 This just came down. Troy Tulawitski, no real surprise, announced his retirement. He said, I wanted to take this opportunity to announce my retirement as a Major League Baseball player. For as long as I can remember, my dream was to compete at the highest level as a Major League Baseball player, to wear a big league uniform, and to play hard for my teammates and the fans. I will forever be grateful for every day that I've had to live out my dream. It's been an absolute honor. So he's been injury plagued. Yankees took a flyer. It was like $500,000, thinking that maybe he could be the guy to replace Dee Dee while Dee Dee was out. Didn't work out. Another one of those injuries that just didn't seem to affect the Yankees at all. But still, 13 years, really good player. And I know a lot of those numbers might be exaggerated because of Colorado. But you saw he did well in Toronto. It's just super human being, good teammate, and his career is over today. Seventh overall pick in the 2005 draft I'm just looking through. I got into the computer, by the way. I'm now able to peruse all this stuff. You know what I find interesting? This is probably taking a place that is only interesting to me. But I can't picture in my life being 34 years old and being done with my career. Like he'll be able to go do whatever he wants to do now. But you and I both had an ambition in our lives, which was to be in this industry. You and I are the same age, and we came up at the same time. Sort of the explosion of popular sports media sport. You and I both grew up a sports phone and all that kind of stuff. And this is really the only thing I ever wanted to do. And I'm now 51, almost 52 years old. And I feel like I'm just getting started. I feel like I'm better now than I ever was before. And I'm anticipating being better five years from now. I can't imagine. Oh, look, he's got all the money in the world and no one needs to feel sorry for him. But to be 34 years old and be like, okay, now what am I going to do with the rest of my life is, it's got to be a really interesting situation to be in. Again, I'm not asking people to feel sorry for him. Most people would probably trade places with him to say, okay, I'd be 34 and I'll have tens of millions of dollars in the bank. Yes, all of us would love that. But it would be interesting for those of us who are passionate about what we do and to be a major league baseball player, you have to have been incredibly passionate to have made it to that point, to just wake up one day and say, okay, I've been a baseball player all my life. Now I'm 34, what am I now? What do I do next? I think that's a very interesting, that has to be a very complicated thing to feel. Sports athletes are kind of doing it in reverse. Like you just said, you feel like you're in your groove right now. You're 52 years old, I'm 51. I feel like I'm at the top of the world. I work hard to get to this point. I'm in my groove. I feel like I'm in our prime. This is our prime. We're in our prime. And it took a long time to get there. When I was 34, at the end of his career, when I was 34, I was, I still was trying to make my way. I wasn't nearly as polished as I am now. And I knew that and I had to work on it. Some guys are on a different track than others. You know, people like Ian Eagle and Bob Bushusin, they were born with a microphone in their hand. They seemed like they were doing games as fetuses, right? They were so young. But for the most part is that you get your break, you work hard and then you get to a point, like when you get to your fifties, or sometimes acting is the same way. You feel like this is, I finally got here. It works the opposite as a player. Like there is that little moment where you're rookie and you're kind of figuring it out. But then every year, you kind of slip a little bit and a little bit and then eventually your career is over. It's just, as Michael Kaye has always said, you die two deaths when you're an athlete. You die, he's no longer a Major League Baseball player and that in kind of way is a death. And then he moves on to another portion of his life. We could be radio guys and TV guys forever. You know, as long as they keep giving us a job, we can do it in like into our 70s and 80s. You look at guys like Marv Albert and Doc Emmerich and Sam Rosen, you know, the list goes on and on of people that are doing it well into their 70s and still killing it. You know, and that's not a luxury that an athlete has.