 I want to go back to some of those Pittsburgh teams because those were really good teams. I mean, I think people overlooked those a little bit. I mean, McCutcheon got, what, one MVP? He kind of became a star of the league, but that's a dude who you mentioned some of the different markets. I think if McCutcheon was a Dodger or Yankee or some of those other teams, I mean, he would be household household. And luckily, social media, he is becoming household household. But I want to hear a little bit about a couple of those teams, maybe 2013 or what don't people know? Because I mean, McCutcheon, yeah, he was a stud. But I'm looking at some of those pitching staffs. And those are silly. It's Burnett, Lyriano, Cole, Morton. Those teams were awesome, man. Yeah, I got the big weeks in 2010 and kind of got established later on in the 2011 season. I felt like I finally was like, OK, I'm here. Andrew was up there a half a season before me in 2009. And then fast forward a little further. Charlie Morton was up there, but he was still kind of struggling to get his footing and consistency as a big league starter. We had guys like Starling Marte that came along, I think, later in the 2012 season. We had a really good first half of the 2012 season and fizzled out in August and September. And we knew going into that offseason, we were like, hey, we got a pretty good squad here. Like, we got some good players. And they did a really good job that year of bringing in Russell Martin and Lyriano and AJ Burnett and these guys that were veteran guys. And they had kind of meddled a little bit the last couple of years. But it was a perfect market for those guys that come in. I think AJ was coming from New York or Philadelphia or somewhere like that. Frankie struggled a little bit. I think he was with the White Sox maybe and just kind of struggled in the AL. Came over and these guys just were really good. Everybody was healthy. It was like the perfect storm. And we got to about late May in 2013. And we kind of looked around and we were like, hey, we're legit. We got a chance at this. And we were staring down the barrel of the Cardinals. And Cincinnati was still really competitive. Chicago was kind of up and coming at that time. Milwaukee was on the downswing for that year. And we were just good. And we didn't have, like you said, we didn't have big-name guys. Andrew was clearly our best player. Everything was built around him. Our pitchy staff was steady. And Gary Cole got up there mid-season. And he just jumped right into the rotation basically as our number two guy. And we were one game. We lost the game. We lost the fifth game of the Division Series against the Cardinals in St. Louis. Carlos Belchon had a huge three-run homer like the sixth inning to completely separate the game. But there was not many guys in our team that had a lot of postseason experience. And that kind of catapulted us through the next couple of years. And people that know that 14 and 15 year, we ran into a complete buzz saw after that with Jake Arietta and Madison Bumgarder in the wild card games. But we were just as good in 14 and 15 as we were in 13. We just kind of fell victim to the wild card game. And in 13, we were beneficiaries of the wild card game. So that's kind of baseball. I mean, think about this last year, the Milwaukee Brewers had the wild card game won. It had it won. And the Washington guys, it was one of the World Series. So it's crazy. Yeah, I mean, that 15 season, you guys won 98 games. Yeah. And we still had to play. We almost had to play on the road for a wild card game. That's insane. Fans love it. Fans, as a fan, I love watching a one game thing. But as a player, and I never got to experience that, but to play 162 games, win 98 of them, and then have your entire post season balance on one game. And you know baseball, a pitcher can dominate for one game, and you have no chance. And that's kind of what happened two years in a row. Now that I'm talking it out loud, I don't like the wild card game. I'm going to have to call Rob. We might need to look this up, but I believe I'm the leader in the clubhouse for most wild card games played. Really? So I've been a part of five. The first year with the Mets, I got hurt at the end of the year. So three with the Pirates, one with the Mets, and then one with the Yankees. And a two and three record, but like I said, I've only been around for eight years. Yeah. If you want me to be a part of a wild card game, just bring me under squad, I guess. Was that so? What's the furthest you went in a postseason? So we got 2013, very first year. Well, I mean, 2013, and then 2018 with the Yankees. We got to game five of the division series against the Cardinals in 13. And then we got to game four against the Red Sox in 18. So, you know, both. It was more nerve-wracking. Like, was the buzz, the excitement, the nervous energy more in the, like the NLDS than it was in the wild card game? Or was that what, or like how, like, just tell us how the wild card game is as a player. Like, like you said, no, it sucks. Like, it sucks. It's, I mean, the, so the very first wild card game, Johnny Cueto, we faced Johnny Cueto in the reds, and we got up early. And Lyriana just shoved, right? The next year, we had Madison Bumgarner. He came into Pittsburgh. Brandon Crawford hit a grand slam in, like, the sixth inning. And Bumgarner threw, basically, a shot out weird toast. No, no shot. The next year, Arietta was unhittable the entire year. It was NL, Cy Young came into Pittsburgh and shoved it. The following year, I was with the Mets and didn't play, but Madison Bumgarner pitch did the same thing. Shoved it for nine or eight. And it was still tied. We went to, we went to an x-raying and somebody hit a Conrad Gillespie and we went home. Oh yeah, that was the Cindergarde game, right? We just rewatched that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And he shoved it and Bumgarner shoved it and somebody hit a three-round homer in, like, the top of the 10th inning, something like that, and we lost. Two years later, with the Yankees, we played the Oakland Athletics and Severino pitched an absolute gem. Judge hit a big homer early in the game to give us a cushion. And I think we ended up winning, like, six to two or six to three or something like that, so. But there's, like, it's out the window. The script is completely out the window. It's not like, okay, well, we got Severino throwing game one and Tanaka throwing game two and, you know, we got it set up to go on the road. It's like, all right, all hands on deck. Like, all of our starters in the bullpen, something happens in the first two innings. We're gonna go to the number two starter and hope that he can get through two innings. And that's really the way it's been. Most every single game it's either been. Somebody got a huge hit or a huge homer to kind of extend the game and give a cushion or a pitcher shoved it. So that's the name of the wildfire.