Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting ‘She has worked the hardest I have ever seen someone work’

‘She has worked the hardest I have ever seen someone work’

The hope of finding somewhere to turn when there is seemingly no place to go is, at best, a paralyzing one. Especially when that someone is not even five years old. Amira Smiley was born in Lexington, Kentucky, in 2002, just under three years before her sister, Gia. Born to parents Joe and Missy, the sisters were brought into a world steeped in unfathomable hardship. Before the game of golf helped to become a reliable staple in her life, Amira was forced to grow up way too soon in the face of way too much despair. “At a very young age, I was fending for myself and trying to raise my little sister, too,” said Amira, now 20. “We grew up too quickly and saw a lot of stuff people just should not ever be subjected to. When I was about four or five, me and my sister started living with my (paternal) grandmother, but it was very off and on. I would live with her for a few months until my parents had supposedly gotten their acts together. It was just a lot of back and forth.” With both battling drug addiction, parents Joe and Missy Smiley allowed a life to create itself around their two girls that no one should have to endure. “Amira was with me off and on from the day she was born,” said Parley Smiley, the girls’ grandmother. “She saw a lot in her childhood years that a person should never have to see or go through. I raised them just like I raised my own kids, which included teaching them about responsibility.” “I have to say, what I really think kept me from becoming a statistic are the people in my life, especially my grandmother,” Amira said. “She has been my mother, father, grandmother and grandfather. Her support has inspired me a lot. She has always encouraged us with things like school and pursuing all opportunities to further ourselves.” When Amira got a little older, Parley was awarded legal custody of the Amira and Gia. In the height of her middle school years in 2013, the girls’ mother, Missy, passed by a drug overdose. She was 37. Amira was 11. “The day that happened, I was living with my grandmother and playing outside,” Amira recalled. “My grandmother came outside and told us what had happened. She ended up being on life support for about five days.” Although her mother had already been declared brain dead, Amira had the opportunity for one final visit. “I did get final closure by being able to go and see her one last time,” Amira said. “Prior to that, because of another incident, I hadn’t seen her in over a year. I just felt a lot of ill feelings towards her for putting me through what she had. Honestly, I didn’t want to see her the last time I saw her. But, having the chance to do so one final time with her maybe somehow able to hear what I had to say gave me that final closure.” Ever since then, the girls’ father, Joe, has been in drug-related trouble with the law. After being released from jail in 2021, it wasn’t long before he was in trouble again. Currently homeless, Joe continues his battle with addiction. Amira sees him on occasion walking around, though she has decided it to be best for her to have no interaction with him at this point. “I always knew I wanted a different life for myself,” Amira said. “I had to grow up so quick and raise my sister and know what I had to protect her from. I didn’t want all that. I knew that I wanted to grow up and get married. If I had kids, I didn’t want them to have to experience what I had to.” Enter the game of golf. Interestingly, it was Amira’s father, a golf fanatic, who introduced his oldest daughter to the game. When Amira was just three years old, Joe would take her to the course to hit balls. “One of the guys who worked at the golf course told my dad he should keep me in the game of golf,” Amira said. “That guy saw potential even at that young age. But then, my dad got into trouble, and I couldn’t play golf anymore. So, I started playing basketball instead.” Amira played basketball through her freshman year at Henry Clay High School in Lexington, but it just didn’t capture her drive like the game of golf had at such a young age. “I’m the type of person who always needs to be active and doing something, and I didn’t get a lot of playing time in basketball” she said. “I thought back to golf and decided to try it out again.” “I don’t know a lot about golf, but I do see how much it’s meaning to her,” Parley said. “When she stopped playing basketball, she told me she thought she wanted to return to golf. She went and showed the golf coach what she could do, and he said, ‘yeah, there’s a spot on this team for you.’ From then on, that was it.” Amira began playing seriously her sophomore year at Henry Cook. “The first time I met Amira was on the driving range many years ago,” said Kevin Mims, Executive Director, First Tee – Greater Lexington and Amira’s former golf coach at Henry Cook. “Her dad had called me and said he wanted to see if she could play on my team. “I told him anybody can play on the team, and no one gets cut. If they can’t play golf, they can learn it.” Mims, though, was impressed by what he saw out of her on the range that first day. To help get a bit more information on her, Mims reached out to Amira’s basketball coach. “He said to me, and I quote, ‘you won’t find a harder worker or anyone that puts their head down and goes to it as hard as she does,’” said Mims. “Kevin and others encouraged me to keep playing and practicing, which made me fall in love with it even more,” Amira said. “The better I got at golf, the more fun I had.” “I truly believe golf is the most important part of Amira’s life,” said Alena Woodson, Amira’s friend. “Since finding golf, she has been able to go out there and focus on the good things about herself, as an individual, as opposed to all the bad things that have happened to her in her life. When she is out there, she is focusing on exactly what she loves most – golf.” When the golf coach at Transylvania University in Lexington reached out to Amira late in her high school career, he offered her a spot on the team. As a rising junior at Transylvania now, Amira looks back with confidence on her decision to not just pursue golf, but to stick with it. “I love the game now,” she said. “I not only like the game, but I like being able to use the game as a way to help impact other people at First Tee.” In addition to volunteering her time to teach kids at First Tee – Greater Lexington, but in keeping with the values and life skills ingrained in the program, Amira has actually broadened the spectrum of people who benefit from the game. “Later this month, I’ve arranged for First Tee kids to come with me to where I work at the Woodhill Community Center, which is a home for at-risk youth,” she said. “The kids I work with there are underprivileged kids who don’t really have the opportunity to play golf, so we’ve arranged to be able to bring golf to them and see if they might become interested in it as well.” “Last year, the team went to Elizabethtown, Kentucky,” said Mims. “One of the places we visited was an organization that helps combat sex trafficking and/or the sexual abuse of girls. Upon arrival, Amira was the first one through the doors after assuring Mims she had no qualms about sharing her story if it could help even one girl. “She marched straight in saying, ‘I’ll do anything, share my story…anything.’ She looked at me and said, ‘you just don’t know how close I was to being one of these girls.’” Amira also credits the Woodhill Community Center and its Urban Impact program, which provides a safe haven and activities for kids with problematic home lives. She began going to the center – which is a beneficiary of this week’s Barbasol Championship on the PGA TOUR, as is First Tee – Greater Lexington – in the third grade. “Amira may be hard-nosed, but she also has a heart as big as I’ve ever seen,” said Mims. “When Amira came along, we started taking the girls to the Woodhill Community Center on Wednesday nights, which Amira was instrumental in getting done. “I can’t speak highly enough about her. She is all about giving back.” Prior to Amira joining the golf team, Mims said the team practiced every day and competed in tournaments on Saturdays. On Wednesday nights, though, he added in team visits to assisted-living or nursing homes, to give these girls a broader view of what life was about. “Amira can – and will – do anything she puts her mind to,” said Eve Fox, Amira’s friend and college roommate. “She wants to be a fighter pilot and a great golfer. She’s definitely determined to do it all, and I know she will accomplish it all.” “I just want to have a good family when I get a little older,” Amira said. “I would like a husband and kids that would love and support me and let me love and support them. That’s something I’ve wanted ever since I was a kid, to give that love and respect. When I think about my life, I just want to have a positive impact on my kids and grandkids. I want my grandkids to feel about me the way I feel about my grandmother.” “She won’t settle for anything but the best,” said Parley. “She’s a very true person. If she says she’s going to do something, she does it. She’s a selfless person and very unique in my eyes.” To Amira, First Tee – Greater Lexington is a wonderful outlet for her to share her story and the lessons she has learned along the way. “She’s a leader that does so by doing,” said Mims. “She is all about integrity and doing what you say you’re going to do. She is used to responsibility and, I think, was forced to take too much on as a youngster.” And her game? “I think the best parts of my game are ball-striking and putting,” said Amira, whose best tournament score is 80. “I know that if I can just get it onto the green, I’m good to go.” “She has worked really hard at golf and has gotten really good at it,” said Fox. “She has taken me out on the course, and I’ve watched her do trick shots. It’s just really fun to watch her play. She’s also very serious about it and continually strives to get better.” For now, Amira’s plan after college is to join the military. She has become quite the skilled young pilot and is currently working to earn her private pilot’s license. Her sister Gia, now 17, graduated from high school back in May and is headed to a technical college to pursue a career in welding. “Amira is one of the most amazing people I have ever met,” said Woodson. “When you learn of her life story, you quickly see how easy it would’ve been for her to follow the path that everyone before her is on. But she has worked the hardest I have ever seen someone work, not at golf, but also in school. She just refuses to become a product of her environment.” “This stuff has always been a part of my life, but it’s stuff I’m getting through,” said Amira. “I’d like to believe it has made me a better and stronger person.” Never a doubt. And it has resulted in a remarkable young lady with everywhere to go, too.

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King of the DesertKing of the Desert

First impressions are often memorable, even if they don’t leave you with an accurate picture. The first time he caddied for Johnny Miller, for instance, Andy Martinez stood with the bag and watched his man hit a 5-iron to a flagstick on the back right of the green. “Just a beautiful fade to 5 feet right of the flag,â€� Martinez recalls. “But he was irked. I mean, he was really irked. I’m thinking, ‘What is this guy, nuts?’ It was a practice round!â€� Martinez soon discovered that Miller was far from nuts. “Fact is, he was one of the smartest players ever,â€� said Martinez, and the reason for the dismay at being 5 feet right of the pin that day was simple. “Johnny knew he came close to short-siding himself, that he wanted to be 5 feet left of the hole.â€� It was, Martinez came to discover, a reasonable goal for Miller. “He was that phenomenal an iron player.â€� And never was that more evident than it was a long time ago in a desert far, far away. It is one of the reasons he chose this week’s Waste Management Phoenix Open as the place where he would end his lengthy broadcast career. There were so many good memories in the desert, it seems fitting to add another. Desert win No. 1 Jan. 10-13, 1974: Phoenix Open 69-69-66-67—271 (13 under) Wins by one shot over Lanny Wadkins Miller arrived in Phoenix on a bit of a tear, having won the World Cup in Spain to end the 1973 season and the rain-shortened, 54-hole Bing Crosby National Pro-Am at Pebble Beach one week earlier. His hot streak seemed in jeopardy, however, because Wadkins – just as he had done the previous day to end Saturday’s third round — eagled the par-5 18th just as Miller was three-putting for bogey at the 16th down the stretch on Sunday. Now trailing by one, Miller produced some theatrics. He birdied the par-4 17th to tie, then the 18th to win. Forever famous for the 63 at Oakmont to win the ’73 U.S. Open and unforgettable for a 1976 Open Championship win in which the lads who tied for second a whopping six back were named Jack Nicklaus and Seve Ballesteros, Miller did what very few golfers have ever done: He made the game look so easy. That the ease with which he crushed the competition came in the desert, where the perception about soft courses and easy-to-putt-greens isn’t always reality, matters not an inch. Miller was phenomenal in these tournaments and his body of work in the desert – four wins in Tucson, two in Phoenix, two in Palm Springs – still resonates, the numbers hardly in need of the superfluous stats that blur so much of today’s vantage points and dull our sense of perception. Andy North could care less about such minutia because he had two great eyes, a keen golf mind, and a front-row seat that offered a clear picture. “Johnny did all that stuff back then by putting just average,â€� North says. “But he didn’t have to because he hit everything inside of 10 feet. “He was absolutely the best guy on the golf course and in the world. Jack (Nicklaus) was pretty good, but what Johnny was doing was a joke.â€� Desert win No. 2 Jan. 17-20, 1974: Dean Martin Tucson Open 62-71-71-68—272 (16 under) Wins by three shots over Ben Crenshaw It had the makings of a brilliant shoot-out between two of the game’s brightest stars, only the 22-year-old Crenshaw couldn’t quite keep pace. “Every time I’d make a birdie, he’d make a birdie,â€� said Crenshaw, who started the final round two behind, shot 69 and lost a stroke to the 26-year-old Miller. “I never had to fight back,â€� said Miller, who made birdie putts of 40 feet on No. 10, 20 feet on No. 12 and 20 feet on No. 13 to thwart Crenshaw. The joke was on the competition and the punch line was this: In winning those eight tournaments in the desert, Miller was under par in 31 of his 34 rounds, in the 60s 27 times, over par just once, and a cumulative 144 under par. Most impressively, his average margin of victory was a whopping 4.75 strokes, with six of the eight wins by three or more. His scoring average was a tidy 67.3 But these were not days of just merely dipping his toes into the 60s; no, Miller had to play with Lloyd Bridges’ snorkel gear he went so deep – twice in that torrid stretch of wins, he shot 61, once 62, once 63, three times 64, once 65, and four times he signed for 66. Oh, and there was this: From the third round in Phoenix in 1974 to the second round in Palm Springs in 1975, Miller was at least a co-leader for 16 consecutive rounds across five tournaments. And this, too: He did it in crunch time, the worst closing-round score in those eight wins being a 68. There was a 61 to finish in Tucson in 1975, a 63 to seal the deal in Palm Springs in 1976, a 64 to nail down a Phoenix win in 1975, and a 65 to win in Tucson in ’81. His scoring average on Sunday for those eight desert wins: 65.5. Desert win No. 3 Jan. 9-12, 1975: Phoenix Open 67-61-68-64—260 (24 under) Wins by 14 shots over Jerry Heard If there were fears of complacency following his eight-win ’74 campaign, they were dashed when Miller touched desert sand to kick off his ’75 season and met a large contingent of golf writers. “I just always felt really good at the beginning of the year. The beginning of the year were big tournaments and a lot of attention was on them. The folks back East were snowed in, so a lot of people were watching,â€� he told the media. What they saw on this week was more head-shaking dominance, Miller’s second-round 61 especially so. It moved Frank Gianelli of the Arizona Republic to write: “Johnny Miller did everything but pick up the clubhouse deed staking claim to Phoenix Country Club.â€� Leading by six, Miller bumped the lead to seven with a third-round 68, then buried the field with a closing 64, an overpowering wire-to-wire performance. Why the ability to go deep on Sunday, to make birdie, then turn to Martinez and ask: “Now, what do I do?â€� Martinez suggests “it was almost like he didn’t think any lead was big enough.â€� Miller agrees. “I didn’t like it to be close because my putting was unreliable. So, I would keep knocking the flag out of the hole. I got a kick out of playing the last five or six holes knowing it was over.â€� In other words, swagger, style and substance dominated the PGA TOUR scene with a cool and confident aura 40 years before someone reinvented the wheel and said, “Hey, whaddayasay we call something that is cool ‘Tour Sauce?’ And we make a big deal out of trajectory – we’ll even call it ‘traj’ – and point out that some guys do club twirls.â€� Desert win No. 4 Jan. 16-19, 1975: Dean Martin Tucson Open 66-69-67-61—263 (25 under) Wins by nine shots over John Mahaffey Two weeks before he would host his annual TOUR event in Palm Springs, Bob Hope stopped into Tucson to play in the pro-am and got the levity going when he told reporters, “I’m thrilled to be here for the Johnny Miller Benefit.â€� Unlikely that competitors laughed. “I didn’t come here to finish second,â€� said John Mahaffey, who hit all 36 greens in regulation for the first two days – and still trailed Miller by one. “He’s only human. I have to believe he can be beaten.â€� Not at this moment in history. Miller scorched Tucson National for 67-61 on the weekend to leave Mahaffey second, a robust nine back. Back-to-back wins, a cumulative 49 under to win by a total of 23 strokes. If it appeared easy for Miller, consider how brutally hard it was for those playing next to him. “I remember playing Phoenix Country Club (where Miller won in ’74 and ’75), such a terrific golf course, but it was tight, like a bowling alley,â€� Mahaffey says. “You’d hit long irons, trying to keep it in play, maybe set up a wedge. But Johnny would just take out driver. He was so confident and such a marvelous driver. It was uncanny. “I can only imagine it was what it must have been like playing with Byron Nelson. I mean, Johnny just didn’t miss fairways or greens. He was a machine.â€� One frozen rope after another. One birdie piled atop another. No laser guns. No yardage books. No pin sheets. No green-reading books. “Just an incredible set of eyes and tremendous feel and trust in himself,â€� Martinez says. And a strut. Good gracious how the strut, the confident stride, his neck craned and long blonde hair waving in the wind seconds after contact, screamed out, “Well, there’s another solid shot. I’ve done it again.â€� “Oh, he did have a swagger. He did,â€� laughs Mahaffey — and Martinez echoes that. “He had the classic ‘Reverse C,’ the fancy pants, the long hair, a good slash at the ball … he had it all going,â€� his caddie recalls, still impressed. Desert win No. 5 Feb. 5-9, 1975: Bob Hope Desert Classic 64-69-72-66-68—339 (21 under) Wins by three shots over Bob Murphy A sense of shock enveloped the PGA TOUR when in Round 3 at La Quinta, Miller shot 72. For 16 consecutive rounds of desert golf, dating back to Phoenix of ’74, he had at least shared the lead; now, he was tied for second, a whole shot behind Don Bies. Sixty-six strokes later, Miller was back in the lead to stay, three ahead of Jerry Heard, who might epitomize what it was like for the competition in these days. In the seven desert tournaments won by Miller in 1974-76, Heard finished top 10 four times. This week, he challenged late into Round 4 and knocked his approach to 7 feet at the 13th. Only Miller silenced his charge by making his 30-footer for birdie. “The rest of us look inferior compared to Miller,â€� Heard, who would finish third, told reporters. “I’m getting a little tired of it.â€� Three straight wins on this desert swing, a 66.3 scoring average for 13 rounds in which he was a cumulative 70 under par. A whole generation, maybe two, associates Miller with his television work with NBC. Fitting, a desert stop, eh? But understand this: Miller’s refreshing “tell it like it isâ€� style isn’t a TV thing; it was as much a part of his playing days as sansabelt and hatless. “I was never one to hit it that good on the range,â€� says Miller, looking back. “But in 1975, one day I was on the range and every shot was great. I said, ‘What’s going on here?’ I was feeling my oats and back then I’d average about 17 greens a day. I mean, it was easy. I’d go to sleep at night and wake up in the morning with absolutely zero nervousness. I was stress-free and this was part of my three years of good putting.â€� His confidence came through with his comments. Like when he won in Phoenix by 14 and said, “I’m winning so easy now that it’s ridiculous.â€� Or when he arrived at the Hope in 1976 and told reporters, “I’m not saying I will win, but I am saying I’ll be surprised if I don’t.â€� (He closed with 63 and won by three.) Mahaffey says he was never bothered. “Johnny had a whole lot of confidence, but he was never arrogant. He was oblivious and so focused.â€� Likewise, North says he wasn’t offended by things Miller said, nor should competitors have been. Why? “Because he was 100 percent correct,â€� he adds. “When he was in that mode, it was sayonara. It didn’t matter what you shot; he shot lower.â€� Desert win No. 6 Jan. 8-11, 1976: NBC Tucson Open 70-69-67-68—274 (14 under) Wins by three shots over Howard Twitty Before jumping into action for a possible third straight win at Tucson National, Miller was asked about the fourth-round 61 that earned him the ’75 win. “I’ll probably never play like that again,â€� Miller said with a hint of melancholy. “That’s disheartening. That was Dreamsville.â€� If it sounded as if he had lost his competitive fire, think again. Tied for 16th after Round 1 and tied for seventh after Round 2, Miller on Saturday slammed home a 30-footer for birdie at the 18th hole to get within one of leader Tom Weiskopf. Yes, he had a brighter bounce in his step. With a closing 68, he ran straight to another win, much to the chagrin of a heckler who could be heard yelling, “Go home, Mormonâ€� as Miller played the 17th. Rather than confront the guy, Miller tossed him a golf ball. “A perfect throw,â€� he said. “There was nothing the guy could say. I just killed him with kindness.â€� So many of the storylines painted a solitary picture of Miller, a guy who practiced hard, played elite golf, then disappeared into his quiet, respectful family-centered way of life. “He’s an incurable homebody,â€� Bob Hurt wrote in the Arizona Republic in 1981. Yet for as accurate a view as that is, Miller enjoyed being in great company. Study his career and you realize he won tournaments hosted by Hope, Dean Martin, Bing Crosby, Andy Williams, Glen Campbell, Jackie Gleason and Joe Garagiola. It was not a coincidence. “There was something about that relaxed atmosphere that I liked,â€� says Miller, who considered Hope a good friend, played some of his best golf alongside Martin, and won a one-day pro-am with Jack Lemmon the week of his ’75 triumph at the Bob Hope Desert Classic. On his way home from that win in Palm Springs, he stopped to be with Johnny Carson on “The Tonight Show.â€� Aloof? Perhaps. But he was a man in demand and while he was very comfortable with the biggest of personalities, Miller never sought out the spotlight for the benevolent side that might define him more than his golf championships. “Miller has compassion. He cares for people,â€� wrote Hurt. “He will arrive early for the Phoenix Open later this month to conduct a junior clinic. He keeps gong back to his alma mater, Brigham Young, to help with recruiting or fund drives.â€� Desert win No. 7 Feb. 4-8, 1976: Bob Hope Desert Classic 71-69-73-68-63—344 (16 under) Wins by three shots over Rik Massengale It wasn’t just the pairing with Jack Nicklaus in Round 2, with Evel Knievel and Lawrence Welk as pro-am partners. It was the leaderboards that made this a star-filled week. Arnold Palmer was two off the 36-hole lead, and when Round 3 ended, Nicklaus and Billy Casper were just one behind the leader, Bud Allin, and Miller was at 213, tied for seventh, but just three back. A pall fell over the tournament when Palmer withdraw following Round 3 when he heard his father, Deacon, had died while playing golf at Bay Hill in Orlando, Florida. Shock arrived, too, when Miller needed 19 putts for his first nine holes Saturday to fall down the leaderboard. Then he played his final 27 holes in 13-under to close the deal and while the window-dressing stuff was impressive – it was Miller’s 17th PGA TOUR win; his seventh triumph in his last nine starts in the Tucson-Phoenix-Palm Springs swing; he became the youngest player to earn $1 million in career money – the 28-year-old put up the stop sign to a reporter’s suggestion of supreme greatness. “I don’t want to be compared to Jack (Nicklaus),â€� he said. What happened? Miller faced the question a thousand times in those years when the game wasn’t so easy, when the wins stopped piling up. He went winless in 1977, ’78, ’79, and by 1981 Miller had played 10 times in Tucson, Phoenix and Palm Springs without a finish inside the top 25. Miller heard all the theories – that he was complacent and couldn’t practice because of tendinitis in the wrist, that he had put on weight and had to swing differently, that it was simply a lack of passion – but Hurt, in his Arizona Republic column before Tucson in 1981, suggested this: “Many golfers have self-destructed by forgetting family and chasing after women, but in Miller, we have a guy who slumped quite probably because he cared so much for his family.â€� That probably had the most to do with it, but Miller, in his inimitable manner, offered reporters his take: “To tell the truth, I got bored. I scaled Mt. Everest. So, what do I do? Scale it again?â€� Desert win No. 8 Jan. 8-11, 1981: Joe Garagiola Tucson Open 66-64-70-65—265 (15 under) Wins by two shots over Lon Hinkle Some second-round magic rekindled fond memories of his desert domination, but Miller lost the lead Saturday and fell two behind Don Halldorson. But the back-and-forth Sunday battle was with Lon Hinkle, one group ahead on a cool, wet day at Randolph Park. Tied with Miller, Hinkle stood over a 20-foot birdie try at the 18th and thought he had a putt to win. He jammed it 5 feet by, then missed the comebacker and thought he had lost the tournament right there. Unbeknownst to him, Miller back on the 17th had indeed scaled great heights once again. His fifth and final birdie in a bogey-free round provided yet another win. It was his sixth in Arizona – the most of any TOUR golfer until Phil Mickelson tied him six years ago at TPC Scottsdale. Martinez remembers that birdie at Randolph Park much as he does that 5-iron shot Miller had played into a par-3 during their first practice round years earlier. That is, with unfiltered fondness, for both shots spoke to the genius of Miller and the relationship caddie and player enjoyed. “It was a three-tier green and the pin was on the last tier,â€� recalls Martinez. “We had 140, but it was cool, and I liked a little 7-iron with those balata balls. With 8-iron, he would have had to have really gone at it.â€� Miller listened to Martinez and deferred to his good friend. “He asserted himself and as soon as I changed clubs, I knew he was right,â€� says Miller, who stuffed a low draw to 3 feet. “Johnny always wanted to feel like he had enough club in his hands,â€� explains Martinez. “He didn’t want to come up short.â€� Martinez laughed, because he knows Miller hardly ever was anywhere but right on the flagstick – never short, rarely long – especially during those days of desert dominance. Just an utterly brilliant stretch of golf. “I don’t think I’ll ever see anything like that again,â€� says Martinez. The beginning of the year were big tournaments and a lot of attention was on them. The folks back East were snowed in, so a lot of people were watching. 

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