 What would you say the biggest objections or struggles or challenges that coaches have in swimming? Their biggest problem really is being able to do a good job of balancing. If you're a full-time swim coach, say you do a swim club, you work your ass off for a very small amount of money, like say you make 60k a year, right? But your six practices a week, two hours in the morning, two hours in the evening, plus weight training because like you want to coach these elite kids, and it's like I don't think you have to be doing that to make 60 grand a year. You could probably be doing it a different way, incorporating more coaches. I think they're just afraid to, afraid of like letting go of the program. Also, we have an issue here too with everything being like a non-profit. So when you do like stuff here and it's a non-profit, you have to have like some, most of the time you have to have a board and when you have a board, the board's made up of other people sometimes and they can like fire you. So you know like your job's on the edge there and so balancing that on how you want to organize your structure. Technically ours is a non-profit, but like me and my dad are on the board, you know, really not going to fire myself, which I don't know if that's highly legal or not, but no one's, the IRS isn't going to like come knocking down my door on, you know, oh my god, you're the board of a non-profit and it's like, yeah, I make a small amount of money and we zero out every year to take all my money. So I think they just, they fear, they fear that they're going to, they just can't sustain it. Like most of them are high school coaches that do it after school. And if they are full-time swim coach, then not a lot of full-time learn to swim coaches. There's not a lot of, there's like no full-time water polo coaches. Like that like does exist. That's my goal, right? That's my goal. It's like, I'm going to be a full-time water polo coach and make all my money coaching club water polo, which I've never met anyone that does that. It just doesn't make you enough money because people haven't thought about how to make money off of it, right? Like there's just either you have, you just, people just have not strategized to do it. The system is just, you coach your high school team or you're a club coach for a local club and you make, you know, $1,000 a month as a coach, you know, a couple of nights. There's no like system in place on how to like do it full-time. That's the big thing and which I think people could do if they structured it properly. They just don't structure it properly and, you know, try to, you know, get the, again, also people don't like own their own pools, which would be like a huge factor. Like I know people, it's easier to like, if it's easier to put up a gym where you can just put up like technically, if you have enough fun, not super crazy amount of funds, but you can put up a box and you know, pretty easy box with like a basketball couple, like a basketball gym or like a little indoor soccer thing, the pool price and the maintenance on a pool to like own your own pool is significantly different. You'd have to have your club rocking at like probably like a million a year I would think to like maintain a pool and do everything. Which would be, which isn't unfathomable if you have enough kids and you're turning the right process is totally, totally possible to do. But yeah, those are the, they, I think a lot of coaches get burned out because it's the, it's their second job. So that's pretty much most of it. I mean, I imagine that's in a lot of sports coaches are getting burned out because their second job in the camping. No, no, no professional water pool coaches here in the United States. Another is in Europe because they have clubs. So Hungary, Spain, Italy, they have professional clubs. So you can actually professional coach work for a club, but they don't do that here. So, okay. So when you, when you talk about