 Coach, you have your share of experience with Flocko. What are some of the things you remember about his game? Well, he's got an incredibly strong arm, a hard guy to bring down in the pocket. He's big, deceivingly fast, more than what you might think. He really has a great arm. I mean, I was always amazed watching him out in practice. I mean, he can put it on a string now. Gilbert seems like a guy who's made pretty quick progress since you guys picked him up and got him in the lineup. That dead accurate, what's he doing well to fit in? Yeah, I think he's taken it to heart. I mean, he's really been just like one of the guys in there. But ever since he got here, I think he's very conscientious, kind of quiet, and just really studies a lot. I think he's been on top of it. He knows what to do. He hasn't had many mental mistakes at all for being a new guy. And I think he's just working really hard at it. Skills-wise, what's he too well? Well, I think he's a good pass rusher. He does a good job of setting the edge. We can all improve in that area, I think, a little bit, all of them. But I think he's done a good job of being a pass rusher. Where have you seen Harold maybe make his best strides from last year to this year so far? Well, I just think he's much more in tune to the whole defense and what we're really kind of wanting him to do and what his role is on every play. Every play is not a pass play. He's not just a pass rusher. He's an outside linebacker. So I think that's big. To me, he's been the biggest strides in the base defense, just being able to play outside backer, setting the edge better in the run, those kind of things that you just didn't have to do that at BC as much. And there's coverage stuff that's involved now that he didn't really have to do at BC. So the biggest strides to me I think he's made is in base defense. Do you see a difference when they change backs? Well, the thing of this is that they're both complementary. I mean, one is a speed. Everybody's at the point of attack. Take it outside, bounce the ball. Ball could go anywhere. The other guy is bigger. I mean, one's 190, one's 230 something. I mean, they're downhill, slasher, hard runner, but he can also bounce it outside. And they both are really good out of the backfield. I mean, when you look at them, you look at all these, you look at running backs in the league and you look at the stats and you say, well, this guy's like the leading rusher in this. Well, when you combine the two of them, they're the leading rusher. And that's the thing that we got two different styles of guys, the poise are kind of the same, but they may run them a little different just because of their style. I think they're both just extremely, extremely complementary to each other in the run game, but they're also just as dynamic in the pass game. How about the tight end fan? Usually the rookie tight ends up kind of struggling initially, but he seems to be holding his own. He's doing a great job. I mean, the guy's a really good athlete. I think everybody knew when they drafted him, when he was coming out. I didn't, you know, I obviously spent a whole lot of time evaluating offensive guys for the draft, but I just know that his name came up. Seems like every time I turned on the TV, his name came up as a tight end. He's not disappointing. He's really a talented, talented guy. Defense, obviously, you play well enough. You probably win every game, but I'm sure you're finding things that need to get better. What are the things you're preaching that you can take it to another level? Well, two main things probably, Jim, is number one, we just can't give up the one big play a game that we seem to be giving up. You know, we'll play well, play well, play well, and we give up last week, we give up a reverse. One week we gave up, you know. It's not so much the desperation at the end that bothers me sometimes, because, you know, we may make a call that, you know, we're trying to make a play at the end and sometimes it's feast or famine, you know, when you're trying to get somebody stopped at the end. But we've given up, you know, a run in the Colts game. We gave up the reverse last week. We gave up, you know, just a run in the Jacksonville game. And just, we just got to eliminate that big play a game that we've given up. And then the other thing is we just got to play better in the red zone. We've been really good in the red zone last year. We were really good down there. And I'm just kind of disappointed at where we are right now in the red zone. We just got to get them, hold them to field goals down there. You guys have a pretty varied group when it comes to sacks. I think maybe like nine people have at least one sack. Has that kind of always been a hallmark for your defenses? And does that matter? You know, should one guy be, I don't really know? Not when I had Suggs. That's right. And that wasn't necessarily true. But I think it's, I'm fine with that. I don't care who gets the sacks or who's doing what. We're just trying to devise things to try to get home and whoever that might be, whether it be somebody out of the secondary, whether it be an outside backer, you know, and if we get a guy that we're gonna kind of just let him rush, then that's kind of what we're gonna do. I mean, we didn't drop Suggs very often. And so we probably got more. And some of these other guys were kind of dropping them into coverage and trying to disguise and do things. So they may not end up with as many bottom line as at the end of the day. I don't care who gets them or how we get them, just as long as we get them.