 One homerun and that came off the bat of Aaron Judge. Let's hear from him post game. Aaron, what did Aaron Boone say to you guys after this one? He mentioned that it was a fairly quiet room and there were some tears and obviously frustration. Yeah, just I won't go into too much detail, but just told us he was proud of us for continuing the battle down to the last out and to continue to keep working. There's a lot of work that still needs to be done with this team, you know, with each individual. And they'll just continue to work. And you know, don't forget that feeling. That fifth inning, the Meadows ball that you tried to make a play on, just a matter of getting too close to the wall, not knowing the ballpark, what exactly happened there as you tried to jump for that ball? Yeah, just didn't like to play. Had a beat on it from the get-go. Knew it was going to be close to the wall, but you had to run out of room and just didn't make the play. You know, that's the chain of the ball game right there, you know, and get up there and rob that home or, you know, different outcome of the game, you know. So it's a tough one right there. Tom, Mary, you have the next question. Erin, what do you think was the biggest difference in the series that enables the race to move on? Timely hitting. You know, there's a couple opportunities, you know, looking back on the series that we had, you know, runners on base, runners in certain situations to either score, you know, kind of keep the inning going and get some of their pitchers to throw some more pitches, and we just weren't able to capitalize. You know, I can look back on quite a few of my bats, you know, coming in, you know, especially late in the game, you know, runners on base and not, you know, either not getting the job done or not, you know, passing baton to the next guy to, you know, keep the line moving. So I think that's kind of what it comes down to.