Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The top 10 moments in Charles Schwab Challenge history

The top 10 moments in Charles Schwab Challenge history

This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Charles Schwab Challenge. The tournament first known as the Colonial National Invitation has been played every year at historic Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, making it the longest continuous host of a PGA TOUR event. Ben Hogan, who is immortalized with a statue at the club, won five times at Colonial, including the inaugural event in 1946. Daniel Berger’s win last year also was momentous, coming in the first event after the COVID-induced hiatus. Past champions at Colonial also include Sam Snead, Arnold Palmer, Billy Casper, Lee Trevino, Jack Nicklaus, Nick Price and Tom Watson. To mark this year’s special anniversary, here are the top 10 moments in the venerable history of the Charles Schwab Challenge, presented in chronological order. RELATED: The First Look | How the field qualified for Colonial 1946 The inaugural Colonial National Invitation featured a field of the top 24 players in earnings and 12 leading amateurs. Only five amateurs were selected the first year because many were still in the Army or had new jobs after World War II. The unique tournament was hailed by players for its lavish purse of $15,000 and such perks as no entry fees, no caddie fees, and no clubhouse expenses. Longtime club pro Harry Todd of Dallas, who turned pro in 1944, held the third-round lead at 1 over. Sam Snead was one stroke back and local favorite Ben Hogan trailed by three. After rounds of 71-70-70, Todd said he thought another 70 would be enough for victory. He managed to shoot 1-under 69 on Sunday but lost by one shot. Hogan stormed to the top with a 65. He took charge with three straight birdies starting at No. 11 and then held on with a back-nine 32. He was the only player to finish under par, at 1-under 279. Hogan’s 65 would stand as the course record for 24 years. 1959 Hogan claimed his fifth NIT title in the tournament’s first playoff, beating Fred Hawkins by four strokes over 18 holes. Hogan shot 69 to Hawkins’ 73 to claim the final victory of his career. Hawkins was playing a new set of Hogan clubs his friend gave him before the tournament. Hogan, 46, was going for his first victory since his banner year of 1953, when he won three majors. Hogan could have won in regulation but missed a 2 1/2 -foot putt on the 72nd hole. “I was completely confident I could sink the putt,” Hogan said, but the ball stopped one inch short of the cup. “Guess I didn’t hit enough club,” Hogan said with a grin afterward. Hogan’s victory had special meaning. It marked the first time his wife, Valerie, watched a round that earned him a title. And he also got a celebratory embrace from his mother, Clara. “I’ve galleried several times out here,” Clara said. “I meant to come out Sunday, but I was listening to it on the radio, and it got so exciting, I was afraid I would miss something if I left home.” 1962 Arnold Palmer had considered skipping Colonial after winning in Las Vegas, his third victory in four starts. After all, his best finish in six visits to Fort Worth was a tie for sixth. But Palmer decided to honor his previous commitment after talking to Colonial officials. Palmer tried a different strategy to negotiate his way through the treelined doglegs. Instead of hitting irons off many tees as he often did on the 7,112-yard layout, Palmer went with driver. Paired with Gary Player, Palmer was 3 under through nine holes. He missed only one fairway during his opening 67. “When I stood on 12, I was 1 under and felt like a hacker,” Player said. But Palmer failed to maintain his driving accuracy, and his lead. Known for his exciting stretch runs, he all but collapsed in the fourth round. Bogeys on two of the final three holes left him tied for the lead with Johnny Pott, who overcame a seven-shot deficit with a 69. In Monday’s 18-hole playoff, the second in tournament history, Palmer pulled away with birdies on 11, 15 and 16. He won by four strokes. 1963 Julius Boros became the first player other than Hogan to win multiple Colonial titles. Three years after overcoming a one-stroke deficit by shooting an even-par 70, Boros shot a final-round 71 to extend his third-round lead by one to four strokes. Although Hogan missed the event for the first time since its inception, Boros had to withstand challenges from Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus, who finished second and third, respectively. Boros was never seriously threatened on Sunday. Although Player got to within two shots of the lead, Boros answered with a birdie on 14 and then patiently stuck to par the rest of the way. “After that birdie, I figured if I just parred in I would win,” Boros said. “So I just started shooting for the center of the greens.” Boros’ 1-under 279 was the first sub-par total at Colonial since Chandler Harper’s 276 in 1955. But Boros played deliberately, choosing to avoid mistakes. He made eight pars and a bogey on the front and then countered his bogey on 10 with the birdie on 14. “I knew about where I stood,” he said. “There are scoreboards all over the course. I kept an eye on them.” Upstaging Hogan in Texas was nothing new for Boros. His breakthrough win came in the 1952 U.S. Open at Northwood Club in Dallas, where he ended Hogan’s bid for a third straight Open title. 1987 Keith Clearwater had never played the Colonial. After five PGATOUR qualifying schools, the 27-year-old was just getting his bearings as a rookie. So when Clearwater teed off at 7:22 on Sunday, only a small group of sleepy spectators and several volunteers were at the first tee. No photographers. No network cameras. The little-known rookie was in a 19-way tie for 25th, five shots behind. “Just another Saturday round after making the cut,” Clearwater said. But in Sunday’s 36-hole finale of the rain-delayed event, Clearwater went historic on the venerable layout. He shot two rounds of six-under 64 to become the tournament’s first rookie winner. He beat Davis Love III by three shots and matched Corey Pavin’s 1985 tournament record of 14-under 266. Clearwater made 13 birdies and one bogey the last two rounds, taking advantage of the rain-softened course. His $108,000 paycheck nearly matched his earnings as leading money winner on the Tournament Players Association minor league circuit the previous year. He called it “the greatest experience I’ve had in my life, at least on the golf course.” 1998 Tom Watson visited the new World Golf Hall of Fame before arriving in Fort Worth and then added another remarkable feat to his legendary career at Colonial. He stamped his name on the Wall of Champions, joining the likes of Hogan, Nicklaus, Palmer, and Snead at age 48. Watson had come close at Colonial. He finished third twice, fourth four times, and was 20 years removed from being the first player to post four subpar rounds at Colonial without winning. This time, he was tied for the lead when his drive on No. 8 landed in a fairway bunker. Watson faced a tough lie with his feet on the bunker’s edge, several inches above the ball. A stiff crosswind was blowing, and a pond fronting the green left little margin for error. Watson huddled with longtime caddie Bruce Edwards. “There was no thought of laying up at all,” Watson said. “The discussion was whether to hit an 8- or a 9-iron. We decided on the 8 because of the reduced swing speed from the awkward stance. I was just trying to make contact and not hit it fat.” The high fade came down 10 feet from the hole. Watson rolled in the birdie putt for a one-shot lead over playing partner Jim Furyk, finishing with a bogey-free 66 for his 39th and final PGATOUR victory. “Winning at my age is a rarity,” Watson said. “I didn’t know if I would win another tournament on this TOUR.” 2001 A year after overcoming a seven-stroke deficit over the final nine holes, Phil Mickelson blew a five-shot lead while being overtaken by Colonial rookie Sergio Garcia. Garcia reenacted Mickelson’s 2000 heroics with a final-round 63, breaking through for his first PGA TOUR victory by two strokes over Mickelson and Brian Gay. “It’s something I was waiting for,” said Garcia, who won in his 33rd start. “I’m glad I was able to finally win on probably the toughest TOUR in the world.” Garcia, who shot 29 on the front nine, became the youngest Colonial winner (21 years, 4 months) and seventh to make Colonial his first victory. He also became the third-youngest first-time winner on Tour in the past 10 years, joining Tiger Woods (20 years, 10 months) and Mickelson (20 years, six months). But Garcia’s victory seemed a long time coming. Considering the hoopla accompanying his arrival on TOUR in 1999, his win stopped the stream of “when” questions. “It took longer than I thought it should … I mean, I’ve felt like I’ve played well enough to win,” said Garcia, who had 11 previous top-10s. “They say the first one is the toughest. Well, hopefully some nice things will start happening now.” 2003 All eyes were on Colonial as Annika Sorenstam became the first woman in 58 years to play a PGA TOUR event. Fans were gathering around the 10th tee an hour before the world’s top-ranked woman hit her first shot. Fans lined the clubhouse balcony and the grassy hill overlooking the tee. Some among the record crowds wore “Go Annika” buttons. And photographers and reporters from around the world jockeyed for position when Sorenstam began her historic quest with a 4-wood shot to the fairway. “I knew I was going to give it my best, but I was nervous I might not get my ball on the tee,” Sorenstam said. “I was shaking.” Sorenstam, 32, shot 71-74, missing the cut by four shots. But she handled the pressure and pre-event hoopla with grace. She also showed that she could play with the men. “I remember all the people,” Sorenstam said 10 years later. “Rows and rows and rows of people. There were people hanging in the trees, and there were so many cameras.” Kenny Perry became the most overshadowed winner in Colonial history. He shattered the tournament scoring record with a 19-under 261 in ideal conditions. 2008 Locked in a three-way tie on the 72nd hole, Phil Mickelson pulled off one of the best shots in tournament history to claim his second Colonial title. His drive on 18 went left into a grove of trees, his ball nestled in heavy rough 140 yards from the pin. So, Mickelson threaded a wedge shot under one tree and over another. His ball clipped branches rising to the sky and then came to rest 9 feet from the pin. “Just lucky,” Mickelson said smiling afterward. “I’m as surprised as anybody I was able to make a 3 from over there.” Mickelson then made the birdie putt for a one-stroke victory over Rod Pampling and Tim Clark. After hitting a shot destined for tournament lore, Mickelson was asked where it might rank on his personal scale. “Probably top five,” he said, adding that he had already discussed the subject with his wife, Amy. 2020 After the longest unscheduled break in PGA TOUR history — since the 105-day gap during World War II (Sept. 3 to Dec. 17, 1943) — the Charles Schwab Challenge served as the first tournament back from a 91-day layoff caused by the pandemic. Most sports sat idle as Covid-19 forced stay-at-home orders. NASCAR and IndyCar — both contested without fans — were the only major American sports to return before Colonial. Players were so eager to return that Colonial landed one of its strongest fields, which included the world’s top five and16 of the top 20. As the first event played under the TOUR’s new coronavirus protocol, Colonial would provide a test in terms of staging a sporting event during a pandemic. The TOUR spent more than a month planning for the relaunch. A 37-page safety protocol required players, caddies and on-site TOUR employees to be tested before and after arriving in Fort Worth. Each of the 1,000 on-site personnel — players, caddies, staff, volunteers, and media — underwent thermal scanning each day. Perhaps most bizarre was that the tournament steeped in tradition lacked the typical roars erupting across the tree-lined doglegs. Not even a holed shot from the fairway could break the silence. But the loaded leaderboard supplied plenty of drama. And after a three-month wait, it seemed fitting that an extra hole would be required to determine the champion. Xander Schauffele was tied for the lead until a bogey on the 71st hole opened the playoff door for Daniel Berger and Collin Morikawa. On the first extra hole, No. 17, Berger made par and then Morikawa’s 3 ½-foot putt to extend the playoff rimmed out. Berger’s third career victory was his first since 2017. “I’ve grinded so hard over the last two months to be in this position,” Berger said. “When I came back, I came back stronger than I ever have before and I wanted it more than I ever have before.”

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PXG introduces Gen2 driver, fairway woods and hybridsPXG introduces Gen2 driver, fairway woods and hybrids

Bob Parsons is the founder and owner of Parsons Extreme Golf (PXG); he’s also a billionaire entrepreneur, the founder of GoDaddy.com, a Marine and … now he’s a golf club designer, too? Well, maybe not exactly, but he did spark the idea for PXG’s new Gen2 driver technology, according to himself and the company. Due to his love of muscle cars – Dodge muscle cars, to be exact, of which he has a Demon, a Charger, a Hell Cat, and a Durango 392 SRT, among others – Parsons suggested his engineers make a driver crown to look like the hood of American muscle cars. Parsons’ idea to mimic the scoop of a muscle car on its new 0811 Gen2 X and XF drivers, which have titanium faces and bodies, led to a carbon fiber crown design that is said to raise ball speeds by keeping energy focused where it needs to be at impact. It’s called “hot rodâ€� technology, according to the company. “We went down a rabbit hole, and my god there was a rabbit there,â€� Parsons told me. So Parsons, while simply making a recommendation for an aesthetic design based on his love of American muscle vehicles, actually came up with a new engineering technology. Here’s how the story goes, straight from Parsons himself. “So I come in one day and I say guys, why don’t we try on our driver, rather than making the crown plain, making it look like a scoop on a muscle car. And they didn’t want to do it at first, but they did. And then they thought about it and they said you know what it might be fun. So we did it. And what happened was, first it acted like an alignment aid, which is what I thought it would do. And I thought it would look kind of cool, which it did. To our surprise, there were performance benefits. One of them is stiffening that crown, and having that scoop there kind of focuses the energy, or keeps the energy there from dissipating.â€� To reference My Cousin Vinny, does Parsons’ case hold water? For that answer, we turn to PXG’s engineers Mike Nicolette and Brad Schweigert for an explanation on exactly how the new technology works. “The most noticeable thing is the crown. One of the things we’ve learned, working a lot more with polymers these days is just how they interact, the things they do well, the things there’s drawbacks on … the crown geometry is made up of carbon fiber and it’s binded together with the polymer resin. That resin material, when it deflects, it bends and it dissipates energy. We figured out a way to make the crown stiffer so that you don’t lose or dissipate any energy in the crown, which yields higher ball speeds and ultimately more distance. So that’s a big part of the story.â€� Basically, with the muscle-car-inspired-scoop, the carbon-fiber crown has multi-level, variable thickness that works to reduce energy dissipation, thus increasing ball speeds across the face. Also, the multi-level design enhances aerodynamics by reducing drag, according to PXG. The crown also has a new matte paint with anti-glare to reduce distractions, according to the company. Now, for the tough question: Are these drivers special?  More specifically, will these drivers now hold the same appeal and performance as PXG’s irons? Since July 2015, when PXG launched its Gen1 0311 irons, the company has been known mostly in the equipment world for its irons, which use a special TPE (thermoplastic urethane) material behind the face to increase both feel and ball speed. But when it comes to its 0811 drivers — and the various low-spin X and higher-forgiveness XF driver launches — PXG’s drivers seem to have lacked the same level of regard as its irons from the equipment world. Schweigert takes on the difficult question: “We knew it. The irons were special. They offered the consumer everything. They had a really unique feel, they had a unique technology story. They looked amazing, they performed really, really well. So, we knew those were going to be the all stars, so to speak. The driver category in and of itself is tough, because there’s a lot of product that performs pretty well. So it’s hard to differentiate yourself. I think the difference now with this new generation of woods is that I feel like we’re on the cusp of everything that we have with the irons. Because you have this really cool unique look that differentiates it from everything else that’s in the marketplace. It feels really really good, and that differentiates it. It has a different feel from everything else in the marketplace. Performance is outstanding. There’s a fitting story there, in being able to customize it for an individual. We’re cautiously optimistic that it’s going to take a seat alongside our irons as being considered industry-leading product. That’s the expectation for us. So far, all of the feedback we’re getting reinforces that expectation. Now it’s just wait and see, to see if that comes to fruition.â€� Like its previous driver release, PXG’s Gen2 0811X drivers, will be a lower-spinning version, with forward CG positions available for even lower spin, and the Gen2 0811XF driver will be the more forgiving option. Those familiar PXG-signature weights have also been given a tweak to increase the adjustability of center of gravity (CG) – the X driver has 9 weight ports and the XF driver has 5 ports, with the silver Tungsten weights measuring 4.1 grams and the black titanium weights measuring 0.8 grams. “The way we’ve constructed those weights, we made it more intuitive for the mass movement … it’s both more intuitive and more efficient. So when you move one weight you see a bigger effect.â€� This change will help golfers better find the right setting to optimize their ball flight, and it will help fitters to dial in the consumer. Overall, PXG reports a CG below the neutral axis in its X driver, and it says the XF driver is at the MOI (moment of inertia) limit mandated by the USGA. The drivers also have PXG’s honeycomb TPE insert in the inner portions of their soles to dampen vibrations and enhance feel and acoustics. PXG reports its X driver is the lowest spinning driver on the market and has a 2 mph faster ball speed than the closest driver competitor, while the PXG XF is reported by the company as the highest MOI driver head on the market will 1 mph faster ball speed than its closest competitor on the market. Compared to its own Gen1 drivers, PXG says the Gen2 X driver has 1-2 mph faster ball speed, 300-400rpm lower spin rate, is 7-10 yards longer and has a 26 percent tighter dispersion area. The Gen2 XF driver, compared to the Gen 1 XF, has 1 mph faster ball speed, “similarâ€� spin rate, “slightlyâ€� higher launch angle, is 3-6 yards longer, and has a 34 percent tighter dispersion area, according to the company. There’s also been a drastic price decrease. PXG’s previous retail drivers sold for $850, while the new Gen 0811X drivers (9, 10.5 and 12 degrees) and the Gen2 081XF drivers (9, 10.5, 12 and 14 degrees) will sell for $575 starting on January 15. Each of the drivers have a 60-degree lie angle, measure 45 inches in length and come stock with a swing weight of D3. Parsons explains the price drop: “We priced it to take advantage of our scale now. And it’s still the most expensive driver there is, but it’s now an affordable luxury, moreso than it was. When we did our Gen 1 stuff, we’re a small company. Just getting going. You know, we’re not selling all that much so reach out and we start buying. And you don’t buy really in quantity, or you don’t know what you’re quantity is going to be. And so, you know it’s like you, when you go buy stuff and you buy just a few, you pay more than when you buy a lot. Same here. We’re always going to be a high performance brand. So we will never make a low performance product at a low price. It’s just not something we’ll do. Our stuff is always high performance period. And it will always outperform anything that we run up against. At least in our eyes it will. So from that standpoint, I don’t ever look to change that.â€� PXG fairway woods and hybrids Like the Gen2 0811 drivers, the Gen2 0341 fairway woods and Gen2 0317 hybrids also have the hot rod technology on their carbon fiber crowns to improve ball speeds. They each have anti-glare crowns, honeycomb TPE sole inserts, CG-adjustability in their soles via weight ports, and weight forward designs for lower spin. Same as the drivers, the fairway woods and hybrids have 4.1 silver tungsten weights and black 0.8-gram titanium weights for fine-tuning the soles. Compared to the Gen1 0341 fairway woods, PXG reports the Gen2 woods have 1-2 mph faster ball speeds, 300-400rpm lower spin, “similarâ€� launch angles, are 7-10 yards longer with a 3 percent tighter dispersion area. Compared to the Gen1 hybrids, PXG reports the new Gen 2 hybrids have 2-3 mph faster ball speeds, have “similarâ€� spin rates, “similarâ€� launch angles, are 4-7 yards longer with a 6 percent tighter dispersion area. The Gen2 0341 fairway woods (13, 15, 18 and 21 degrees) will sell for $425, and the Gen2 0317 hybrids (17, 19, 22, 25 and 28 degrees) will sell for $375.

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Paul Casey finally finds A+ putting stroke on Sunday at Valspar ChampionshipPaul Casey finally finds A+ putting stroke on Sunday at Valspar Championship

In the final round of the 2018 Valspar Championship, Paul Casey birdies seven of his first 13 holes, then pars in for a 65 and a one-shot win over Patrick Reed (68) and Tiger Woods (70). Welcome to the Monday Finish, where amid great Tiger fervor, Casey won for the second time on the PGA TOUR and the first since the 2009 Houston Open, moving from 39th to eighth in the FedExCup. Here are some further thoughts on the Valspar: FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1- If you want to get more out of your game, sometimes it helps to try less. Casey got into contention a lot last year only to struggle on Sundays. At the TOUR Championship, he was in the mix to win before shooting a final-round 73 to finish fifth. Eventually he realized he was grinding so hard, especially on the greens, that his perfectionism was getting in the way. He was even shutting and de-lofting the putter face. This year, Casey has tried to open the putter face while not getting himself so worked up on the greens. (Jordan Spieth would call it free-rollin’.) It certainly worked at the Valspar. Casey took just 21 putts Sunday, the lowest single-round total of his PGA TOUR career, and was +1.660 in strokes gained: putting on the day. “The way I strike the golf ball … I don’t stress about technique, I never have,â€� Casey said. “I figure everything out and I pick the target and hit it. If it’s a good shot, great. If it’s a bad one and went slightly off line, maybe I make a small adjustment and try not to do the same with the next one. I’ve never done with that the putting. I’ve always been super critical and try to have a great stroke. I’m approaching it the same way I approach the rest of the game. It’s carefree. “If it’s not, I’m not beating myself up,â€� he added. “I’m now striking the ball much better. My speed is infinitely better and I’m not shutting the putter face. And starting on line I can now read putts again. It’s pretty simple, but for so long I just couldn’t see it and trying to be perfect and trying to be better and the trying wasn’t getting anywhere. Getting in my own way.â€� 2- Birdies get the glamour, but pars save the day. Casey sizzled with the seven birdies and one bogey (at the difficult par-4 third hole), but after signing his card and beginning the long wait in the clubhouse, he was most delighted with his par saves at 16, 17 and 18. He missed all three greens in regulation, but chipped up and made knee-knocking par putts of 3 feet, 5 inches; 2 feet, 4 inches; and 5 feet, 2 inches. “The reason I’m happy, the way I cleaned up,â€� Casey said. “I putted brilliantly, the thing that has been holding me back for a couple seasons. Really good to hole the putts at 16, 17 and 18. It’s been a long time since I’ve holed three pressure putts like that in a row. I’m ecstatic about it.â€� 3- Tiger Woods (70) at least enjoyed some smaller victories. He moved to 43rd in the FedExCup and posted four straight sub-par rounds for the first time since THE NORTHERN TRUST in 2013. He also registered his 30th runner-up and 187th top-10 finish in 332 TOUR starts, and this week he heads to the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by MasterCard, which he’s won eight times. (For more on his comeback and his performance at the Valspar, click here.) 4- Woods wasn’t the only player enjoying a big comeback at the Valspar. Jim Furyk, the 2010 Valspar champion, was playing on a sponsor invitation and shot a final-round 66 to finish solo seventh. It was the first top-10 finish for the 17-time TOUR winner since he finished T6 at The RSM Classic in 2016. At 47, Furyk is trying to bounce back from a disappointing 2017 even as he makes preparations to captain the U.S. Ryder Cup Team in Paris in the fall. 5- Sergio Garcia’s eight birdies Sunday was a tournament best for a single round, but he was left to lament what might have been were it not for his two bogeys, everything adding up to a 65 that left him in solo fourth. Garcia also didn’t capitalize on his first three rounds (70-72-69). “Unfortunately, I left myself too much to do today,â€� he said. “Played really, really nicely. I played nicely all week. Unfortunately, I didn’t really get anything out of my rounds the first three days and today could have been a really, really special round. You know, I probably wasted at least three shots on the front nine with a three-putt and a couple short misses for birdies.â€� FIVE INSIGHTS 1- Casey scrambled exceptionally well, getting up and down 82.14 percent of the time, third best in the field. He was also +.865 in strokes gained: putting (15th), and near the top in driving distance (301.6 yards, 17th) and proximity to the hole (35’ 10’’ for T22). His worst stat was driving accuracy (46.15 percent, T68). 2- Perhaps the winner’s nerve on the greens (just 21 putts in the final round) was helped by the fact that he hit nine of 13 fairways, by far his best of the week. Casey, 40, had hit just six, five and four fairways over the first three rounds, respectively. 3- Woods was attempting to match fellow 40-something Phil Mickelson’s victory at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship the week before. In no particular order, Woods and Mickelson have won in back-to-back weeks on TOUR 10 times, most recently at the 2013 Farmers Insurance Open (Woods) and Waste Management Phoenix Open (Mickelson). 4- Patrick Reed (68) logged a lot of driving range time at the WGC-Mexico Championship, and it paid off at the Valspar. He matched Casey at 10-under before making bogey at the last. Reed’s sixth TOUR win, and first since THE NORTHERN TRUST in 2016, will have to wait. So, too, will atonement for the 2015 Valspar, when Reed and Sean O’Hair lost a playoff to Jordan Spieth. 5- Sam Burns came into the Valspar with 122 non-member FedExCup points, needing no worse than a two-way tie for third to earn the 147 points that would equal No. 150 on last year’s list (Rick Lamb, 269 points). Alas, Burns finished T12 and remains 88 points of Special Temporary Membership. He’ll play on a sponsor invitation at this week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by MasterCard. TOP VIDEOS

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