 We will, of course, have plenty more on the Subway series matchup coming up. But yesterday, Yankees general partner and co-chairperson Hal Steinbrenner met the media for a wide-ranging discussion about the state of the 2021 Yankees. The club sits at 41 and 39 as we reach the halfway mark. A record hell is not happy with. It's aggravating. I mean, there's no doubt about it. I mean, I don't need to tell you that. It's absolutely aggravating, maddening. I mean, you choose the word. It has been tough to watch. And the players know that. This is not, you know, they're better than this. This is not the product that we expect. And it's not the type of play that they expect themselves. Myself, Cashman, Boone, the coaches, I mean, we're responsible, right? I mean, we're in charge. So at some level, we're responsible for what's going on. But make no mistake about it. I mean, my opinion, the majority of the responsibility, whether it's the responsibility of inconsistent offense or bad base running, et cetera, that responsibility lies with the players. They're the ones on the field, right? They're a group of very talented professional athletes that are playing this game at the highest level in the world. They need to fix this problem. They need to fix the problem because everyone, including our fan base, rightfully so, has had enough, quite frankly. It's enough. And they know that. And, you know, you're seeing them say that. They're taking it seriously. They had a team-only meeting a couple days ago, which in my opinion is always the best type of meeting. Peers holding other peers accountable is, in my belief, the most effective type of meeting that can occur. But we all can share the blame, but the majority of the blame lies with them. Everybody on the coaching staff has dealt with these players in the past. We've had some great offenses and some great teams. So, and, you know, nobody's working harder than the coaches. And, you know, the players, the most important thing to me always, any given year, is that the players respect the coaches, believe in the coaches, and that's absolutely the case here. So these Jekyll and Hyde Yankees had a nice stretch in June, but still finished the month under 500 at 12 and 14. Their offense has started to snap out of what's been a season-long malaise, scoring nearly five runs a game, but now it's the pitching staff that has sagged. The team, ERA, last month was nearly five. It had been 3.20 through the end of May.