 All right, for Johns Hopkins, we have head coach Tim Cole and freshman Natalie Aston and Simone Wiss. Coach, first of all, congratulations on excellent season. I'm just opening thoughts on the match tonight. I think we were quite yellow light for a big stretch of the match and showed most in our serving. There were probably some feelings of relief on the SWAT side that not only did we miss a lot, but the serves that we did put in were on the softer side. And to their credit, they handled them well, ran a nice offense, diversified well, did a nice job, finding options other than Denver Oven and Wallace, who have carried them so far. Huge tip of the cap to Sarah Gerard. She's the heart and soul of that team. Really brought so much fight, so much fire. So SWAT's energy was terrific. They had great fan support. We had some nice support as well. It was a nice match between two teams that have seen each other a lot. And, you know, it stinks to lose. In some people's perspective, a lot less to us. We're really not too wrapped up in that. But this was an opportunity for us to spend more time together. And that is the loss. And that is what we are feeling some sorrow about. And most of all, it stinks to lose when you don't bring your best. But that's something to learn from and something to put in our bank for the future. Yeah, this question is for Rosamona now. Obviously, both freshman, first season of Collegiate Volleyball, where do you take away from this experience to get to this point and to be able to take away music from the rest of your collegiate career or in the next year? I guess that... Well, our program is really just a big family. And that's a big change from regular, like from high school volleyball or before you get to college volleyball. Our program is especially unique in that we're not off the court and on the court. We're a family. We take care of each other. We're on each other. Make sure we're all about our mission and what our goals are and what we really want to do. That's my biggest takeaway is that all the ways that I can do everything that I can to be all in for our team mission. Yeah. And just even before season and pre-season had even started, we were already talking to each other and building our relationships and that just makes it so much harder to not see each other every day. And just the gratitude and love we have for each other is something that I'll never forget. Yeah. Because you talked a little bit about it, like honestly, you're serving and really, these all three of these games that maybe hasn't been quite where you've been all season. Is that just because you're facing better teams, better service teams, or it wasn't a little bit of what you weren't doing this weekend? Yeah, you know, I think it maybe is more politically correct or fashionable to be like those other teams really neutralized us. But we came out with our tail between our legs for the last three sets and had been walking on thin ice. A lot of errors and a lot of soft serves. Like I said, pretty yellow light most of the time. Some spurts of good quality. And that's a part of the game too. You know, our opponents weren't green light every moment of every... You know, this is college athletics and we're an elite program and the fluctuation in everyone's performance is what makes it so sensational to watch sometimes. You don't know what's going to happen and that's part of the joy of it and part of the growth opportunity for us to strive even when we're not feeling great even when things aren't rolling our way. So there are things that I can do differently to help, you know, promote a competitive environment in the gym. A lot of it, you know, might go under the large umbrella of just experience, you might say. Liz certainly is a champion on the line. You know, my mind goes back to last year in the fourth set of the NCAAs against Juniata. You know, she continued to rip the ball and she was great today as well. She still couldn't quite get it going as much as she has earlier and I think against SWAT in particular. They were pretty used to her serve but she also just did bring her best quality. That's all right. There's variance. There's fluctuation in performance. The other thing that I'd really like to note about the team's play is there was no down emotion despite, you know, a yellow light approach. We weren't sad on the court. We weren't mad on the court. We were just trying to get some traction and get going and I'm proud of us for that fight. I'm proud of us for that grit. That's what we're about. You touched upon it a little bit. You've been in and saved us a couple of years now. What do you take away as a coach from this experience to get to this level and to get to this point? You know, there's one thing which is your quality of play and then there's the other how far you advance in the tournament and there are lots of great teams that aren't fortunate enough to advance every season. And we've been one of those teams in the past. I thought we've been a great team with a near 500 record a few years ago. We've been a great team and had a few bumps and bruises at different, you know, inopportune times. There's never a great time for an injury but as people like to say no one feels sorry for you. The other team doesn't feel sorry for you when that happens. They sense blood in the water. So there's really nothing new learned about the experience. We're just striving for a high level of play and to be, as Simone said, a close knit family, 365. So a kind of an amendment to Natalie's comment. Don't worry, you'll see your teammates every day still. All right, Rick, thank you very much. Thank you.