 As you can see, Yankee Stadium is a fully functioning facility operating all year round. Conversion from baseball to football to soccer happens as needed. I think the surprising part is just how much work goes into it. I think a lot of what we do in operations is behind the scenes. So people may look at it when they come in. We just needed to put some grass over the infield, but it's a lot more strategy goes into it to make sure that it's a safe field and it looks like it belonged all along. When people show up for a soccer match, Yankee Stadium is supposed to look like a soccer field. And that takes a lot of effort to do that by the guys. As Yankee Senior VP of Stadium Operations, Doug Bihar explained, a lot goes into converting the Yankee Stadium playing surface to a soccer field. Last Saturday, NYCFC had their first game at Yankee Stadium and will play again the following weekend. After that, the field will be set up for baseball. What exactly goes into creating the soccer pitch at the stadium? Well, it is quite a process. What we do though, we still obviously have to put sod over our infield, our skin material. So we're bringing in about 20,000 square feet of sod to get in laid over the top appropriately. We do it in a way that transitions very, very cleanly. So there's no big undulation in the middle of the field. But that's about three days worth of work going in and three days worth of work going out. So our grounds crew works very hard getting this stuff in and out and to make it look like a soccer field that was here all along. It's not just getting the sod in right. It's getting the lines, getting all the logos, getting all that stuff in, making sure that we're measured right and strung out right and the whole thing. And it takes a lot of effort and like any good carpenter would do, we measure twice just to make sure we didn't mess up along the way. But that's all these guys and it's a lot of effort. Safety is always the number one priority. We want to make sure that the sod is level, that there are no surprises with people's footing or how the ball may bounce. So they're constantly strategizing on the field and walking through it, rolling it, constantly making sure it's a clean, safe field. Then it's the aesthetics, then making sure it looks good to match how well it plays. Putting new sod in over a sand mix to make it feel like it's a level playing field takes a lot of effort. It's actually more surgical what we say when you're working around the skin and some of the nuances that it takes for the guys. Now that the Yankee Stadium ground crew has gotten used to converting the baseball field to soccer over the last few years, they have developed a system that works and have gotten more efficient with the process as time has gone on. The conversion process changed in a way that I think the guys have gotten a little bit quicker at it, if you will. They know what has to get done. There's a little less thought about it, but you're still weather and other factors still determine how quick you can do it. But for the most part, the strategy has been the same and it's worked. The next soccer match at Yankee Stadium will not be until mid-April and in the coming weeks, we will highlight the conversion back to baseball for opening day at Yankee Stadium and the season's first home stand beginning April 7th.