All right, it's up to finish the game. Control what what what those out of that game? I mean I think, uh, really, you know, finish the game, just you know, minimize mistakes and just try to everybody, you know, just be together. I think, um, you know, we just have to finish. I mean, answer your question like it's something this team starts to learn to do. I mean, we're we're we're we're professional athletes. So I think that everybody should know,
you know, how to finish. We just gotta you gotta find it, you know, deep down in the heart, you know, we just gotta find it somewhere. And um, to finish that game obviously, but uh, you know, obviously again we didn't finish. So we just move on to next week and hopefully we put in that situation again and uh and we were able to finish the game. But it looks like the last two games with Benny out of there,
you've been seeing a few more double teams. Would never be safe to say, um, I mean I see it. I see it, and I just got to fight through it. And you know know that teams, you know, they're gonna know where I'm at. They're gonna know why I line up at I just have to embrace the challenge, I think, and uh, you know, fight through it and you know, do whatever it takes to help this team win well. Josh said that he thinks most professional athletes own guns
for protection. Has that been your experience that you think most guys do? And if so, how big of a threat is that? Um? I think you know, as an American, as an American citizen, you know you're allowed to own a gun. UM. I am a hunter and uh, you know I own a few guns. Um as far as protection goes, have you ever felt the need to have one for protection being a professional athlete and maybe having a target on you because of that? Um, I mean,
just to depend on just what's the situation. I think you know, I think you know, most professional athletes you know, do own you know a firearm. You know it could be you know, for protection family, you know, family needs, you know, protect their family, or you know, just just other things. Like me, Man, you know, I'm a big hunter. So I mean, I love my love my firearms. You've gotten to know Dug since he got hired, and you've seen him deal with a lot of with with several
issues off the field, issues since then. I mean, have you have you admired the way he's he's handled a lot of these as far as dealing with you guys and dealing with the people that have been involved. Um, yes, I think he's doing a real good job at it. Man. He just you know, he just come to the leaders on his team and say, hey, we got to get behind that guy and keep his confidence up. You know. Um he you know, we can't forget that. Josh is a teammate. You know, he is a player for the
Philadelphia Eagles. You know, you know, everybody support him. Um, we know that. You know sometimes um that you know, people make bad decisions, but we support you know, decisions, you know, good or bad. And we just got to you know, rather behind Josh and he stay behind the whole way through. Hey, Fletcher, folks, the education you guys get from the players Association or the organization, did they give you like concrete details? Because this is kind of
an interesting situation south of Building Jersey. The difference between laws, did they get into that with you? Is just more personal responsibility? Um? No, you know, actually you know we do. UM have you know meetings about um, the different gun laws in different States, okay,
