Let me try to get all those, Jason. And I didn't dodge your question, the first one. I just forgot to answer it. So, we're not going to give today a commercial structure announcement as to how many people. We have our internal models that we built, know will be dedicated. Today Eximo, Jason, has one head of sales in the U.S. who’s handled all the KOL relationships and getting some initial products placed to be utilized by the KOLs. So, there's a supply chain situation. We want to make sure we can supply our customers with number one, the lasers at the right cadence that we need them; number two, the catheters with the quality levels that we expect at AngioDynamics and the volume levels that we’ve built in our forecast. So we've got to get those two things built up first. So, we're thinking a deliberate approach towards how we commercialize and market the product. The reason why we're not giving any revenue guidance this year, because we don't think there’ll be much. There may be some merely trailing at the end of our fiscal year. If so, we'll update you during the current year. We're going take a period of months to make sure we commercialize it properly. So, as we do that, we’ll then you more details around how many people we’re adding and where. The numbers we gave you today that are associated with the adjustment in EPS, support what we expect to spend this year on a blend, probably two-thirds commercial, maybe one-third R&D, as Michael identified earlier, but a blend, more that towards commercial. So, we think that's important. Now, getting back to how we're going to go after the competitive set. Again, we think this technology is really, really unique. And you saw again, by the indications that are granted. We think that's a really, really strong set of indications. And we agree with you. Above the knee and below the knee are two different areas. We're excited that this technology can address both of those areas. And we want to communicate that. So, that's going to be one way the challenge, one way an opportunity for us as to how we do that, Jason. That's why we're being deliberate a bit to make sure we do it right, communicate it. We know already from established KOL relationships where a lot of the interest lies, and physicians want to utilize this product. So, as we go forward, we better make sure we do communicate that properly. And finally, back to your point of investors having some level of future growth, we agree. And hopefully, you'll see we’ve been very transparent we believe the last couple years with how we're going to do, what we're going to do. And this really follows that pathway, where we told the marketplace we want to upgrade our portfolio, do less things that are based in commodity and supplies, do more things that are specialized, unique technologies. And that's where we do well. So over time, Jason, we will update revenues that our investors can expect to see. Again, let me remind you, these are very, very high gross margins based upon especially looking at what we left behind. The NAMIC business is a great business, and Medline bought a great business. But that was a 40% gross margin business with no growth. Today, we're entering something at nearly double that gross margin level, growing at a faster pace. So, we'll update our investors, Jason, during the course of this fiscal year, as we test our assumptions, build out our plan. If you want to use a rough model and think, hey, three years down, AngioDynamics will probably have 8% to 10% of the market, that's probably in line with our expectations. And we'll give you more detail as we go.