 We've heard zero timeout play callers getting in a rhythm. How often would you say have you experienced that this year? And what can you describe the feeling when you get into a rhythm? It's just been the same message all year, just week to week. Learn from different lessons as you go throughout. Try not to make the same mistake twice. And in a lot of that end game, you're seeing how the game's going and how you prepare going in the week. And then obviously you're always going to have to adapt. And that's every NFL game. And then it'll be the same thing Saturday night. And that's the challenge that I love about this job. It makes it fun. You're curious to see, I mean, that they have the reputation for taking away something from every offense they face. You're kind of curious to see what they're going to try and take away from you? Yeah, it's always a chess match. And that's the most NFL games it usually is. But these guys have been the standard for the last 20 years around the NFL. So you go on there Saturday night and understand that it's going to be a sparring match. And we've got to make sure that we're prepared at every play. As they try to take away from your guys that they want to challenge you to beat them with guys like Berkser and Tajah and Pruitt and Raymond, those guys have made plays for you fairly regularly this year. You feel like you're in good position for that? We just feel like week to week and we've tried to create the atmosphere here that no matter who's in there, I know that's an old coaching with cliche, but our numbers back it up. We've spread the ball around. We've got a lot of confidence in whoever lines up out there. And we'll be ready to roll. And we'll have to, if they show us something different, we'll adapt. And that's what you have to do week to week. So what's Corey Davis do so well as a blocker? And did he start that well coming out of college? Or has this been proven by leaps and bounds over the years? Like a lot of players. That's the thing that it's proud to get to coach these guys because they buy in. They all, AJ does it. Tajah, Khalif, Adam, all those guys have tried to. And like those, Corey's done a nice job. And he's tried to improve week to week. And he hasn't gotten down. And it's been fun to coach those guys. What are some of the successful ways whether it be yourself or seeing other coaches, Coach Dews, Coach Rable, be able to inspire and bring the best out of Derek Hamlin? I think there's a lot of factors into it. And it's been good. It's just like the question about Corey. Derek's the same way. As he's gotten every year, he's had the right mindset and work ethic to come out of here and try to improve. And he's really worked at it. And it's nice to see a guy that's worked that hard for him to have some success and really has the team and has the offense. Same with the line. And he's focused this year, Arthur, even though he's in a contract year. And you made it clear to start a camp that he wasn't looking at that. Have you seen that focus on the task at hand through the year? Well, I mean, that's his personal situation. And the way I always looked at it from coaches and players, you kind of treat almost every day and every year as a contract year for you. You never want to get comfortable in any situation or any job in this business. But I can't speak for how Derek felt about that. I just, the way he worked out here as a teammate, it's been fun to see. Did he look more like himself, you think, in the game on Sunday? And did you take some pride in having the NFL's leading rusher? Well, I think it's a credit to the players. They did a nice job all year and stuck with it. And it was good to see Derek do that. And it was really happy for the offense and the offense in line. And as part of that, the tight ends deserve some credit. And so the receivers, we preach all 11. They've run away from people as much as they've run over them. But you think in Henry, AJ, and Johnny, you've got a trio that's maybe as tough to tackle or guys are as unexcited to have to tackle over the course of a game as well? Those guys have done a nice job. And you've got a factor in Corey, too. Corey breaks tackles as well. And those guys have done a nice job in getting open. And they all block for each other. I mean, go back to AJ's touchdown on that first third down. It was a hell of a block on the back end. But that's what you want to see. Like, that excites me more than just to play AJ made, because those guys are committed to it. The easy thing to do is to act like I almost had them. And you see plenty of that around. But it's a credit to all those guys. Combo of size and speed there. You've got to affect your career. Those guys, it's been proven this year, they can create yards after contact. You factor into your game plan and all that we wear and tear that Derrick has on defenses as a game goes along? Well, as a game, and that's to me the running of football, especially late in the year. You hope that it has that effect. And you hope that you're not playing in certain situations. You want to be able to still dictate what you want to do, not become obvious. And it is nice to see, as a run game, you stay committed to it, and it just chips away at it. And Derrick's done a nice job with that, and so is the line. Do you have any more for a big guy like him that might be for a smaller man? You can certainly see it. I mean, the numbers are there. He's a big guy, and I like giving him the ball, especially late in the game. When you guys were two and four, and you made the switch to Ryan, has the evolution of the offense and his play been as bad as good as you could have possibly hoped at that moment? Well, like I said, I never looked at anything as catastrophic or got too high one way or the other, because you just kind of looked at it from week to week, and there was a lot of factors into it. And I know that was obviously a big decision, and Ryan's done a nice job. But it's a lot of the offense. The line settled in, the receivers, everybody got more comfortable with each other, and Ryan did a nice job of leading them. But you just kind of look at it week to week. Even when you win, you don't want to sit there and pat yourself in the back, because you know that this thing is a grind. And it'll be, as we're working here to Saturday, the same thing, and that's just keep improving. Has he done anything in his play that's maybe, obviously, you hadn't coached him before, unlike a lot of these guys. Has he done anything in the 10 weeks that maybe surprised you a little bit in his play? I wouldn't say surprised me. I mean, those guys, he's a professional, and he's a confident guy, and he's been around. So he's done a nice job of taking what's been given to him, and his role has increased, and he really has done a nice job. But it hasn't surprised me, no. How do you like the poise that he's played with maybe in tough situations, and how you anticipate it maybe going into his first playoff? Again, it's hypothetical to get in somebody else's mind. I don't know. All I see is the way he works, the way he approaches it, and we've been consistent from week to week, and we'll continue to be consistent this week.