Showing posts with label Mens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mens. Show all posts

The Recap: UK Open Nationals 2021

Editor: Hazard (he/him)

Nationals is over! Very well done to Clapham for winning the tournament (again), and to Alba for winning spirit of the game. These articles are simply going to be giving each team a space to write a few thoughts on the tournament, in order of finishing.

Open is also the only division in which any team accepted spots to represent the UK at EUCF (the European Championships). Both Clapham and Smash'D will be heading out to Belgium. Best of luck to them both, but also well done to all teams for a fantastic weekend.

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Other Coverage

Full results can be found on the schedule.

The ShowGame are doing weekly podcasts every Friday/Saturday covering all the action.

Hogi filmed some games this weekend. You can see his watchalong on Twitch, or watch the game footage on YouTube.

Ulti.tv filmed a lot of Nationals, and streamed it for free to the public on their YouTube. You can support them and find out more on their Patreon.

Photo albums can be found with UltimouatGraham Shellswellmaio2zaiparen, and the ShowGame

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Results

1. Clapham Ultimate

2. Chevron Action Flash

3. Alba (Spirit)

4. Devon Ultimate

5. Smash'D

6. Ka-pow!

7. Bristol Open

8. Leamington Lemmings Open


The Saturday pool results for Open Nationals



The Sunday knockout bracket for Open Nationals



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Recaps


1st Place: Clapham

Andy LewisThis year Clapham celebrated it's 20th proper season. The expectations both internally and externally to take a 20th National Championship were high, expectations which were almost immediately tested by a hungry Alba squad. The entire game was dominated by D rolls with the CU O line feeling the most pressure since 2019. After a shaky start (7-3/4?) the O line got their feet under them and the D line managed the claw back enough breaks to win by 2! 

Ironically, the game before this saw a very different O line performance where Bristol posted the best hold rate against the CU D line. A hard and loose game against Lemmings Open rounded out our pool games in an enjoyable way! 

We drew Devon in our Semi, who I suspect were perhaps already thinking ahead to the bronze medal game and didn't summon the fire that has made scraps with Devon greatly enjoyable in the past. We won fairly comfortably at 15-3.

We did manage to watch the end of an incredibly tense game between Alba and Chev to see who we would play in the final. While a repeat of our Alba game would have been greatly enjoyable (if stressful) it was also fantastic to play CU's old nemesis of Chev. While the game started well for us, Chevron did manage to claw back a few breaks after half. However, we managed to regain control of the game to close out the win and inevitably get blasted in the face by Connor McHale's Champagne. On to Bruges and see you there Smash'D!


2nd Place: Chevron Action Flash

Sadly no one from Chevron ever answered my calls and I couldn't find anything on social medias, so please accept this highlight of them in the final as coverage. If any Chevronians do want to send me a paragraph, feel free to drop me a line.


3rd Place: Alba

Andrew Warnock (he/him)It was the one that could have been, or maybe should have been for us. Frustrating close moments, but moments of absolute class summed up our nationals. Trading throughout the first half in our first match with Lemmings probably wasn’t the best way to start, but that was due to Lemmings being surprisingly good, and us shaking off the rust at the first tournament in a couple years – we eventually won that game 15-7.

Next up was the Clapham pool game. I’m not sure if anyone genuinely thought we could win it before the match, but we talked about it as a “free shot” with nothing to lose and then we kinda went out and f***ed them up in the first half with breaks galore from both sides. Honestly one of the craziest matches I will ever play in, definitely the best Alba has ever played to that point. With a few points to go, and still up, we realised that if there was ever a doubt before, we were a serious outfit and we fully deserved all the hype there was around us going into Nationals. In the end Clapham won the game 12-10, and deservedly so with some stupidly big grabs and D’s from the usual lads like Justin Foord and Ollie Gordon (#CatchesWinMatches). Gutting loss, but actually not too important. A semi-comfortable win against Bristol on the stream set up the inevitable semi against Chevron. 

This one was different because we were expecting to win it. There were more nerves, a big ol' sideline and questionable decisions on both sides, but holy s**t was it exciting. Having played in the game I remember surprisingly little of it, the first half had mini peaks and troughs for both teams, and I think Chev took half by one (??). But towards the end we started to make a few extra mistakes, and apparently one of us dropped the pull but I have no idea who that was, great banter though. However, a D roll from us sets up a universe point… obviously that was going to happen. And like the 2 universe losses to Chev before this, we got a turn and didn’t quite put it in. Chev score, and we’ve now lost 2 incredibly close games, against the 2 best open teams in the country. We were gutted, and still will be till next year. 

The 3v4 we played Devon and won – lolWe found out after that game we won spirit, just a testament at this team’s ability to leave absolutely everything on the pitch and still come away as the good guys. Next time we’ll do that but also have a Nats trophy alongside it.


4th Place: Devon 1

Matt BoltonDevon's season priority was reconciling an influx of players on the O line with a new system over a handful of split-team league games and relatively few trainings. The weekend's results show we didn't nail it - relying on an absolutely mutant D line to shore up errors and miscommunications, and getting blown out when that didn't work. We fiddled with stuff after the Chev game, then again after Clapham but next season we can begin again from the ground up. 

Clapham - 3-15 Oof. The issues we'd been worrying about were all laid bare in this game - sucks to suck.

Our 3rd vs 4th place game against Alba ended up 6-13. This was an enjoyable match that started very close with a couple of monster points heading towards half, before getting progressively less close as Alba built momentum.

Jaimie Rabbetts getting big for Devon against Smash'D. Photo Credit: Graham Shellswell. Find more Nationals photos here


5th Place: Smash'D

Chun Lee: I will keep this short and sweet, like my fellow captain Jake Betson. Overall it was a great weekend for us, we played some really good games and had such a great time on and off the field.

In terms of the Devon game, we were looking forward to it the most and it certainly didn’t disappoint. Regardless of the controversial calls and the 11-12 sudden-death loss, it was a very enjoyable game and we learnt a lot from it.

We now have Euros coming up which will be a lot of fun, but more importantly it will also be a good opportunity to get playing experience against top teams, which will allow us to continue improving as a team.


6th Place: Ka-Pow

Lucas Main and Max RexOur goal for 2021 was to get a squad of players out playing Frisbee regularly with their mates, to give it our best college try in the league and if we made it to Nationals that was a bonus. Having achieved these goals, we needed a new goal, why not create a common enemy that wasn't sprints or our own captains. We decided we wanted to ruin Devon's weekend, nothing against them, just happened to be our first game and the perfect scapegoat to rally a team around. An arch nemesis established, we went into the weekend in good spirits, despite missing ten players from the squad. Losing an additional three players during play on Saturday didn't help, so we had to build chemistry through the tournament – it might not come through from reading the score lines, but we were definitely able to achieve that. 

Saturday morning loomed and despite breaking Devon on the first point of the tournament we couldn't quite gel together quick enough and lost handily to the experienced monster squad from the coast. Smash'D was next and used their adrenaline-fuelled angst to get the better of us. Then, just like a stall 1 hammer, out of nowhere we are 6-5 up against Chevron leading by a break in our final game of Saturday. Ka-Pow! had done what it wasn't able to do all season, score more than 4 points in a game against the squad from all-over-England. It was short lived as we started to lose steam and Chevy clearly decided it was time to put an end to the shenanigans. Saturday ends with 3 people injured, 3 loses and laughs all around as we reflected on what was a very successful day, results notwithstanding. 

Sunday morning of a tournament weekend dawned - something some of us hadn't encountered for almost 2 years. Easily our closest game of the tournament, as Bristol pushed us all the way earning the right to play universe point, but we were able to hang on to get our only win. Our second game against Smash'D in the 5th vs 6th game showed how much we came together through the weekend. Both teams were going all out for the win, and it was close the whole way through. Smash'D were able to get a couple of key late breaks which sealed the win. A final result of 1W-4L is not bad for a team of about 70% rookies who were all very different people from when they rolled into Nottingham on Friday night. 

Nationals was a great success for the Ka-Pow! team. It gives us a great foundation for what is hopefully a more "normal" 2022 season where we will be able to pursue a higher finish and qualify for Euros.


7th Place: Bristol Open

Jake Waller (he/him)Despite exceeding our own expectations (and seemingly every round of predictions) in making it to Nats, we weren't stopping there. Trading half a dozen points with Clapham, and managing the highest offensive conversion rate against the Clapham D-line of all the teams there, was a definite highlight. The multiple Clapham defenders that got skied by Chris Diles for a huge goal will be glad that match wasn't filmed! 

We gave a good account of ourselves against Alba on stream too, and saw off Lemmings twice more after first beating them in the Cup semi-finals. Ka-pow! was the only game we came away from with significant regrets, as a sleepy start gave us too much to do, despite taking it to universe. 

All in all, we have to be happy with matching Bristol's best Open Nats finish on record, but we're determined to improve next season. Doing so without the departing George Imbert will be a challenge, but one I know this group is up for!

Bristol Open spitting facts on Instagram


8th Place: Leamington Lemmings

James Selley and Dan McLeanAfter a clutch qualifying game against EMO, Lemmings at Open Nationals suddenly became a reality, and to say we were excited would be an understatement. Coming into the weekend, we knew we'd be fighting an uphill battle against the best teams in the country, if not Europe, and we were determined to bring it to them to show we deserve our place in the top 8.

On Saturday, results went to seed with our closest score line against Bristol (who have proven to be our nemesis this season). Performance wise, we showed our competitive intentions with respectable score against Alba (tying at 6s before half at 8-6), before a final score of 15-7 which really set the precedent for the rest of the tournament and showed us how tough it would be. From here we had a close game with Bristol (as was in our league game), and wrapped up day one with what was both our most anticipated and worried about game... Clapham... We knew where we stood with them, but we still wanted to get out there and show what we had, with some of us putting in some of our finest performance of the weekend against the best of the best in front of a passionate sideline. 

Sunday was always where we thought we might be able to squeak some results. Our SF saw us match up against Smash’D in what was James's favourite game of the weekend. Although Smash’D came out winners 13-10, the way the Lemmings squad rallied in the second half (from 8-4 down) showed the quality of play we were capable of, despite multiple injuries. A re-re-match with Bristol closed out our weekend and credit to them they were clinical to the end. While we still demonstrated some top class ultimate, Bristol ultimately proved to be the better team this season. 

Reflecting on Lemming’s first ever Open Nationals it is obviously disappointing not to have got a W on the board but our performances and scores show we deserved our spot at the table. In the year of the rat it’s been a fantastic learning curve for the squad and a brilliant season for the club. Getting to nationals was a huge achievement for the club, and something that we'd like to make regular occurrence, as Lemmings can only go up from here!

The Recap: Open National League and Cup QF/SF

  Editor: Hazard (he/him)

The Open League/Cup is now finally coming to an end. A total of 32 teams (26 cup + 6 league) entered, and Clapham, Chevron, Alba, Smash'D, and Bristol have guaranteed their place at Nationals. Clapham have also claimed victory in the league, and Smash'D vs Bristol will be the cup final.

The remaining spots are assigned in the playoffs. Unlike in the Women's/Mixed divisions, only 3 spots are available. Devon are guaranteed 4th in the league, whereas Ka-pow! and EMO have one final game to determine 5th/6th.

CU Legends vs Lemmings is a seeding game between the two losing cup semi-finalists.

The winner of that game plays the 6th-placed League team (Ka-pow/EMO) in a gtg*.

The loser of that game plays the 5th-placed League team (Ka-pow/EMO) in a gtg.

EDI vs Devon 2 occurs for seeding between the remaining Cup teams, with the winner facing the 4th place League team (Devon 1) in a final gtg.

The loser of EDI vs Devon 2 is knocked out.

*gtg = game-to-go, a qualifying game for Nationals



Here is the final structure of the playoffs, with the decisive EMO vs Ka-Pow league game also shown.

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Other Coverage

The ShowGame are doing weekly podcasts every Friday/Saturday covering all the action

Hogi has been filming lots of games. You can see his watchalongs on Monday on Twitch, or watch the game footage on YouTube

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Structure

The overall championship is the UK National Series. Within it, teams compete for 8 spots at the National Championships. An easy to read graphic is included below.

We have 6 National League teams. They play in a mini-league. Clapham, Chevron and Alba gained Nationals spots through this route.

We also have the National Cup, with Bristol and Smash'D reaching the final to take two more spots to Nationals.

The remaining 3 National League teams (Devon 1, Ka-Pow!, and EMO), the two Cup semi-finalists (Lemmings, CU Legends), and two recovery-winner Cup quarter finalists (EDI and Devon 2) enter the National Playoffs. These seven teams are fighting for 3 spots at the National Championships.

Taken from UKU's guide to 2020/21 Ultimate

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National League

Clapham  15 - 10  Alba

Location: Sheffield

Andy Lewis (Clapham)This was the kind of intense game that both teams had been waiting for since the return to play. Alba created excellent space for their star players to use aggressively and effectively. Combined with a roster that was athletic top to bottom they more then took the fight to Clapham finishing the half with a break a piece. The game was decided early in the second half where CU’s D line went on a 4 point roll against Alba’s O line. Possibly caused by Cameron Agnew apparently asking his team “not to chump it against Clapham in the second half”. Jinxes aside potential rematches at Nationals could come down to the wire with Alba certainly competing as an elite UK team!

Andrew Warnock (Alba, he/him)
We were pumped up to play Clapham and immediately showed in the first half we were capable of winning, not just competing. Our O-line looked clean as anything after having a few games to gel. 

Being only 1 break down at half, we talked about not being one of those teams that chumps it to Clapham in the 2nd half, but then decided that's exactly what we should do (helped by some stupidly good grabs from Conrad Wilson and Andrew Hillman). 

 All in all we were more disappointed with the game than happy cause it felt like a missed opportunity, but more than a few positives to take away and work on before Nats. Also shout out to Ross Nugent for his 5 minute you guys were all sh*te and should be ashamed of yourselves speech.


Alba  15 - 5  Ka-Pow!

Location: Sheffield

Andrew Warnock (Alba, he/him)We played Kapow and they had sh*t chants that were semi good patter


Chevron  15 - 5  EMO

Location: 

We don't currently have a report for this game




National League 2021
MixedWomen'sOpen
TeamPlayedWinsLossesGDTeamPlayedWinsLossesGDTeamPlayedWinsLossesGD
Reading44031SMOG55037Clapham44028
SMOG33021ICENI54122Chevron54*115
Mighty Hucks42212Bristol53224Alba53220
Deep Space413-11SYC52*3-11Devon523**4
Birmingham413-25SCRAM51*4-31EMO202-22
Glasgow303-28RED505**-40Kapow404-35

*SYC, SCRAM, and Chevron have all benefitted from being forfeited against
**RED have forfeited two games, Devon have forfeited one


National Cup


Lemmings  15 - 10  EDI

Location: Leeds

Cameron Dick (EDI, he/him): Roasting day in Leeds with Lemmings having the "home advantage" (130 miles vs 215 miles). Two equally matched teams trading at the start of the game. EDI took a couple of points to create a small 2 point lead before Lemmings switched their defensive looks. Their zone was effective in shutting down what we wanted to do and led to our offence having some unusual blunders. Lemmings took half and were steadfast in their zone during our low spell. We started to piece things together in the final 10 minutes of the game, but it was far too late. Shout out to Adam Sweeney for his defensive plays and Adam "Spaggers" McKenzie for his fortitude over his cooking ability.

James Selley (Lemmings)Lemmings rocked up to Leeds for the second Saturday on the bounce, this time the Open squad looking to emulate the success of their Mixed counterparts and qualify for Nationals. EDI had brought a sizable contingent south of the border for this game and forced a break in the very first point. Lemmings knew this game would be a step up from our previous cup games and a combination of EDI’s ability to throw the inside break and execute well worked deep shots exemplified this.

With a squad that was ‘freshened up’ with a few new faces and given no guests from the mixed squad it took the Lemmings O some time to gel especially in the face of some tight match D and well worked Zone to match transitions. Eventually Lemmings did manage to start grinding out some scrappy points breaking through the zone and stealing back a break of our own to take half 8-7

Lemmings came out in the 2nd half with a renewed focus, having learnt our lessons we switched to a zone defence, taking away some of the danger options for EDI and forcing them to work in the heat for every single metre made. This tactic paid increasing dividends, pushing the handlers deeper and limiting their deep options. With the heat beginning to take its toll on both squads Lemmings showed increasing composure on O to convert our turns and, despite a late rally from EDI, take the game 15-10.


Bristol  14 - 12  Lemmings

Location: Leeds

Jake Waller (Bristol, he/him)After having a scrappy R0 game to ‘focus up’ was cited as a factor in our dismantling of Reading in R1, Oxford’s late withdrawal from their QF match* with us meant the tables had turned for our semi-final against Lemmings. And with co-captains, R1 stars and young guns all missing through isolation, unavailability, and injury, how would we possibly cope? After all, the Midlands men had seen off EDI in impressive fashion, finishing very strongly under our unfocused gaze. Our recently-crocked sideline champion and waterboy supreme Owen Lane suggested we needed to come out firing and since he’s a smart guy with lots of degrees, we took his advice. 

A quick, clean hold first point was a good start, and we broke to make it 4-2 early on before Lemmings fought back. The heat meant both teams were taking a few shortcuts, and despite our D line generating not just turns but blocks almost every point, Lemmings put together their own great D run to take a 7-6 lead. Cleaner O and superb defence brought us level and then took half, as well as the first point after it. From there, the game more or less traded out, as athletic plays bailed out questionable decisions from both teams. Despite throwing one such jump ball, Chris Diles was a machine, running his defenders ragged as we ground out the second half. Holding a 13-12 lead in the cap, we looked to have given the disc up with a tight endzone shot that zipped by its intended receivers, but James “what shoulder injury?” Taylor made a gravity-defying layout grab to end an enjoyable match and send us into the Cup final.

*ed's note: our bad

James Selley (Lemmings)With the temperature touching 30 degrees Lemmings were straight into the Semi-final against a Bristol team who had received a bye for their QF owing to Oxford pulling out to focus on their mixed commitments. Lemmings knew this was going to be a battle both physically and mentally after the exertions in our previous game and with a ticket to nationals on the line.

Unsurprisingly Bristol came out firing on the first few points, looking to capitalise on their fresh legs forcing a break on Lemming’s first O points. Bristol had obviously done their scouting of our game against EDI and the Lemmings zone had mixed success against stronger handler movement forcing us to expend more energy on match D. Throughout the game it felt like Bristol were threatening on O, looking to attack the break side and generate space for deep shots which more often than not they managed to bring down even with what might be considered ‘speculative’ cross field shots to the endzone more frequently seen indoors. Lemmings did manage to force their way back into contention in the first half, even starting ‘galaxy’ (eugh) point on O but another Bristol break saw them take half 8-7. 

Bristol broke again at the start of the second half and despite a valiant fightback from Lemmings, saw out the game 14-12. Huge credit to the Lemmings squad. Fatigue, injuries and cramp leading to several of the squad playing through the wall. Notable shout outs to Stevie Loat (currently training for a marathon to raise money for a great cause https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/stephen-loat) who must have iron manned the entire second half and was everywhere on defence and George Pickens who at times was un-guardable.

As a personal comment, I want to take nothing away from Bristol, they played some lovely Ultimate, were well spirited and did exactly what they needed to do to take their spot at Nationals, as the old adage goes ‘you can only beat what’s put in front of you’ so well done to them. However: I’d like to think anyone who played a league, cup or challenge match on Saturday would acknowledge how tough the conditions were. After a battle in our QF, playing a Cup semi-final against a team that was fresh from a bye doesn’t seem balanced and personally leaves a bitter taste in the mouth. I can understand Oxford’s motives for pulling out, after all Lemmings are competing on two fronts as well, however I would be interested to know how teams like Flump or Manchester (who I assume would have relished a spot in the quarter finals) feel about how this situation has played out*. Congrats to Bristol, I hope we get a rematch at Nationals and thanks to EDI, both games were intense but well spirited, a highlight of the season so far.

*ed's note: Fully agree, we knew a couple of days in advance we couldn't go so I was hoping someone else would be able to come in and take our place when it turned out we were unable to.


Smash'D  15 - 8  BLU

Location: Reading

Willem Garnier (Smash'D)BLU came out with a zone right from the start, perhaps smartly looking to save some energy in the sweltering heat (or potentially out of fear after spotting Akito Oyama's tree-trunk calves?). Our offence looked confident throughout, methodically working the disc up the pitch while the boys in BLU did their best to keep chasing the disc despite the heat. 

First half was pretty tight as our defence probably took a while to figure out BLU's offence, but we eventually managed to pull away in the second half with some unfortunate mistakes by BLU on their break chances (again, the heat likely didn't help). While I heard this was a grudge match for some of the Brighton boys, it felt very cleanly played and well spirited on both sides (hopefully BLU agrees) throughout. I had a great time. 

Shout-out to Dom "the best player Felix has ever coached" Burnham for a massive zone-shattering hammer, Will "Will Seth" Seth for an incredible layout D just before half, and of course BLU's Cam "scored against Revolver at worlds" Samuels for scoring against Revolver at worlds.

 

Clapham Ultimate Legends  15 - 7  Devon 2

Location: Reading

Ben Bruin (Devon 1): Clapham started strong with very few errors and and a solid zone. Dev 2 strangled to get any flow to begin with and made a lot of errors as they were forced into some less than ideal options. Clapham went 5-1 up before Dev 2 switched on, but soon brought it back with Clapham taking half 8-6. Dev 2 caused more turns in the second half but couldn't convert and Clapham's zone continued to cause issues as Dev 2 tried to swing it around the back without gaining many yards. Clapham closed out the game 15-7. 

Magnus Wilson (CU Legends): The game ebbed and flowed against a young but skilled Devon team. We started surprisingly well and Devon took a bit of time to hit their stride. 4-0. Devon then got going and went on a good run. 5-4. In the end there was just enough wind for our zone to frustrate Devon, but they made us work hard until the end. 

 


Smash'D  15 - 7  Clapham Ultimate Legends

Location: Reading

Willem Garnier (Smash'D)Our second time playing a team of legends in a day, weirdly enough they too came out with a zone right off the bat. Again, it never troubled our offence too much. Shout-out to Clapham reject Jake Betson with a filthy (potentially even disrespectful) stall one breakside huck from the brick mark to the back of the endzone to take half. 
The story of the game was probably our D line going on a massive roll to put us up 7-1 in the first half before the stubborn old men of Clapham finally gave up and changed their offence.

The game was a lot tighter after that, but with an O-line as clinical as ours was we never felt too much pressure once we'd earned that early lead. They (obviously) had some great players which were really fun to mark and be marked by, I think everyone really enjoyed the game (except possibly some of the younger Clapham retirees which perhaps weren't used to losing by that margin outside of the US). I hear that we "restored Brummie's faith in UK ultimate", too. Final shout-out goes out to Fire for scoring more points against us than either of these teams did.

Magnus Wilson (CU Legends)Smash'D are a quality team. They brought the energy and athleticism you'd expect from a U24-ish team and had a lot more organisation and composure than I expected. We were sloppy with the disc in the first half and couldn't get close to them on D. I hope they can cause some upsets in the top 4 at Nationals, but it remains to be seen how they will cope with the significant step up in quality that they'll face. 

Another enjoyable weekend for the Legends with more people coming out of the woodwork (Si Weeks, Kai, Brummie & Parslow) plus Sam Hill adding some much needed youth (wearing his father's shirts that are older than him). If any CU alumni are reading this and are interested in the next round, please get in touch.


Devon 2  15 - 12  BLU

Location: Reading

Ben Bruin (Devon 1)Much better start from Dev 2 as they managed to get into their rhythm early and break first point. Both teams then traded for several points and neither team could capitalise on the errors made as the heat took its toll. Dev managed another break or two before half as they became more patient on the disc and tidied things up, along with a couple of saving grabs from Ali Todd. Second half started well for Dev 2 with more breaks coming from their tight man defence and a couple of layout D's from Rhodri Williams taking the score to 11-7. BLU then began to force a few errors out of Dev 2 and connect on their long game as a late comeback began. BLU brought it back to 14-12, but it was just too big of an ask in the heat and Dev 2 closed out the game on O to make it 15-12.



A graphic showing the open cup structure. Credit to u/smoothconch on the UK Ultimate subreddit



University Indoors in the Past Decade

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