 Well, there's more drama with Houston. This is a couple nights ago. Castiano's young pitcher for Houston. I don't think he's seen much time at double A or triple A at all. He hits L'Oriano with that pitch. L'Oriano is not going to be happy about that because he got hit by a pitch and that doesn't feel good. Then a couple days later, you got this guy on the mound. His name is Brandon Bailey and he got traded for L'Oriano outright back in 2017 between the A's and Houston and Dave Stewart had some fun things to say about that. How the A's got this guy is unbelievable and what it took to get him is unbelievable on Houston's part. Houston, thank you once again, you cheaters. So shots fired there, calls him cheaters. Also says what it took to get him. Kind of a direct insult to Brandon Bailey who sees this quote when it was tweeted out and likes it. He maybe he gets it. Maybe he's using it as bulletin board material. Who knows? But now he's facing L'Oriano in this game and he's going to plunk him right on the shoulder with 91 mile per hour fastball. A little high. Is it on purpose? Who knows? Is L'Oriano allowed to be upset about it? Absolutely. It probably did not feel good. Later on in the game, Dusty Baker gets ejected for arguing that strike call. So now he's out and Dusty Baker, his job is basically, you know, protect the Astros. They're going to get booed and everything. So maybe, maybe someone else thinks they're going to need to protect him. Now we have the young pitcher casting on us again. Hits L'Oriano again with what's supposed to be a slider. 78 miles per hour. Sure doesn't sting as much as 99, but let me hit you with 78. It'll sting. And he's saying, Hey, you're throwing it too straight. You're throwing that slider too straight. Just snap it. If you snap it, you'll get the break, but it's going straight right now because you're just not snapping it. So just a pitching lesson for the young pitcher. He says, Hey, it was a slider, man. It was a slider and Lawrence like, I know, I know. I'm just telling him that he's going too straight on him. He needs to snap it a little more. I'm good. I'm good. I'll take first base. L'Oriano has been hit twice in this game three times in the series. He's going to be mad. He's going to be fired up. What he doesn't need is the Houston hitting coach egging him on and saying, come on. Come on. Why don't you come fight me? And he says, get the hell out of here. I don't even know who you are. He says, yeah, come fight me. And then he kind of takes this first step right here, takes the first step, hikes up his pants a little bit. Oh yeah, hike them pants up and then he gets in a, you know, a nice wide base fighting position. Bring it on Ramon. I'm right here. I'm the hitting coach Ramon charges in. Let's fucking go. Let's fucking go. And then look at his wall. They built great wall by the Houston players to protect their hitting coach. Just a great role. L'Oriano tries to go around him up Garno wraps him up. One of the better wrap-ups you'll see just immediate. Get some tangled. Get some to the ground. The hitting coach. He's just kind of hanging back in the back here. Just watching guy who invited the fight said, come on. Let his players handle it. And then now he's just standing here watching. This guy right here. He was the one that said, come on. Come fight me to the guy who just got hit twice in the same game and was upset about it. And he egged him on and said, come fight me. He's just standing in the background right there. So then a whole big old mess happens. Chapman on the A's is heated. But Maldonado spins around. Maldonado takes away from him. But now we got the A's catcher Allen. He beelines it for Maldonado. It's like a hockey fight equipment versus equipment. And they just start going straight tug-of-war mode. Looking at each other. Now we're going to have Maldonado's mask disappears. Beretto number four. He's going to come up with it right here. And I don't know how it happens. He walks out of this pile holding Maldonado's mask. And I don't know at what point that happened. Here's another angle. Maldonado mask on, right? And then and then it's on and now it's off. It's like in this one frame. It's off there, right? Okay. The mask is on his head here and now it's off his head. And now somehow Beretto all the way over there has it in his hand. He just drops it. Ramon's getting walked off. He's heated, looking great. Eye black looks great, looking great. Ramon, love you, dude. My buddy, I have his batting glove. We're just great friends. He says, yeah, man, I don't care if it's a slider. Just stop hitting me. And the coach stepped at me. Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh. It's bullshit. Garno, you know, this is what happens when you have a great time. You know, this is what happens when you have a great time. This happens when you have a great takedown tackle. You're going to get bruised up. You're going to. This one was brought to you by Talking Baseball. It's a podcast. I'm on it. That's me and my boy Ramon Laureano right there. Hey, man, you like the Astros? No.