 That's a nice camp. Update! Come on. You're welcome. You're welcome. Not that much, man. Daniel McCune. Doing some beat the street stuff in Oakland. Just finished my camps. So we had Mike Maul come out with Flow and do some video stuff and teach some technique. And then actually, you know, who came out and showed some similar misdirection stuff was good old big John Heffernan from St. Ed's. Really? Yeah, man. He's cool. That's awesome. And Gene Mills. Was Perry there? Yes, he's Perry. Perry went down and he was a clinician at Cormier's camp. Oh, that was Cormier's camp. There's so many camps going on right now. Oh, man. It's been busy. It's a little bit oversaturated. But we're all, I'm really psyched about the beat the street stuff because Cormier, Welsh, Borelli, myself, Halverson, Joey Boreng, a lot of the guys in the Bay Area are all kind of working together on the coaches committee for beat the streets. And once we get rolling and get more curriculum down, it'll cycle through the coaches committee to give them feedback and to provide. So you've been working on this for a minute, though. Like, when I came out to the camp at your place, what, three, four years ago, maybe with Levalli and Munoz and some other guys, talk about the process of getting that done and like, you know, just getting all these guys together. I mean, you got schedules. You got red tape. You got egos. You got people that want other people in their backyard. And you're just the dude trying to grow wrestling at the roots form. You don't care who, what, where, how. Yeah. Good, good, you know, good people wanting to do good work is basically what we've used to, you know, figure out who we wanted to surround ourselves by. And I actually connected about the same time you came out, I got connected to Jeff Marsh. And Marsh had talked a little bit about what was going on with beat the streets national. And he kind of coached me up a little bit on patience. I was not feeling very patient. You're like me. You're ripping and running. Yeah. I wanted to go. I wanted to go. So he's helped me over time. Kind of the big stuff that I wasn't familiar with, like board development and, you know, donor retention and recruitment and stuff like that. You know, I didn't worry about that at all. I was like, we don't have any money now and we're doing all kinds of good wrestling stuff. You know, we'll figure out how to scrape together the pennies. We need to make this happen. But with with national with, you know, Kiribati and some of the big people involved, you know, the guys out in Philly and then and then actually we got connected to Boston Youth Wrestling and BTS Cleveland and just the collaboration and the interaction that's going on due to that national organization has really allowed us to kind of skip some steps of failure that we would have needed to have to grow. So as you went to New York and met with them and kind of got coached up a little bit and the eyes opened at what you were in for, which didn't scare you. Yeah, yeah. It was, you know, and it's a different beast. And I think what I really like about Beat the Streets is that each location is its own 501 C3 entity, but it's like a loose network of these these people trying to do good through sport and being able to share your experience is hugely valuable to not making the same missteps and to knowing what ideas may be good or bad from others experiences. So it took us a little bit to get to the place where we had all of that access. But as we've got, you know, the right people kind of in that core group in that board development phase. We've had a lot of support from that national body and from, you know, Barry and Modder and really Jeff Marsh, the guy on the ground. So that helped us a lot. And then the Bay Area is unique, man. It's, you know, there was a lot of talk about doing multiple Beat the Streets here. There was a lot of talk about, you know, where we should start, where we should focus. I was always from kind of back when we talked that there should be one Beat the Streets. It should encompass the whole Bay Area and it should be an umbrella over everything. And that's still kind of what I'm thinking and how I feel. And then now that we have a board, they they're able to guide me to what we need to do. And then with this last fall, Oakland announced Oakland Unified School District announced they were going to cut all sports and that really lit a fire under a bunch of people. And then when they started bringing sports back as they raised the money, they needed to bridge that gap of the budget deficit they had. Wrestling was on the shopping block all the way until the last hour. So being able to use that to help kind of solidify the motivation of the board really helped. And then we went into Oakland this last year and did two middle school programs. And then Oakland... You were delivering mats. I saw two about six months ago. You were traveling around delivering mats. I've been real lucky, man. The people I've been working with over time with my programs in Sunnyvale, they're good folks and they come to bat. California USA Wrestling loaned us two mats for Oakland. And then we ended up bringing them back to them. And then we ended up actually purchasing a mat from Dolomir through California USA Wrestling. And we've still got like a long way to go. We're still looking for donors and sponsors and stuff like that. But we've got a solid foothold now in Oakland that we're going to expand upon. We had two teams this last year. I think we're going to do four in Oakland and one in Berkeley this next year. And hopefully I've been looking around for partnerships in space to maybe have an academy sort of program. A lot like Beat the Streets Philly and Beat the Streets New York have those programs as well. So more of like a year-round club where we can provide more mentorship opportunities for the kids. But man, it's been fun. We ended up having a little bit of kind of logistical issues with getting the kids to competitions. So I was lucky enough to just be able to grab some 15 passenger vans. We rented them and I just was the driver. So I drove up, picked the kids up in Oakland, took them where they needed to go. We ended up going to Hatham Bay, going into the city, coming up here to the North Bay to compete. And it was so much fun getting to know the kids, getting to know kind of some of the school staff. We have a program at Westlake Middle School in Oakland and those guys are awesome. They've got an AD that's unbelievable, an administrator that supports us really thoroughly. The principal's great, you know. And if we can continue to develop partnerships inside that public school system and have just good people involved that are supporting our program, the amount of good we can do through the sport will be tremendous. Man, I've been watching literally from afar since I got to know you a while back and your passion and your energy you put in is far beyond selfless. Man, I've always had a ton of respect for you and the way you go about stuff. But man, starting to get to see some of this stuff develop. And it's from a wrestling fierce on my end and the pains we've gone through in Georgia of just trying to get on the map and get some respect over the years and then seeing what you're doing even on a lower level than that with grassroots movement. Man, it's pretty special. Man, we're going to keep in touch and keep doing what you're doing, buddy. Thanks, man. Good to see you. Where can we find out more information about what you're doing? BeatTheStreetsBay Area dot org is the Beat The Streets Bay Area website and then my club who knows someday it may be joined in there but SunnyvaleWrestling.com is our nonprofit specifically in Sunnyvale where I'm from. But yeah, those are the two main places we got stuff going on. Awesome, man.