 What else did you check for anything else? Yeah. Firebird 1, pressing 9-line medivac. Firebird 1, this is Weston. As leaders, we have to constantly challenge ourselves. You're constantly looking for the next professional development challenge. All the time you're looking for the next challenge. You're looking for the next opportunity. Whether it's easy or hard, you don't back away from it because you think it's going to be hard. You overcome it and then you do better. Being a part of this competition has allowed me to actually touch weapons systems, understand basic medical care under fire, combat casualty care, test my physical fitness amongst other soldiers and see if I still got it. I think it's a reward in and of itself to be able to test yourself, push yourself as hard as you can. I think just participation in this allows you to get better at some of the things that soldiers are expected to do. Being in this competition allows you to get back to soldiering and understanding level one tasks. A lot of these things are perishable skills. So if we should ever go out to the field and I should end up in a squad on a patrol at some point in the future, I would like to know these things. The reason I think that I should win the best war competition is I like to push myself, I like to do things right and that's what I want to do, that's what I've been trying to do. I think as long as I do it right, I'll be the winner. To see not just the soldiers perform at a high level but perform together at a high level, I think that's important and as soldiers, that cooperation that we have to have to drive forward and accomplish whatever the mission is in front of us, we all know that that is core and that is key.