 Okay, Eric, you drew with Olga Giriya today. Tell us something about the game. Yeah, it was a pretty clean game. I played an opening I've never played before, prepared it last night and this morning. And then once the game began, I forgot most of my preparation and had to figure it out on the board. So I took like 10 minutes in the early kind of opening theory to recall what I was studying. And thankfully, I didn't mess anything up. And we got kind of a interesting playable position, some imbalances. And yeah, I checked afterwards with the engine, just a brief leachess engine analysis. And it was a perfect game. There were no mistakes, blunders or inaccuracies for either of us. So can't complain with that. Sounds good. Let's look at it. Okay. Okay, Eric, we're looking at the position after you've just played Queen C2 and a Jaco Piano. Tell us something about it. Right. This is kind of trendy opening these days. There's a chess ball course by Wesley So, and this is one of the main positions that's featured in that course. And here, Black has a few different options. Olga played Knight takes C3, which was a secondary move in my preparation. I was a bit more ready for Bishop G6, which is a more natural move, aligning with the Queen. And the main line here is Queen to B3, hitting the pawn, Knight to E7 and castling C6, Bishop D3. And there's been a lot of top level games that have reached this position. So this was an alternative, but we went for a slightly different route. Yes, you did. Okay. So Knight takes C3. Yeah. And if we go forward a few moves, I think the play was pretty natural. It takes, F6 takes. One thing here, if we just go back after I took on F6, Black has the option of taking on F3. And I had this position on my computer screen this morning. And the only thing I remember is Black can't take on F3 because I have the intermediate move, pawn takes G7, and White's doing quite well here. So we followed kind of the main line. If we just talk about the main line, Queen of 6, Bishop to E2, Knight to E5, and then Knight to E5. Natural move, Bishop takes, and takes, and C5 gets Black. Right. And when I first saw C5, it looks like an elementary plunder because it allows a very simple fork on D7. And it took me a few minutes to realize that it's not good for me to deliver the fork, because if I go for a Nd7, Black has some interesting counterplay with Queen C6, Nf8, and pawn takes D4. And it's weird because I'm temporarily up a full rook, but I think White is just much worse here because I'm losing back a lot of material. Queen C3 is in the position, and I just didn't want to have any of this. Yeah. Yeah. That's right. Okay. So I castled instead. I castled, and we carry on. Yep. Takes, takes. And you played Queen to E6. Queen E6, and this is a very natural move. It avoids the fork now, which I was threatening. It also supported Knight to C4, which we're going to see very soon after F4. For Knight C4. And then Knight C4. And yeah, so it's an interesting kind of imbalance because I have this very strong Knight on E5, but now Black is challenging it. And the problem with my position is my Bishop on E3. It's just a really sad piece. So my dream was to get in G4 and F5, and eventually Bishop F4, and try and attack on the King side. I really wanted to play G4 right away, but I don't think this quite works for me because after Knight takes E5, I would really like to take back with the pawn, but then D4, and I'm getting hurt here because Bishop F2 hangs F4 pawn, and Bishop D2 is even worse because D3 attack. So instead of going into this, I played Rook Ad1, which is just improving the worst place piece, more of a prophylactic move. And if we keep going... So we move on to that one. Keep going. Yeah, we can keep going. So G4, and this is where things begin to simplify. We trade on, or Rc4 is a good move, and we trade on B6. Trade on B6, checks, I move the King. And then very quickly, a lot of things came off the board because I lose F4. It's a major hoovering off of material. And then I win D5, and at first it looks scary for me because my King is a bit naked, my Rook is pinned, but it turns out everything is under control after Queen to D3. It does look scary, as you said. And then Rf8, and I still have to be careful because Black is threatening Rook to D8. And my Rook is still pinned, so I move on. And then Queen c1, and it still looks scary because all these check possibilities and... Yeah, King's a bit exposed. Right. Very exposed actually. And I realized here that I can just drop back to D2 and I'm allowing Queen g1. But if she plays Queen g1, I just tuck my King away on H4. And surprisingly, my King is quite safe here because I'm controlling the two checking squares. G5 doesn't quite work for Black, and I'm ready to play Rook to D8 and just force some trades. So she didn't go for this. That was OK. Queen a3 check out played. Queen a3, and this is where we just repeated moves. I don't think she saw anything better than to just go for this. After Queen c5, I move back. I still was allowing Queen g1, but if she didn't play it the first time, I didn't think she would play it this position. So the game ended very peacefully. OK, thanks very much, Harry. Thank you.