 couple questions for you. One, I know, you know, with the addition of Julio, you know, another big receiver out there, you know, several guys that are that are good sized receivers on the on the roster right now. And wondering your thoughts, how advantageous is that to a to a quarterback to have a number of guys, you know, with the kind of dimensions that that you guys have now? Yeah, well, that room is definitely different as far as size, for sure. You know, it's a lot of tall, fast, big guys. And, you know, it obviously has pros and conks in different situations where that's beneficial. We also have guys like Cam Batson who has his own skill set, those types of guys are valuable too. But I would agree to you, John, like the room looks a lot different now. It's as big as we've gotten in that one. Yeah, I mean, I guess, obviously, does that in general, can that help in terms of windows and things like that, just the, you know, catching radius, etc. that a quarterback shoots for? Well, you know, it can. Yeah. And I really think that also, there are different skill sets, you know, some of the best receivers in the league aren't six through, you know, as well. So I think there's different ways to use different body types in an offense. I wouldn't say one's better or one's not. Gotcha. One more for you. Yeah, getting getting back actually to the receivers, the addition of Julio. I wonder what that opens up for Ryan, you know, in terms of further options. And, you know, in the past, you guys haven't necessarily thrown deep a lot, but you've done it pretty well. I wonder if that's a, you know, if Ryan maybe does potential a little bit more of that with Julio there, do you think? Well, you know, I think it's always goes back to whether you're throwing the ball deep or throwing it short or rushing the football a lot. It's just, you know, you try to find ways to win the surest way. And it doesn't always involve maybe a deep ball or maybe rushing the ball less than you normally do. It always develops, it always depends on what's going on with that game. As far as Julio being here, obviously he's a great player. And I think what's important now is just developing that rapport, that understanding amongst each other as a whole offense. Julio's included in that. We always believe that it takes all 11. And so we're really just, you know, we haven't got training camp. Julio was here the other day, obviously. That was day one. So, you know, we all have a lot of work to do to all get on the same page. Yeah, pretty good sign that I guess Ryan and Julio, I think, have already been out to dinner once. And that, you know, that Julio and Ryan were already working out in the non-mandatory OTAs as well. That doesn't surprise me. You know, just knowing Ryan, you know, Ryan's the leader of our football team. We have many leaders. Ryan's certainly one of those guys. It doesn't surprise me that, you know, they've started develop relationship. And as we get to know Julio more and more and the short time he has been here, he's a true pro. He's happy to be here. So it really seems like so. It's a good situation so far. Thank you, Pat. Okay, John. Looks like Jim Wyatt just hopped in here. Go ahead, Jim. I am. I hope I'm not going to be redundant here, Pat. I hope you're doing okay. Hey, Jim, how you doing, man? I'm doing great. I'm doing great. I want to ask you about Logan and I'm going to ask you about DeSean both. I guess Logan continues to work. I know he did some stuff with some guys leading up to camp. How do you like his leadership? How do you like his growth even though he hasn't been on the field a lot to play? Has he made great strides in your mind? Past, you know, way back to Korean pre-draft. We had him in 18 years for a little bit and obviously in 1920. So I think the thing about Logan is just, you know, he's just his work level, his work ethic. He doesn't really set to earn everything he's had to do. He's done a good job, you know, getting guys out and form with him. He's always done that. That doesn't surprise me. And DeSean, I guess in more of a normal setting this year, being on the field with guys, working, how much should that help? And what have you maybe seen from him during the course of this offseason? Yeah, you know, it's last year, it was hard, you know, for him. I'm like, I credit him being a quarantine quarterback and really him just dealing with me for a lot of hours on Zoom. And then he would come after everyone was done and we'd go out and grow and go through the game plan. And, you know, he handled that really well. And so I know he had been eager to get back on the field. And, you know, it shows I think the transition has been good for him. It's a healthy competition right now. Those two guys are both working hard. The key for them is preparing every day. And they both have come prepared each day throughout our offseason program and showing some leadership. So, you know, a lot, a lot more work to be done, obviously, and as we move forward here at our mandatory minicamp. And last one from me, I mean, obviously, another big addition to Julio, I guess part of Ryan's job is to get the ball in the hands of his playmakers. Does it bring a smile to everybody's face when you get a guy like Julio Jones in here because you know of what kind of impact he can have on the whole offense? Well, certainly it's great player. I mean, obviously, you know, obviously great player. And, you know, the challenge is to get him up to speed what we're doing. And for us to get comfortable with him. And he's one part of our offense, you know, we have a lot of parts, it takes all 11. We all know that. And each week, you know, we'll prepare to do what it takes to win that particular game or on that particular possession. But until then, we have mandatory minicamp this week, and then everyone goes away for a month. And then we have training camps. So there's there's a lot more to be looked at and see. Huron. Was that coach Pat? Hey, TD. All right, getting back to Kaiser, you know, you see him coming out of Notre Dame so talented and seems like everything is right. But you know, when you get into just the importance of getting into the right situation, how much do you think that's impacted Kaiser? Because obviously you guys have spent a lot of one on one time. So I'm sure that's something you've discussed. We did. We've had a number of conversations, many, many conversations about that. And really, you know, I really look at, regardless of what happened in the past, we believe that as an organization. And we certainly believe that in our quarterback room, I believe it too, is that, you know, whatever's happened in the past, it doesn't matter how you got here, you know, it matters what you do when you're here. And the first start for Deshaun, not to say start, but the first, you know, load of operation for him was really understand the game plan, being a quarterback, quarantine thershering quarterback last year, which is not easy. So required a ton of mental concentration and not be able to really do anything or leave the house. So some sacrifices made there like a lot we all did through COVID. But for him, it was a challenge like, look, man, you got to be ready to roll, step in if we have some weird outbreak and that could happen at any time. And so the challenge was for him to understand the planning suite without really taking any breaths and just kind of working post practice a little bit on the field with me and some others just kind of figured out and that was step one, you know, and then now that he's excited to be back on the field, you know, this is step two of getting in the huddle and having some command and able to translate what he's learned about our offense and translated into his play. And, you know, so far it's been good. It's a good competition there with him and Logan. They're both approaching it the right way. And it's an opportunity. That's an opportunity for Deshaun.