 Let's talk about what you guys need to do to be elite level players. The first thing is, you have to learn how to blend confidence with humility. Where does confidence comes from? Confidence comes from demonstrated performance. It comes from putting in the work during the unseen hours. Confidence comes from putting in the work during the unseen hours and getting in the repetitions. I think you have to work every single day. I think that's where your confidence comes from. Because when nobody's looking, that's the time that really counts. That's the time that really matters. But the finished product is the easy part. The games, I can literally play in the games in my sleep. It's like the working out at five, six a.m. and all the practices and all the extra conditioning. That's the hard part. But when push comes to shove, when I'm in the fourth quarter and it's two minutes left to go, I know how much I train. I know how tired I've already made my body. This is nothing, and so I can get through it. That work that you do every single day is key. And let's not get it twisted. How do you get good at anything? Repetition in practice. So you guys have to understand, repetition is not punishment. Repetition is the oldest and most effective form of learning and skill acquisition on the planet. You want to get good at anything, but specifically the skills of basketball, it comes down to repetition, repetition, repetition. With minimal exception, you know who the best shooters are on the planet? The ones who put in the most reps during the unseen hours. It's cause and effect. It's not luck. Because that's what you're gonna be able to fall back on. And that's what you're gonna be able to, like, rely on when push comes to shove. So every single day, like I said, I love it. I love to work out, wake up and train early, eat right, break my body down and then rest and build it back up and then do the same thing over again. So first and foremost, you have to earn the right to be confident. And you earn the right through demonstrated performance during the unseen hours. But the second part of that is, you have to continue to be humble. See, when you're humble, you're humble enough, that means you're going to prepare. That means you don't take any opponent lightly. Humility is what allows you to say no matter how good of a player you are, and you guys are elite level players, no matter how good you are, humility is what says, I can still get better. Every single day, work at it. I mean, it's been a struggle some days, I'm on line, some days I'm like, man, this is tiring, this is hard. Now I embrace the hard and I want that every single day. I don't ever want anything to be easy. It's those times when no one else is watching. It's when the lights aren't on, the cameras aren't rolling, the cheerleaders aren't dancing. It's when you choose to come in an hour early or stay an hour late to work on a certain move, work on your game or get up extra shots. It's when you choose to have the discipline to put yourself to bed at a better hour so that you have the requisite sleep so that you feel prepared to the next day to give your best effort and make a maximum contribution. So it comes down to preparation. I think whenever it's hard, like you really, really, really deserve it. If it's hard and you get it done, you're like, you gave everything to it, that's yours, nobody can take that from you. I don't care how good I am or how good everyone else says I am, I know I can still get better. So when you can learn to blend earned confidence through the humility of knowing that you still have a lot to learn in this game and can still get better, that's the first step to becoming an elite player.