I thought you were asking Clive.
I'm actually going to steal Clive's thunder here and talk about hockey a little. I have a friend by the name of Drew Callander who played with the Regina Pats years ago. He was big into hockey. He pointed out something many years ago and it stayed with me. He talked about a hockey school that he was at in Calgary and it was done by, I think, some Russian players. He talked about the number of times a kid passes or receives the puck in a game and the number of times he actually takes shots on net in a game. Those numbers are very low. So you're not developing skills in a game, because you're only shooting the puck at the net two or three times or receiving the puck half a dozen times in a game.
Personally, I would like to see more practice, because I think those skills are developed more in practice than they are in a game. So when you talk about less competition, there's some merit to that.
The problem is there are many coaches out there who, for various reasons—some of them I have personal thoughts on—want to play games; let's play games. To my mind, in some of the sports we have, there are too many games and not enough practices. In basketball at the high school level you may have three practices to one game. Some people would argue that's not enough practices for the one game to develop the skills. Again, that comes to mind from taking a page from this hockey school that I heard about.