That is so true, and that is the most difficult part of this whole structure, in my opinion. We were talking about getting good coaching and qualified coaching at the grassroots, but that is almost impossible. I hear a lot of talk about how an educated coach is asked to coach an atom or peewee team, let's say, but that is their dilemma: they don't want to go there because of the parents. They can't do what they need to do in that environment to make the players better and, in my opinion, make the environment better and make it competitive, because of the parents.
That is the dilemma we're facing every day. It's at my level. It's at levels below mine. I know that even at some of the levels above mine it is a dilemma. This is something that's been there for years and years, and I believe it's going to be there for years and years, because how can we change that? We may have a qualified coach who doesn't want to coach for that reason.
How do we change that other than to educate the parents on this whole journey we're on? Educate them that maybe little Johnny is not an NHL-calibre player right now, but just let the coach do the job, and in two or three years it may be a possibility. This is something that we have a problem with, for sure.