I think Dean Blandino and his officiating staff have done a very good job of that. From the first meeting we had with him last spring, the rule hasn’t changed, but they’ve made it a point of I guess emphasis, or more careful scrutiny and also consistency with the officials that I think they are all kind of calling it the same way. Sometimes you get those plays and one crew might call them and one crew might not, but I think now across the board, there are a lot of them and I think this is one of those things kind of like the defensive rule that a defenseless receiver, that those hits have gone down. They have diminished over the last couple of years as defenders are more conscious of it, they are more aware of the rule. They do it a little bit differently and I think offensively teams — we’re one of them — you have to be more careful about running into guys where in the past sometimes when you run crossing patterns you just don’t know where those defenders are going to be sometimes.
Sometimes they are off, sometimes they are on, sometimes one is off one is on, one is on two are off, two are on one is off and you can run those plays in practice or in games and they are all sometimes a little bit different, where those meshes are and who bumps into who and all that. I think offensively we as a league, that that rule has been enforced pretty consistently and everybody is getting called for those type things and we have to do a better job of coaching it, number one, that’s me. And then we have to do a better job of executing it as receivers of trying to get to where we are trying to go to, but without impeding a defender illegally.