 The value of all star games in general is it's the first time that us as scouts get to put our hands on the guys as far as interviews. You know, we get to sit them down at night, we get to sit them down in the morning, trying to confirm or deny all the reports that we get from a character perspective during the school calls in the fall, but also to see them in a highly competitive environment against good on good, you know, top competition around the country. And so we're talking about a specific player and there was an evaluation or several evaluations on his college tape. Because you're projecting the college players to the NFL. So you might have some questions, but then you can put on the senior bowl film and see some specific things that he did and it really helps in that evaluation process. Again, whether you're talking about a quarterback that wasn't under center much and so you get to see him in the senior bowl under center doing some different things that he didn't do in college or it can be a defensive end, undersized defensive end that you're projecting to be a stack backer. Now you can see him do those things. Seeing a player play on special teams in a game that didn't play on special teams. So you're projecting and so getting him out here on the field, being able to see them do some of those things really helps. Seeing them compete and competing. You have a lot of the best players out there and one-on-ones and the teamwork and getting to see those guys, the way they compete, the way they do things and see their progression and how they take the coaching from day one to day three and then into the game and how they learned and getting to spend the time with them and interview them. And so all those things are really valuable. It's a really valuable exposure.