Nobody's glad you wrecked. It's a part of the hobby. I did similar into a pond about a month ago, posted it in the crash forum.
You've learned a lesson and can move on. You have a good attitude about it.
Thoroughly disassemble and clean the engine (resist the urge to rotate the crank!) and then reassemble with a good oil. Then check for any roughness in the bearings by bolting on a prop and turning the engine over while pulling and pushing on the prop hub. These engines are amazingly durable.
The servos should be highly suspect, so do a similar test by hooking them to a different receiver and run them through the full range of motion while lightly resisting the movement with a finger. You're not trying to stall the servo, but are feeling for notchiness that would indicate some stripped gear teeth. Although servos are fairly cheap, it's still cheaper to buy a gearset and replace them.
It's not a crash, it's an 'upgrade opportunity'. Lol
Good luck.