 This one, an interception just beyond the 40 yard line. Interception, Duke, Jeremiah Lewis has it for the Blue Devils. I've been playing football, God knows how long, first grade. It's just something that we've, I guess, always done in Texas. I began playing at a little age just to be active. Man, as time went on, I really grew up passionate for the game, and I love for the game. I knew I wanted to be at a place where my parents didn't have to pay for school. Late middle school, early high school, was kind of when I made that decision, and that's kind of when I kind of took my game to a whole other level. Let's talk about going to Duke. Why'd you choose that? Duke, still having to be my first Power Five offer. I wanted to be in the best situation against the best athletes, the best competition. Duke kind of gave me that opportunity. Believe in me, from an early age, was always, you know, trusted them and what they could possibly do for me and what I could do for them. That's back, takes off inside the five, gets lit up in the one. 2020 seems like you're a full-time starter, 827 snaps, and then it goes back down to 576. Now, after that fourth season at Duke, you transferred. Would you attribute that to the less amount of snaps that you wanted more playing time over at Northwestern? No, so the biggest reason for me transferring is I wanted to transition positions. When I got to Duke, I played corner. You know, they felt like I could get on the field early playing corner, so I just kind of took it and ran with it. Did well, achieved well, but my biggest was obviously wanted to transition to safety, which is what I played primarily in high school. Just giving my skill set, my IQ, my instincts. This is time for Allen. Lost the football! Exactly what Northwestern needed! You had a little bit of time over at Northwestern, so what made you go back? Was there a safety position that opened up at Duke? Yes, so Duke wanted me back. I mean, at Northwestern, I played free safety, so I played a lot on the back end. High post, stuff like that. And at Duke, that, you know, asked me to do a different role, which was being more of a run fitter in the box, much more closer to the line of scrimmage, that I think allowed me to show off my physicality. Show off that I can cover why a variety of space being at Northwestern playing more deeper high post, reading QB Vision, where Duke was kind of like, we need you to, you know, come stop the runner. Which of those two would you prefer and which one do you feel like you best succeed at so that you can have longevity in the NFL? I mean, I think I succeeded at both. I think a lot of people, you know, you would think as far as longevity, it's like, least body injuries, but I mean, I really adapted to the willingness to tackle. I don't think there's a one size fit all, but I think that's just a test to like, my skill set and my versatility that I've kind of adapted these last couple of years. Why do you believe that Jeremiah Lewis should be a starting safety in the NFL? I think what I did this last year is unheard of. Transferred somewhere else three days after in August. Ended up playing, starting, played multiple positions. You don't hear about how people learn a whole playbook in three to five days. That's just unheard of. I don't think there's any, or many or any safeties that's able to do that. I can't probably count any times where a ball carrier is, you know, running and I fall back. I mean, I believe that as far as fluidity, I don't think there's any other safety or defensive back that's as fluid as me. That's why I'm more than deserving and more than able to start and play in this league.