 So Kyle, good to see you. Obviously a hugely successful weekend on the rally in front for you. It's nice to win a championship, isn't it? Oh, that's great. It's been a tricky weekend there over in Wales. Now we're happy to get through and get to the finish line and we wrapped up the Caramay Trophy Cup and the BRC. So now it was a great weekend. So it was a huge effort, I'm sure, by you and obviously all those involved in the team because it was a big commitment. So what is it, Kyle? Oh, definitely for sure. It's a lot of work to get over to an event like that and not only the event to do it throughout the year, like a huge thanks actually to all my sponsors and all the people who helped me to get over there and to do what I'm doing at the minute. It's been a privilege to do it and it's been very good so far. Was it tough going the championship? Tell us about your campaign. Yeah, it was a bit of a bad luck at the start of the year with the car, few mechanical issues, but now whenever we got the car sorted and we got everything sorted, we're good to go and we're happy with our pace throughout the year. It's been a really good year so far. We did the championship over in the Caramay Trophy and the BRC and we're doing the Motorsport Ireland Geo Surface Championship in Ireland. So it's been a very busy year there within the last four weeks with the event. So now it's been very busy, but it's good to be very active. Whenever we are in Wales at the weekend, we're just fresh and go away somewhere. So now it's good to be coming out of one event so fresh and straight into another. It's good for your pace and for bolding your pace and moving on for progressing. It's good to have. Are you still in contention on the other championships as well, Kel? Yeah, we're very tight. It's going to go down to the last round and then I got a harvest. So we're sitting currently, we're leading it, you know, but when the draft scores want to play, it's a bit all over the place. But no, it's going to go down to the last round and it's going to be a hell of a risk once again. So now I'm really looking forward to get going and it's only four or five more weeks to go so now I can't wait. You haven't been rallying for too long, have you? No, well, I started off in the J1000 since I was 15, you know. So no, we're at it now a few years, you know, but we've moved up a lot. So we're happy. We're happy enough. So you're involved with the Motorsport Ireland Rally Academy. You were in the T-shirt today. Tell us about that and how did that come about for you because it's important for you to be part of it? It's a huge thing for me to be in. You know, it's an academy team in Ireland that they pick drivers out of Ireland, you know. I got selected from one in the J1000s back in 2019. So it's a full year. You're with them and they definitely had to opt for them. They put a huge effort in the work they put in this mental to try and push all the drivers on and take that next step to see where we can find that extra bit of time, you know. And it's just all learning to me and it's great to be part of, you know. But no, it's great to be in, you know. Yeah, hugely beneficial. Maybe we'll just go back to Sunday again, obviously coming over the Funnishramp. Great celebrations with you and your team. Moments like that when you're under the sport at a very young age, things that you dream of? Definitely, actually 100%. You dream of these things when you're young and ever they come through, like it is just mental, like it's hard to take in at the time. But no, it's great to get across the Funnishramp now. It was a long lucky end and the stages over in Wales are extremely tricky, you know. And definitely to get through them all with no major hassle. It was great. And a couple of men's been keeping you right this year, okay? Oh, definitely. I had a fair play to Darren on the notes there. He made a good job all year and out of a few other lads it was an early year, you know, helped me out, you know. And that's awful to go to all people around me, you know, to get where I got, you know. And hopefully I'll see him again for next year. Yeah, well, what is next then for you? Because in a rally special this week, we're speaking to yourself and we're also going to speaking to Joseph Kelly, who won the ERT Trophy, and Eamon Kelly, who's British Junior Champion as well. So you're the Academy winner. What's the next step for you, Cain? Yeah, so looking forward to next year, I'd say, well, we secured the championship this year in the Academy Trophy and the prize for that was free entries for the Junior BRC, which that's the one of the Eamon one. So obviously our plan would be to go back over now and to compete on that. But we have to upgrade our KR to Rally 4, so we're going to try and upgrade the KR and go over and compete on the Junior BRC all going well. Yeah. What's the difference between the Rally 2 and the 4-Kers? The KR, I have 20-15, and then the Rally 4-Kers is just the newer one, they're the 2019, they're the same KR, they're 4-Kers, they're the exact same, just the newer ones are a lot more f*****g, you know. But no, that's our plan. Hopefully we can be able to do it, you know. Yeah, okay. And if I was to ask you a question, where would you like to be in your motorsport career, five, ten years down the line, Cain? Where would you like to be? Oh, well, you always have to look as far forward as you can, you know. We all want to be like, in the world rally car someday, you know, but you never know. You just have to dream it and you never know it. Yeah. Would one in Donegal and International be a dream toofie? Definitely, definitely. You never know, so high. So yeah, Donegal would be mental, you know, but yeah, you never know. Well, listen, you keep dreaming and keep the heart work up as well. Cain, you're doing a fantastic job. You're off to a great start in your young motorsport career. We wish you every success in the future and many congratulations again on your Academy Trophy one. Thank you, Yashin. Thanks for having me.