 You got a lot of success, especially that first half, get into the rim, what are you seeing there? There's a flow like that. What does it do if you got to your rhythm? To be honest, we were just in the flow of the game. We tried to, of course, attack Trey a bit more, look for him, put him in some situations, and take advantage of those mismatches. He was guarding D-Wipe, which is already a tough task for him. And then on top of that, we put him into actions and pick and rolls. And he has to switch or just put them at a disadvantage. And we did that and got off to a good start offensively, not so great, maybe defensively. But then we picked it up also in second half defensively and got the job done. Yeah, what adjustments were made in the second half? Joe just came in at halftime and he asked us, he gave us a goal to get at least one 25-quarter, 25-point quarter. And I don't know if we got two or one, I think one. We got the third one, right? So that was the goal, and we did that. And offensively, maybe we again took maybe a step back, but the game kind of slowed down a little bit. And I think we did a good job of stopping some of their actions. To be honest, offensively, they're a good team offensively. We're trai, being the head of the snake, throwing those lobs and getting those guys involved. Like, it's tough to stop them. And I think their coach is doing a really good job of making them dangerous offensively. So it was on us to pick it up defensively so we can get that separation from them. It's kind of the comfort level offensively. Like, I think the Hawks threw one or two double teams at you, and obviously you passed out. What's kind of the process there? Yeah, it's an adjustment. No, as the season goes along. Obviously at first, it was just straight up one-on-one. And then as I showed time and time again that I was being super effective at it, then teams start to do different kind of stuff. And I have to start making different kind of reads. And today, again, it was like they were like floating from the baseline. They weren't really doubling right away, but they were floating from the baseline. So it's putting me in like a reading situation, like whether I attack or whether I look for that kick out. So they were doing a pretty good job of kind of like playing in that gray area with that coverage. And that's on me to make that right read and take advantage of those mismatches or those double teams. But it's on pretty much every game is something a little bit different. I think the coaching staff is doing a really good job of giving me the answers, what it might look like. But it can be adjustments and things like that. So it's always on the go. And I'm trying to be as effective as I can for the team. There was some plays where you guys kind of worked the ball baseline. And then you would make a delayed roll through the middle. And they would just kind of drop it back to you for the dunk. Have you worked in that kind of system before, where it's like one that kind of works almost baseline out? And how does that work for you? Yeah, I mean, it's a read thing, right? As the guard goes downhill, sometimes rolling too quick, it kind of doesn't give you an advantage because the big is in the middle of both of us, right? Kind of happened a little bit in a Lakers game. It was tight space. So late pass was not really there, or even a finish for the guard wasn't there. So we second half of the Lakers game, we did a better job of opening up that pick and roll and getting downhill and having a bit more space. And today, again, we kind of try to create a little bit separation me from the guard as I roll. And then maybe slowing down a little bit, seeing if there's a pocket that we can find where the guard can just drop it off to me. And we did a pretty good job of that. I forgot one more thing. I forgot that, but whatever, yeah, pretty much. Joe said Xavier's going to have to get used to this defense that you guys crossed when he gets here. What's kind of the biggest advice you would give him based on how you learned this defense and what the hardest part was adjusting to it? I think he's going to have his processor pretty working. He's going to be working because it's a lot of adjustments on the go. Joe likes to just, boom, we have to be ready to respond. Whatever the coverage is, whatever the change is, whatever the matchup is in that moment, boom, you have to be ready for it. And I think he will pick it up and understand that it's going to be on the go. And that's a little bit different here. And it challenges you as a player to respond quickly to whatever Joe sees. And I think he might take him a little bit of time, but once he finds that ability to just switch his mindset on two different things, he'll be fine. What do you say to him about playing with him? His ability to defend, right? All kinds of multiple positions. And yeah, I mean, he has some tools offensively also that can help us. But I think he's just his body and he's built. He's a really strong defender, and he can guard multiple guys, which is going to be a huge advantage for us. Why are you so excited after you hit that three from the corner? Because I haven't hit one this season yet. From the corner? Yeah, from the corner. And we talked about it. Is it that corner or any corner? Any corner. Because I had one in OKC, and I stepped on the line. And today, again, I stepped on the line. I was celebrating. I thought it was a three, but at the end it was a two again. No, they gave you a three. They called it a three, didn't they? I was 26, and then they changed it. Was that a different one? No, that was a different one. Yeah, that was somebody else stepped on it. They counted the exam. And then mine was a two again. So yeah, because of my stance or whatever, I just cannot hit a corner three. So hopefully soon. And then, have you and JB talked about the dunk contest? Yes, I was trying to get some information out of him, like what are his best dunks? And see if I could get some inside info. But he was being mysterious, and he didn't want to tell yet. I don't think he knows either. So we'll see. He's going to surprise us for sure. Presented by your New England Ford dealers. Built for America. Built Ford Proud.