Tara VanDerveer: I’ve thought about this and going to Stanford. I loved—I loved playing at Indiana with my teammates, and we had a great team. I loved coaching at Idaho, where, you know, it was my first job. I actually had—my very first job was coaching a JV team at Ohio State. I loved that, and I loved going to Ohio State. And then, going back to Ohio State, I had a great opportunity and loved coaching there. The players were fabulous. Our team was really, really good. But there was something—this was before professional basketball—there was something, to me, really special about Stanford. Besides great weather, besides, you know, the fact that it wasn’t quite… it wasn’t quite where it could be, I really felt like it was a gold mine job, in that for women especially, education was the key. You know, a woman got a chance to get a Stanford degree and play basketball, and we were just gonna go into the PAC-12 Conference at that time. And so, I just thought, this is the—this is a gold mine job. My dad, however, told me it was a graveyard job, you know? So I said, “Well, I think the job does involve digging, but I think it’s really a gold mine job.” And with, you know, four or five great recruits a year—and that’s all you have to get—and I really felt going to Stanford would help me know if I knew what I was doing. Like, it was an ultimate challenge for a coach, and the ultimate challenge for a young person playing on the team. So, I looked at it that way. And it was—it was really challenging. It was really… it was—it was very hard to kind of turn the team around, but we were able to do it. And I’m really proud of the assistants I have, the great administrators I worked with, and, obviously, the players that I got. You know, the players that came to Stanford were fabulous.