You’ve hit the nail on its head. This is the whole issue of roles and responsibilities. So, today if there’s a disappointment or debacle we’ve had at the last Olympics [and] if I ask the question ‘who’s responsible for it’ what is the answer? Each person will try to deflect it to something other than him. This is the bane of the problem. The role delineation should be crystal clear. The government’s role is largely policy-making, the structural reforms or something like that it has to carry out, and the financial support which it has to give. In many countries governments step in. In the United Kingdom, bulk of the funding comes from UK Sport, which in turn receives it from the government and lottery funds. SAI has a bigger role, operationally, and naturally the SAI will have to take responsibility, in the sense, the training camps for athletes and their preparation. So, [regarding] the 360 degrees sort of attention and result orientation, there are issues within SAI. We have to make it more result oriented and a little more focussed. The national sports federation (NSFs) are, of course, mainly responsible for identifying the talent, honing it and selecting the national teams. So, they’ll have to take the lion’s share of credit as well as [criticism for] failure. The government and SAI can, at best, be the facilitators. And then main actor, the athlete, has a huge amount of accountability. So, it’s ultimately a shared accountability and if there is a failure -- if you go objectively and dispassionately -- you’ll find fault-lines among all these stakeholders. So, we’ll have to sit and honestly identify and admit to those fault-lines and correct them.