Kris Kretschman Show

Could The Cowboys DRAFT Keldric Faulk At 12?! - Kris Kretschman Show

Kris Kretschman Season 1 Episode 27

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The Dallas Cowboys might finally be ready to get AGGRESSIVE in the NFL Draft… and it could completely change the future of this defense.

On today’s episode of the Kris Kretschman Show, we break down major draft buzz surrounding Dallas — starting with Peter Schrager hinting at the Cowboys targeting Keldric Faulk, a move that could bring serious physicality to the defensive front.

Then we dive into Dane Brugler reporting that Dallas could TRADE UP for Sonny Styles — a versatile, tone-setting defender that fits exactly what this team has been missing.

And it doesn’t stop there…

We react to Todd McShay’s latest mock draft where the Cowboys go ALL-IN — trading up for Sonny Styles AND landing Jermod McCoy to completely reshape the secondary.

Are the Cowboys finally building a dominant defense? Or is this too risky?

This episode breaks down the fits, the strategy, and what it all means for the future of Dallas.

Make sure to LIKE, SUBSCRIBE, and join the conversation in the comments!

SPEAKER_00

Hello, what's going on, everybody? Welcome to the Chris Kraftsman show for April 15th, 2026. And on today's episode, we are going to talk about Keldrick Folk possibly being the pick for the Cowboys. We're going to talk about Sonny Styles and the recent activity going on with a lot of people talking about hey, Sonny Styles could potentially be a guy that the Cowboys trade up for. We probably talked about it plenty of times before, but it's it seems like it's starting to get more serious here. And then Todd McShay dropped his most recent mock draft. So I want to go over that. But before we get into the episode, please make sure to hit that like button, subscribe. I would greatly appreciate it. And without further ado, let's get into the episode. So I want to start this episode off by talking about Keldrick Falk and him being connected to the Cowboys at pick 20. And that's what Peter Schroeger said, by the way. He went on to DLLS and he said that more so they're talking about him at pick 20 than pick 12. I just think at pick 12, it's a flat outreach. I don't think that he's worth the 12th overall pick. But I'll say this if the Cowboys select Keldrick Falk at pick 20, I would be okay with that. If it's at pick 12, that's just a flat outreach. I don't think that he is worth the 12th overall pick. But if the Cowboys come to their evaluation and they say, we think this guy has an extremely high ceiling, which I think he does, day one, I think he provides some really good things when it comes to playing run defense, right? That's going to be his calling card day one. The thing is, though, as a day one player, I don't think he's going to be a guy that can rush the passer. And you ask yourself, the Cowboys need a guy that can rush the passer right now, immediately. I don't think they need a guy that can rush the passer three years from now. Like obviously, that would be great. But when you talk about day one impact, which I think if you're passing on a guy like Akeem Mesidor, who I think could give you day one impact as a pass rusher, that's where I would have a little bit of a problem with this. But at pick 20, I would absolutely be okay with that. At pick 12, no, you just cannot do it. He's not ready to be a big-time player in the NFL right now. I don't know how you could have a first round grade on him, especially considering the fact that you need this guy to step up day one because you need a pass rusher on this defensive line, especially on the edge, more so. On the interior, you already have Quentin Williams, who's a very good pass rusher, but on the edge, you need a guy. And I think Keldrick Falk is not going to be that guy for you day one. Mesador can absolutely be that. But it kind of goes back to something that I've been saying all draft season, which is you want to find guys that can provide value for you day one, right? Like if you're drafting in the top 20, especially with the window that this team has, I don't necessarily believe in the DAC window. I know people are saying you have to win within the next three years if you want to win a Super Bowl with Dak. I'm not like 100% buying that. But I do think that there needs to be some urgency when it comes to them trying to win a Super Bowl. And, you know, is Keldrick Folk a guy that can be that guy for you? I don't think day one he can be. And he's kind of a redundancy when you look at the guys that you have in this room already. Now, Rashawn Gary, is he going to be here at this time next year? Is a question that you have to ask yourself. And I think maybe that's something that the Cowboys are asking themselves if they're really interested in Keldrick Folk at pick 20. They're probably saying to themselves, yeah, we have Rashawn Gary and they're of the same mold, but is Rashawn Gary going to be here next season? Because, you know, I I I just want to get this through to fans. You're not drafting specifically for this upcoming season. You're drafting for, you know, the next five to ten years for this player, right? You're not just drafting for day one impact, even though it is very important with the way this team is constructed right now. But when it comes to Kaldrick Falk, I think what the Cowboys are looking at is Rashawn Gary might not be here next year. And we need that guy with how important DeMarcus Lawrence was for this defense, you know, ever since from 2014 to 2024, this guy was so important to the Cowboys defense. He was such an impact player for them. And I think they're looking for that replacement for him. And I think they probably see that in Keldrick Folk, which I understand. And that's where I look at that and I say, if if they go up to the podium and and they send the message that this is not a one-year pick, which obviously no draft should be. But again, I think, especially Cowboys fans, Cowboys fans are just so conditioned to think we need to find guys in the draft. That's how we're gonna find our impact players for this upcoming season. And I understand why, because the Cowboys do not participate in free agency. I know they did more than they usually do this year. I I don't even know if you can really say that. I mean, they added Jalen Thompson, who was probably the best player that they added in free agency in quite some time, right? But like this is what happens when your team doesn't participate in free agency. You you get a fan base that's so conditioned to put so much pressure on the draft, and and and they think that these guys just need to come in day one and be, you know, what Micah Parsons was, or somewhere to that impact, right? Because I think with the way some rookies play, with the way some rookies play in the NFL today, they come in and they make an immediate impact off the bat. And I think a lot of people just they they think that every rookie can do that when it's like, no, it's kind of like when you're playing golf, right? And you hit a few good shots, you know, you're playing at the range, right? You're you're you're hitting golf balls at the range, and you hit a few good shots, and then you go to the course and it's actually game time, and then you're like, well, I'm actually not as good as I think just because I was hitting at the range, just because I hit some good shots. It's the same thing when it comes to rookies in the NFL. Yes, there's some rookies that come in and play really well. Majority of them, they they take some time before you know you really see a return on your investment. And that's what Keldrick Falk is. And if the Cowboys are comfortable with that, if they're comfortable with having a player that they have to wait a little bit for and they have to really coach up, which is you know something that I think Caldrick Falk needs, then it makes sense. But if you're looking for day one impact, I think you can find better players there. And, you know, like Keldrick Falk at pick 20, again, fine. That's completely fine with that. And especially with the the traits that he has. I mean, he he he's long, he's athletic, he's really physical, he's strong, he he is a a fine player for you this year, right? But it's do you already have that guy on this roster? Which is, I think, where some fans are coming from. Again, if if folk is the pick, I would be like, okay, this is a pick that they're looking more so in the five-year range than just the the three-year range. If you if you guys understand what I'm saying there, right? Like if you draft Mesador, that's a guy who you're expecting day one, he needs to come in and make an impact. Falk, a little different, but you know, it's not a safe pick. I'm just gonna be 100% honest with you. Keldrick Folk is not a safe pick. So if the Cowboys are thinking here, we want to find safe players like they did last year with Tyler Booker. Keldrick Folk isn't that. You're gonna have to coach this guy up, and that's what they're gonna sell you. And I'm good, I'm okay being sold on that at pick 20. Pick 12, no, can't do it. And you know, it's it's interesting because pick 12 is so interesting because I don't think they're gonna stay there. I and and to be 100% honest with you, I don't think they're gonna draft Keldrick Falk because I think they're gonna trade up to uh pick six. Now, we're gonna talk about Todd McShay's mock draft. If they are able to stay at pick 20, then yeah, obviously, like that makes sense, right? But if they have to give up pick 12 and pick 20 to go get six and 39, you're not getting Keldrick Falk. You're getting with the six overall pick, you're getting Styles or you're getting downs, you're getting one of those guys. And then at 39, Keldrick Falk's not gonna be there. And if he is, great. Great. If Keldrick Falk's available at pick 39, absolutely, you turn the card in. I would absolutely be all for that. But it's not gonna happen like that. So Peter Schrager, he's saying that the Cowboys, they're really interested in Keldrick Falk. And I think you guys need to listen to that and and and and take um take a lot of uh uh confidence that that's a guy that they're definitely looking at at pick 20. I don't think at pick 12 because that's what Schrager was saying. This is more a 20 thing than 12, but a guy nonetheless to pay attention to. For the next topic here, I want to talk about Sonny Styles and him potentially being the pick at pick six if the Cowboys move up, because you know, Dan Brugler was on uh DLLS and he was saying that, hey, the Cowboys are very interested in Sonny Styles. And I think the Cowboys are going to trade up in this draft, but I don't think it's gonna be Styles that's available. I think Styles is probably gonna go at five to the Giants, and I think what's gonna be left over is Caleb Downs there at pick six, and I think ultimately that's gonna be the direction where the Cowboys go. But they're absolutely interested in Sonny Styles. And to be 100% honest with you, am I for trading up to pick six to draft Sonny Styles? I'm not for it, but I can live with it because I think he's gonna be a really good player in the league. And if you trade up for Sonny Styles, you're good at linebacker. You now feel very confident in the second level of your defense. But my ultimate thing when it comes to Sonny Styles and trading up for him, I feel like you can trade less capital for similar linebacker play for this upcoming season compared to just trading up for Sonny Styles. I think you can trade, and I would be even okay with overpaying to go get a guy like Jordan Brooks because then you feel really good about your linebacker position, and you can go use pick six to go get downs, or you can go use pick six to maybe draft Bain. I don't think they're interested in him, but that's another guy that you could add. You could go so many different ways. Delane's another guy that you could pick at pick six instead of drafting Sonny Styles, and you already have a similar level of play. Let's be honest. This upcoming season, Jordan Brooks is probably gonna be a better player than Sonny Styles. I'm I'm just saying that right now. He's probably gonna be a better player. So you're probably getting better immediate return on your investment when it comes to Brooks, and you're probably gonna be a better defense if you just trade for Brooks and go draft downs or Delane. And then at pick 20, you know, maybe you use it on offense, maybe you use it again on defense. But that's the way I would look at this. And, you know, Sonny Styles, he's a really good football player. I think he's gonna be a really good football player in the NFL. When I say I think Sonny Styles is more around, you know, the eighth to thirteenth best player in the draft, that's not me saying that Sonny Styles isn't a really good player because he is. Like if you're I mean, if you are one of the 10 best players in the NFL draft, you're obviously a really good player. The divide I think between people that think like me and the people who are extremely high on Sonny Styles and think that, you know, you should trade up to pick four to draft him, is that, you know, like we're not saying that he's not a really good player. He's a really good player, but is he worth trading up all those assets to get when you can find similar level of play at the linebacker position? That's the that's the thing that like gets me when you're trading up there. Now, Downs, I think he's such a special player that I don't think you're getting comparable safety pie. This guy could be a Hall of Famer. Caleb Downs could be a Hall of Fame player. This guy, Caleb Downs has been one of the best safeties in college football over the past three seasons. And he did it in the SEC and he did it in the Big Ten. He did it for Alabama, he did it for Ohio State. Those are two of the best programs in the entire country. And this guy has been a starter, he has been a key piece of those defenses ever since he was a freshman. He could be a Hall of Fame player because Hall of Fame players do stuff like that. Potential Hall of Fame players do stuff like that. That's the type of ceiling I think Caleb Downs has. I think that the play that you would get from somebody that is just a really good safety and Caleb Downs is completely different. The difference that the difference of the level of play that you're gonna get from a really good linebacker and Sonny Styles, I think it's way closer than it is Downs and a really good safety. Because I think this guy could legitimately be a special player. And if you're trading up for this guy, that I think is a player you trade up for. Even though he doesn't play a premium position, he does not play edge or corner or tackle, quarterback, or wide receiver, he doesn't play those positions. But what he does for your defense, he covers up so many flaws. That's why I'm saying if you draft him at pick six and you keep pick 20, I did a mock draft. I had the Cowboys selecting Jordan Tyson at pick 20 because I believe so much in Caleb Downs that if you add him to your team, very much like what Micah Parsons did for this team over the past uh four seasons that he was with the Cowboys, he covered up for deficiencies on the team because he was that good of a player. That is Caleb Downs, but you're not getting the head cases that you're getting from Micah Parsons. You're getting a guy in Caleb Downs that just bought in on football. That's the difference between the two. He's gonna give you a similar impact, yes, at a no non-premium position compared to Parsons playing a premium position. But if you add downs to this defense, I think right away this defense takes a step up because now you feel great about your safeties. You you might have one of the better safety rooms in the league at that point. If you have Downs and Thompson and Hooker and PJ Locke, you feel good about that room. And then now you start piecing some things together here where you're like, okay, the defensive line, yeah, they need a pass rusher, but they look pretty good as it is. Williams, Clark, uh, uh Ezraku, Rashawn Gary, those guys are very good. You have a very good defensive line, and then you have very good safeties with Downs and Jalen Thompson. And then, you know, now you're looking at the corners and you're saying, Revel, we need you to step up. And I don't love that. I I I I've said this on this platform before. I don't love the the hope strategy, right? Where it's like, we hope that this guy improves, we hope that he gets better, because you know, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. It worked for them in 2021 when they were banking on Diggs to improve and develop. Diggs had a really good year in 2021. But there's also cases where it doesn't work as well. They wanted Mozzie Smith to step up and develop into a legitimate one-technique defensive tackle, and he didn't do that. So for all of the you know, hope strategy players that work, I could probably give you about five guys that didn't work. And that's where I'm kind of at here with Revel. I think Revel could be a really, really good player in the league. When you look at some of his press man snaps, right, this guy is just absolute lockdown in some of his reps. But, you know, the the feel in zone and understanding the responsibilities in zone is one thing he needs to improve on. But he has real potential, and you hope that Bland can rebound from, you know, rebound from the season that he had last year where it was not his best season. Schottenheimer said it in a press conference. Bland will tell you that himself. So you need better play there, but then like you start to piece it together with his defense where you're like, you know, there's there's some things you really like about it. You you like the defensive line, you really like the safeties, you like having Caleb Downs on your team. You're gonna need to find a linebacker. Let me give you guys this scenario. If the Cowboys added Caleb Downs in the upcoming draft, what defense do you think would be better? The one with Caleb Downs, where you have the two safeties, Downs and Thompson, and then you have the defensive line you have in the corners with overshone, and then you add Jordan Brooks into that defense? Or would you be better if you added Sonny Styles to that defense and you kept the defense the same? Maybe you drafted an offensive player or something like that, and you drafted a third-round defensive player. What defense is is better? I think that the defense with downs, and then you trade for Brooks. And if you want to double down on defense, if you can keep that pick 20, I'm cool with that. If you keep pick 39, I think there's gonna be some guys there, maybe R. Mason Thomas, maybe Ramel O'Hite. Those guys I think would make a lot of sense. But I think you guys, I maybe I didn't illustrate it as well as I wanted it to, but I think you're better off with trading up, drafting downs, and I think the Giants are gonna take Styles. But even if you have the pick of the two, I think Downs is a better pick because I can find play comparable to Sonny Styles. I don't think I could do that with Downs because he's that good of a player. But interesting to say the least. So for the last topic of the day, I want to talk about a mock draft from Todd McShea. He just dropped his mock draft 4.0 today, and I want to talk about it. And there's some interesting things with this one. So I'm gonna go through pick by pick. I'm not gonna spend time on anybody other than the Cowboys, but at pick one, Mendoza to the Raiders. At pick two, David Bailey to Texas Tech. That's something that I think you need to pay attention to. At three, there was a trade-up. The Saints traded up with the Cardinals. They traded 8-42 in a 2027 second rounder to the Cardinals for pick three. They take R Vell Reese. At pick four, the Titans take Jeremia Love. At pick five, the Giants take Francis Malinowa. Now, I heard they weren't really all in on Francis Malinowa. Just some things that I've heard that they're not 100% sold on drafting him at pick five, but maybe that's a smoke screen. You never know. At pick six, the Cowboys trade pick number 12, 92, and a 2027 second rounder to the Browns for number six. And that trade haul, I think I'm okay with that. I don't want to lose pick 20, right? Like that's a top 20 pick. And you don't know, you know, if you draft a pick 39, yes, that would be good because I still think there's going to be good players on the board, but I would prefer to pick a pick 20 because I mean that's a more valuable pick. Obviously, you can you can even trade that back, and maybe you get another third round pick to recover from trading away pick 92. You never know, right? So I would prefer to keep pick 20 in this trade. That's what they do. Here's the write-up. Defensive part, uh defensive coordinator Christian Parker covers at covet's athleticism and intelligence and linebacker for his scheme. And Styles checks both boxes. A former safety, Styles measured in at 6'5 and 244 pounds, the biggest linebacker in the class and still ran the fastest 40, 4.46 seconds tied with Reese and the fastest 10-yard split, 1.56 seconds tied with Nambi Obi Zar. I'm sorry, I I do not know how to pronounce that name. Among linebackers, uh, while also posting the top broad jump 11 feet two inches and setting a record for players 6'4 or taller with a 43.5 inch vertical since 2023. Beyond the off-the-charts testing, Styles is widely regarded as one of the smartest players in this draft. One executive told me that he'll run a company when his football days are over. He should step in and improve the football IQ of this defense and help clean up the play at the second and third levels. Okay, so McShay is the Cowboys taking Styles at six. Very consistent to what you heard from Dane Brugler, that they are very interested in Sonny Styles at pick six. And I'm gonna keep saying it. I'm okay with styles at pick six because then you look at your linebacker room and you're saying, we're good here. You don't have to worry about the linebacker room anymore. You have your guy that's gonna be the catalyst of this defense going forward. You build around this guy, you know, however long Christian Parker is here, this is the guy he's going to build his defense around. This is a blue chip player in this draft. So while I think that the compensation is a little too much, I mean, you're talking about trading a third-round pick and a 2027 second rounder for an off-ball linebacker. I get a little bit wheezy uh hearing about that. But if he's Fred Warner, I'm not really gonna care about that, to be 100% honest with you. If he's that type of player, I would be absolutely okay trading up for that. But again, I mean, that's best case scenario, right? I mean, Styles being Fred Warner, that's best case scenario. You can't trade up and and consider the best case scenario, right? I mean, you have to you have to take what the best case scenario is and mix that with the the floor of the player and find it somewhere in the uh somewhere in the middle. And if that player, if that player that you comp to like somewhere in the middle, is still a really good player, then then I think that makes a lot of sense, right? But again, I would go a different direction here. I would go with downs instead of styles, but that's just me. I've already said my piece about that. But styles here pick six, and you keep pick 20, I'm okay with that. I'm I'm okay. I can live with that. Uh, and and here's the thing, right? You know, we we we talk about draft capital. We talk about draft capital and oh, this is too much and that's too much, or you can't draft this player, you you you gotta draft this player. If the player ends up being really good, you're not gonna care how much you spend for them, right? Like you'll get over it. A few years down the line, you're gonna get over it. If you draft an offensive player, you're gonna get over it if the guy's really good. It's just off season talk. And even come training camp, you're not gonna worry about oh, we drafted a non premium player. We We traded up too many assets to go get him. If the guy can play, he can play. And that's just the way I think about it. Pick seven, the Jets take Carnell Tate. Pick eight, the Cardinals, they were in that trade with the Saints. They pick Spencer Fanu. Pick number nine, the Kansas City Chiefs take Jordan Tyson. Pick number 10, the Cincinnati Bengals take Caleb Downs. Pick number 11, the Miami Dolphins take Mansoor Delane. Pick 12, the Cleveland Browns take Caden Proctor. Pick 13, the Los Angeles Rams take Mikai Lemon. Pick 14, the Ravens take Ruben Bain Jr. Pick 15, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers take Akeem Mazador. Pick 16, the Commanders take Omar Cooper Jr. Pick 17, the Lions take Blake Miller. Pick 18, the Vikings take Denzel Boston. Pick 19, the Panthers take Kenyon Sadiq. And at pick 20, the Dallas Cowboys select Jermaud McCoy, the cornerback from Tennessee. So this is this is interesting, but I'll get into Todd's right up. Dallas addressed its linebacker need earlier in this exercise. So now the focus shifts to the secondary. The Cowboys gave up 35 passing touchdowns last season, second most in the NFL, only the Jets, uh behind only the Jets. So getting help on the back end is a priority. There's been plenty of buzz linking the Cowboys to safeties such as Caleb Downs and Dylan Thieneman. So it wouldn't be surprising if they picked Thieneman if he's available. That said, you can make a strong argument that cornerback is the bigger need. And McCoy offers outstanding value here. He's a top 10 talent who slides to number 20 largely due to concerns about his knee after he tore his ACL, PCL, and MCL in January of 2025. He looked excellent at Tennessee's Pro Day, running in the four threes and moving well in position drills, but medical evaluations remain mixed. So on the board still was Dylan Thieneman at pick 22, right? So that guy was on the board, and I think he's going to be, you know, a real, really, really good player in the league. But I'm okay with McCoy over Thieneman. Absolutely. I wonder if the Cowboys would do that, though. I'm not 100% sold the Cowboys are going to take Jermond McCoy in this draft, even if he's at pick 20. Now understand this. What I think they should do and what the Cowboys are going to do are two completely different things, guys. They're two completely different things. I I'm not, and to be 100% honest with you, I'm not a scout. I'm not in these meetings. I don't have the medicals for Jamad McCoy. I don't know everything about Jamad McCoy. So it's easy for me to sit on this mic and say that they should take Jramon McCoy. It's easy for me to say that. I don't have all the information. I just watch the player play. I watch the tape. I think he's really good. I think he'd be a really good player in the league. But if they're being told that what Jamad McCoy is dealing with is degenerative, then you get into a little bit of a situation there. And I can see why the Cowboys aren't interested interested in him even at pick 20, right? Like, yeah, that's great value at pick 20 if he stays healthy. Because if he stays healthy, the guy could be a really, really good player. But that's a big if. And especially if you're getting the medicals back and you're hearing degenerative knee, if that's the case, then you run into a situation there. And I don't think the Cowboys are necessarily interested in drafting a player like that. I I just don't think they are. But it's interesting because what I hear just from the local guys here in Dallas is that, you know, they're not really interested in drafting Jermon McQuay. And and and what from the way I take it is they're not interested in him at 12 or 20. That's kind of how I take it. I should follow up on one of these and say, even at pick 20, they're not interested, because I do want to get an answer to that. But, you know, to me, when I look at this, uh, if they're not interested in him at pick 20, it's because they know things that we don't know. So if they don't take him, I'm not going to criticize them because, you know, they're the ones paying, Jerry Jones is the one paying Jramad McCoy a lot of money if he's on this team. And if you're paying a guy a lot of money, you want that guy to be healthy. You want him to play games for you. You don't want him on the sidelines. Especially when you just had a cornerback and Trayvon Diggs that you paid a lot of money to, and he was on the sidelines. And Savon Revel, you drafted him last year. I know he was a third-round pick and all that. I got it. I got it. I got it. He was a third-round pick last year, and um, you know, he didn't really play that much this year. And when he played, you could tell, still dealing with some effects from that. So I I understand why the Cowboys would be hesitant on Jramad McCoy. But if if this is the draft and and they take styles at pick six, Thieneman, I think, makes a lot of sense there at pick 20. I think Thieneman is a fantastic player. And I I understand where Todd's going here. But what I would say about Thieneman is that like, yes, the Cowboys, like the the cornerback is the more premium position. But when I look at Thieneman, that's not just a regular safety. This guy is a guy that can play in the nickel. They need a nickel cornerback, right? I think he can do that. And then you still have your guys over the top, Thompson, PJ Locker, Malik Hooker, those guys, and that's a fine safety deal. And then, you know, you feel good about your cornerback room at that point. I don't think Bland's gonna be, or I'm sorry, not Bland, Revel. I don't think Revel is gonna be like a turnstile, right? Like, yeah, he might not develop into the elite cornerback that people thought he was gonna be coming out of the draft, right? Because there were a lot of people who thought he could be a first-round pick. He might not be that, but I don't think he's gonna be a turnstile. I don't think he's gonna be a liability at all. So I would be surprised if that was the case. But when I look at Todd McShay's mock draft, I think I think the Cowboys would do really good with this one, just because you add Styles to the second level and you add McCoy, who is your premium position player. And, you know, if they draft him at pick 20, they're obviously comfortable enough, right? Like they're comfortable enough with the medicals to draft him there. But just from what I'm what I'm hearing around the scene, I I don't know if that's if that's something that the Cowboys are really interested in. So, you know, interesting to say the least. And uh yeah, I mean, this mock draft, if I were to grade it, I I mean, you know, I'd probably give it like a B minus, just because I I think you you traded a lot to get up to pick six there. But I mean, look, if you're going from pick 12 to pick six, you're gonna have to trade a lot. But it's just the the the player that they're doing it for. I don't know. If if Downs is on the board and they trade up to pick six and and downs is on the board, I I I would I think that would be a much better fit, in my personal opinion. So that's gonna be it for the show. If you guys haven't already, please make sure to hit that like button, subscribe. I would greatly appreciate that. And I will see you guys on the next episode. Peace.