 So I have to tell you the opening ceremonies were really quite a remarkable experience. Being in the stadium and watching all the different elements of the performance was really fantastic. I think it was a force for the athletes. I think it gave them a great sense of confidence. I have never seen an Indian contingent walk out with the confidence that they did both in Delhi and in Guangzhou because they just looked so happy and they just looked so confident and they looked that they had 1 billion people behind them. I attended, for example, the 400-meter race by the Indian women's race, which was absolutely fantastic. I mean, you know, Nehru Stadium, the roof nearly came down. They've taken it to set the stadium alight. The Indians are the champions. What a story for the Indians. The thing that struck me most in the games were the Indian athletes. Last night on the 4x400 and the Discus, the 100-meter runner, there is a potential for athletics there that really is huge. So I think people will look at India as an emerging sporting powerhouse over the next 20, 30 years. It's kind of a dream come true coming to the games of this nature. You sit as a child and you watch people compete at these games and you never already know that you're going to end up there. I didn't really know what to expect, but the village is amazing. There's so much to do and the food is really good and training facilities are so convenient because it's just around the corner for me. Especially the training venue and the competition venue, they're fantastic. The best I've ever seen really. In our perspective, the venues are working quite well. Always one of two little issues, but it's a shame that people tend to dwell on the difficulties rather than on the positives and there have been a lot of positives here. The media always manages to blow things up proportionally a little bit, so I knew it wouldn't be as bad, but yeah, I found it surprisingly lovely. Only the people that are kind of working in the village who are really, really nice, everyone that I've met so far is just so helpful and friendly and it's a really nice atmosphere. All you can judge is that at the moment everybody's happy. All the athletes are very satisfied with the security. Certainly the security is the toughest I've ever seen, ever. I went to the Sydney Olympics, the Beijing Olympics and the security here is absolutely formidable. Well, certainly Delhi has been the net beneficiary of a lot of infrastructure. And my hope is, and when I say this, I really mean it, because you have such really good infrastructure now on the sports side, I hope it gets used going forward into the future, because I think that's very important. The legacy dimension of the infrastructure for the games, very important. Of course, the stadiums that are going to have been built, I believe, are going to become not only symbols for how far the government values sports in this country, but they are going to become instruments for developing more skills, encouraging the youth to take on more sporting activities. I think going forward, Delhi and India can only be better in sports because they took on and organize the Commonwealth Games in the way they did.