 So Arthur drops. How do you try to get guys to carry over what they're doing on the field and catch them in game? Yeah, you just keep working. I mean, it's, you know, be one thing if it was one person had a consecutive series of them, but it was, you know, unfortunately it was multiple people and it came at the critical situations. So I mean, the thing is, you don't get down on people like that. I mean, it happens once. I mean, it's you try to work through it and keep going to them and making sure that everybody's confident in what they're doing. Want to address it, but you don't want guys thinking about it too much. Yeah, I think you could, you could put it in that category as well. I mean, you got guys that you trust have really good hands and then it happens once to each of them. You don't want to sit here and make it some catastrophic epidemic and, you know, put that in their head. But yeah, you see it all the time in different sports with free throws being one of it or, you know, batters or pitchers. Example of the stunt that they ran last week to get that sack. Is that something that maybe give a little time together, go on and set full, you know, better than that? Sure. I mean, I did it as you know, when you're playing in the offensive line, there's definitely a familiarity that you that you need. But on the flip side, unfortunately, for the NFL is things happen quick and you got to move guys around with injuries or whatever happens. So, you know, try to rationalize it. I mean, you work those things, those stunts and you got to pick them up in the process of setting plays up when you see something you want to come back to. How do you go about figuring out when is the right time? Yeah, there's a lot of factors into there, you know, the way the game's going, how they're calling things and what you have set up and when's the right time to do that? And you try to make a, you know, educated guess and this stuff going in that you see how they're going to play you and how you prepared and then as the game the flow of the game, you may see an adjustment they make and you're like, all right, I'm going to come back to this and, you know, you hope to hit at the right time and you get the right coverage. Are there what's made Von Miller just so consistent over the years? Yeah, he's different. He's a special player. You know, those guys, you know, Ryan was in his recruiting class at A&M. He's got some pretty interesting stories about how they have an athletic freak he is, but he's he's different. You know, we played him a couple years ago here in Denver. He moves ways most guys don't his upper body sometimes doesn't look like it's connected to his loader body. So he's a heck of a challenge to prepare for in the block. How much better should the whole line get more nights in there more Taylor gets comfortable and working with Roger and what are you stressing this weekend into week six? Yeah, you're just I think everyone we're trying to stress improvement and consistency. And like I said, whether you win or lose and there's there's things you've got to fix. And you've got to improve and you're working to do it. And so and then you know, you go along with the two there may be different matchup issues going on this week. But we're just trying to get more consistent as an offense. Could you expand on just like early game philosophy? Yeah, no, we scripted but I guess I probably could have done a better dot defining, you know, some and again, I can only go from my experience with different coordinators. But if you look around, like somebody says, Hey, here's my first 15 plays like I've got everybody's different. But you have opening thoughts. And you try to stick to it. But there's things that happen, right? The first play of the game, you know, you're on on track, you get the penalty, you get the spot as a penalty. So now you're off track. And so you've got to go to something else like you may necessarily that's not the second play you'll call because something happened. It happened in the preseason opener, Philly, same thing, you wanted to call. Okay, we're fall start first and 15. Here's where we go. So you try to stick to you know where you're playing of attack. I guess what I was trying to say is it doesn't always go one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10. But you're still trying to get sure. Yeah, because you prepared. But like a game, it's a sometimes it's a chess match. Okay, this is what they're doing today. And sure, we'll adjust. And but yeah, so that that's it can definitely throw you off. And I can't speak for anybody else, you know, you have 31 other opinions. So AJ snaps, go up last week, what does it say about how he's kind of learning, you know, maybe more about the position and then simply catching the ball. Yeah, I think a lot of times when guys are productive, and as he's growing as a rookie, you try to put him in the best best spots. But we still have a good belief that receivers have done a good job. And so it just a pull of the game to and how it goes and where he's used. But yeah, as long as he keeps improving, you know, he'll keep getting more snaps. What do you think he's learning maybe in terms of whether it's block or out running or anything like that? Are you seeing strides and that? Oh, definitely. All those guys, the whole receiver group and there's not just because AJ has made some plays as it doesn't mean somebody else has done something wrong. But yeah, no, I think there's growth in it. I mean, same with Nate Davis, they get out there as rookies, you play more, you learn things and you adjust off those experiences. Get to see Munch this weekend, talk about what he's meant to your career. Yeah, so I mean, I'm a lot to be thankful for. You know, he obviously hired me here. He's a great teacher. He's a great man. And he taught me a lot about protections and one of the jobs I have with him was was drawing the protection for him. And then you meet with him at night, he put his notes in it and he's just a great person and he's a really good football coach and he's really good at what he does. And there's not a lot of guys like him. Protection philosophies are still in this playbook here. Well, there's there's a lot of I mean, you know, we've gone through a couple schematic changes, but there's certainly lessons that he he's taught me along the way that you apply no different than other coaches are for but but Munch is really good at what he does. He's staying in touch with him. We do. I mean, he's not a I see him. You see him at these NFL events and they talked to him once in summer. See how he's doing. You've been coaching Delaney obviously a long time, right? Snaps are down for him this year when you look back at 2017. That just a function of game plan or or is he 100% health wise? No, I you know, a lot of that is a situation on how the games are going. And so there's certain packages we have men and if something is working, we may stay heavy and one thing or we may go to something else. And then there's nothing that I mean, again, the first play of the game went to him as unfortunately got called back. He understands that and he knows where he's at. And a lot of it too when it's all it's all situational in game plan based. And in some games, like I said, I mean the Jacksonville game obviously snaps are up, but you don't really want to be in that two minutes situation that long. Usually you're losing. I mean, you go back to the is 94 year catch season, not 94 year, but 94 catch season. We weren't very good. And we played a lot of two minute and he got a lot of balls. And then the next year we were much better in his catch percentage went down, but he was extremely productive in both years. So sometimes, you know, that you get those stats and it's like you compare some, you know, the guys that average a lot of a lot of points on a bad basketball team, they may, you know, you don't want to you want to find a fine line of balance. And he's a very productive player. And you know, it's just unfortunate some of these games, depending on how we're going. So and it's really productive. And then you find yourself in scenarios where you're not in a lot of two minutes. Isn't there an obligation to find another way to get a ball? Yeah, you're always finding ways. I mean, that's that's it goes back to the questions about, you know, Corey early in the year. He may be the primary on a play, but the ball may not go there because the coverage dictated they may they may have tried it and you go to the second read, but it doesn't necessarily mean that like just because the targets on the stat sheet, there's things that are called for guys, just necessarily it happened to the second read or third read or, you know, something happened on the play. Would you expect over the course of 16 games then for those numbers to kind of round out to where you would envision them? Sure, sure. As you plan, I mean, as you go, and obviously things happen during the season, but yeah, absolutely. You evaluate quarterback play after five games. I mean, it's the same, you know, from week to week, you know, just it's you evaluate consistency, the stuff we may have asked him to do. And like I said, I mean, that's it's the toughest position in sports because it's like this job. Like you know what you step in for, like you know what you signed up for. But at the same time, there may be things we ask him to do week to week. That may, you know, there may be different, you know, our plan from protection standpoint or how we're trying to attack them. And so I know a lot of times people look at it like, oh, he should have done this or should have done that. Well, you may not know what we have told them behind the scenes. And Marcus has been consistent. And we like every position, we're just asking these guys to get better. That's all we that's all we're asking for.