 We talked about the fans throwing that bottle at Kyrie Irving as he was leaving the game and after the game, this is what Kyrie did as you see him right there at half court. He stomped on the logo, wiped his foot on it, so maybe that incensed the fan if he saw that, but it is still unacceptable for people to do that at arenas. And as Kevin Durant eloquently said, you need to grow up and you need to get over yourselves. It's bigger than you. It's a game and they're not animals. So let's go to Kyrie's sound, see what he had to say about tonight's win and perhaps about the bottle throwing as well. It's unfortunate, you know, that sports has come to a lot of this, you know, kind of crossroads where you see in a lot of old ways come up. It's been part of like, it's been part of that, it's been that way in history in terms of entertainment, performers and sports for a long period of time and just underlying racism and just treating people like they're in a human zoo, you know, throwing stuff at people, saying things, you know, there's a certain point where it just gets to be too much. So, you know, I called it out. I just wanted to keep it strictly basketball. And then you just see that people just feel very entitled out here. You know, they pay for the tickets. Great. I'm grateful that coming in to watch a great performance. But it's just, you know, we're not at the theater. We're not throwing tomatoes and other random stuff at the people that are performing, you know, it's just, it's too much. And it's a reflection on, you know, us as a whole when you have fans acting like that. So, you know, hopefully people learn their lessons from being banned for however many years of being arrested. But, you know, it's always going to be an occasion. So, Greg Logan, Newsday. Kyrie, can you just describe the motivation you had coming into this game? You didn't have your best performance in game three, but you handled everything tonight and kind of gave it back to the fans. So what was the feeling of satisfaction like for you? Oh, well, the job isn't finished. So it's just momentarily moment. It's momentarily. So it's momentary. So Brian Lewis, New York Post, you're muted, Brian. I'm my apologies. I was asking what the difference was for you, Kyrie, from three to four. I mean, did you notice different ways that they were defending you? Did you do something to get yourself in a different mental headspace? What did you do from three to four that allowed you to come out and have a night like you had tonight? Same things I've been doing since I was a kid. You know, I've been part of a lot of hostile environments since I was a kid. You know, it's not the first time in my life where I've had to bounce back from one of those type of performances that isn't typical of me in terms of the big stage and I can't do it alone. So, you know, in between, you know, last day or so, just spending some time with my teammates, spending some time with myself, you know, just having some conversations to keep me balanced and grounded and then go out there and have fun and play basketball at a high level, you know, is I'm grateful to be able to put on the uniform and just go perform with some guys that are very selfless. And I just just wanted to see some good basketball out there. And we do the little things to help each other win. Malika Andrews, ESPN. Kairi, could you just walk us through what happened? I mean, did the fan yell at you? Did the bottle hit you? What what happened? It doesn't matter, honestly, Malika. It's just these actions, like I said, are historically relative, you know, when you think about just where we've come as a sport, you know, it used to happen back in the day. A lot of older players went through it and any great person, great entertainer, performer understands that when you're achieving something bigger than yourself, you know, you're going to have a lot of adversity animosity and you just got to figure out a way to deal with this. So tonight, I think we collectively dealt with it. You know, anything could have happened with that water bottle being thrown at me. But, you know, my brothers were surrounded around me. I had people in the crowd. So just trying to get home to my wife and my kids. You mentioned, you know, treating you as human, which should be a basic right. I'm just wondering what you would want folks who feel entitled to do that to know about how that makes you feel. Well, we keep saying things like we're human, we're human. But we don't get treated like we have rights when we're out there at times and people feel entitled to go and do things like that. You know, we claim that we care about each other as human beings, but, you know, we just call things out before they happen like I did the other day. And like I'm telling people, just keep the basketball. And then you have things that happen at the garden. You know, you got things happening in Utah and, you know, there's a lot of history there of things happening. So just do your research, I would say to everybody. And hopefully the respect of the game is kept at a high level moving forward. That's what I hope. You know, Connor, New York Post. Yeah, Kyrie, I was just wondering before that water bottle was, unfortunately, thrown at you. What did you feel in the crowd these two nights? Did you feel that racism or subtle racism that you had warned about? Or had they pretty much kept it strictly about basketball until that incident as you were walking off? Well, like I said, I've been in some hostile environments where a lot of things have been said to me, a lot of things have been done to my teammates, or I've experienced some type of subtle racism that I'm referring to, you know, where it's just underlying throughout the game. You know, the things that they're saying is not necessarily about talent or gifts, it's just more or less about moms or what you look like or the calling you out of your name. And like I said, you know, I joined this sport because I loved it. And inevitably, you know, you're going to have opposing fans do things that are going to help their team win. You know, they love being involved. I don't want to take away that nature. It's just when you get, when you feel disrespected as a person, man or woman, and someone calls you out your name or does something like that, it doesn't make you feel good. And then when you react, and we had times in history where people have reacted and gone in the crowd and we're wrong, and we need to, we need to be civilized and we need to keep our calm and we need to keep our cool and then it's reflected on us. So, you know, like I said, just want to keep it upfront and truthful and it's just unacceptable for that stuff to be happening, but we move on. So. Alex Schiffer, the athletic. Harry, kind of piggybacking off Malika's question. James just said before you joined us that he doesn't think that banning fans does anything with this stuff because it continues to happen and he'd like to see the process change with all this. I'm curious if you were thought on that. Yeah, I think each one of us have our own individual experiences but as a black man playing in the NBA, dealing with a lot of this stuff is fairly difficult because you never know when it can happen or what's going to happen at the end of the game or before the game. So banning fans, I get the objective, but at the same time it doesn't stop people from running on the court. I've had a situation in Cleveland where people have run on the court. I had situations so often throughout my career where we don't really talk about it because we want to be mentally tough. We want to be tough minded. We don't want to be called soft or we're not man enough to deal with boos and fans never block my shot. So I'm not worried about that type of physical, type of violence. It's just when they start doing things that are just out of character, just getting belligerently drunk and that's just what sports is. You mix drunk people out in the crowd that are cheering for their team. You have some fans that are there to watch the quality of the game and then you have a mix of in between and then you've got this intermixing and then now we don't know who's who. But like I said, I just want to move on from this man. I've dealt with it as a player here as Celtic of different things and now being an opponent again. I just want to move on.