 If Frankie Montas is not going to start the season on time, it sounds like it's Hermann, right, is the guy. He said Hermann so quickly that I would believe it would be Hermann, and that is the sensible choice. You're talking about someone who has an 18-win season on his resume. But when you investigate what's going on with Montas, Bob, if the Yankees could unequivocally say he's going to eradicate all of this inflammation and he'll be ready to go on May 1st, I think you could live with it and you get five solid months out of him in the regular season. But this is someone who was acquired to be a top end of the rotation pitcher, Michael. It didn't happen, and now it's going to be delayed and potentially happening. I listen, they have certainly enough pitching to fill the void. Clark Schmidt and Domingo Hermann, this is a blow. There's no other way to shape it. I mean, this guy is supposed to be your number two or three starter. You gave up a lot of minor league capital to get him from the Oakland Athletics, and you got him, and when he had shoulder problems then, then he had shoulder problems during the end of the year, and then after a whole layoff of an offseason, it's still bothering him. That's a concern to me, because when I put together this rotation in my head, I depended on Frankie Montas, giving me 30 starts. Now, you're almost looking at, is he going to give you 18 starts? Yeah, we were talking about this in my office. The danger here, it's a recurring injury. It's the same thing. It's the right shoulder. It's not, oh, he has a calf. He'll work on that, he'll get treatment, and he'll be fine. When you see that happen, time it again with a pitcher, and now it's happened again in the offseason, that's a concern. Yeah, it's worrisome, because this guy, when healthy, is really filthy. I mean, his stuff is that good, and then when you hear that, you just shake your head and go, wow. Because you know, everybody's first choice last year was Castillo, but obviously the ask was just too much. You don't want to give up Volpe. You don't want to give up Paraza. Totally understand it. So the second choice goes to Montas, and it didn't work out. It hasn't worked out, and you hope, if he does give you those 18 to 20 starts, that he's really dominant, because that's what you expected of him. You mentioned the stuff being filthy, and there were times with Oakland where the Yankees saw that version of Montas, and he's got that great splitter, and batters hit under 200 against the splitter last season, but Bob, the word you brought up is the word we did discuss in your office, recurring. Now, every pitcher is going to have some sort of nagging issue. David Cohen always talks about that. Once the season starts, you never feel 100%, but the fact that this is something that has lingered for a pitcher that the Yankees had high hopes for, it's just a level of frustration. Will they be able to overcome it? Could they have a great April without Montas? Of course they could, but the point is, they acquired him to be a big part of what they're trying to do.