As I said, the intentions of Own the Podium were excellent. I was actually a commentator with TSN, with the conglomerate in Vancouver, for short track. I was there, and I experienced that as probably one of my most enjoyable Olympics.
The money, as I said, is not the problem. The problem is that Own the Podium has evolved since 2005, I think, when it came into action. At that point, we had high-performance directors frustrated with the interference a little bit, but they didn't have high-performance advisers assigned to sports and designed to tell the experts in those sports exactly what they had to do with the money.
The amount of work our high-performance directors do to try to please Own the Podium is incredible. The experts in our sport are our hired high-performance directors. Own the Podium could have a place, but not the way it is right now. It is absolutely an organization that interferes and bullies national sport organizations unless you toe the line.
Again, a national inquiry would expose all of this. It would allow us to see if there is some sort of organization that might work better than an Own the Podium type.
For sure, I agree with you. Medals are exciting when we have a home Olympics, and we want them, but that—