 Aaron Boone mentioned the fact that he felt like you really leaned on your cutter tonight. Why did that pitch prove to be so important for you? I mean, they're a lot of smart, they've pleased me a lot. I feel like they were trying to eliminate my change up and anything out of the zone. Because I was throwing a lot of good curveballs, I was ahead of most counts, threw some good curveballs and they just didn't want to expand, so I'm just trying to execute inside of the inside part of the plate to kind of keep them on balance. Is that a game plan coming in or is that an adjustment you make as you see the swings and you see the way they're approaching you at the plate? An adjustment, kind of a baseball is a game of adjustments. So you kind of got to go with the flow of the game and kind of do it, kind of read swings, I guess. Aaron also mentioned the fact that he's been impressed by the fact that you have not been distracted by outside noise or circumstance that has happened, you know, throughout your last couple of starts. How are you able to block out all that noise? Just know I have a job to do. Every five days, I expect us to win. So whenever I go out there, I'm going to get a mile and expect to come out of the team to team win. We can go next. So Lindsay Adler, what do you attribute to some of the steps forward you've made this year? Is it, you know, being further removed from your time away or, you know, working with this pitching staff and this coaching staff? Like, what do you think has really helped you this year? I think I've got a little more time out of TJ, trust in my arm, confidence in my stuff, aggressiveness, comfort, more comfortable on the mound and just trying to think less. I mean, when I'm out there aggressive competing, I feel like I'm one of the better pitchers in league, but then my mind gets in the way and I try and do too much. So I just try and go out there and leave it on the field.