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Twice-to-beat teams SMB, TNT eye shorter route to semifinals

TOP seed San Miguel Beer faces eight ranked Blackwater. — PBA MEDIA

FOR top seed San Miguel Beer (SMB) and No. 2 TNT, it’s time to reap the fruits of all their hard work throughout the eliminations and mad dash for the two coveted quarterfinal incentives.

With fresher legs and a shorter route to the PBA Philippine semifinals, the twice-to-beat Beermen seek to advance straightaway with a victory against eighth-ranked Blackwater in tonight’s 6 p.m. main game at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

The Tropang Giga carry the same mission against No. 7 Converge at 3 p.m. as they try to take the next step in their title-retention bid.

The odds may be in their favor but TNT coach Chot Reyes said they should be on their toes against the tough league debutants. In their lone meeting in the elims, the Tropang Giga needed Jayson Castro’s late heroics to pull off an 86-83 escape act against the upset-conscious FiberXers.

“Iyung effort namin in our game in the elimination round, it’s not going to be enough come the playoffs,” said Mr. Reyes. “So iyun ang focus talaga namin, we have to raise the level of our game.”

He noted Converge’s strong offensive rebounding and fastbreak game as among the major areas to address for the Tropang Giga to stop the FiberXers from forcing a deciding game.

“They’re a big team and well-distributed ang minutes nila so mapapalaban kami nang husto nito,” said Mr. Reyes. “We have to keep them off the glass, stop them sa fastbreak and also important, at least ma-match yung energy nila.”

It’s been 17 days since TNT’s last outing and the break allowed Troy Rosario and Brian Heruela to recover from their respective injuries and get ready for the playoffs.

Meanwhile, rejuvenated June Mar Fajardo and the Beermen look to continue their climb back to the summit and standing in their way is a Bossing team bent on saving a sputtering redemption campaign and extending its redemption tour.

The Bossing made the playoffs again after their league-worst 29-game losing streak. But after a promising 5-1 start, they spiraled to five successive losses to find themselves paired with mighty SMB.

“Still positive. Sabi ko nga sa team, we’re four games better than last conference (1-10 in the Governors’ Cup). We’re in the playoffs, we’re not dead,” said Blackwater mentor Ariel Vanguardia. “But we have to put our acts together against San Miguel.” — Olmin Leyba

EJ Obiena targets Paris Games medal and six-meter club

EJ OBIENA — REUTERS

WORLD Athletics Championships pole-vault bronze medalist EJ Obiena isn’t done rewriting history.

A day after his glorious Eugene, Oregon feat where he delivered the Philippines its first podium finish in the Worlds, Mr. Obiena said he is eyeing to accomplish two more things what only a rare few had done — snare an Olympic medal and join the elite 6-meter club.

“There are a lot of things I want to do in the sport. I’m still happy to win the bronze medal but missing six meters is like yeah, there’s something I need to do,” said Mr. Obiena during yesterday’s zoom meeting he hosted.

“There’s only 24 people who reached the six-meter mark, I want to be the 25th,” he added.

Mr. Obiena had his chances in Eugene though as he went for 6m but missed in three attempts.

But his 5.94m was enough to deliver the country its first medal in the history of the biennial event while shattering the old Asian mark of 5.93m he himself set in the Golden Roof Challenge in Innsbruck, Austria last year.

The Southeast Asian Games gold medalist will have his opportunities to breach the 6m-mark as he is scheduled to see action in the Silesia leg of the Diamond League set on Aug. 6 in Poland and the Gyulai Istvan Memorial-Hungarian Athletics Grand Prix on Aug. 8 in Hungary.

Another goal that would cement Mr. Obiena’s status as one of the biggest, brightest stars of the sport is if he could win medal in the Olympics, a first by a Filipino since Miguel White copped a 400m hurdles bronze in the 1936 Berlin Games.

To achieve this, Mr. Obiena said he must level up with rivals Armand Duplantis, who set a new world record of 6.21 in Eugene, and American Christopher Nilsen, who snatched the silver with a 5.94m.

“That’s the plan, that’s definitely what I want to achieve. Mondo (Duplantis) is definitely a force to be respected, to be reckoned with and Chris (Nilsen) is a competitor and everybody else in the field so if it’s going to be a medal, that I can’t say. Hopefully it will be a better case in Paris,” he said. — Joey Villar

UAAP champion UP shoots for solo lead

UP Maroons’ forward Carl Tamayo — FILECO SPORTS

REIGNING UAAP champion University of the Philippines (UP) shoots for a solo lead while defending NCAA titlist Letran finally dives into action against separate opponents in the Filoil EcoOil Preseason Cup at the Filoil EcoOil Centre in San Juan.

The Fighting Maroons collide with fellow UAAP squad University of the East (UE) at 5 p.m. in Group A right after Letran’s Group B debut against another NCAA team in Jose Rizal U at 3 p.m. to headline the quintuple bill.

Emilio Aguinaldo College and University of Perpetual Help System Dalta open the show at 9 am. followed by matches of Far Eastern U-San Sebastian and Arellano-National U at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., respectively.

The spotlight is on the undefeated Maroons under the leadership of Gilas Pilipinas forward Carl Tamayo as they go for a 3-0 card in Group A.

Mr. Tamayo who’s lording it over the Filoil competition with double-double averages of 19.0 points and 12.5 rebounds.

Mr. Tamayo’s Gilas teammate in Rhenz Abando, on the other hand, is expected to banner the Knights in their Filoil debut along with ace guard Fran Yu.

Both UP and Letran are touted as the heavy favorites to top their respective groups as only four teams from each pool will advance to the knockout quarterfinals after a single-round robin eliminations.

The Fighting Maroons and the Knights are gearing up for their defense bids in the UAAP and the NCAA, which will return to a full calendar in September after compressed formats last season. — John Bryan Ulanday

Puentevella not sure if Hidilyn Diaz will continue her lifting glory

HIDILYN Diaz with her husband/trainer Julius Naranjo — HIDILYN DIAZ OFFICIAL FB

THE WORLD Weightlifting Championships set in Bogota, Colombia in December this year could decide whether Tokyo Games gold medalist Hidilyn Diaz will continue in her pursuit for more Olympic glory or just end it to focus on her personal life.

“If she does not do well in Colombia, I think I have to talk to both of them as one of their godfathers to just focus on family because she has nothing more to prove, she deserves to be happy,” said Samahang Weightlifting ng Pilipinas president Monico Puentevella during yesterday’s online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum that coincided with Ms. Diaz’s wedding with her trainer Julius Naranjo in Baguio.

“After her wedding, we will see in the World Championship if she still really has something left in her, I would tell her to go for it. But if there is really none left, I will advice her to raise a family,” he added.

One other problem that could pose as another threat to Ms. Diaz’s bid to have another go at the quadrennial event was her division — the 55 kilograms — was scrapped from the Paris calendar.

“If she does well, she would have to think if she’s willing to go down on weight at 49kgs or go higher at 59kgs where she would compete with Elreen Ando,” said Mr. Puentevella. “If she goes up, she would compete against bigger women. If she choses 49kgs, she would need to go down by six kilos and she would be forced not to eat.”

Mr. Puentevella also announced Ms. Diaz’s participation in the National Open set Aug. 8 to 12 in Tagbilaran, Bohol.

“Hidilyn will be peforming on an exhibition basis in Tagbilaran fresh from honeymoon,” he said.

It would also be a busy year not just for Ms. Diaz but also for the rest of the national team as the country is scheduled to join the Asian Senior Championships slated in October in Bahrain where teenage sensation Vanessa Sarno will be eyeing to improve on her two-gold, one-silver haul in the 71kg class in last year’s edition in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

But whether or not Ms. Diaz could make it that far, Mr. Puentevella remains optimistic of the country’s chances in Paris.

“A gold and silver in Paris,” he said. — Joey Villar

‘Bong’ Coo: Happy to be of service  to fellow athletes and PHL sports

THE APPOINTMENT of bowling legend Olivia “Bong” Coo as board member of the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) meant there would be at least one big ally by the athletes and national sports associations in the agency.

“My position as an athlete and NSA official will help me to see both sides and I’m sure it will help me in the PSC,” said Ms. Coo during yesterday’s online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum.

“I’ve come full circle because this is the highest I have attained. I’m very happy to be of service to my fellow athletes and Philippine sports as a whole,” she added.

The 74-year-old Ms. Coo has a perspective of an athlete having brought home so many accolades for the country having topped the World Cup, the Asian Games and Southeast Asian Games among others while serving as secretary-general and eventually president of the Philippine Bowling Congress.

Now she will help chart the course of the country seeking to extend Philippine sports’ glorious era following the breakthrough gold medal won by lifter Hidilyn Diaz in the Tokyo Olympics last year.

“I’m sure we’re getting already there, we already had a great start. I’m sure the PSC will be helping all NSAs to be able to achieve the gold medals we all desire to win,” said Ms. Coo. — Joey Villar

Alex Eala jumps to career best No. 282 WTA ranking

ALEX Eala’s meteoric rise in the international tennis scene reached another peak after barging into Top 300 rankings of the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA).

From No. 317, Ms. Eala jumped 35 notches to No. 282 as per the WTA list on Tuesday for her new career-best placing in the women’s pro circuit.

Ms. Eala, only 17 years of age, started at No. 526 this season and way outside the Top 1000 when she turned pro in 2020.

She has won two championships since then in Spain and Thailand with hopes of capturing more crowns in a bevy of tournaments still in line for her this season.

Last week, she just fell short from that bid after a semifinal exit in the W60 Vitoria-Gasteiz in Spain. She also finished runner-up in the W60 Madrid last month.

With only a little break, Ms. Eala is slated to play in the W25 El Espinar/Segovia also in Spain starting today with a first-round action against Maria Bondarenko.

The Filipina wunderkind opted to focus on women’s tournaments this season more than the juniors, where she was once the world No. 3 player built on two doubles Grand Slams in Australian and French Open. — John Bryan Ulanday

Red Sox snap cold spell with win over Guardians

A PAIR of sixth-inning runs helped the host Boston Red Sox edge the Cleveland Guardians 3-1 on Monday night in the opener of a four-game series.

After Rob Refsnyder walked to lead off the frame, Alex Verdugo doubled him home to give Boston a 2-1 lead. Xander Bogaerts’ base hit moved Verdugo to third, and Christian Vazquez singled him home to give Boston a cushion it would retain to snap a five-game losing streak.

Yolmer Sanchez also drove in a run for the Red Sox, who hadn’t won since before the All-Star break.

Zach Plesac (2-8) allowed all three runs in addition to three hits in five innings of work. He walked three and struck out four.

John Schreiber (3-1) worked 1 1/3 scoreless innings of relief and picked up two strikeouts. Starter Nick Pivetta was strong across 5 2/3 innings, allowing just one run on seven hits with six strikeouts. He walked three.

Garrett Whitlock picked up his second save of the season. The right-hander retired all six batters he faced in order, fanning two of them.

Jose Ramirez and Myles Straw both went 2-for-4 for a Cleveland offense that didn’t record an extra-base hit. Ramirez drove in Straw with a single in the fifth for the lone Guardians run.

The Red Sox got on the board with back-to-back hits in the third inning just before a 38-minute rain delay began.

Jackie Bradley Jr. led off the inning with a double off the Green Monster and crossed the plate on Sanchez’s line-drive single into the left-field corner. It was Sanchez’s second RBI in just as many days, and he’s hit safely in two of four games since being recalled from Triple-A Worcester last week.

Cleveland didn’t get on the scoreboard until the fifth when Ramirez flicked a game-tying base hit inside the third-base bag.

Trevor Stephan and Sam Hentges each provided 2/3 of an inning out of the Guardians bullpen, and James Karinchak struck out four across 1 2/3 scoreless frames. — Reuters

Shareef O’Neal, son of Shaq, signing with G League Ignite

SHAREEF O’Neal is signing with the G League Ignite after going unselected in last month’s NBA draft.

“VEGAS LETS DO IT!!” the son of Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal tweeted Monday, referencing the city where the Ignite is based. “Thank you ignite!”

The Athletic reported O’Neal signed “a six-figure contract” with the Ignite.

The G League Ignite was formed in 2020 as an alternative development route for elite NBA prospects to pursue instead of college basketball, but those who have played collegiately and turned pro are also eligible. The Ignite play an exhibition schedule of G League opponents and international teams.

The 2022-23 Ignite roster will include O’Neal, former five-star high school prospect Scoot Henderson, Washington State transfer Efe Abogidi, Canadian five-star Leonard Miller and French 18-year-old Sidy Cissoko.

The Ignite had three players selected in last month’s draft — Australian Dyson Daniels (No. 8 overall), MarJon Beauchamp (No. 24) and Jaden Hardy (second round, No. 37).

O’Neal, 22, played for the Lakers in the NBA Summer League this month. In two games he averaged 4.5 points and 3.5 rebounds over 9.6 minutes per game.

O’Neal played 13 games for UCLA in 2019-20 before transferring to LSU for two seasons. In 37 career NCAA games, he averaged 2.6 points and 3.0 rebounds per game. He averaged 50 percent from the floor for the Tigers last season, including 60 percent from 2-point range. Reuters

PHL chess team off to Solo, Indonesia for ASEAN Para Games

DAMIANO LINGAURI

THE Philippine team seeing action in the 11th ASEAN Para Games slated July 30 to Aug. 6 in Solo, Indonesia left the country yesterday with one goal in mind—make the country proud.

The bulk of the 212-strong delegation flew to Solo via a chartered flight arranged by the Philippine Sports Commission that included an optimistic 22-strong chess team seeking to harvest multiple gold medals.

“We will do our best for the country,” said national para chess tean coach James Infiesto, whose team will be bannered by quadruple 2018 Jakarta Asian Games gold medalist Sander Severino.

The PSC had given its full support to the team via the P31.7 million released to cover the Nationals’ actual participation not to mention the P10.4 million for training equipment, supplies and uniforms and P7.7 million for their bubble training months before.

“We support our national para-athletes as much as we support our abled athletes. This is their chance to raise the flag again in the 11th ASEAN Para Games,” said PSC executive director and officer-in-charge Atty. Guillermo B. Iroy Jr.

“We wish them all the best this APG. They are the greatest pride of the country, especially for the PWD community. We are all behind them, win or lose,” he added.

Chess is one of the sports the country is expected to draw its victories and help duplicate, if not surpass, its 20-gold, 20-silver and 20-bronze medal haul in the biennial games that will finally push through after several cancellations and postponements due to the pandemic.

The team will also to try to improve on its four-gold, three-silver, nine-bronze haul in Kuala Lumpur where Severino encountered some rough patches and wound up with three mints.

But with the addition of blitz where the country is strong at and the strengthening of the women’s team with the arrival of Cheyzer Mendoza, a talented former University of the Philippines standout, there were high hopes the Filipino chessers could reach new heights.

Chess will stake a total of 36 golds—12 in standard, 12 in rapid and 12 in blitz—spread in different classes of disability.

RLC Residences is heading to Ironman 70.3 in Cebu this August

WITNESS RLC Residences raise the bar yet again as it joins this year’s most awaited global triathlon event in Cebu as part of the run leg.

“We are thrilled to be part of this year’s event, as this is a testament to how RLC Residences has come full circle in the game of elevating the lives of people who they build condominiums for,” RLC Residences Head of Marketing and Chief Integration Officer,  Karen Cesario shares.

Not many know, but RLC Residences has been part of the first Ironman held in Cebu in 2012, through its project AmiSa Private Residences. AmiSa Private Residences, a destination home located in Mactan, Cebu has since then been part of this three-part race, welcoming triathletes as they take on the course’s run phase along the breathtaking views of the Punta Engano coastline.   

The Amisa Private Residences has been part of the run course of the IRONMAN 70.3 since it moved to Cebu in 2012.

This year, RLC Residences has taken a more active part in Ironman 70.3 as it lines up a number of activities for participants and spectators alike. Visitors of Ironman’s 4-day expo are in for a treat, with exclusive RLC Residences merchandise up for grabs designed to beat the heat and much ideal for sports fans & enthusiasts.

“Participants of this year’s Ironman 70.3 coming from various parts of the globe, will surely find the run interesting”. We hope to continue to be able to showcase this wonderful home and the many possibilities it presents to investors,” Cesario shares. Moreso now as Tower D comes with all the upgrades in the living spaces and amenities.

And to cap off RLC Residences’ participation in this year’s Ironman is the creation of its Triathlon team composed of athletic enthusiasts from Robinsons Land Corporation’s various business units. Headlined by RLC Residences’ Brand Management Head, Dan Carlo Torres, the team hopes to inspire the RLC Residences community to pursue an active and healthy lifestyle.

Celtic Durant?

At face value, the idea that the Celtics, runners-up in the immediate past season of the National Basketball Association, would entertain the thought of breaking up their core group sounds absurd. Why would they risk disrupting chemistry — a critical but often elusive factor for even the most talented assemblies of stars — simply because of the possibility that the grass is greener on the other side? Have they forgotten about the saying “plus valet in minibus avis unica quam dupla silvis”? The annals of pro hoops are littered with examples of flameouts arising from those who ignore how much a bird in the hand is worth versus the two in the bush.

That said, the temptation of welcoming future Hall of Famer Kevin Durant into the fold seems too much to overcome. Not that the Celtics are wrong to entertain the thought; after all, the 12-time All-Star is a generational talent worth the assets — outside of reigning Eastern Conference Most Valuable Player awardee Jayson Tatum, of course — they will probably have to give up in exchange. He’s that good, period, and far be it for the green and white to immediately balk at the prospect of spreading the welcome mat for him. And it’s not as if he hasn’t already shown he can fit in with talents of proven contenders; two titles with the Warriors prove the malleability of his otherworldly skills.

To be sure, talks with the Nets are, at best, at the infancy stages, and not just because Durant’s current employers have seen fit to exact what they deem to be the right pound of flesh as payment. The asking price for him remains astronomical, although it’s one that the Celtics can actually cover should they so desire. What’s under consideration isn’t whether they’re capable of acceding to the demands; it’s whether they should. And they haven’t even assessed yet if his sensitive skin fits New England sensibilities; fans are intensely loyal, but they can likewise be savage in their criticism of the warts of supposed stalwarts.

Bottom line, the Celtics will not pull the trigger on any deal they feel compromises their view of the horizon. Durant’s an old 33, with major surgeries to his name, and they’ll be giving up prominent figures of their youth movement for him. Head of hoops operations Brad Stevens has his work cut out for him. Should he go for it? Or should he keep building on what he already has? The answers figure to shape the Celtics’ future for some time to come.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Glaciers vanishing at record rate in Alps following heatwaves

A WOMAN walks on the ice to a measuring point on the Pers Glacier near the Alpine resort of Pontresina, Switzerland, July 21, 2022. — REUTERS

MORTERATSCH GLACIER, Switzerland — From the way 45-year-old Swiss glaciologist Andreas Linsbauer bounds over icy crevasses, you would never guess he was carrying 10 kg of steel equipment needed to chart the decline of Switzerland’s glaciers.

Normally, he heads down this path on the massive Morteratsch Glacier in late September, the end of the summer melt season in the Alps. But exceptionally high ice loss this year has brought him to this 15-square-kilometer amphitheater of ice two months early for emergency maintenance work.

The measuring poles he uses to track changes in the depth of the pack are at risk of dislodging entirely as the ice melts away and he needs to drill new holes.

The Alps’ glaciers are on track for their highest mass losses in at least 60 years of record keeping, data shared exclusively with Reuters shows. By looking at the difference in how much snow fell in winter, and how much ice melts in the summer, scientists can measure how much a glacier has shrunk in any given year.

Since last winter, which brought relatively little snowfall, the Alps have sweltered through two big early summer heatwaves — including one in July marked by temperatures near 30 Celsius (86 Fahrenheit) in the Swiss mountain village of Zermatt.

During this heatwave, the elevation at which water froze was measured at a record high of 5,184 meters — at an altitude higher than Mont Blanc’s — compared with the normal summer level of between 3,000-3,500 meters.

“It’s really obvious that this is an extreme season,” Mr. Linsbauer said, shouting over the roar of rushing meltwater as he checked the height of a pole jutting out of the ice.

Most of the world’s mountain glaciers — remnants of the last ice age — are retreating due to climate change. But those in the European Alps are especially vulnerable because they are smaller with relatively little ice cover. Meanwhile, temperatures in the Alps are warming at around 0.3C per decade — around twice as fast as the global average.

If greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, the Alps glaciers are expected to lose more than 80% of their current mass by 2100. Many will disappear regardless of whatever emissions action is taken now, thanks to global warming baked in by past emissions, according to a 2019 report by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Already, Morteratsch is much changed from the glacier depicted on the region’s tourist maps. The long tongue that once reached deep into the valley below has shrunk back by nearly 3 kilometers (2 miles), while the depth of the snow and ice pack has thinned by up to 200 meters (656 feet). A parallel glacier Pers flowed into it until 2017 but has now receded so much that an expanding strip of grit lies between them.

The dire situation this year raises concern that the Alps’ glaciers might vanish sooner than expected. With more years like 2022, that could happen, said Matthias Huss, who leads Glacier Monitoring Switzerland (GLAMOS).

“We are seeing model results expected a few decades in the future are happening now,” Mr. Huss said. “I did not expect to see such an extreme year so early in the century.”

NO SNOW, HIGH HEAT
Reuters spoke with glaciologists in Austria, France, and Italy who confirmed that glaciers there were on track for record losses. In Austria, “the glaciers are snow-free up to the summits,” said Andrea Fischer, a glaciologist at the Austrian Academy of Sciences.

Seasonal snowfall, apart from replenishing ice lost during summer, protects glaciers from further melt by providing a white cover that reflects sunlight back out to the atmosphere better than darker ice — sullied by dust or pollution — can do.

But at the Grand Etret glacier in northwest Italy, only 1.3 meters of snow had accumulated during this past winter — 2 meters less than the annual average for the 20 years up to 2020.

This year’s Alpine ice losses, registered even before the biggest melt month of August, surprised scientists to some extent, as many of the glaciers had already lost their lower-lying snouts. Because they had retreated up the mountain, where temperatures are cooler, scientists thought they should have been better protected.

“You can easily imagine the final results after summer will be … extensive loss of glacier coverage in the Italian Alps,” said Marco Giardino, vice president of the Italian Glaciological Committee.

Data shared exclusively with Reuters shows that Morteratsch is now shedding about 5 centimeters (2 inches) a day and is already in a worse state than it would normally be at the end of an average summer, according to data from GLAMOS and the Universite libre de Bruxelles.

The nearby Silvretta Glacier has lost about 1 meter (3.3 feet) more than at the same point in 1947 — the worst year in its database stretching back to 1915.

HIMALAYAN THAW
Himalayan glaciers are also on track for a record ice loss year, scientists told Reuters. When the summer monsoon season arrived in the Kashmir region, for example, many glaciers had already been shrunk drastically, with their snowlines starting high up the mountain, after a March-May heatwave marked by temperatures above 48C (118F) in northern India.

An early June expedition in India’s Himachal Pradesh found that the Chhota Shigri Glacier had lost much of its snow cover. “The highest temperature in over a century in March through May clearly had its impacts,” said glaciologist Mohd Farooq Azam at the Indian Institute of Technology Indore.

Vanishing glaciers are already endangering lives and livelihoods. Earlier this month, a glacier collapse on the Marmolada in Italy killed 11 people.

Days later, a collapsing glacier in the Tian Shan mountains of eastern Kyrgyzstan triggered a massive avalanche, sending ice and rocks hurdling toward passing tourists.

Above the Swiss village of Saas Fee, a path leading to a mountain hut once passed through a summer snowfield on top of the Chessjen Glacier.

“It’s too dangerous now,” due to the risk of falling rocks, once held together by hard-frozen ice, said hutkeeper Dario Andenmatten while gazing out over a barren landscape dotted with glacial lakes. Nearby, the rumble of stones tumbling from the mountain could be heard.

Swiss residents worry that the glacier losses will hurt their economy. Some area ski resorts of the Alps, which rely on these glaciers, now cover them with white sheets to reflect sunlight and reduce melting.

Swiss glaciers feature in many of the country’s fairy tales, and the Aletsch Glacier is considered a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Losing the glaciers “means losing our national heritage, our identity,” said hiker Bernardin Chavaillaz. “It’s sad.” — Reuters

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