 You're coming out of the Philly game, what was on the special teams to do this? You know, more so to see you guys play with, you know, great effort, you know, stay in the present and then use their proper technique. We still have a lot of room for improvement. You know, we had two penalties in the game that we need to clean up, one pre-snap, one down the field, post-snap. So cleaning that up to help our offense with better field position and also to make that game set of a one-score game a two-score game. So those were addressed on Monday, you know, guys are doing a great job of moving forward. We're focused on Tampa Bay right now to get going and go out there and play with great effort come Sunday. And your return is how did Avery and Coral perform for you? You know, limited opportunities. I thought Avery did a great job of decision-making, catching the ball clean, trying to make the first guy miss. You know, hopefully down the road, we're gonna continue to get more opportunities. Us as a return unit, we had to take advantage of those opportunities, whether it's one per game and maybe one in two to three weeks or just in a two to three-week span. So we have to do a better job of, you know, not only the returner, but all the other 10 guys out there making the most of those opportunities. How tough of or keeps Armstrong's units, folks around here know who he is and so forth, but what are some of the traits that his units possess and how he tried to attack those units? Physicality, they play physical. They got bigger guys out there, they use a combination of speed and power to create, you know, physical mismatches out there on the field and those guys will play a great effort. So it's a great opportunity for our unit to go down there and play against those guys, but Keith, I heavily respect them. I followed his career ever since I got into NFL as a special teams coach. So it's a great opportunity to go against Keith this weekend. Coach Harris is one player I wanted to ask you about where Avery Williams is a part return one, maybe he could have tried to return that but just kind of let it bounce out and is that something that maybe is a little bit of a rookie mistake to kind of go back to what the college rules are in terms of where you feel that where you kind of return it is that a conversation that you guys had? Yeah, we have those conversations all the time. Once the opponents get to around the logo area, they start to switch up a different pun. They're trying to pin up our team back a little bit. So we have a rule, we have a certain yard line that we line up our returners and if we don't want them to drift back and catch that ball within a certain yard line. So I thought Avery made a great decision because if you see where that ball bounces inside the five to eight yard line and it took a good bounce, give credit to Philadelphia and Sipos for hitting two good puns inside the 10 yard line. But I thought Avery made great decision-making when it comes to that. Sometimes you get guys that will drift back and catch that ball inside the five and now we're in a situation to where we're gonna put our offense in bad field position. Now, if that ball were to hit like around the 12 yard line, 15 yard line, he didn't catch it and then it rolled back inside the five, that's hitting yardage that we lost as a return unit. So I thought Avery, you know, last weekend those two punts particular where he didn't fill them, he made great decisions in those opportunities. Now they just had a good bounce, so give credit to Philly on that. Thanks, no Avery, like when that happens, when they do have those bounces for like, dang it. Like, what do you kind of tell them when he comes over to the sideline like, amen, I'm like, that's all you can do. That's a good pun, that's what I tell them, hey, they make plays too, they get paid. So great punt by them and great decision-making by him just getting out of the way and making sure that we're making the right decision so then the very next play are offense as the football in their hands. Well, there are no rates. You go forward and kick out for a turner in lines, Cordell been so effective at that threat. I think number one is being fearless. You could have a certain speed or, you know, break tackle ability, agility and speed but to have that fearlessness with those attributes while people are running full speed at you it takes a different person to do that and it takes a special person to do that and that's something that Cordell has. He can run full speed, make decisions, real-time decisions, make certain cuts, break tackles, arm tackles while people are running full speed at him and that's key. You have a guy who can run a 4-3-40 but they might not run a 4-3-40 when people are running full speed at them and you get to have a certain mindset and fearlessness when it comes to that. You identify that before you see a guy on the field when you get a guy and how do you look for that? How do you think that guy might be the right guy? I look for that in reps. You know, there's drills that we do at practice where we're working ball security, open field tackling, you know, ball carriers running with the football and you can see that kind of right away if they're wanting to get north and south because in kickoff return or punt return the hole could open as fast and that hole could close as fast so that decision-making to be fearless and get vertical with the football is key when it comes to being a returner in NFL. Does he get more agency to kind of make decisions? You're talking about every with punt returns has, you know, you have yard line rules. When does Correll have more agency to kind of make decisions on his own because of that category that he's had over the years? I mean, he does have the NFL record for longest kick return. So it's a case-by-case, it's just depending on the situation where we're at in the game, what's the score of the game, the time on the clock, the type of defense we're going against, how our offense is going against their defense, how our defense is going against their offense. There's a lot of different variables that come into play with that and those are conversations, again, that Coach Smith, myself and CP half throughout the game. I guess, yeah, my question is more, is how much of that decision-making is really on him versus rules that you all have? It's a combination of both. You know, we'll go into a situation with certain rules and guidelines, parameters. Now, in comparison to other returners in the NFL, his rules and parameters are a little bit more lenient compared to others based on his ability to take the ball all the way, whether it's from 109 or 99 yards. How do you think that Cam has been doing as your launcher, I mean, he wasn't even on a roster to start a camp and has kind of come in here and now has the big buck, he's done. He's progressing well. I thought he punted well. The other day, I know there's one pundit who would like to have back and we got to do a better job, you know, cleaning up the pocket for him when it comes to that, punts and kickoffs, he's doing a really good job and he continues to prove each and every day. And those three guys, you know, yet Josh and Kuhn to the mix, those three guys are improving every single day, but we're excited about Cam and his development and his growth and again, his best days are in front of him. Going back to the CP, when you evaluate, I mean, when you are going through and evaluating, oh God, I'm in here and they're like, hey, he's gonna be running back. I know you're mainly watching what he's doing on special teams, but what does he do on special teams that coordinates well to what he does in the run game? The basic fundamentals, ball carrying, you know, securing the football, break tackle ability, his vision, that's a big part of it, pad level, the speed that he plays with, his agility, the physicality that he brings to it. And the number one thing I say is his fearlessness and the characteristics that he has with how he works at practice, how he works after practice, that character and how his work ethic speaks volumes because those guys that are blocking for him, they wanna block harder and finish all the way through the whistle for him. So those attributes that he brings to the table, whether it's physical or the non-physical attributes, those things are correlated because it's basic fundamentals. Kickoff returns are offensive play and then running the ball is offensive play and him having the football in his hands and making the right decisions, securing the football and getting north-south with the football is critical. The practice periods that you get are at a premium, you know, you don't get very many of them. Do you really try to infuse those with a bunch of intensity that you want your guys on it right away so you can maximize the time that you do have? Yeah, you know, it's not the perfect equations, but you try to balance it out to where we don't have a quantitative number on the reps. It's all about quality reps in that room. Our time is limited, so we want to make the most out of each and every rep that we have on the field. Whether it's full speed, teach tempo, or three-quarter speed, or even a jog through, we want to make the most out of it. How do we make the most out of it? Playing with great technique, pad level, hand placement, footwork, where our eyes are at, you know, our adjustments, and we only get better reps. So we want to make sure when we do hit those full-speed reps at practice that we're getting the most out of that rep in each and every person that's on the field, whether you're on the Falcons team or on the Look team, giving us the looks throughout the week. We're giving each other good-on-good competition. What for you, what makes a good personal protector? I think poise, you know, poise, you know, having command of the huddle and having command once you break the huddle and get lined up, you know, taking your time to identify the fronts, being confident, and then, you know, being physical at the point of attack because you're going against various body types, whether you're going against a variant from a safety or receiver all the way down to a delignment when you're blocking. And then the last part of it, after protection, is being now able to go out and cover. And because, again, you have your gunners that are most athletic guys on the field in relation to the pump returner, that next person's probably going to be your PP that's going to go down there in the open field and make tackles in the open field. Why is that personal? It seems very often that that person is somebody in the secondary. Is there a specific reason? No, not necessarily. I know you talk about the room that we have right now. Those guys have experience at that position. And there's other guys that we've been repping that play offensive positions or even guys that could play the linebacker position. So it just varies based on, you know, the coordinator's philosophy, what they see in a PP, how they protect, and also, too, how they use them in the coverage aspect of the game. Where did you pick up that philosophy for yourself with, you know, because I mean, you've been a rapper. Yeah. I know you know that, yeah. Or you've been like, where did you pick up that philosophy on that specific thing? I mean, I think from, it varies from a bunch of different coaches, whether you start with Craig Ackerman, George Stewart, John Bonamigo, same way. He was the same way when it came to that. And I look at that using that PP as an extra gunner for yourself downfield. Because if you get into a situation where they're double pressing both guys, who's gonna be that next dynamic space player that could help you in the open field? That makes sense. You guys good? Anything else? All right, thanks. Thank you guys for coming. You guys have a great day.