 Um, the frustration of people showing and not showing and who can and who can't the rules that are complicated and just, you know, I don't even know where I'm supposed to show was very evident to all of us and I just suggested that, you know, why don't we try and find some kind of a level playing field that we can as divisions show and Denise spoke up and said, or I've done some research. I've got some numbers. Let's get together. And basically that's how it has evolved. Hopefully what this leveling system will allow is I can enter in my salmon intermediate rider. I can enter a horse that not necessarily has to mark what the non pro top level has to mark. But I can bring it as a B student and maybe me a B rider. I can mark on my level. But yet I might take a shot and enter up and I might be able to, you know, be able to be compensated for both sides of that. It gives me choices, which I don't presently have people just did not feel like they had a level playing field. And when they felt that way, they just wouldn't compete. And so the entries were going down. So we just looked at the database and started coming up with looking out where, how big the spread was in lifetime earnings in the various divisions and tried to figure out well if we made certain levels within those divisions with the player or the member then decide to enter like they used to. So we looked at that and shared that with the competition committee, the full competition committee and came up with the current three structure three levels within each division. And it gives it gives a beginner rider in each division an opportunity to compete against their peers. It gives that intermediate rider an opportunity to compete against their peers. And if either one of those two levels feel like they could be competitive in a higher level, they can enter. And so it gives them the option it doesn't force anybody into enter. It just gives opportunity. And with our current members, we need to grow membership and we need to grow show entries. And so this is an idea that hopefully will be successful at the cotton states. I'm sure there's things that we're going to need to tweak. But at least it'll give us an opportunity to try an idea. So basically, the proposal doesn't actually change this class structure. It creates levels within the structures. And what's the spread of each of those levels? Well, within the, well, there's like I said, there's three levels within each division. And in the amateur, you have, well, in each division, you have a limited and intermediate and then the top level for that division. In the amateur, the limited is 0 to 25,000 in lifetime earnings. The intermediate is 25 to 99,999. And then the top level in the amateur is anything over 100. In your non pro, it's 0 to 100,000 per year limited. It's $100,001 to $44,999, let's see, $499,999 up to the intermediate and then anything over half a million is the top level in the non pro. In the open, it's structured where it's 0 to 200 in the limited open, 200,001 to 749,999 is the intermediate and then anything over 750,000 is the top level in the open. We, you know, we looked at previous shows. We took the top 10 regional shows that had already occurred last year, including the triple crown events. And we stratified those entries to see what the payouts would look like and what the size of the classes would be to make sure that the dollar amount breaks that we proposed worked. And so there was some trial and error. Like I mentioned to you, there's a subcommittee under the competition committee, and we went through a ton of shows to just challenge whether the payouts worked and whether the class size worked. And it did under this, under what we proposed for the cotton states. Hopefully that will be the incentive to grow and maybe, like you say, those students that aren't playing this game and those horses that are being left at the barn instead of coming to town to play, hopefully they will show up. And if they do, these levels could go from three levels in a division to possibly five. If we get more people coming to play, the purse is going to be bigger because we have more riders. So, and it was, it was very, I feel like it was very positively received at the convention. And I have to tell you, it was the first year where I came away with people were excited. They were, they're ready for some change. They recognize that there are some things that need to be changed. And the willingness to try things that are not the old way was, it was cool to see that actually people are excited about wanting to try something new.