It developed over time because I would have a good game and then a bad game, a really good game and then a really bad game. I think they’ve seen the potential and now I have to prove – like an analogy with soccer – that I can do it every game, every week, every training session, so they trust you. When they started this whole idea of the three of us being together in the booth, we were all a little on edge because it’s much easier to do it with two people and it can go really bad with three. We haven’t been perfect, but we feel like we’re getting a lot better. After the last game we did in Denver, we usually analyze and talk about it. But this time we looked at each other and said, ‘I don’t think we could’ve done much better.’ It just felt right. And there’s something to that. I think we’ll get better and better. Things could change. I could have three bad games in a row and Fox could say, ‘We’re going with just John and Stu.’ The idea of doing that on a stage in front of tens of millions of people watching the World Cup would be really cool.