 There's a couple practices in reasonably short order for you. You don't get an opportunity to get that many in. I mean, what were you guys drilling down on and working on? Yeah, so a little bit of you try and really take advantage of days like this to clean up anything that happened in the game that guys have questions on, whether it could be side out of bounds, out of bounds underneath just to give ourselves a chance, every opportunity, every possession. Looking forward to the Atlanta game, how they defend some situations that can give us some confidence once we play those guys. And so trying to toggle and do a little bit of both on a day like this. Atlanta, you guys have had a tough schedule. You've only played four losing teams, granted you beat them all. But now when you're playing a team like Atlanta, another team that's not in the losing category, a competitive team, what are some of the keys in terms of not just Atlanta, but in being able to get over the hump and be able to close out games against those quality teams? Yeah, it's a discipline, Brian. It is leaning more into always instead of sometimes. And we have been sometimes pretty good in possessions. We need to shift that to always, whether that is always defending and being in our right position, whether that's always kicking the ball ahead and having multiple ballhandlers, whether that's always playing with pace once we get a rebound. So that's our challenge as a group. And when you play the better team, it just gets emphasized even more. Because if you don't do it, you're going to lose. And so for us, we're learning those lessons, especially when you play high-level teams. In terms of injury updates, anything new on Ben or Cam? Let's see. No updates for you. Ben and Dennis and Cam will not travel to Atlanta and will not play in Atlanta. Dennis will get an MRI today, and then we'll see what that looks like. So offense, at least from the game against Philly, did you feel the struggles were more about creating advantages or maintaining them once you saw them? Yes, it's interesting. When you have a big, like, embed at the rim, that's always going to present a problem for us. Just because we have a handful of guys who have historically been able to drive the basketball and punish someone at the rim. We watch some of those clips as a team to see other opportunities where we can at least keep our dribble, drag that big out, and then maybe create some driving kick opportunities from that. We can always get to a midi pull-up. Without a doubt, every dude can do that every single possession, so are we disciplined enough to try to make the defense pay when they have a big at the rim? And then just looking at Atlanta, one of the things that's been different about them this year is they're playing a little faster, and they got guys like Jalen Johnson in the lineup. What have you seen other than, I guess, an increased pace? Yeah, Johnson's playing at high-level, do his average in 15 points, shooting the basketball well from three, playing with an extreme amount of confidence. A guy that can get up and down, and when you have two dynamic guards in Murray and Young, their ability to handle the basketball make you collapse because they can get to the rim also. So definitely a disciplined game where you don't wanna allow like a Johnson to have an extreme impact on the game, a Bogdanovich to have an extreme impact on the game, and then disciplined enough to not foul Trey Young also. So a lot of areas you gotta cover when you're playing high-level teams. Trey beat you, I guess, last year when you guys, when Spencer was afraid to get the foul, that wanted to buzzer. Interesting, I mean, he's right behind him on that play, yeah. And, but, you know, Trey is a guy that has learned how to put himself in a position that makes you tough, whether you're gonna reach, whether you're gonna come over and take a charge, whether you're gonna be vertical at the rim against him. So he puts pressure on you. Understanding that every team goes through big injuries, how difficult is it to build chemistry when you have so many big parts of your identity sitting out right now? Yeah, I kinda look at it the other way, it's like we're figuring things out along the way also. Whether that is putting a guy like Trenton Wofford in as our backup point guard and let him figure out how he can impact the game. Whether that is putting Daron and Nick in at the same time for a possession the other day and see if we could be big and get a stop out of bounds underneath. So those opportunities wouldn't present themselves if we had those other guys available. Now I do want them available. That makes us whole and healthy and look forward to that. But I think you just try to figure things out. You stay in this space right here, see how you can get the most out of this group, the potential out of this group and then keep building from there. Do you feel like that knowledge is something that can help you down the stretch? If you embrace it, yes. And so I think we've learned how to, what multiple ball handlers can do for us instead of having the ball in one guy's hand coming back to the basketball, how we can play with pace after makes, after misses, after we get a rebound, why that's so important for us. Those lessons sometimes hard to grab a hold to, but definitely good for us to learn from. For the untrained eye, I mean, Cam's shot looks the same as it always does, but what have you seen in the last five games pretty much since he's gone back? It's really just, you know, he didn't get a bunch of time with Team USA as far as minutes on the floor. And so he was also getting his workout in before and after those games and workouts, and then to come back and not get a bunch of playing with us in the pre-season. So just still feeling this game out, where he's gonna get his shots from, the difference in the offense. I'll lean into the historical data. He'll be able to make shots and create for us. The challenge again, how could he impact the whole game for us because of the minutes that he plays, rebound the basketball, being the right spot to help us off the ball defensively. So those things we'll keep challenging with, the offense, it'll come. We talked to Cam after his event last week with Welfare at Marcy Playground, as someone who's been in Brooklyn for longer than, I think, pretty much everyone on this roster, what advice do you have for guys about kind of ingraining themselves in the community? Man, this is an unbelievable community. Dive into it, embrace it, be a part of it. That's the best part of being here in Brooklyn. Reason I always want to live here and to feel the people, to feel the borough appreciative and for Cam to have his time and spend it in a thankful way. Pretty cool. You said that Dennis was getting an MRI. Has he gotten worse since Sunday? Well, in fact, he's not playing. And so, you know, that's kind of our steps a little bit. You let a guy get clinically diagnosed. You hope it is a acute injury and then you see if he can get some treatment and get back on the floor. Well, we had a couple days of treatment. He's not back on the floor. So then we'll take the next step and get an MRI. So, meaning Cam, Thomas, would get re-evaluated when you come back? Yeah, I think we'll... He's re-evaluated in two weeks. That'd be like around... Yeah, I think we'll have something for you. The next day we get together, we'll probably have something for you. Would his re-evaluation, and I know I asked this before, you weren't sure yet, would his re-evaluation require more imaging than other MRI? Or is it just a clinical thing? To my knowledge, he is heading in the right direction and unless we want to be extremely proficient in giving him an MRI to compare to, my knowledge, he won't need another MRI that he's building towards getting back on the floor. Has anybody been able to do it and take a little bit extra in the last couple days? He's just still doing what he was doing as far as off-the-court stuff, but not in practice or anything of that nature. Lack of turnovers, force for you guys, obviously been a hot topic. And you talked about the willingness to gamble and take risks. Is there anything differently schematically that you guys can do to kind of improve yourselves in that area? Yeah, Eric, we've really taken the most risk as a team or put our guys in a position, schematically, to take risks. You know, it's really just getting our guys comfortable with the result. And sometimes you get a little on edge, especially when you plan high-quality teams and you're saying, okay, let's put ourselves in a position where my guy that I'm guarding might get an open shot. And so being in that uncomfortable zone, we got to make our guys comfortable being in that zone and being able to still take risks in the gamble. We'll still push that envelope, I think it's important for us. It's huge in our defensive efficiency. While we're not being rewarded for whether how good we're rebounding and not fouling, it's huge in that category. So we'll continue to try to come up with concepts to push our guys towards that direction.