 You had 59 a few years ago and you had a few games at the end of the year. I think where you were sitting on 59, um, how tough is it to just have that number right in front of you and the very next game go out and do it? How, how did you deal with that? Having that big 60 in front of you and not quite being able to get it? Uh, how'd I deal with it by not getting it? Uh, but, uh, you know, it's, it's obviously you can't, you can't run from it. You can't hide from it. Uh, you could tell in the stadium, you could tell, um, their team, the, the pitcher on the mound doesn't want to be the one to give it up. Uh, so yeah, that's all, that's all extra distractions outside noise. You got to be able to, to, to compress all that and still stay in your zone and, uh, stick to your approach and what, which he's done all year. And, uh, obviously tonight too. Also about your relationship with him. I asked him in here and he said that he's grown by leaps and bounds. He said, just from being around you and leaning on you and your wisdom and stuff. Um, what have you tried to impart to him? Um, he was already a great hitter when you got here, but how have you tried to help him improve leaving off that? Uh, well, we're, we're very, very similar. Uh, we have a lot, uh, a lot of the same tools, a lot of the same, uh, ways to go about baseball. So just kind of bouncing off those type of ideas. Cause we can't, um, it's, it's hard to, I guess relate to everybody. When you're, when you're looking for a mindset or an approach or, or, you know, how, how is this guy going to come at me, uh, uh, as opposed to other hitters? So it's just good to, to have, you know, uh, like a brother to, to bounce off and, and just, uh, keep, keep each other accountable, keep each other pushing. And, and yeah, uh, wishing each other the best every night. Dave, do you have the mic? Yeah. To the left. Jankal, you know, it feels like when you're swinging well and you can hit home runs and in bunches, when you look at him, we've just talked about the number 1661, but how far do you think he can get? I mean, he said three in two games now. I mean, do you think he has, he has a ways to go here where he can kind of crank out a few more? Uh, I think there, there's no limit and there's no, um, there's no jump in the gun, you know, it's, it's one app out at, at a time, one pitch at a time. Uh, uh, when he, when he gets the next one, that's going to go on to the next one, the next app, uh, but at, as the, the, the distractions and everything else come to him, that's when he has to be more tunnel vision and just, just be ready for what's coming. Dan and Andy to the right. And hello, uh, Aaron is obviously focused on the winds and all that, but how much do you think he's enjoying this, this chase and getting to 60 and all of that? Do you, do you see it inside a little bit more? Yeah, I think he'll, I think he'll fully realize, um, after the fact, I think that he's, he's zoned in and, and, uh, has plenty of bets to go. So I think when you're doing something like this, you don't sit in, in the moment, you're like, what can we do next? What can, uh, the better I do, the more, uh, we're going to win. And the more, uh, he's going to, um, achieve history. So, uh, it's all, it all works together. Andy, you talked about judge's ability to, I think you said compressed it, they keep the external noise out. And it seems publicly that he's doing that really well. You hear about Roger Maris and how much this stressed him out. And he doesn't seem to be going through that. Is that what you see also behind the scenes as much as we see publicly that he's that even keeled about it? And if so, how difficult is that to do mentally? Uh, well, he's been through it. He's been, I mean, obviously not this specific, but I'm seeing he's been through, uh, uh, the media and the buzz here. And it's, it's like nowhere else. So he, he's got a good head start on, on how to compress and, and, uh, throughout the noise there. But, um, yeah, I mean, the end of the day, we're playing baseball. And, uh, if you prepare the way he does, um, you know, you don't got to worry about everything else going on. It'll be fine. Take a couple more, Chris, right here in the middle. Before your grand slam, did you feel in your previous at bats that you were close to breaking through yourself? Uh, you want to hope you're close for, you know, the last two, two, three, four or five weeks, but, uh, you keep pushing, you keep, uh, working and, and trying to get something that clicks. But I feel like, uh, I feel like I saw the ball pretty well tonight. Just, uh, didn't, uh, didn't show to the last at bat. But, um, that's the beauty of this game. That's the difficulties of this game. And, uh, just got to take that in tomorrow. All the way to the right, Bob. Jen Carlo, right here. Um, what do you think about Aaron's ability to intimidate pitchers? I mean, right? He's hitting home run after home run after home run. And it feels like he can do it at any time if, if he gets a mistake. And you know, you've been in the same position where everything, you're locked in and everything seems to go out. And how do you think that affects a picture? What are you seeing? Uh, well, the, they definitely don't want to give up a homer. And I would say the, I would say the younger ones are the ones that this is their first type of experience. They try so hard not to make a mistake that they make the mistake. So, um, it happens in the reverse sometimes that you're so, um, nervous or get out of your, your mindset, uh, yourself on the mound. And, um, so it's cool to see. It's cool to see, uh, that, that cat and mouse to begin with that chess game they're playing and just, uh, watching him time after time come out on top.