 you showed a lot of frustration in the dugout after that inning with a couple of errors. What went on on those plays? Nothing, I may go. I mean, that is our game play, and I may feel mistakes, but I'm really working hard and my mistake is a little bit of frustration for me, especially in the inning for Dezen and Kim through too many beaches. So I'm just afraid to pass a break and keep working for tomorrow. Your defense prior to today, for the most part, since the beginning of the year, you had that little blur, but it's been sound. You spoke about how hard that you had worked. Is it sting more with the way the team has been playing to make errors? Nothing, I mean, it's all myself. The first couple of weeks, I made few mistakes. I do the judgment and be working really well. And for bad looking, I made two errors today. I mean, I know it's part of the game, but that is routine ground ball, and I think I come better of a situation. So just working hard right now for tomorrow and try to get better because it's more games. It's coming a lot more ground balls and just try to feel better and better. It is what it is today. I mean, we pay the price. I feel like mistakes like that I take on myself. So tomorrow can be another day. This team has an important week coming up with the Rays and the Red Sox. How do you guys go about turning the page and focusing on the next series? Like we do right now, I mean, we pay the price. So it's a weekend for us, big series coming out, so we focus on the series and try to play really well. Lindsay Adler, you have the next question. Claymore, after you had that rough stretch in April, you seem to turn it around and feel a lot better mentally. When you do have a game like you have today, who do you go to? Do you go to Mendy, to DJ, to your dad? Who do you go to to sort of help pull you out of this? It depends. I mean, like today, I don't do anything to go to somebody's home. I mean, I know what I do, I make few mistakes. So really, in that moment, I don't want to know what to say something to me because I know what I do. So mentally, like I said before, it's really frustration to me. But another point, I just keep playing. I mean, for sure, I don't want to make two errors in the same inning, especially right now because we play like the way we don't want to play. So like I said, it's frustration. But I mean, it's another day. Tomorrow we go home and try to play better and clean those mistakes for the fish. And when you feel this frustration, I know you tried to let it go. But do you feel that it do you feel that it sort of hangs on you when you go into your bats? Do you feel like if you make a defensive error, it affects you at the point? No, really, I mean, that is the problem. I do those mistakes when I was a minor league. But now I'm the big one. I mean, if I make me stay on the field and just try to to figure out to do something really well on the home plate. So it is what it is. If I do, I don't do a really good team, really good job on the home plate and just try to to do the best defense on the day. So I mean, it's it's nothing, nothing about whatever and things like that. I just just try to play really good baseball.