 The keynote address at this injury prevention symposium was given by Michael Bergeron, and I seldom do this, but you have the most amazing title, and if I had to remember it, I'd fail. Senior Vice President of Development and Applications, Center for Advanced Analytics in Sport and Health of Game Changer Analytics, and President and Chief Executive Officer of Youth Sports of the Americas. You are a busy man. I am a busy man. I have a real passion for not only better understanding youth athletes and what puts them at health, but also what puts them at risk. And I think that today it's really an exciting time to be in that because we have so much capacity for new ways to look at things, new technologies. So the merging of promoting health, preventing injury, and technology and advanced analytics is just really an exciting time. What were the points of your keynote address, the most emphasized points? Well, as far as youth athlete development, we really have to make it much more youth centered and not media centered and not adult centered, and we really have to look at the individual because there's so much variability in how a young athlete responds to training for a lot of different reasons, not the least of which is everyone is different, and everyone has a different response to a stress, also at different maturation levels. So we really have to consider the individual, and we have to consider that it takes a long time to develop a healthy, sustainable, highly resilient athlete. And any time you try to rush that, you put that young athlete in jeopardy. The other side of it with the analytics and the capacity for looking at the factors that really promote health and prevent injury, we have such a great opportunity to look at it from more of a systems biology versus trying to just look at one part of the mechanism. We have to look at real world scenarios or real world information and all of the factors that influence promoting health and preventing injury or putting a young athlete at risk. So you talk about young athletes, I remember when I played little league sports, which is way too many years ago, we had simple, almost leather helmets and somebody had a concussion every practice and the coach would say, how many fingers am I holding up and they'd send us back in. This concussions must be a big area of emphasis. Well, the concussion certainly has gotten a lot of attention and it's really brought to the forefront many of the risks of contact sports and head injuries. No question we need to really be paying attention for that. You have one brain and it's very vulnerable, particularly when you're a young athlete, to some potential long-term complications. The other side of it though is that, you know, back when you and I were playing sports as kids, we did a lot of things and we kind of knew when to rest and when to recover and how hard to go and all of that and so we kind of self-regulated. I think today in today's world because of adults, they've engineered the fun and the variability, the inherent variability that we often had. But again, the issue of brain health is very, very important. How does this tie in with the Stedman-Philipon Research Institute and the Stedman Clinic? You're being here. Well, the Stedman-Philipon Institute is really on the forefront. I mean, they're looking at prevention of injury. They have a huge database of information that hopefully we can partner with and help with the analytics of it, but they're really looking at it from a, right at the forefront of science and medicine as to what really are the risk factors and what can we really do to understand prevention and promote health. It's not an easy task, but we need to look at it comprehensively and we need to look at it creatively and innovatively. Michael Bergeron, thank you very much. The world of youth sports and all sports is changing because of injury prevention thinking.