 I've got a really random question here, Ashley. Tell me something that is true that almost nobody agrees with you on. Oh, that is a random question. Let me have a think. That's a tough one, James. That nobody agrees with me on it. I'm not going to lie, you've thrown me there. If you haven't got an answer, no worries, because it is completely left to field. Yeah. How about something that you continue to bash your head against, a message that you continue to bash your head against a wall with the people that you coach, or maybe the people around you, your club or the wider kind of tennis population, that you're always bashing head against the wall going, needs to be this way, needs to be this way. Nobody does or agrees with you. Okay. Yeah. Okay. I could probably answer that. So this is a common thing in tennis coaching in the country, probably in the world as tennis coaches. So the most important shot in the game is the serve, because every single point in the match starts with the serve, but it's the least practice and the least coached shot in general. You know, most good coaches will spend a lot more time on the serve, but a general theme is if you had an hour lesson, lots of coaches were doing the fun stuff, you know, the hitting forehands and backhands, and because it's more physical, there's a lot more drills that you can do to develop those shots, whereas the serve is quite static. Players get cold if they're not, you know, running around, and it's a harder shot to teach. So most coaches leave the serve practice for the last five minutes of the session, whereas if you look at the stats, over 60% of all professional points are finished within the first four shots. So with the serve and your next shot being the end of the point for 60% or more of the points, it shows how important it is. So really, we should spend a lot more time working on the serve. So in general as coaches, I try to encourage my coaching team to every single drill incorporate the serve in some way. So if we're working on rally length and we're trying to get a 10-shot rally, start it with a serve. If we're doing a drill, working on the backhand, it's serve and then backhand. With the kids, lots of overarm throws, as I said before, lots of action above the head, because in day-to-day life, we're all strong at doing things, you know, pushing things below our shoulders, but we're all a lot weaker biomechanically above our head. So we need to do extra work on that. So yeah, I would say I'm not reinventing the wheel here. I think every coach knows it. It's just finding a way to incorporate the serve more often into sessions. That's a great answer. And I like that you brought up biomechanical weakness above the head with rowing. I tend to find that there's a biomechanical weakness below the waist. And everybody looks at a rowing machine. It's got a handle on it, and they're pulling the handle when they get in the gym. But actually, rowing is a pushing sport. You've got to use your legs more than your trunk and your arms. So I spend, I'm going to say 99.9%. It's not that much, but a lot of my time is spent on getting my athletes to push the boat rather than try and pull it by swinging their body back and using their arms to pull the handle of the oar. Because that's the most, you know, the oar is the most obvious thing that moves. And getting people to understand that that's actually the boat that moves rather than the oar in the water is... Yeah, interesting. Difficult to explain.