 Here is the policy of the 2020 US Open. No spectators, and I think that's a given. We've had no spectators for sports all around the world, except for, you know, select events. I think some soccer matches in other countries and stuff, depending on the country. Players can bring up to three people per hotel. So they're going to have an official hotel area or hotel for the players. And you can bring up to three people. So coach, physio, nutrition, wife, kids. I don't know, whoever you want to bring, whoever you need to bring, you can bring up to three people or you can actually rent out a house and bring as many people as you want. So Djokovic, for example, who was a little bit skeptical about this rule because he didn't want to just bring one person. He's got a huge entourage. Nadal has probably the biggest entourage out of everybody. He's got, you know, it seems like the full coaches box every match he plays. They can they can hire out a house and be able to, you know, go from the house, you know, with as many people as they want. Are they allowed in the stadium with as many people as they want? That's a different question. We don't know. One hundred and twenty eight singles player in the draw. So no change to that. But the difference is no qualifiers, direct entry to the first one hundred and twenty players in the world. So if you're in the top one twenty, you are automatically going to be playing the US Open and then there's going to be eight wild cards who will be given out. So usually it's the Australian, the French Federation, the the UK, and then a couple of others around America as well. So one hundred and twenty players, direct entry. If you're in the top one twenty, you're safe. Probably if you're in the top one hundred, you're safe. If you're in the top one twenty, it might chop and change, depending on that Cincinnati tournament before. But yeah, so that's that's to go there. And then a thirty two double team doubles draw. No qualifiers, no mixed doubles, no wheelchair tennis, no juniors. Lines people will only play only be at the stadiums. So outside of the stadiums, there's probably going to be Hawkeye involved. Maybe the umpire is going to call the shots with Hawkeye being the backup of a player, you know, disputing the call and can Hawkeye review it. Ball kids will vary per court. So I think on the actual main stadium, normal schedule of ball kids, you know, I think six on the court, something like that. But on the outside courts, there's only going to be a hand for the ball kids, maybe two or three, which is more than what we're being seen, because in some of the other tournaments, it's being, you know, call your own shots and pick up the balls yourself. So there is going to be a little bit of that. And then the sixty million dollar prize money overall. I mean, of course, it's going to be a reduced prize money from last year and probably from previous years gone. But, you know, I don't think that really it's a factor for the for the people. Obviously, the lower ranked players. But for the top guys, I mean, if, you know, Nadal and Djokovic are playing, I don't think their focus is prize money. I think their focus is winning the title. But that is the the changes on the policy. So a lot of changes. It'll be different. It'll be different to any US Open we've ever seen before. The French Open, you'd expect would be very similar. Maybe a little bit less strict. Maybe some spectators can come in. Maybe they can bring more people in. Maybe the draw has qualifiers and maybe some more events. But the US Open, obviously, New York is the epicenter of the pandemic at the moment. Well, it has been for a while and and they've got the strictest results, but they go on ahead. So that's good for us. It's good for fans. We get to watch the tennis. It's not great for New York fans. You can't go watch the tennis in live. But it is great for for on TV, watching the watching the tennis on TV. I don't know if they're going to do artificial noise. They're going to bring in, you know, a lot of sports seem to be doing fake noise, be doing, you know, fake cheering crowds. I don't know what they're going to do with that. I mean, I think it works like. If you watch our live shows, we do that all the time. We press buttons, we have a soundboard and we do that. And I think it works. It brings a bit more atmosphere to the to the matches, even if the players maybe it even pumps the players up. Who knows? I mean, the UTS are doing it really well. The ultimate tennis showdown using, you know, artificial crowd noise. It kind of does bring it something extra to the broadcast. So that's probably going to be be happening. But it is an empty stadium. After all, you know, you look around and there's no one in the stands. But you can hear a thousand people screaming. It's, you know, it will be interesting. But I'm excited the tennis is on. It's just a shame that there's, you know, less events, less opportunity for players outside the top 100, which is going to be tough for them because they probably rely on first round, second round matches at the US Open. But also if the big guns aren't playing, it gives it might give us a new champion.