 Hi, welcome, Jeff Frick here, we're at Stanford Stadium. It's a beautiful day. We're here with Dave Covel from the Tales of the Earthquakes for the California Clasico. Dave, great to be here. Are you excited? Can't wait. I mean, it's an amazing day. This is our fourth annual, Clasico, here at Stanford Stadium, expecting another sellout. It's going to be a great day for soccer. It's awesome. So last we talked to you, it was at AT&T Park. Now we're at Stanford Stadium. We're hoping to talk to you at Levi's Stadium in a little while. You guys are like the soccer nomads here in the Bay Area. We're everywhere. The stadium opens next year. We pretty much go wherever we can get a great stadium and this is certainly one at Stanford Stadium. Yeah, and you had the Brazil game as a warm-up, so that was pretty handy. Pretty good undercard, right? Yeah, so talk a little bit about the impact of the World Cup. Clearly, it's getting huge ratings, everybody's really excited, no one's going to work on Thursday. How has that impacted your business and what's going on with the earthquakes? It's been huge. From a mind-share perspective, people are thinking about soccer, they're thinking about how they engage in the sport. In terms of numbers, we were selling about 50 full-season tickets a week for our new stadium before and we're selling well over 100 a week, so it's doubled the amount of sales for our new stadium. And so to see all those things happening at once, to have so many different articles, to have one of our own players, Chris Wainolowski, our superstar in Brazil playing for the U.S., it's been tremendous. That's awesome. So then talk a little bit about the California class ago, because you've taken a little bit of a spin and branded this particular game with the downstate rivals with LA so talk about the history of what's going on and why you say this is the greatest rivalry in the MLS. Well, we have a great history with the Galaxy back and forth, both teams have won and dashed the hopes of the other. The last two seasons here, we've had amazing comeback wins, the earthquakes. And so this game has really become a centerpiece for the whole league in terms of showcasing the quality of play, the talent on the field, and just the fans. We have 50,000 fans here to be able to have that many fans celebrating MLS I think is really an accomplishment. So give us an update on the stadium. How's that going? Last time we talked, I think you had put the tree on top of the stadium because nobody had died, which is a good thing, always a good thing. So kind of where is it now? How's it progressing? When is it going to open? Give us the update. Well, it looks fantastic. You know, all the steel is up. You can see the terraces where the seats are going to go. We have all the roof in there framing all the buildings on the concourse. The actual scoreboard bar, which is the largest exterior bar in North America is fully built. And so all these things are coming together. It's going to be done in November. We open it next March at the beginning of the MLS season, and we can't wait to have our own home. It's awesome. If you haven't seen it, if you are flying out of Sanders Day, you're sitting on your Southwest flight, waiting to go. Look over to your left and you can see it. I can't wait for whatever the takeoff cheer has got to be when the 737s ramp up. It might depend on the airline. You know, we can have one per airline if you have to be kind of fun. So talk about what do you got special going on for this? Last time we talked, we talked about tech and the impact of tech and big data on your fan experience. What tips and tips the effort tonight, special things planned? We're doing a lot with the video boards here at Stanford. You know, we're integrating all the Twitter feeds, Instagram feeds. We're putting that on the board so people can see their comments happening, rolling in real time. So you get a real connection to the experience. You know, we're enabled for Bitcoin here, taking Bitcoin and all our merchandise here at the stadium at Stanford, which is the first time for this stadium right in the middle of Silicon Valley. So we're trying to do as many things as we can to stay progressive, innovative to connect to this community that's just so tech forward. That's awesome. So Dave, thanks for stopping by. I know you're slam-sell-out crowd here at Stanford. We're going to be here for the whole game. We're going to be on the field and the press box out with the people, maybe dropping some Bitcoin on a new hat or something left to figure it out. We're going to go behind the scenes. We're going to talk to the social media people and really investigate how you can use social media and tech to elevate the experience, change the experience, increase the engagement of the experience and what's already a pretty engaged crowd in soccer. They cheer. They bang drums. The whole thing, right? Yeah. All right. So any last comments as we send it out? You ready for the night? No, just ready for three points tonight. Let's go. Three points. All right. Great. All right. Jeff for here. Thanks, Dave. We'll be right back with our next guest after this short break. Sweet man.