Tara VanDerveer: We end up because of all different circumstances. Title IX—my timing with Title IX was great in that, you know, it wasn’t great for playing, but it was great for coaching, you know, because they’re—all of a sudden—they’re putting all these, you know, they’re forming women’s teams, and they are looking for coaches. So, here I am coming up, having played basketball, you know, gone to graduate school, wanting to go into coaching, and they’re looking for coaches. So, I was a head coach when I was like 24 years old, which is really unheard of now. But the background that I had, including being at Indiana, I think really prepared me for that job as a 24-year-old because I’d been mentored by great, great coaches. And throughout my career as a coach, I kind of see myself as a basketball sponge. If there’s a ball bouncing, I’m in the gym watching who it is, what they’re doing. You know, I listen to games on the radio just, you know, watching great players, watching great teams since I was a really little girl, and I don’t know why—I just love it. So, it was just something that was never—it never felt like work to me, but it was always something that, you know, like Malcolm Gladwell will talk about, you know, 10,000 hours. I mean, I passed 10,000 hours when I was 14, you know what I mean? I probably would have flunked out of junior high with all the games that are on television now. I was a basketball—and I am a basketball—junkie. I’m crazy about the game.