryan easily coming off his best performance as a Colt? Yeah, I thought he played really well. I think he threw it 58 times, three touchdowns, no, no interceptions. He took care of the ball well and he completed 72% of his passes. I thought the O-line protected well, receivers got open. He did a really nice job distributing the football in that throw. That last one appears at the end of the game to win it with less than 20 seconds on third down was a heck of a throw. The defensive tackle, who's so dominant, DeForest Buckner. Last two games, three sacks, he's back on track, right? Yeah, he's one of the premium defensive tackles in the national football league. He's long, he's quick, he's fast, he's got range. He's a really instinctive player. Whether it's defending the run or rushing the passer, he factors on most plays. I'd say every opponent that plays Indy, the offensive staff certainly have him circled as a guy they got to take care of. What do you have to do better against the Indianapolis Colts Sunday at Nissan Stadium than you did at Indy on October 7th? Well, I think defensively, Mike, it's eliminating those chunk plays. In that first game, we gave up 365 yards total for the game. Unfortunately, 151 of those yards came on five plays. So those big chunk plays where they eat up tons of yardage in only one play, we've got to eliminate those. And then offensively, it's being better on third down, especially in the second half, thought we did a lot of good things in the first half, moving the football. But we've got to sustain drives in the second half, keep the football, get it down to the red zone and score points. Finally, Delaney Walker announced his retirement as a titan earlier this week on Tuesday. What did he mean to the team most during that period for you? Super talented, unique skill set, a great guy in the locker room. He was a leader. He was a guy that when a play needed to be made, his numbers certainly was at the top of the list of guys to get the ball to make that play. Really thankful for all that he's done for the organization and the community.