 I wanna, for our audience, just name the names of players that they know who I've been. And we've named a bunch, Tanaka, Matsui, hit a homerun at Koshien. Dice K through like 250 pitches one day and then pitch the next day. You say Kukuchi, pitch with a broken rib. Otani pitched and lost and you have his post-game interview from there, which is just so full of emotion. Is there always one player that takes it by storm? And is that how all of these players that I just named were? Were they like heroes of their time or were they late bloomers? Or have you guys known these names since they were like 16? Yeah, yeah. I mean, definitely like every summer there's just a couple of heroes are born. Out of those people you mentioned, for example, Tanaka and Matsuzaka were really those like in the moment at like 17, 18 years old, a household name and we still love them for that no matter what happens in their career later. It's just like every Japanese person has like a soft spot for them for that 18-year-old that gave us so much inspiration that summer, you know? And then there's like other professional leaders like Otani was always a very like, everybody knew he was amazing but because he actually didn't like perform that while his team at Koshien, he didn't even make it to Koshien his senior year which was a big surprise. You know, he was all kind of decided he could like to go to the majors out of high school and then the joining Japanese baseball anyway but that was really kind of when things took off for him I would say. But then yeah, so there's different versions of heroes actually Matsui, people know him not for his home run but the fact that he was walk, intentionally walked five times at Koshien which ultimately worked and his team lost and that was at the time crazy, the controversial and this pure form of his sport you know, it was a riot basically. So that's kind of what he was going for, game two. Two games? Okay. Yeah. And so he still hit a home run and they walked him five times. That's crazy. He'd done so well in his previous years too that by the time it was his senior year, I mean, that was what the other team decided to do. You know, it paid off for the victory but in terms of the spirit of the sport it was just highly, highly controversial. So yeah, and you know, in our year in the 100th tournament there was this guy Kose Yoshida from a very Northern prefecture in Akita that had never really done very well in Koshien who, you know, threw every pitch for his team from the regional through to the finals of Koshien I think 1500 pitches over the course of a month and he became, you know, really the hero although he didn't win in the final because he was like kind of the hero of that year. So there's always like a couple of people and then there's also other professionals like, you know, each year, for example, in high school he was a pitcher actually. So he like threw at Koshien but he's one of the kind of more rarer examples of, you know, he's most known for like not crying when he didn't make it to Koshien his senior. He was still focused on being a pro and he knew like this wasn't it for him which is kind of an exception. I think even like those guys who go to the pros and know that they'll have a career just high school baseball is usually like a very emotional thing. But, you know, looking back, I feel like people knew like he was a different one from that time. So each person has kind of a garbage, you know through a lot in high school baseball and there's like just a lot of emotional shots of those players from that time which I, you know, is I think, you know the years audience would also be kind of interested to see.