Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting How to watch PGA CJ Cup Byron Nelson 2025: ESPN+ schedule

How to watch PGA CJ Cup Byron Nelson 2025: ESPN+ schedule

The PGA event runs Thursday to Sunday, May 1-4 at the TPC Craig Ranch.

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Final Round 3-Balls - A. Cabrera / B. Quigley / D. Pride
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Angel Cabrera+115
Brett Quigley+190
Dicky Pride+260
Final Round 2-Balls - D. Walker / P. Rodgers
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Danny Walker+125
Patrick Rodgers-115
Tie+750
Final Round 3-Balls - S. Cink / B. Mayfair / J. Durant
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink-152
Joe Durant+260
Billy Mayfair+375
Final Round Score - Scottie Scheffler
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 65.5-130
Under 65.5+100
Final Round Score - Erik Van Rooyen
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-105
Under 68.5-125
Final Round Score - Ricky Castillo
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+115
Under 68.5-150
Final Round Score - Adam Schenk
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-120
Under 68.5-110
Final Round Score - Kurt Kitayama
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+125
Under 68.5-165
Final Round Score - Jhonattan Vegas
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+105
Under 68.5-135
Final Round Score - Antoine Rozner
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5-130
Under 68.5+100
Final Round Score - Rasmus Hojgaard
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-130
Under 67.5+100
Final Round Score - Eric Cole
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-145
Under 67.5+110
Final Round Score - Sam Stevens
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5-155
Under 67.5+120
Final Round Score - Sam Burns
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5+105
Under 67.5-135
Final Round Score - Si Woo Kim
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+135
Under 68.5-175
Final Round Score - Jordan Spieth
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 67.5+125
Under 67.5-165
Final Round Score - Michael Thorbjornsen
Type: Final Round Score - Status: OPEN
Over 68.5+105
Under 68.5-135
Final Round 2-Balls - S. Stevens / A. Putnam
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Andrew Putnam+125
Sam Stevens-115
Tie+750
Final Round 3-Balls - M.A. Jimenez / T. Jaidee / S. Allan
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Miguel Angel Jimenez-111
Steve Allan+230
Thongchai Jaidee+275
Final Round 2-Balls - E. Cole / R. Hojgaard
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Eric Cole+115
Rasmus Hojgaard-105
Tie+750
Final Round 3-Balls - M. Weir / R. Goosen / Y.E. Yang
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Retief Goosen+145
Y.E. Yang+145
Mike Weir+260
Final Round Six Shooter - A. Schenk / A. Rozner / E. Van Rooyen / J. Vegas / K. Kitayama / R. Castillo
Type: Final Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Kurt Kitayama+350
Ricky Castillo+375
Erik Van Rooyen+425
Antoine Rozner+450
Jhonattan Vegas+450
Adam Schenk+500
Final Round Match-Ups - J. Vegas vs N. Echavarria
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Nico Echavarria-115
Jhonattan Vegas-105
Final Round 2-Balls - A. Rozner / N. Echavarria
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Nico Echavarria-115
Antoine Rozner+125
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - K. Kitayama vs R. Castillo
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Kurt Kitayama-115
Ricky Castillo-105
Final Round 2-Balls - K. Kitayama / J. Vegas
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Jhonattan Vegas+120
Kurt Kitayama-110
Tie+750
Final Round Match-Ups - A. Schenk vs E. Van Rooyen
Type: Final Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Erik Van Rooyen-120
Adam Schenk+100
Final Round 2-Balls - A. Schenk / R. Castillo
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Adam Schenk+120
Ricky Castillo-110
Tie+750
Final Round 2-Balls - S. Scheffler / E. Van Rooyen
Type: Including Tie - Status: OPEN
Erik Van Rooyen+300
Scottie Scheffler-260
Tie+750
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
Click here for more...
PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1600
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Jon Rahm+2000
Viktor Hovland+2500
Brooks Koepka+3000
Click here for more...
US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
Click here for more...
The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
Click here for more...
Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Cameron Smith sizzles, wins THE PLAYERS ChampionshipCameron Smith sizzles, wins THE PLAYERS Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Cameron Smith made the longest week at THE PLAYERS Championship worth the wait. In a dynamic conclusion to five days of bad weather and high drama, Smith one-putted eight of his last nine holes with his pure stroke and delivered one of the gutsiest shots of his career for the cushion he needed to win. RELATED: Final leaderboard | What’s in Smith’s bag? Leading by two on the par-3 17th hole, 135 yards to the hole on an island green, Smith split the difference in the 12 feet that separated the flag from the water. The ball ended up 4 feet away and the Australian made his record-tying 10th birdie of the round. Turns out he needed it. Smith punched out from the pine straw right of the 18th fairway all the way into the water. After a penalty drop, his 60-yard wedge spun next to the hole to 3 feet for a bogey and a 6-under 66, giving him a one-shot victory over Anirban Lahiri of India. Lahiri, who started the final round with a one-shot lead, birdied the 17th and needed one more to force a playoff. He came up short of the green, and his pitch was below the cup all the way. He closed with a 69. Paul Casey shot 69 and was the victim of a horrible break on the 16th hole when he was in position to edge closer to the lead. Smith, who finished at 13-under 275, won for the second time this year, and the fifth time in his PGA TOUR career, and picked up $3.6 million from the $20 million purse, the richest in golf. He earned a staggering 600 FedExCup points. This was about more than money, more than the three-year exemption he earned to the four majors and a five-year exemption on the PGA TOUR. This was as much about family. Smith, so unflappable in the tense pressure that featured 26 holes on Monday, choked up when he talked about his mother and sister, whom he had not seen more than two years because of travel restrictions Down Under during the pandemic. Smith makes his home down the road in Jacksonville Beach, and he happily went to the airport this week for a special reunion. They watched him capture the crown jewel of the PGA TOUR. “It’s really cool to have them here,” Smith said. “My main priority was to hang out with them. Golf was second. It’s nice to see them and nice to get a win for them.” Lahiri’s only big mistake was a tee shot into a palmetto bush on the par-3 eighth, forcing him to take a drop near the concession area that led to double bogey. It was the only shot he dropped all day, and his best finish on the PGA TOUR came with a $2.18 million consolation prize. Casey, meanwhile, was the victim of bad luck. He was two shots behind and in the same group as Smith when he looked to have a big advantage on the par-5 16th. Smith duck-hooked his tee shot into the pines. Casey drilled his drive down the middle. But the ball took one last roll in the rain-soaked fairway, right into another player’s pitch mark. Instead of a mid-iron into the par 5, he had to punch it out short. Then, he was inches away from getting relief from a sprinkler head near the green and had to scramble for par. Smith punched out to the fairway and matched the par. They headed to the 17th, where Smith’s 9-iron was bolder than he wanted. “I’d be lying if I didn’t push it a little bit,” he said. No matter. He got the birdie, got the win and moved to No. 6 in the world. So concluded a week like no other on the TPC Sawgrass, where so much rain early in the week meant the first round lasted 54 hours and 16 minutes, finishing on Saturday morning. The wind that followed wreaked havoc on half the field. The bone-chilling temperatures Sunday made it tough on everyone. It was the first Monday finish since 2005 at THE PLAYERS. Smith made it memorable for so many other reasons. Kevin Kisner birdied three of his last four holes for a 68 to finish alone in fourth. Kisner is famous for once saying 20th place pays pretty good. So does fourth place at the TOUR’s premier event. He earned $980,000. Keegan Bradley was among four players who had a chance over the last hour. He was one shot behind after a birdie on the 16th, only to three-putt the 17th from the front of the green to a back pin, and then took double bogey on the 18th when his punch shot from the trees came out hot and ended up in the water. He shot 68 and finished fifth.

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D.J. Gregory earns PGA TOUR Courage Award for his dedication to kidsD.J. Gregory earns PGA TOUR Courage Award for his dedication to kids

For the first five years of D.J. Gregory’s life, he had to “army crawl” between the rooms in his parents’ home. He couldn’t stand upright on his own, and he couldn’t walk. He was born 10 weeks premature with cerebral palsy, which is a congenital disorder affecting movement, muscle tone or posture. Making Gregory’s life even more challenging, his legs were tangled together at birth, and his eyes were crossed. By the time he was in the first grade, he’d had five different surgeries, including one in which his abductor muscles, which help control balance, were cut to untangle his legs. The final operation left both legs broken and in casts, separated by a bar as they healed so they couldn’t cross over again. The youngster, who also had six operations on his eyes, spent a month and a half in a wheelchair that time. Once the casts came off, though, Gregory started doing something the doctors had told his parents he would never do when he was born. He walked. First, with a walker. Then, aided by two canes. Finally, now, with just one. And since 2008, Gregory has been a fixture at PGA TOUR events, averaging between 45-48 tournaments each year. He selects a players and he walks all four rounds with them. Should that pro miss the cut, Gregory hooks on with another for the final two days. All total, Gregory has covered more than 14,000 miles since 2008 and raised more than $1 million for his Walking For Kids Foundation, predominately through the donations of TOUR players like world No. 1 Jon Rahm, who is his pro at this week’s WM Phoenix Open. On Tuesday in a surprise ceremony at TPC Scottsdale, Gregory received the TOUR’s Courage Award, presented to a person who has overcome personal tragedy or debilitating injury or illness to make a meaningful contribution to the game. Gregory is the first person to receive the award who is not a member of the PGA TOUR. The award was introduced in 2012 and has only been given four times previously to Erik Compton (2013), Jarrod Lyle (2015), Gene Sauers (2017) and Morgan Hoffmann (2020). “He’s an inspiration to a lot of people,” Rahm says. “He was not dealt the best hand in his life, and he made something wonderful out of it and the fact that he goes out there and walks as much as he does with the difficulty he has to walk, it’s very, very impressive. “He’s captured a lot of hearts of us players — definitely mine.” PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan echoed those sentiments. “Our players have embraced D.J. over the years and continue to be motivated by his dedication to the Walking For Kids Foundation,” he says. “We couldn’t be prouder of the impact he has made and the many lives he has touched in a positive way.” Gregory has always been a sports fan, and he has a special affinity for golf. He began playing the game when he was 9 years old, swinging the club with one hand while steadying himself with the cane in the other. When he was 12, Gregory’s father took him to what is now called the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, North Carolina. He met the late Ken Venturi on the practice tee at Forest Oaks Country Club, and the long-time CBS announcer invited him to come watch the tournament from the 18th tower. That’s where Gregory met Venturi’s broadcast partner, Jim Nantz, who has become a lifelong friend and one of his biggest supporters. “I had no idea that one day, this would actually be such a vital part of his life, going tournament to tournament and really embodying in so many ways, the spirit of the PGA TOUR, walking every hole for every round, and having a charity initiative behind it,” Nantz says. “Who could have imagined when I met this young lad that one day he would grow up and be someone who would be in many, many ways one of the purest, greatest ambassadors for the PGA TOUR with every step he takes.” After he graduated from Springfield College with two degrees in sports management, Gregory began researching how much it would cost to travel the TOUR for a year so he could walk every hole and write a blog about his experiences. He also talked with Aaron Baddeley, whom he’d met at Bay Hill in 2003, about whether he’d be willing to let Gregory walk with him and be interviewed afterwards, and the Australian was more than willing to oblige. “I wanted to get to know the players on a more personal level, other than their scorecards and stats and that was kind of the basis of the blog,” Gregory says. “I wanted to give readers the chance to get to know players more than just birdies and eagles and kind of allow people to get to know them off the golf course and stuff like that. “But I also wanted to accomplish the personal challenge of walking every hole of every event.” So, Gregory came up with a plan. He went to visit a college friend who lived in Dallas during the 2007 AT&T Byron Nelson, and he took the proposal with him when he went to see Nantz in the 18th tower. “Jim actually read it while they were on the air,” Gregory says. “And after the Saturday show, Jim said to me, have you ever thought about getting the PGA TOUR involved? And I said, no, not really. “And he goes, well, I think you should send this to the commissioner and see what happens. And I said, Jim, being the commissioner of a major sport, how in the world is he going to get what I send him? “And he goes, because you’re going to send it to me. And I’m going to hand deliver it to the commissioner and honestly that’s exactly than what happened.” The TOUR, as Nantz expected, was intrigued. Gregory did a trial run with five-time TOUR champ Mark Wilson at The Barclays and Tim Herron at the Deutsche Bank Championship the following week. At that point, he was given the go-ahead for 2008 and his weekly blog was published on PGATOUR.COM. Interestingly, Gregory says he didn’t do anything special to prepare for the year on the road. “I sat on the couch,” he says, laughing. “I don’t work out. I don’t life weights. But once I decide I’m going to do something and I put my mind to it, I’m going to do it no matter what.” Gregory credits his determination – which he acknowledges might border on stubbornness — to his parents, who didn’t treat him any differently than they did his brother and sister. He still had to do the dishes after dinner. He had to take out the trash and make his bed every day. “I’m very fortunate because even though I have a disability, I don’t look at it as having a disability,” Gregory says. “I look at it as I could do anything you could do. It might just take me a little bit longer.” Gregory is a testament to that perseverance on the golf course. He walks deliberately, almost rocking from side to side with each step, always steadying himself with the cane. Early on, he’d go through eight bandages a day. Now his shoes are specially cushioned. “When I walk all my momentum is in front of me,” says Gregory, whose balance was thrown off when the abductor muscles were cut. “So, it’s easier for me to go uphill. … But when I walk downhill, sometimes I actually walk faster than I can move my cane. So that’s how I fall. “ The competitive side of Gregory has prompted him to keep track of those falls, too. He fell 29 times in 2008 but only once last year. He remembers how that happened — in the final event of the 2021 calendar year — like the pros he walks with remember their club selections. “When I fall, I’m the first person to say some choice words to myself, to be honest,” Gregory says. “… Last calendar year I only had one fall and it was actually at the RSM Classic in the second round when I tripped on the cart path which kind of stinks because if I would’ve gone three more rounds, then I would’ve had a complete no-fall year. “It didn’t quite happen. But still one fall for the year is pretty good.” Gregory’s most challenging walk is the first of each calendar year on the Plantation Course at Kapalua during the Sentry Tournament of Champions – “there’s not even a close second at all,” he says. . The flattest, and therefore the easiest, is probably Colonial Country Club which hosts the Charles Schwab Challenge. And his favorite? That’s easy. Pebble Beach. “But honestly it’s not for the golf course,” Gregory says. “It’s for the views around the golf course. Even on a cloudy, rainy day, the views of the Pacific Ocean and the rocks are amazing.” The TOUR’s stat gurus estimate that Gregory has walked more than 42,000 holes since 2008. How would that compare with a TOUR pro? Well, Charles Howell III – who is making his 600th start this week at the WM Phoenix Open – has played more holes than any of his peers during that same time period and he clocks in at a mere 24,000. In the beginning, the TOUR’s media staff helped Gregory find players to walk with and interview. Now, though, he has developed so many friends among the pros that he’s practically booked up in advance. Some like Zach Johnson (Masters and John Deere Classic), Rickie Fowler and Rahm are even on board for two weeks each year. “A lot of guys like to keep the same tournaments and then there’ll be other guys that come up to me and say, hey, when it’s at my turn?” Gregory says. When Jason Day didn’t qualify for the U.S. Open last year, Gregory asked Rahm if he could walk with him. That win at Torrey Pines was Gregory’s eighth with a TOUR pro and solidified their relationship in perpetuity. “I always tell him any week you need me you got me, just let me know because it’s such a beautiful thing, right?” Rahm says. “To be able to help somebody else with somebody you love and on top of all of that, he is a wonderful person. It’s incredible. “I feel honored to have helped him any times but even more importantly to have won a U.S. Open helping him out and donating to his cause. We need more people like him in this world and he is great example.” Gregory’s foundation was incorporated in December of 2009 and began work the next month. He estimates that 80 percent of the more than $1 million it has raised comes from the weekly player donations like Rahm’s – and he’s grateful to have an opportunity to make a difference in the lives of kids. “I have cerebral palsy and I’m very fortunate that my case is very, very mild,” Gregory says. “ … But there are people that have not just cerebral palsy, but other situations where they need help doing their daily activities, they need help getting dressed, they need help with communications. “But no matter any of those things you need help with, no matter what, everybody still has a mind and they still have goals and dreams. And so, the whole mission of my foundation is helping kids achieve their goals and dreams one step at a time and that’s really what I wanted to do. “Did I think that this would be year 13 for my foundation? Absolutely not. But I’ve been given a unique platform and now I’m just trying to do the best I can with it.” So how long does Gregory see himself walking every hole on the PGA TOUR? Well, he’s thinking 50 will be a good time to “retire,” which gives him plenty of time to figure out a back-up plan. He’d like to continue to work in the sports industry but for now, he’s content to continue walking for his kids. “I don’t want to stop right now,” he says. “I think the foundation has so much great momentum and I have some of the best friends out here between players and staff and caddies and their families. I love what I do out here, but I also want to go out on my own terms. I don’t want to be asked to leave.” Nantz says he often sees Gregory in the gallery and thinks about how far he has come and how much he has accomplished since the two first met in 1990. “I’m just so struck by it that I get tears in my eyes, because I know how much he wanted this, how hard it is for him to do it, how driven he is to succeed,” Nantz says. “And we all measure success in a lot of different ways. … But to me, I look at DJ (and) that success is not about having the biggest home or having whatever it might be, the most money in a bank account. His heart is, it’s so big. And it’s infectious. His spirit, his personality, it moves us all.

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4-way tie for lead at THE NORTHERN TRUST as Woods stalls4-way tie for lead at THE NORTHERN TRUST as Woods stalls

PARAMUS, N.J. — Tiger Woods failed to carry any momentum he had from his last tournament into the start of the FedExCup Playoffs. Neither did Sean O’Hair. That was only good news for one of them Thursday in THE NORTHERN TRUST. O’Hair missed the cut last week and saw his FedExCup standing slip to No. 121, meaning he has to play well this week or his season is over. His immediate goal is to advance to the third stage of events because the BMW Championship is at Aronimink outside Philadelphia, where O’Hair is a member. He drilled a 3-wood from 284 yards to 6 feet for eagle on No. 3. He hammered another 3-wood on the par-5 17th to 10 feet, settling for a two-putt birdie. That carried O’Hair to a 5-under 66, giving him a share of the lead with Kevin Tway, Jamie Lovemark and Vaughn Taylor. “I’m obviously very disappointed that I’m not in a better position, but I’m kind of in charge of my destiny,” O’Hair said. “If I play good golf I’m just going to work into the next week.” Woods, playing for the first time since his runner-up finish at the PGA Championship, had a pair of birdies, a pair of bogeys, a lot of pars and a 71. He was five shots behind and in a tie for 60th. After a rough start off the tee, Woods wound up hitting nine of 14 fairways. He just never got it close enough for good looks at birdie. “Just didn’t have the situations where I had the full club and I could go ahead and take a rip at it and start being aggressive and going after these flags,” Woods said. “I kept having to play a little defensive because I was taking more club, trying to shape it and take spin off. One of those days.” Woods is back in the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time in five years, and it was his first time at Ridgewood Country Club since 2010. Thousands came to watch him play, and they heard plenty of cheers from the group behind him. Dustin Johnson rimmed out a 6-iron on the par-3 sixth for one of his seven birdies to offset a triple bogey for a 67. U.S. Open and PGA champion Brooks Koepka ran off four birdies and an eagle for his 67. FedExCup champion Justin Thomas had four birdies in his round of 69. Johnson could tell his 6-iron was close to perfect from the flight of the shot, where it landed and the reaction of the fans behind the par-3 sixth green as the ball rolled around left edge of the cup. Or were they cheering because Woods teed off on the hole ahead of them? “I was kind of debating whether they were yelling for me or him,” Johnson said with a smile. O’Hair isn’t alone in the urgency to play well. The top 100 advance to the second stage next week at the TPC Boston, with the top 70 going to the BMW Championship and the top 30 making it to East Lake in Atlanta for the TOUR Championship. Tway and Lovemark are in the mid-80s in the FedExCup, while Taylor is at No. 112. Tway began his week playing in a charity event with good friend Morgan Hoffmann, who is coping with muscular dystrophy. Hoffmann is a reminder of how far players can go with the FedExCup points quadrupled in the playoffs. “Morgan Hoffmann came in at 124 and went all the way to The TOUR Championship,” Tway said, referring to 2014. “That’s kind of the plan, try to play as good as you can and go as far as you can.” Johnson had no idea where his tee shots were going until late in his round, yet he still managed to pile up birdies. One wild drive cost him at the 17th, where the ball went so far left it wasn’t even worth searching for in the woods. Johnson made triple bogey. “I hit that ball 70 yards left of where I was looking,” he said. “If I’m trying to hit a high cut, if anything I’m going to over- cut it to the right. And it came off low and hooked. So I just laughed. Wasn’t funny when I made triple, though.”  O’Hair doesn’t sound like he’s playing under a lot of pressure. He had knee surgery last year that kept him from most of the fall events, putting him behind. He decided to keep playing until he had his card locked up, and then he was runner-up at the Valero Texas Open. “After that, I kind of just checked out mentally because I knew I was safe and kind of lost my drive a little bit,” he said. He took off the month of June, which he had never done, and hasn’t played very well since then. But he’s back to work, first on his long game and late on his putter, and he found the right formula on a rain-softened course at Ridgewood. It was a good start, nothing more. And while he would love to play on his home course in two weeks at Aronimink, he’s not obsessed with it. O’Hair said he came into the Playoffs with one eye toward next year. “It’s not like, `Hey, I need to do this to play Aronimink,'” O’Hair said. “I’ll play Aronimink after the tournament. I think I’ve got a member-guest the following week.”

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