 So I heard a competition through my mass-harn. I was teleworking that day. He gave me a call and he was asking if I was interested in the shooting team. First Lieutenant Baker, 112. Go to resgt. Joshua Smith, mouse 24. Captain Garrett Adcock, headquarters battalion. Sergeant Castingon, Marfl Peck Band. Nice group of wag, BME 3. Last hour on my mode, CLC 33. A lot of the drills we're doing are very different from the regular movement drills we could do, such as the old table two and the old range. And it's a lot more down and dirty with it. You're getting up close and personal, obviously the pistol. I wasn't qualified for the pistol before. So I got to qualify for that now. So coming in as an introductory shooter, I didn't really know much about rifle holds. I only knew what was taught in boot camp. But coming through this course, it's definitely taught me a lot more on holds, positioning, and just stability overall. So shooting a competition, you really have to make sure that you can understand what targets you're aiming at. Understand the course of fire, moving, just stability overall. So a quality annual is more of like testing your skills. How good of a shooter you are competition wise is how many rounds can you send down range and hit the target. Stand by.