 I don't feel weird to be in the center of a media focus over pitch that didn't do anything necessarily. Yeah, I mean, obviously that was the high end type pitch. I mean, that's not a comfortable feeling for him and, you know, it just, it is what it is, I guess. That seems to be a common refrain. It is what it is. Things like this happen, right? He says it's a high end type pitch. We've got David Cohen in our broadcast booth who pitched in 450 major league games, won almost 200 games, and Cohen immediately talked about seeing intent with that pitch. You're throwing a four-seam fastball. That's a pitch that is known as a straight fastball. A two-seam fastball is the one that's going to move from side to side. You throw a four-seam fastball in that spot. There's intent behind that. Kittridge is going to say that he's just trying to keep a guy off the plate. He's just trying to back a guy off the plate. You have to pitch inside. He's going to offer up all the cliches that pitchers offer up after situations like that. But I guess the Rays were upset that a couple of their batters got hit. And even if there was an intent from the Yankee side, they felt the need to retaliate. And then, of course, they got their own player hit in Sucre. I think the Rays look poor in this situation. Let me ask you a follow-up on that, because these guys are expert pitchers. Are they trying to sell you? This would apply to anybody that doesn't, on the fact that they don't know what they're doing out there, because a team is going to look at that and say, that was a four-seamer. That was up. It wasn't even located well, as opposed to, you know what to do with your pitches. You know how to throw them. If there's intent, you want to do it the right way. Like CeCe did on Sucre, do it the right way. Do it the right way. Teams understand that this is going to happen. And I think you're absolutely right, Bob. If Kittridge throws that pitch and it hits Romine in the thigh or the butt, the Yankees are probably a little perplexed, saying, well, we don't think our pitchers are doing it intentionally. But fine, you felt the need that you had to retaliate. There it is. It's over. When you start getting up around a guy's neck and you put a pitch in a spot where a batter has to react and worry that he might get hit in the head, I mean, you also saw Romine's immediate reaction. Turning to the catcher, well, he looked at Kittridge as well, but also turning to Sucre and saying, what is that for? What was that about? So again, I think the raise Kittridge handled this poorly. I think CeCe, Sabathia, handled it the way that any true teammate would handle it.