 You know, it's been a disaster this season, and yeah, it's definitely a shock. Certainly, I don't think anybody on our side of the fence, from our player group, from our coaches or manager, or even outside the organization saw what it predicted this. Aside from the injuries, where do you think things have gone wrong? Well, we're going to evaluate it all. Clearly, unfortunately, we're going to have some time to do that. But I'd say everybody's had a little bit of a hand in it, you know, from top to bottom. And it's our job to find out where. You know, obviously, that's what we're going to be up to and tasked with. I certainly met with Hal Steinman around several occasions already, and this is not something we're accustomed to or used to. And I think there's definitely going to be a lot of internal assessments going on. Gary and Brent. Brian, Aaron, players have said that the fight is there, the world's compete is there, the guys in the clubhouse are there. Do you see that fight and that competitive spirit when you watch? I try to explain it as the fight is there, the care is there, the intent is there. Being a part of this organization from quite some time, I do know the difference when you're bad. A lot of those other things that you just described also come with it. I can just tell you, putting yourself into a player's seat, if they're at the plate, for instance, they do not want to fail. Or if they're on the mound, they do not want to fail either. And they're all collectively trying to do the best they possibly can to stop what's happening to us or what's occurring now for a sustained period of time. Because they enjoy competing, they enjoy winning, they enjoy having success. And many of them have had much success in their career and there's a lot of good that comes with it. And no one wants the bad that comes with having lack of success. And so, yeah, they're certainly trying to swing away the failure or pitch away the failure. So they or we don't have to deal with what comes with that. Because obviously we're in a bad spot and we're losing sleep over, whether it's a front office, whether you're a player or a coach or a manager, this is a rough time. I don't care if you're in high school, college or pro sports, when you're part of something that's supposed to be really good and it turns really bad, it makes for a horrific experience both obviously in the game situation and the clubhouse and obviously when you get home. And that's something I wouldn't wish that on anybody, but it's also part of it. And you got to be a pro and you got to deal with it, you got to face it, you got to fight through it and find what caused it. And everything's going to be obviously looked at. Also, you made the decision to fire Dylan Lawson at the All-Star break. What has Sean Casey brought to the team in your estimation because the numbers haven't changed all that much? No, the numbers haven't changed. And in Dylan's case, obviously we were struggling offensively and we still are struggling offensively, but the one thing I was able to determine on making that difficult decision was how much I felt from my touch points with all of our players and stuff, how much connections we're going on with Dylan and how much of his coaching was able to be transferred over. We've had a lot of success with Dylan's programs, but at this level it's a little bit different and I don't care if you're whatever manager or whatever coach you are, you have to get player acceptance or buy-in and that wasn't that connectivity or relationship building, whatever that wasn't there. So I obviously made a change, something I've never done. But when I saw that that was the case through collectively the entire offense, I knew we just needed to find somebody different. So going to flip to Sean Casey, he is connecting with these guys. Certainly Dylan did everything he could to try to connect and obviously drive through the success on the offense and Sean Casey is doing the same. The only difference is obviously I think there is some connection there going on with Sean and hopefully we can get some better results. But acknowledge that obviously see something wrong, try to fix it. But if it doesn't get fixed, listen and understand why the question is coming because our job is to find a way to get better. Brandon, what do you say to the fans who are angry at the situation the team is in right now, where it is in last place in the AL East and also a lot of the anger has been directed at you through poor performance or roster construction. They seem to be pretty upset with the job they feel you've done. They want us to win. They're invested in this franchise, they're invested in our team and they're disappointed. And certainly I hear them loud and clear, we're disappointed too. And also how would you assess the job that Aaron Boone has done this season? I think Boone is doing everything he can possibly do, just like all of us. We're all trying to, you know, but I used the Dylan questions that came up as an example of trying to change something to find a way through it and get better at it. And so I think we're all pulling out everything we possibly can or have been, you know, even though the results haven't been there, including Aaron Boone. I know he had a team meeting Friday night after that, lost to Boston going into Saturday's game, but, you know, that didn't help. There's individual conversations, there are team conversations. You know, you have your specialty coaches doing their job, pulling their weight. You know, that's the job and, you know, I can assure you he's pulling all those levers too.