Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting DraftKings preview: WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

DraftKings preview: WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play

The stars are out this week in the World Golf Championships – Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club in Austin, Texas. The course is a par 71, measuring 7,108 yards and will be on TifEagle bermudagrass overseeded with Poa Trivialis. Like TPC Sawgrass a couple of weeks ago at THE PLAYERS Championship, Austin Country Club is a Pete Dye design. The tournament starts on Wednesday and ends with the final match on Sunday. Past winners since the tournament moved to Austin CC include Jason Day, Dustin Johnson ($10,000), Kevin Kisner ($7,600), Bubba Watson ($7,200) and defending champion Billy Horschel ($8,800). Set your DraftKings fantasy golf lineups here: PGA TOUR $750K Pitch + Putt [$200K to 1st] (Match Play) FORMAT The 64-player field are seeding via world ranking with the top 16 forming the A pool, the next 16 in the B pool, the next 16 as C pool and the last 16 as D pool. From there 16 groups are then randomly assigned with one A, B, C and D player in each. Each group of four players will play their group opponents over the first three days, Wednesday – Friday. The player with the highest point total (1 point for winning a match, 0.5 point for tying, 0 for a loss) after the group stage advances to the Round of 16, which will begin the straight elimination section. Saturday will be the Round of 16 and the quarterfinals. Sunday will hold the semifinals in the morning followed by the final and a third-place match in the afternoon. STRATEGY Another Pete Dye design presents another test of precision golf. Austin Country Club sports deep pot bunkers, undulations throughout fairways and greens, and resembles a links style layout. The course also has its lowlands and highlands, and players like Jordan Spieth ($8,900) have mentioned that the two nines play like two different courses. The front nine is tighter, playing inside a canyon, before the back nine opens up for the stunning views and water holes. All Pete Dye courses demand precision with the approach shot, but we could also be leaning towards Strokes Gained: Off the Tee more this week. Gamesmanship is a factor in match play. Triple bogeys don’t carry the same negative weight as they do in stroke play, but driving it past your opponent and playing your second shot based on what your opponent does is advantageous in this setting. The course doesn’t just suit the bombers, but when Dustin Johnson and Bubba Watson win here, we should be taking notice. Again, those players need to survive the tight early holes, where Kevin Kisner has shone, before it opens up to their strengths. Austin CC can also play windy, which is why we’ve seen golfers like Johnson, Scottie Scheffler ($11,000) and Sergio Garcia ($8,300) play well here. Most daily fantasy lineups go ‘chalk’ every year, choosing the top-seeded golfers at this tournament. It’s easy to think the top golfers will advance with relative ease, but as we’ve seen in the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament this year and seasons past, the top seeds can lose early or fail to advance to the finals. Since 2017, the most top seeds to advance out of the group stage is five, and only one No.1 seed has won the event in Austin (Dustin Johnson, 2017). Also, only once has the final match been contested by two top-16 seeded players (No. 16 Louis Oosthuizen and No. 2 Jason Day). Match play is highly variant, so embrace the chaos this week; it should be fun. Tyrrell Hatton ($9,200) The good thing about Hatton is that he didn’t gain many strokes on the greens last week en route to his top 25. That shouldn’t be a net positive, but Hatton was gaining an unsustainable amount of strokes on the greens over his previous two tournaments before Valspar Championship and wasn’t gaining a ton via ball-striking. At the Valspar, Hatton gained the sixth-most strokes through approach and 1.64 off-the-tee, the improvement we (and he) were seeking. If we include only past winners in the field, since 1999 their average number of starts in this event before winning is 5.5, with Johnson having the most (eight) and Horschel having the least (four). This week will be Hatton’s fifth start here, and he’s coming in with form, finishing T21 at Valspar, 13th at THE PLAYERS Championship and runner-up at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. Group 13 could be a tough draw for Hatton, but Daniel Berger ($9,800) is 3-9 at this event over his previous six starts. Si Woo Kim ($7,100) is fantastic on Pete Dye courses but also struggles in match play, with a 3-7-3 record at Austin CC. Kevin Kisner ($7,600) While Spieth is a potential sleeper in Group 6, Kisner ultimately gets the nod. He’ll need to get past Justin Thomas ($10,700), but the 2019 winner of this event isn’t going to back down from any competition. Since 2016, Kisner’s record is 16-6-1 with a 67% winning percentage. Compile that with his record at this tournament since 1999 and Presidents Cups, Kisner has the highest win rate of any golfer in the field (70%). His recent top-5 finish at TPC Sawgrass, another Pete Dye course, proves Kisner should be on the shortlist of golfers to roster this week. Cameron Young ($7,000) There’s an excellent chance Young will go under rostered because he has to face Jon Rahm ($11,300) and Patrick Reed ($7,500), who everyone loves in this format. Rahm and Reed are not playing up to their expectations coming into this event, and Young could exceed everyone’s expectation of him, especially if he’s going to be hitting second the majority of the time with how well he hits it off the tee. A near win at The Genesis Invitational, followed by a top 20 at PGA National (Honda Classic) and top 15 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, should give us confidence this ‘young’ golfer has the resolve to beat some top brass in Texas. Set your DraftKings fantasy golf lineups here: PGA TOUR $750K Pitch + Putt [$200K to 1st] (Match Play) Put your knowledge to the test. Sign up for DraftKings and experience the game inside the game. Place your golf bets at DraftKings Sportsbook or by downloading the DraftKings Sportsbook app. All views expressed are my own. I am an employee of DraftKings and am ineligible to play in public DFS or DKSB contests. The contents contained in this article do not constitute a representation that any particular strategy will guarantee success. All customers should use their own skill and judgment in building lineups. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/MI/NJ/PA/WV/WY), 1-800-NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/NH), 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 1-877-770-STOP (7867) (LA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), call/text TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/LA/MI/NH/NJ/NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. Eligibility restrictions apply. See draftkings.com/sportsbook for full terms and conditions.

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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
Brooks Koepka+700
Justin Thomas+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Xander Schauffele+1400
Jon Rahm+1800
Collin Morikawa+2000
Brooks Koepka+2500
Justin Thomas+2500
Viktor Hovland+2500
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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
Viktor Hovland+2000
Justin Thomas+2500
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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
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Nine things to know about Harding ParkNine things to know about Harding Park

Bethpage Black and Torrey Pines have proven that municipal course can host memorable majors. This week, TPC Harding Park will try to continue the trend. San Francisco’s public gem – which has already hosted two World Golf Championships and Presidents Cup – is hosting one of golf’s Grand Slam events for the first time. The 2020 PGA Championship also will be the first major in more than a year. Harding Park, which was built nearly a century ago, has a colorful history that is representative of the city it calls home. Like Bethpage Black, it also emerged from a period of neglect to reach greater heights. Its comeback culminates this week. 1. HARDING’S SAVIOR A certain Stanford alum will garner plenty of attention this week. Tiger Woods is seeking his record-setting 83rd PGA TOUR victory and 16th major championship. There’s a strong chance you’ll hear the name of another former Cardinal who won an NCAA individual golf title, as well. That’s Sandy Tatum, the man who was the driving force behind Harding Park’s rejuvenation. Tatum, who passed away in 2017, was a Rhodes Scholar and president of the United States Golf Association. He played in his first San Francisco City Championship (more on that unique event later) in 1939 while a student at Stanford. Harding Park fell on tough times in the latter half of the 20th century. An inadequate irrigation system led to large fissures in the fairways, which were also dotted with daisies. Bunker walls collapsed and the putting greens were dotted with bare spots. The clubhouse was falling into disrepair. “It was a public disgrace,” said San Francisco golf historian Bo Links. In 1998, the historic course was used as a parking lot for the U.S. Open at the neighboring Olympic Club. Links called it “the ultimate indignity.” Tatum was known for his diplomacy and for staying calm when faced with criticism. He was the man who famously answered pros’ complaints about the course setup for the 1974 U.S. Open, the infamous “Massacre at Winged Foot,” by saying, “We’re not trying to embarrass the game’s great players. We’re trying to identify them.” Tom Watson, a fellow Stanford alum and longtime friend, described Tatum as a “straight shooter.” “Sandy had an absolute passion for golf. He was a man of integrity, respect and humor,” Watson said. Those traits served him well while trying to navigate the bureaucracy of local government. He faced many hurdles, but he was able to galvanize the golf community behind his vision. By 2001, he formed an alliance with the PGA TOUR that helped return Harding Park to its former glory. The course was renovated and the San Francisco chapter of the First Tee was started at Harding Park. Links describes Tatum as “the most complete human being I’ve ever met.” “He could have gone down and played Cypress Point every day of his life, but he played Harding Park. He’d be out at Harding Park in the rain and the mud, playing in the City Championship and wondering why everyone was complaining about the rain and the mud,” Links said. “He was the purest golfer you’d ever meet. He was in love with the game. He knew its value.” 2. AHEAD OF ITS TIME Harding Park was one of the country’s first great municipal courses, predating places like Bethpage Black, Torrey Pines and Los Angeles’ Rancho Park. Harding Park, which opened in 1925, was designed by the same two men who created Olympic Club’s two courses: Willie Watson and Sam Whiting. San Francisco caught the golf bug in the early 20th century, and Harding Park was built after the city’s first public course, Lincoln Park, was overrun with golfers. Lincoln Park is now a short par-68 but it is famous for its scenic vistas overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge. Harding Park was built on a desirable piece of property, as well. The land, which was owned by the Spring Valley Water Company, was located next to Lake Merced. The fertile, loamy soil and rolling terrain made it prime golfing ground. The site also is just a few miles from the Pacific Ocean. The ocean isn’t visible from the course, but its effect is felt by the strong winds and dense fog. The land surrounding Lake Merced is densely populated by great golf courses. Harding Park, Olympic Club and the A.W. Tillinghast-designed San Francisco Golf Club surround the lake, while the Lake Merced Golf Club, which was re-designed by Alister Mackenzie, is nearby. 3. THE CITY Locals will say this isn’t the first major championship hosted by Harding Park. In fact, they’ll contend that it conducts one annually. That’s because the San Francisco City Championship is held high regard among San Francisco’s passionate golf community. The City, as it’s affectionately known, is a match-play event held over a series of winter weekends. The tournament, which has a variety of flights for players of every age, gender and ability, draws a diverse field of competitors that is true to San Francisco’s ethos. The tournament started in 1916 at Lincoln Park before shifting to Harding Park. Now, both courses host the stroke-play portion and, as a testament to Lincoln Park’s tricky layout, it isn’t uncommon to see players shoot higher scores on the shorter course. Because it was not halted for the world wars, the tournament boasts of being the oldest uninterrupted championship in the world. Past champions of The City include World Golf Hall of Fame members Ken Venturi and Juli Inkster, Masters champion George Archer and PGA TOUR players Martin Trainer and Brandon Hagy. Major winners Johnny Miller and Bob Rosburg are past participants in The City, as well. Among The City’s lesser-known legends was Frank Mazion, a Black baggage handler at San Francisco airport, who would compete after working the graveyard shift. A long hitter with a deft touch, he won The City in 1979 and 1983. The tournament is known for its harsh conditions, made even more trying during the course’s lean years, and cast of characters. After the third round of the 2002 Open Championship – when Woods’ Grand Slam bid ended with an 81 shot in the midst of a severe storm — Scott McCarron surprised writers when he compared the conditions to what he’d faced in the San Francisco City Championship. The most famous moment in The City’s history was the 1956 final between Ken Venturi and Harvie Ward. The match was front-page news in a day when San Francisco didn’t have an MLB or NBA team. It was an age when amateur golf was held in high esteem, as well. In 1955, Ward won the U.S. Amateur claimed the City Championship while Venturi was stationed in Austria with the Army. “I’ve come to get my title back,” Venturi, who won the City in 1950 and 1953, reportedly said on the first tee of the 1956 Final. An estimated 10,000 fans attended the match, which Venturi won, 5 and 4. Venturi would go on to finish second in the Masters a month later, while Ward would successfully defend his U.S. Amateur title. The showdown also came two months after the famed Cypress Point match where Venturi and Ward took on Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson. Hogan and Nelson won, 1 up, but history seems to have forgotten that the amateurs won a rematch just a few days later at Harding Park (more on that below). Venturi’s 1956 triumph was his third and final win in The City. He also won the last of his 14 PGA TOUR titles at Harding Park, claiming the 1966 Lucky International Open. It was a fitting conclusion to his career, as his father, Fred, ran Harding Park’s pro shop for many years. Ken Venturi holds the course record (59) and is said to have eagled 17 of the course’s 18 holes. 4. WHERE THE PROS PLAY Professional golf arrived at Harding Park in 1944 for the Victory Open. It was a wartime moniker for the San Francisco Open, which rotated between the city’s courses. Byron Nelson won, then claimed the same event at Harding Park in December, giving him two wins in the same event at the same venue in the same year. The San Francisco Open died a quiet death after that. It was played in 1946 at the Olympic Club, followed by an eight-year hiatus. A final competition was held at Lake Merced Golf Club in 1954. The pros returned to Harding in 1959, when Mason Rudolph won the Golden Gate Open. That event was played just one time. Two years later, the Lucky International Open, which was sponsored by a local brewery, began a seven-year run at Harding Park. It was played all but one year between 1961 and 1969. Six of the Lucky’s seven winners were also major champions: Gary Player, Gene Littler, Jack Burke, Jr., Billy Casper, Archer and Venturi. The lone exception was Chi Chi Rodriguez, who is in the World Golf Hall of Fame. The PGA TOUR returned for World Golf Championships in 2005 and 2015, as well as the 2009 Presidents Cup (more on that later). PGA TOUR Champions played Harding Park in 1981 (Don January won) before returning to host its season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship in 2010, 2011 and 2013. John Cook, Jay Don Blake and Fred Couples won those events. 5. TIGER TRACKING Woods will arrive at the PGA Championship after a middling performance at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide and amidst questions about his health, but he can lean on a strong history at Harding Park. Woods, who played Harding Park when he was a boy, was blown away by its transformation when he returned for the 2005 World Golf Championships-American Express Championship. “It’s unbelievable how much they’ve changed the golf course. It used to be basically a clover field out here,” he said. He predicted a low winning score, but his 10-under 270 was good enough to get into a playoff with John Daly. Woods won after Daly missed a short par putt in sudden-death. “The pins were set up tough. The greens were fast and firm for the most part,” Woods said. “Any time you get fairways that are running, the scores are generally not going to be all that low, and a lot of good shots were running through fairways.” Woods was impressive at Harding Park again four years later, going 5-0-0 in the Presidents Cup. He and Steve Stricker dominated their four team matches, winning 6 and 4, 5 and 3, 4 and 2 and 1 up. In singles, Woods beat Y.E. Yang, 6 and 5, to exact revenge for Yang’s upset at the PGA Championship two months earlier. The TOUR returned to Harding Park for the 2015 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. Rory McIlroy beat Gary Woodland, 4 and 2, in the final. 6. LONG AND SHORT OF IT Harding Park was a 6,505-yard, par-73 when it opened. Par was dropped to 72 when the 11th hole was turned into a par-3 by the mid-1940s. The layout remained relatively unchanged until Jack Fleming, who was Alister Mackenzie’s construction supervisor at Cypress Point, upgraded the course in 1960s. When Harding Park first opened, there were several practice fairways where players could shag their own practice balls. Venturi was among the players who honed their game on those fairways. With Harding Park receiving more play, those fairways were converted into a nine-hole course now known as the Fleming Nine. The big course was expanded to 6,722 yards, as well. Harding Park was lengthened 450 yards when it was renovated after the turn of the century. It will play 7,234 yards this week, relatively short by major championship standards, but the course features seven par-4s that are at least 460 yards long. There are also two par-4s that are potentially drivable, the seventh and 16th holes. The longest par-3, the eighth hole, is 251 yards, and the two par-5s both measure over 560 yards. Harding Park’s curving fairways require players to choose how aggressive they want to be and to shape their tee shots. Players have to be careful to avoid the cypress trees, which are known to swallow golf balls, though. “I’ve seen enough (balls) get stuck to where I’m going to try my hardest to avoid cutting off doglegs too much,” Jordan Spieth said before the 2015 Match Play. The course can also play long in the thick San Francisco air, especially when the fog rolls in. 7. LAKE VIEW It isn’t until late in the round that players truly get a glimpse of Lake Merced. Harding Park is laid out in two loops, with the back nine wrapping around the front nine’s inner loop. “The course begins at the 14th hole,” Links said, “because that’s when you get to the lake.” The stretch of holes along Lake Merced don’t just provide scenic vistas. It also offer a myriad of challenges and allows for scoring swings. Being by the water also exposes those holes to more wind. The course actually starts its move toward the water with the 13th hole, a 472-yard, dogleg right. The Olympic Club is visible in the distance behind the green. Those final six holes feature three par-4s of 460-plus yards, two short par-4s and a short, but tricky, par-3. After a player departs the 13th green, he’ll have Lake Merced on his left for the final five holes. Fourteen is another long par-4, playing 470 yards with a fairway that slopes right-to-left. The next two holes are short par-4s. Fifteen is just 401 yards long, but it is downhill and doglegs severely to the left. The 16th hole is a drivable par-4 of 336 yards. Bunkers protect the left side of the green, while overhanging cypress trees guard the right. The green is among the most undulating on the course. Seventeen is a short par-3 of 171 yards but Links said the trees make it difficult to judge the fickle wind. And the 463-yard finishing hole curves left around the lake, requiring players to decide how much to cut off on the dogleg left while avoiding the deep bunkers on the right. 8. PRESIDENTIAL CONNECTION The course is named after Warren G. Harding, the 29th President of the United States. Harding was from Ohio, but in August 1923, he died of a heart attack in San Francisco while returning from a trip to Alaska. Harding was an avid golfer and was the first sitting President to award the U.S. Open trophy to the winner. He gave it to Jim Barnes after Barnes’ victory in 1921 at Columbia Country Club in Chevy Chase, Maryland. Soon after Harding’s death, calls came forth to name San Francisco’s new course after the President. 9. REMATCH The four-ball match at Cypress Point between Hogan, Nelson, Ward and Venturi has become the stuff of legend. The sequel at Harding Park has been forgotten over the years, though. The second match took place 10 days later. Hogan was replaced by Jack Fleck, the man who six months earlier had upset Hogan in the U.S. Open across the lake at Olympic Club. Fleck partnered with Nelson to take on the two amateur heavyweights. The match benefited local flood relief. The match was highly publicized. There were several practice rounds, a hole-in-one contest and exhibition atmosphere all week. With more than 7,000 fans watching, Venturi and Ward were 3 up after 12 holes and defeated the pros, 2 and 1. Venturi shot 68, while Fleck shot 73, Ward shot 74 and Nelson struggled to a 78 (although it was match play, the players agreed to hole everything out for the spectators). Fans lined every fairway and green. Nelson called it the best-behaved gallery he had ever seen. Unfortunately, there will be no fans at Harding Park this week. The course will still get its turn in the spotlight, though.

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Winner’s bag: Matthew Wolff, 3M OpenWinner’s bag: Matthew Wolff, 3M Open

Matthew Wolff’s dramatic eagle at the 72nd hole earned him his first PGA TOUR title at the 3M Open. Here’s a look at Wolff’s equipment: Driver: TaylorMade M5 (8 degrees) Shaft: Graphite Design AD-TP 7TX 3 Wood: TaylorMade M5 (15 degrees) Shaft: Graphite Design Tour AD-BB Irons: TaylorMade P760 (2 iron), TaylorMade P750 Tour Proto (4-PW) Shafts: Nippon N.S. Pro Tour 130X Wedges: TaylorMade Milled Grind (52, 56 and 60 bent to 62 degrees) Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 Putter: TaylorMade Spider X Tour Shaft: KBS CT Tour putter shaft Golf Ball: 2019 Titleist Pro V1 Related: Matthew Wolff: In-depth ‘What’s in the bag?’ and one of the coolest headcovers in golf

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Winner’s Bag: Ian Poulter, Houston OpenWinner’s Bag: Ian Poulter, Houston Open

HUMBLE, Texas — Ian Poulter won for the first time in six years on TOUR and booked his place in the Masters field with a sudden-death playoff victory over Beau Hossler on Sunday at the Houston Open.  Down one on the last hole of regulation, Poulter stuck his approach to 19 feet and drained the putt to force extra holes. The Odyssey #7 putter he used to make the putt was recently called out of retirement at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play following a lengthy run in Poulter’s bag that included a memorable performance on the final day of the 2012 Ryder Cup.  “It’s not going anywhere anytime soon,” Poulter said about the putter after the win.  Poulter ranked 19th in strokes gained: putting for the week with the flat stick and said earlier in the week that going back to the putter gave him no excuses due to the success he’d had with it in the past.  “When you’re tinkering, messing, trying, when you grab something that you know has done wonderful things, you have to take the onus then because you know it’s not the putter, it’s generally the person holding it,” Poulter said. “So I could go out, not blame anyone else and really try and find some good mojo, some good memories, some good feelings like I’ve had with that and take on the course because my game’s in shape and I just need to hole a few putts and it’s happening.” Here’s a look at Poulter’s entire equipment setup: Driver: Titleist 917D2 (Mitsubishi Tensei Orange CK 60TX shaft), 9.5 degrees 3-wood: Titleist 917F2 (Matrix Ozik TP7HDe 7X shaft), 16.5 degrees Hybrid: Titleist 816 H2 (Aldila Tour Green ATX85H TX shaft), 21 degrees Irons: Titleist 716 T-MB (4-iron; Project X LZ 130 7.0shaft), Titleist 718 AP2 (5-PW; Project X LZ 130 7.0 shafts) Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (52.12F, 56.14F and 60.04L degrees; True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts) Putter: Odyssey #7  Ball: Titleist Pro V1x PGA TOUR SUPERSTORE: Buy equipment here

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