 And it's now time for Kids Ask, Mike Vareble. Give me my theme music. My name is Alka, and I'm eight. My question is, why was the Oklahoma drill, and why do they not have it anymore? What a good question. What's the Oklahoma drill? What's the Oklahoma drill? Yeah, the Oklahoma drill. I used to weed out some of the players that maybe weren't back in the day that weren't quite ready for football. But I remember the Oklahoma drill being, two players would lay on their back. One would have a football, one won it. And they'd say, said, hut, you'd get up and you'd run at each other and smash each other. Another version was O-limin, D-limin, running back, linebacker, straight ahead, no fair dodging. In between two cones. Yeah. And the quarterbacks got to stand there and hand off like they were part of it. Absolutely. But anyways, I think that's a great question. Again, the game has changed. The game has evolved. Some of those situations rarely happen in our game. There's so many more angles. There's so many different types of schemes. Our players are rarely lined up right over top of somebody else. And there's combination blocks. There's zone blocking. And so there is really no real reason. There's other ways to teach technique, fundamentals, pad level. Physical, toughness, technique and all those things without just setting up a straight ahead drill. And so that's why they did away with it. And rightfully so.