 Looking, fires down the middle, intercepted, screened, Buster's free to the 30, to the 25, to the 20, and it's Chattanooga's own! So Buster, you are one of the most experienced Titans in terms of NFL experience, nearly 160 games. But you're one of the most inexperienced in terms of playoffs. How does that feel to be sort of the new guy again, huh? Well, it feels good, definitely, to be in the playoffs in last year. I had got a concussion late in the season, so I couldn't play, and the Chicago Bears played the Saints. So, you know, there's a bummer sitting out, but I'm just glad I'm here. How did you get here? How did that happen in November? Free agency. I didn't like my offers, and I ended up waiting. And the teams that offered me, I ended up pulling them. I said I didn't want to be on the practice squad, because I know I can still play at a high level. And Tennessee gave me a chance, and, you know, it worked out. What's the key to being a guy who can just basically show up, and then four or five days later play and play well? I would say experience is big, and then, like, the mental part of the game. I always had, like, high confidence. So anybody I lined up against, like, I feel like one win every day. But just a high confidence guy. A lot of your attributes stand out as we've watched you over the past two months play for the Titans. Your smarts, your toughness. But what really jumps out is you appear fearless. Have you always been fearless? I've always been fearless. I grew up, like, wrestling and stuff like that. So I think I probably started there, and having, like, older cousins that are, you know, always, like, push me around and stuff. You know, I've just never been scared to hit anybody, even though I wait. We're not going to say how much I wait, but I don't wait a lot. But that's just been my mentality. Now, when you talk about wrestling, you're talking about Ric Flair and the Macho Man. Which is fine. You're talking about real wrestling. Yeah, real wrestling. Now, what did you do coming up in terms of wrestling? What weight did you wrestle at, and how successful were you? So I was 124. I don't know if they use that as a weight class right now. But I was always smaller than high school. That was my weight class. I ended up graduating at 140 pounds. You know, I had partly a dude who I ended up at Chattanooga, a smaller guy. But everybody knows wrestling. Like, you have a certain mentality. It kind of just carries over. I think just over time, I built up, like, a certain mentality mentally to, like, always win. And I did win state, and I won under 50 that season. So that's just been me. Did you think about wrestling in college? Nah. I honestly didn't enjoy, like, the sport of wrestling. I was good, but I didn't enjoy it. But you obviously love football. Why do you love football so much? I would say it just takes a group of guys to come together and all believe, like, in the scheme. It doesn't matter how good you are, but, like, everybody has to come together. Believe in the scheme whether it's good or bad, and you can win the game. So playing it throughout the week, like, that whole process. Just being able to show guys now, like, this is what we do as vets, and this is what we got to eat. I think it's pretty cool. Just being able to do this. So 140 pounds graduating high school. You end up at Chattanooga. You fight your way into the NFL and have a lot of success. Like I said, nearly 160 games in the league. How will you feel when you take the field and the division around for your first playoff game? It's going to feel good. And no moments too big, because I'm not going to, like, overthink it or anything like that. It's going to go out there and shadow me. That's it.