 I think it'll be an illness reported on the on the injury report. COVID illness? Illness. What's your concern level for obviously a hugely significant player for the game? No designation. First of all, it's been good to see him back. You know, that was a player that had improved, that had gone in, gotten better each and every week and was really starting to play well, building some confidence, you know, and then had to, you know, suffered an injury, required a few weeks and so this was the return to play and we'll see kind of how he responded to the last couple days of practice and then to try to make a decision on him obviously before the game. When you're deciding like who's going to wear the green dot headset, like how much, what factors into that and just like with the way modern offenses are, because a lot of times it's a linebacker and you know, you've got to shuffle them off the field in certain packages. Yeah, well you'd like to try to have somebody that doesn't come off the field, right? There's some moving parts there, you know, what packages are they in with and who, what kind of communicator are they, you know, so then, you know, there's some, and then if they are, they do come out, you know, are you able to get, you know, you just can't have two on the field at the same time. So, you know, there's a lot of things that go into that, but most importantly is probably you'd like to find the one that is out there that is communicating in the middle part of the defense so that you can get it on both ends and I know that, you know, some teams have a safety, you know, a lot of people do it differently, but predominantly it's been a linebacker. How many men and the authentic woman do pass protection last week and Adrian just talked about that you guys do things a little differently in what you require running backs to pass growth and so forth. Yeah, I'm sure that's going to be the case everywhere we go. You know, you go to another team, there's going to be some things that they're going to ask their guys to do. And so, you know, I would say that the majority of those guys, what they did last week was on first and second down. You know, a role for Jeremy's on third down and Jeremy does a great job with that and so, you know, I think when the pressure came or when they brought people on first and second down, I thought they were, you know, they were efficient in what they do. They need to improve just like everybody else, but, you know, when you play to, you know, different teams, I'm sure they ask, you know, some do some stuff differently. What's my job and so special for them? And if he doesn't play, do you see maybe the same things, just Ingram, just a bigger, heavier guy? Well, they put a lot on his plate. You know, I mean, I think as far as percentage of offense, I think when you talk about, you know, where Derek was for us and, you know, where Alvin Camaro are and where, you know, McCaffrey's out there, I mean, that's, those are premier players and he has speed, his quickness, he runs behind his pads. You know, it's not just like he's a, you know, one hit takes him down. You know, I mean, it breaks a lot of tackles. I've always had a lot of respect for him. I think he catches the ball well. He's a good route runner. He'll protect. You know, I watched Seattle. He comes back and, you know, protects Adam. You know, when he blitzes, he's not afraid to run in between the tackles. You know, it's not like this is just toss sweeps and he runs the entire offense. He gets downhill when he has to get downhill and he's a really good player. Are you in a position where maybe you have to consider putting Julio on the IR to get past the hamstring issue? I don't know if we're in a position to do really anything. We're just trying to find 48 guys that are available, that can help the team win. And, you know, that's a decision that we end up making, we'll make, but I don't think we're in that position at all. You think a second week of practice and one game under Adrian Peterson's belt will, you know, help him going into this weekend? I mean, I think, I think blocking better and running better will help anybody that's back there, you know. I think that, you know, he's practiced well. Him and Deontay have practiced well and, you know, the verbiage and understanding and, you know, where things may be on certain runs that we have and where the cut may be, not that you could anticipate anything like that, but I think the more that he sees it, the more that he's back there in the backfield for us, hopefully that helps. What about maybe sometimes being two quick first blockers, maybe being a little bit too overeager? Is that something that you've done? I've done a lot of things in this league and take a handoff and run with it has been one that I haven't done. So I'm just going to let the run, you know, there are running backs for a reason. You know, we hand it to them and, you know, that's why we tell linemen and receivers not to direct traffic. Like, hey, run over here. I'm blocking over here. Like just turn and block and we give the guy the ball and they know what to do with it. Do you have hamstrings this week? Any in-house considerations as to why that's been such a popular injury on this thing? I think that they're popular, you know, soft tissue injuries are something that the entire competitive athletic world deals with. You know, we'll continue to moderate, you know, whether they're high or not. You know, we always try to do what's best for the players and focus on things and how we warm up, how we prepare, you know, and then it's obviously there's a large part that, you know, is on each individual to make sure that they're ready to go and, you know, some things, you know, we understand that are just going to happen and come up and that are part of, you know, playing football. So everybody has a part in trying to take care of the health and safety of the player. You know, we're not panicking. We're not changing the way that we structure practice. You know, we walk through on Wednesday and we stretch, we ran striders. I would say that that's not something that would load the player. And so we just have to make sure that as we work our way through the games and we see how guys feel and, you know, that we're staying on top of this stuff. You think the schedule of the year maybe leads to more soft tissue injuries? It's been like this, you know, forever. And again, I don't think anybody has a definite answer. I know that I listened to the information that's provided from the NFL. I listened to the information that's provided from the NFLPA, the coaches talk, you know, I mean, how we structure practice or conscious of our days off or conscious of regeneration days. I mean, 10 years ago there was, I didn't know what regeneration day is when we were in middle of 10, two days in training camp. Like nobody knew what any of this stuff was. But we're trying to focus on those things. You ask other coaches, you know, how are you guys doing it? So it's just, it's a process. You know, we understand that our game, our business, our fans, this is all because of the players and the athletes. And the more that you can have the athlete out there and available, the better the team can be and the better the product is. If you've got a player, you know, who's maybe at like 80% or something like that, how is it for a coach and a former player with that line like to say, can you give us, you know, all that you can, 80% or, you know, if they say, I can't go, do you just leave it at that or, you know, if you ever say, 80% of you is better than nothing. You know, what's that like? I'm not going to get into those discussions. But I would say that we use three things that I've referenced here before that I've tried to explain to you whether you wrote it down or whether you kept the recording, but it's, can they make it worse? Can they do their job up to the standard that we expect it? And can they take care of themselves in battle? And not to say this is a war, but, you know, those guys, they're trying to inflict pain and they have to be able to protect themselves when they're out there playing football. As you guys witness each and every week, you know, watching these games. So those are what I have to ask. And those are the questions that I ask and I try to get feedback from a lot of different people. Then I make a decision. If that helps. If I could get one more green dot question. You, yeah, I believe when you played, they didn't have that. No, they did. I didn't play that long ago, Teron. No, they did. They did, Teron. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. How much of a difference does it make? Because I'm sure you've been on the field where the green dot wasn't able to be used. So how much does it difference does that make just communication-wise on the field? You know, I think it, one thing it's done is it's forced, I liked it when you're signaled, right? Because then everybody had, it forced everybody to look over there. You know, and so again, when we're in two minute, you know, we don't have time and the offense is going fast. You don't have time to like rely on one guy to try to get 10 other guys the call. So a part of me likes everybody looking over there and getting the signal so that they can understand what's going on and they're engaged early on in the play as opposed to just sitting there and waiting for it to come through and having somebody tell you what the call is. And so it does help though that you're not signaling, you know, and then the DBs can get the call and the safety can echo it to the corners and the linebacker can communicate it to the front end. But there is a certain part of me that thinks that the guys, you know, put it on them to engage and actively look over and get the call, you know, and we've done okay with that. We've done pretty well at that where, you know, let's say Jeff gets the call and then he's echoing it to the front guys and then the linebackers are communicating and the safeties are communicating with the corners and that can always improve but, you know, teams are going to go fast, different types, different areas of the field and, you know, we have to be ready to go whether we can get the call in or not or sometimes teams will sub late, you know, they shut those off after 15 seconds and so, you know, offenses know that, you know, offenses know that, so they come out of, you know, they sub under, you know, 15 seconds and get in the huddle and, you know, break, you can't make a call and so you're changing personnel and you have to signal because they shut off, 15 seconds, that thing just gives you a loud beep so, you know, I think it's good for the game but, you know, I don't think you can rely on it, those things go out like cell phone service and everything else. We've had our quarterbacks, you know, they go out and we have a system set up for our quarterbacks to be able to get into a play based on the personnel and give them a menu of things to do when the headsets go out. What do you have to be able to do really just try to make the game better, you know, that's, it's a great honor. Try to focus on the areas improvement, you know, just trying to make the game better, you know, make it a better product and try to make it obviously safer and the best that we can. Pollution service, I guess, Veterans Day weekend, that extra unique maybe across the NFL maybe even day back of your day as a player. Yeah, I think that that's important. I think that this is a phenomenal opportunity to recognize the 19 or so million living veterans in our country that are family members, that are friends, and I had an opportunity to explain to the team about Veterans Day and, you know, Armistice Day and how it started on the 11th hour, you know, November 11th and Congress changing it to Veterans Day and I had an opportunity when I was in Kansas City to go visit the VA hospital and spend some time with those men. There was a VA hospital near Arrowhead and, you know, those men and women, they don't come back. Sometimes they don't come back the same as when they left and I think we need to be conscious of that just like in our game, you know, they suffer from headaches, body aches, concussions, anxiety, much like pro football players do when they're done, except the pensions and the 401K and the annuities probably aren't, I guarantee, aren't the same. So I think it's a great thing for that, you know, we do and I hope our players are mindful of that and respectful of that.