And Avery Hayes, I think, more pronounced than Tristan Broz. I thought, you know, Avery was excellent in Buffalo at the Prospects Challenge. He had a strong start early, and then right around the middle of the camp here, both in practice and the games, just thought his effectiveness dropped. Then at the end, he pushed his way back again and finished very strong. He’s someone that he’s ultra-competitive. He’s had to earn his way to everything…

…Just someone that we feel embodies everything that we want to be about on the developmental side, someone that shows when you buy into the programming, what you can make of it. And he just continues to improve. And you want to see guys like that have success, who are that competitive. And he’s not the biggest guy in the world, but he goes to the middle of the ice and will play in contact. He’s another guy similar to the two we’ve already talked about, like, they’re there. They’re banging on the door. Can they go down, play huge minutes and continue to exert themselves, and much in the way that Ville [Koivunen] did throughout the year last year, but particularly at the end, and Rutger [McGroarty] the same way, and earn their way up. So, I know it would have been a great story for all of them to be on the team, but we have to make the decision we think is best for their long-range development, to get them to be the best players they can be at the NHL level at the very end. And that’s what we did.