 luckily, but I have lighting, that's the only thing. Yeah, something I would say, and a lot of coaches ask me, do I need to have a 3G pitch? Do I need to have an astroturf? I always say to them, no. Some of the most successful coaches I work with run their business from local parks. So it's what you make of it. Some coaches like to use the excuse, oh, I'm doing a session out at the park, parents aren't going to pay for it, blah, blah, blah, blah. The truth is, parents will pay for it if you provide value. If you provide value, you make the program really good, and you're solving a problem for their child. It doesn't matter where you do your training, parents will pay for it. So that's an excuse a lot of coaches have. Oh, my business isn't growing because I'm working out of a park. For me, that's not an excuse because, as I said, I've seen coaches who are doing very well that do work out solely of parks. Obviously, in the UK, winter can be an issue because a lot of rain does get cold. Sometimes we even get snow. But what you can do instead of doing your sessions in the evening, something I did at the beginning was I moved them to the Saturday morning. And then once you get through the winter, then you can go back into maybe offering it during the evenings at parks when obviously daytime gets longer. So just want to encourage you, don't feel that because I'm doing my sessions out of a park, that I can't charge or I can't grow it. For me, that doesn't matter. Are you providing quality training? Are you solving a specific problem for the player? And what's the relationship with your clients, the parents? If you have a really good relationship, you provide good service. For me, it doesn't matter where you do your training.