PW: It goes back to what I said, ‘We’re all human.’ We want to be perfect. We want to succeed then and there. As soon as something doesn’t go right, you just want to changing things. Once you start changing, you can lose who you were. That foundation that you had goes away. George had to remind me, ‘Hey, get back to what we were doing.’ It’s so simple. It really is. But it seems so far away. Especially when you’re playing in a game and you want to get a hit and you want to come through for your team.

PW: Yes. Right. It started this offseason when I had a plan on what I wanted to work on, and I worked on it as early as November. Actually, even I would say October. I was working three days a week, I would say. It was able to translate into spring training, and after talking with (John Mabry) and Billy (Mueller) that’s it. You have it. Now it’s just being able to maintain it, like you said. Just make sure that I’m doing it every single day here. Every. Single. Day. You can kind of get away from it sometimes and then that goes downhill. If you keep getting away with that, it will catch up with you. Being able to work in there with them, with the things that I worked on in the offseason, being able to translate that into a game – all of that has really been good for me. Back to your question, I would say that coming into this spring training I knew what I needed to do. In the past you’re a younger guy, per se, so you’re just trying to fit in, go under the radar. You want to listen to what they’re saying and do what they’re saying, but you don’t want to be a problem. This one I feel a little older. I’ve been to big-league camp a couple of times. I know what to expect. I know how to go about my business. It’s just a lot different this year.