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Live: Youzhny vs. Federer

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017

Live: Youzhny vs. Federer

Russian looks to break 16-match losing streak against Federer

Mikhail Youhzny, currently No. 101 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, leads third seed Roger Federer, the 2004-2008 US Open champion, 1-6, 7-6(3), 6-4 on Wednesday afternoon.

Federer, who has never lost to Youzhny in their 16-match FedEx ATP Head2Head series, is looking to capture his third Grand Slam championship of the year and 20th major overall. The Swiss superstar has compiled a 36-3 match record in 2017, including five trophies. Former World No. 8 Youzhny reached the US Open semi-finals in 2006 and 2010.

The winner will next meet Spanish No. 31 seed Feliciano Lopez, who beat his compatriot Fernando Verdasco 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-1 in two hours and 10 minutes.

Federer did not put a foot wrong in the 26-minute first set, which saw him win the first five games. Although he could not convert two set point chances on Youzhny’s serve with a 5-0 lead, his domination was tempered when Youhzny regrouped by winning the first two games of the second set.

Federer clinched four straight games, but when he served for the set at 5-4, three backhand errors cost him. Youzhny went onto capitalise by winning just his fifth set – also 2000 Stockholm, 2003 Halle, 2011 Wimbledon, 2013 Halle – against Federer in their 17th meeting. It broke a streak of 16 sets for Federer in hard-court matches against Youzhny, dating back to their first clash in Sweden, which the Swiss star won 5-7, 6-4, 6-3.

In the third set, Federer saw his service speed drop on average by nine miles per hour from the previous two sets. Youzhny broke for a 3-2 and, seizing his chance, closed out the set on his third opportunity. Federer had grit hit teeth to save two set points in a 14-point ninth game.

Federer beat #NextGenATP American Frances Tiafoe 4-6, 6-2, 6-1, 1-6, 6-4 in the first round on Tuesday.

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Edmund to face Shapovalov on day five at US Open

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017
US Open
Venue: Flushing Meadows, New York Dates: 28 Aug-10 Sept
BBC coverage: Live radio and text commentary on selected matches every day.

Britain’s Kyle Edmund will take on Canadian teenager Denis Shapovalov for a place in the fourth round of the US Open in New York on Friday.

The pair will meet in the second match on Arthur Ashe Stadium at around 18:00 BST on day five at Flushing Meadows.

It will be their third meeting this year, after Edmund won their Davis Cup contest in February and Shapovalov prevailed at Queen’s Club in June.

Garbine Muguruza, Venus Williams and Maria Sharapova also feature.

  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Wozniacki unhappy at Sharapova schedule
  • Dimitrov loses to teenager Rublev
  • Federer beats Youzhny in five sets

Sharapova gets another night-session match on Ashe, this time against fellow wildcard Sofia Kenin of the USA.

They will follow American 10th seed John Isner against German 23rd seed Mischa Zverev from 00:00 on Saturday.

Wimbledon champion and third seed Muguruza will play Slovakian 31st seed Magdalena Rybarikova on Louis Armstrong Stadium at around 21:00.

Two-time winner Venus Williams and Marria Sakkari of Greece follow Edmund and Shapovalov on Ashe.

Croatia’s Cilic, the champion in 2014, is now the highest seed left in the bottom half of the men’s draw, and he takes on 29th seed Diego Schwartzman of Argentina at 16:00.

‘It got a few YouTube hits’

Edmund, 22, will hope to extend an impressive run of form that sees him in action for the 10th time in 14 days.

The world number 42 reached the semi-finals in Winston-Salem before the US Open, and has seen off Robin Haase and Steve Johnson in New York.

“I know I’m playing well,” he told BBC Radio 5 live. “I’ve played lots of matches, hit lots of balls.

“I feel I’m reading the matches well and just want to keep that ball rolling and not make things too complicated, just keep it really simple. I think that’s when I play my best tennis.”

The Briton will need to be at his best if he is to match last year’s run to the fourth round, with 18-year-old Shapovalov in irrepressible form.

The Canadian is up to 69th in the rankings after reaching the Montreal Masters semi-finals earlier this month, beating Rafael Nadal along the way.

He took another huge step with a comprehensive straight-set win over eighth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in Wednesday’s night session, but will not underestimate Edmund.

“He is so solid,” Shapovalov said of the British number two. “He’s an unbelievable player. He goes for his shots. He’s not afraid to take it to the guy.”

Shapovalov gained a deal of notoriety when he was defaulted from their Davis Cup match in February for hitting the umpire with a ball he struck in anger.

“I’ve come a long way from the incident,” said the Canadian. “I’ve been working extremely hard on it. It’s definitely helped me mature.”

Edmund agreed that it might well have fast-tracked Shapovalov’s progress, and found another positive to take from the experience.

“It got a few YouTube hits,” said Edmund.

“All my matches have got some thing like 5,000 or 10,000, and you go on that match and it’s something like 200,000.”

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Rublev Rumbles Into US Open Third Round

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017

Rublev Rumbles Into US Open Third Round

#NextGenATP Russian scores first Top 10 win

The #NextGenATP stars of the ATP World Tour are on a tear this week at the US Open, making Flushing Meadows their playground with a trio storming into the third round.

Andrey Rublev joined Borna Coric and Denis Shapovalov with a stunning 7-5, 7-6(3), 6-3 upset of Grigor Dimitrov on Thursday afternoon. Rublev demonstrated the poise of a veteran on Louis Armstrong Stadium, crushing his forehand with fearless aplomb. He fired 36 winners, including 23 on that wing, while saving eight of 10 break points faced.

Seventh seed Dimitrov was not as sharp as he was in streaking to the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title in Cincinnati two weeks ago, and Rublev took full advantage. It was the Russian’s first Top 10 win, marking the third time a #NextGenATP player has beaten a Top 8 seed this week in New York. On Wednesday, Coric upset fourth seed Alexander Zverev and Shapovalov shocked eighth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.

“I think my style of game is to just play aggressive, to try to play with my rhythm because I have quite good rhythm,” said Rublev. “I can compete with many good guys. I think this is one of the main things of my game. Of course, to try to work hard, to try to improve all the things that I need to improve every day. I hope that I’m doing better and better. In this way I have better results and ranking.”

You May Also Like: Del Potro Cruises At US Open; Dolgopolov Beats Berdych

Rublev’s victory also marks the first time multiple teenagers are into the US Open third round in nearly a decade, since Marin Cilic, Juan Martin del Potro and Kei Nishikori advanced as far in 2008. He is making strides in solidifying his place among the eight players who will feature at the Next Gen ATP Finals from 7-11 November in Milan. He is currently fifth in the Emirates ATP Race To Milan.

For Rublev, the straight-sets scoreline does not tell the entire story. It was a battle from first ball, with Dimitrov streaking to a 4-1 lead in both the first and second sets, before Rublev stormed back. After breaking the Bulgarian serving for the opener at 5-3, he broke again and closed it out on his fourth set point. His defensive prowess was on full display as he replicated the result in the second set, and claimed an early break in the third before holding to the finish line.

“I was just thinking to try to focus, just to try to fight, no matter even if I am losing with a break. And in the end, I was little bit lucky. I made a few good returns. I hit maybe a few points close to the line. In the end I broke. I think I was just pushing myself to fight for every point, even if I’m with break down. That’s how it works.”

A lunging forehand winner closed out the win after two hours and 27 minutes. Rublev will next face Damir Dzumhur in an unseeded battle on Saturday. A coveted spot in a first Grand Slam fourth round will be on the line. It will be their second FedEx ATP Head2Head encounter, with Rublev having prevailed on the clay of Istanbul in 2015.

Dzumhur rallied past Cedrik-Marcel Stebe 4-6, 6-4, 6-0, 6-1, concluding his impressive month of August with a 14-3 record. Runner-up at both the ATP Challenger Tour event in Santo Domingo and ATP World Tour 250 in Winston-Salem, the Bosnian is closing in on a career-high in the Top 50 of the Emirates ATP Rankings.

Ninth seed David Goffin and 18th seed Gael Monfils both had to do it the hard way, fighting through five-setters on Thursday to set their third-round showdown. Goffin improved to 5-4 since suffering a serious ankle injury at Roland Garros with his 3-6, 7-6(5), 6-7(2), 7-6(4), 6-3 victory over Guido Pella, the No. 72 in the Emirates ATP Rankings.

The Belgian held a set point at 5-4 in the fourth set but was forced to scrap it out on his third chance in the tie-break to take a two-sets-to-one lead. From there, his Argentine opponent began to fade, dropping serve twice in the final set of a four-hour, 26-minute battle.

Monfils, a semi-finalist at Flushing Meadows last season (l. to No. 1 Djokovic), called a medical time-out during the second set of his match, but rallied to hold off American lefty Donald Young 6-3, 6-7(3), 6-4, 2-6, 7-5 on Grandstand. The Frenchman held four set points to take a two-set lead on Young’s serve at 4-5, only to drop the set in a tie-break.

The final set featured five breaks and after a lengthy battle on serve at 5-5, a rash of unforced errors cost the American the break. Monfils returned to close it out with his 19th ace. Goffin and Monfils have split their two prior FedEx ATP Head2Head encounters.

 

 

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US Open 2017: Grigor Dimitrov & Tomas Berdych knocked out

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017
US Open
Venue: Flushing Meadows, New York Dates: 28 Aug-10 Sept
BBC coverage: Live radio and text commentary on selected matches every day.

Seventh seed Grigor Dimitrov lost in straight sets in the US Open second round to Russian 19-year-old Andrey Rublev.

The Bulgarian, 26, was a break up in both of the first two sets but eventually lost 7-5 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 at Flushing Meadows, New York.

Rublev, who beat British number three Aljaz Bedene in round one on Wednesday, will face Bosnia’s Damir Dzumhur next.

Czech 15th seed Tomas Berdych lost in four sets to Alexandr Dolgopolov.

The Ukrainian world number 64 triumphed 3-6 6-1 7-6 (7-5) 6-2.

Berdych hit 57 unforced errors, 12 double faults and had a first-serve percentage of only 45%.

Dolgopolov, 28, will face Victor Troicki in the third round after the Serb beat Italy’s Stefano Travaglia 7-6 (8-6) 7-5 6-0.

The Ukrainian said on Wednesday he gave his “best effort” in a match at the Winston-Salem Open last week that is being assessed for suspicious betting patterns.

  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Svitolina & Ostapenko into third round
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Travaglia Breaking New Ground After Career-Threatening Accident

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017

Travaglia Breaking New Ground After Career-Threatening Accident

Italian pushing towards Top 100 after first Grand Slam victory in New York

Entering the US Open, Italy’s Stefano Travaglia had won 274 matches in his pro career.

None at the tour-level and none over Top 50 opposition, with just 12 coming on hard courts.

There is a first for everything. Travaglia’s fortunes changed in flash at one of the biggest stages in the game, streaking into the main draw last week with a trio of straight-set qualifying wins. Then, the breakthrough arrived. A gritty 6-4, 7-6(8), 3-6, 6-0 victory over 22nd-seed Fabio Fognini on Wednesday afternoon.

The Italian stunned his countryman in two hours and 27 minutes behind eight breaks from 18 chances, seizing the opportunity on a packed Court 11.

“Today was the best win of my career and the first win in a Grand Slam main draw,” Travaglia told ATPWorldTour.com. “It’s very good for me and I will try to enjoy this day. When I lost the third set, he played a little better and then I changed my play. I was a break up but I lost five games in a row. In the fourth set, I played better and was full power from there.”

Less than two months after making his tour-level debut at Wimbledon, the mere fact that Travaglia is competing at this stage is astonishing. A tennis player’s ability to maintain a firm grip on the racquet is one of the most integral factors to success. For Travaglia, that seemingly basic faculty was nearly stripped from him entirely.

For six years, Travaglia has been building towards this moment after suffering a career-threatening accident in 2011, when he fell down a flight of stairs. In an attempt to halt his fall, the right-hander reached out with his right arm, but crashed through a pane of glass.

The fall had disastrous results, as the glass sliced between his wrist and elbow. As a result, Travaglia suffered nerve and tendon damage, losing feeling in four fingers. For nine months, tennis was far from his mind as Travaglia sought to restore his life back to normal. That is, nine months of suffering through surgery and rehab.

But, as the 25 year old says, the struggle and sacrifice was all worth it. Now, with the help of the facilities at Fabio Gorietti’s academy in Foligno, Italy, he has soared from No. 483 in the Emirates ATP Rankings a year ago to a projected Top 130 position following the US Open.

“It is unbelievable because my career has been stopped a lot of times. To be here today and win this round means a lot of things. I tried to play my best tennis and we’ll see where I’ll arrive in the next round and in the next month. The past is the past I have to think about the future and the present.”

Travaglia, who owns a stunning haul of 18 Futures titles, believes his game is maturing rapidly in 2017 as he graduates to full-time status on the ATP Challenger Tour. His experience in lifting his maiden Challenger crown in Ostrava, Czech Republic, in May and subsequent run at Wimbledon as a qualifier, has not only provided a surge of confidence, but allowed him to gauge his place against world-class competition.

“It has helped me to stay in the court without pressure,” Travaglia added. “I am trying to make the best of my tennis without thinking about the other player. I just play my game and focus on my tennis. Maybe at Wimbledon I was thinking about the other player and the [Emirates ATP Rankings] points. Now, I am focused on me only and playing tennis.

“Ostrava gave me confidence too. It was on another surface, on clay, but tennis is tennis. Whether it’s clay or hard courts. It’s only good for my confidence. I believe more in myself and I will keep going.”

Travaglia will face Viktor Troicki in the second round on Thursday.

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US Open 2017: Caroline Wozniacki unhappy at scheduling of Maria Sharapova matches

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017

Caroline Wozniacki has described the decision to schedule Maria Sharapova’s US Open matches on the main stadium court as “questionable”.

Sharapova, in her first Grand Slam event since returning from a 15-month doping ban, has played both her matches so far on the Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Wozniacki said that putting the Russian wildcard on the main court following her ban “doesn’t set a good example”.

The Danish fifth seed lost to Ekaterina Makarova on court 17 late on Wednesday.

  • Federer and Nadal in action – day four preview

Wozniacki’s match was originally scheduled last on court five, but was eventually moved to 17 as organisers got through 87 singles matches following Tuesday’s rain.

“I think putting out a schedule where the number five in the world is on court five, fifth match on, I feel at 11pm, I think that’s unacceptable,” Wozniacki told Danish newspaper Ekstra Bladet.

“When you look on centre court [Ashe], I understand completely the business side of things and everything, but someone who comes back from a drugs sentence and, you know, performance-enhancing drugs, and all of a sudden gets to play every single match on centre court, I believe is a questionable thing to do.

“I think it doesn’t set a good example.”

Sharapova, 30, was given a wildcard into the main draw, because she is ranked 146th as she makes her way back following the ban.

The 2006 champion’s opening win over world number two Simona Halep was the most highly anticipated match of the first round, and played out in front of almost 24,000 spectators during Monday’s night session.

Sharapova then beat Hungary’s Timea Babos, the world number 59, on Wednesday afternoon, again on Arthur Ashe Stadium.

“I’ve had an amazing reaction from fans since I’ve been back, and that’s been very special,” said the five-time Grand Slam champion.

Wozniacki, 27, played her opening match on Monday on the third show court, Grandstand, before losing 6-2 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 to Makarova on Wednesday.

“I think someone who has fought their way back from injury and is five in the world deserves to play on a bigger court than court five,” said the Dane, twice a finalist in New York.

“Finally they moved us to court 17, which is a really nice court, actually, and we had a great atmosphere out there.

“But, yeah, I think they should sometimes look into what they need to do in the future.”

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US Open 2017: Venus Williams, Elina Svitolina & Garbine Muguruza win

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017
US Open
Venue: Flushing Meadows, New York Dates: 28 Aug-10 Sept
BBC coverage: Live radio and text commentary on selected matches every day.

Venus Williams moved into the third round of the US Open by overcoming France’s Oceane Dodin 7-5 6-4.

The 37-year-old hit 33 winners in the first match of day three’s night session at Flushing Meadows.

The final match of the day saw fifth seed and two-time finalist Caroline Wozniacki suffer a shock 6-2 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 defeat by Ekaterina Makarova.

Wimbledon champion Garbine Muguruza eased past Ying-Ying Duan in straight sets 6-4 6-0.

Fourth seed Elina Svitolina saw off Katerina Siniakova 6-0 6-7 (5-7) 6-3 and next plays Evgeniya Rodina, who beat Eugenie Bouchard 7-6 (7-2) 6-1.

Sloane Stephens, a semi-finalist in Toronto and Cincinnati, defeated 11th seed Dominika Cibulkova 6-2 5-7 6-3.

Eighth seed Svetlana Kuznetsova,who won at Flushing Meadows in 2004, saved three match points to prevail against Marketa Vondrousova in an entertaining encounter on Grandstand Court.

The 18-year-old Vondrousova was left in tears as she lost the final-set tie-break after struggling with cramp.

  • Sharapova beats Babos in three sets
  • Fourth seed Zverev knocked out by Coric
  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Injured Kyrgios beaten
  • ‘I gave my best effort’, says Dolgopolov

Two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova, seeded 13th, saw off Alize Cornet, who beat Heather Watson in round one, 6-1 6-2.

Fourteenth seed Kristina Mladenovic, who has gone out in the first round in her past three tournaments, continued the pattern as she lost in straight sets to Romania’s Monica Niculescu.

American 20th seed Coco Vandeweghe beat compatriot Alison Riske 2-6 6-3 6-4, despite a mixed performance that saw her make 45 unforced errors, while Agnieszka Radwanska registered a 6-4 7-6 (7-3) win over Petra Martic.

Elsewhere, 25th seed Daria Gavrilova, who won her first WTA title at the Connecticut Open earlier this month, beat America’s Allie Kiick in straight sets to set up a meeting with Shelby Rogers.

However, 26th seed Anett Kontaveit was beaten 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 6-4 by Czech world number 37 Lucie Safarova.

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Shapovalov Stuns Tsonga In US Open Second Round

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017

Shapovalov Stuns Tsonga In US Open Second Round

NextGenATP star to face Edmund for place in the fourth round

Denis Shapovalov’s star continues on its fast-rising trajectory with eighth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga his latest victim at the US Open. The #NextGenATP Canadian qualifier dismissed the Frenchman 6-4, 6-4, 7-6(3) to reach the third round on Wednesday.

After taking down big names Rafael Nadal and Juan Martin del Potro en route to the semi-finals on home turf at the Coupe Rogers early this month, Shapovalov transferred his red-hot hard-court form to Flushing Meadows. His victory over Tsonga came on the heels of his first-round defeat of fellow #NextGen ATP player Daniil Medvedev.

You May Also Like: Coric Claims #NextGenATP Battle Over Zverev

It completed a strong day for the #NextGenATP charge, with Borna Coric downing fellow 20 year old, No. 4 seed Alexander Zverev, to join Taylor Fritz and Andrey Rublev as Day 3 winners. Fritz took down Marcos Baghdatis and Rublev saw off Aljaz Bedene, both in straight sets.

“I think every win that I’ve been going through, it’s been securing anyone’s doubts or even my own doubts, whether or not I belong,” Shapovalov said. “I belong with these guys, playing these high-level tournaments. 

“So this win, it’s definitely another confidence boost. It shows that Montreal wasn’t a fluke week. To do it back-to-back, it’s not easy. I’ve had to go through qualifying, which is also stacked with super tough players.”

In the last match on Arthur Ashe Stadium on a packed Day 3 schedule, Tsonga struggled to find his range throughout against the free-swinging Canadian. Trailing two sets, he sent a wild smash well long before he sailed a forehand wide to surrender the break for 4-3.

Shapovalov’s first sign of nerves crept in when serving for the match at 5-4 as he quickly fell behind 0-40. Tsonga landed his first break of the match to level at 5-5 but his momentum swing was brief.
The Canadian brought up three match points with a backhand pass drawing the volley error from Tsonga and claimed it when the Frenchman sliced long. He will take on Brit Kyle Edmund for a place in the fourth round.

“I played unbelievable today, very high level,” Shapovalov said. “I don’t know why, but I just managed to stay loose and go for my shots the whole match, except a little bit at 5-3 or 5-4, serving for the third set. I got a little bit tight, stopped moving my feet on a couple shots, sailed some forehands.

“He did a good job to break me. He stayed mentally tough there. I mean, I just stayed calm and just waited for my next chance and took it.”

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US Open 2017: Kyle Edmund wins as Aljaz Bedene and Cameron Norrie go out

  • Posted: Aug 31, 2017
US Open
Venue: Flushing Meadows, New York Dates: 28 Aug-10 Sept
BBC coverage: Live radio and text commentary on selected matches every day.

Kyle Edmund kept British hopes alive in the US Open singles after Aljaz Bedene and Cameron Norrie were beaten in New York on Wednesday.

Edmund, ranked 42nd, beat American Steve Johnson 7-5 6-2 7-6 (7-4) to reach round three for the second year running.

However, Bedene lost 6-1 6-4 6-4 to Russia’s Andrey Rublev in round one.

And qualifier Norrie went down 6-2 6-4 6-3 to Spanish 12th seed Pablo Carreno Busta in the second round.

Edmund will next face French eighth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga or unseeded Canadian Denis Shapovalov.

He is the last Briton standing after six were initially entered in the main draw.

“It’s a shame really that a few of us have lost early, and obviously Andy [Murray] was injured.” he said.

“I guess in another way it’s good that there’s some more depth in British tennis that we’re able to have other people go further.”

  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Injured Kyrgios beaten by Millman
  • Fourth seed Zverev knocked out
  • Sharapova beats Babos in three sets
  • Venus moves into third round

The Briton, 22, had to wait until 7.30pm local time to get under way on a packed day of 87 singles matches, as organisers looked to make up for Tuesday’s near washout.

He was playing his ninth match in 12 days after reaching the semi-finals in Winston-Salem last week, beating Johnson along the way.

If he was feeling the effects of so many matches, Edmund gave no indication as he saw off Johnson in two hours and 17 minutes.

He needed three breaks of serve to finally clinch the opening set before dominating the second on a sparsely attended Louis Armstrong Stadium.

Johnson, ranked 46th, held firm in the third to force a tie-break, but Edmund got the decisive break with a superb drop shot for 5-3 and closed it out on serve.

“That’s a big one to get through, very happy I came out with my level the way it was,” said Edmund.

“If he’d snuck that third set then it’s game on, but I played some good points in that tie-break.”

‘I’m proud of myself but a little bit disappointed’

Bedene, 28, continued his poor run at Flushing Meadows, where he has now won just one match in four appearances in the main draw.

“I’m very disappointed, it wasn’t good at all,” the world number 48 told BBC Sport.

“I’m struggling with the movement at the moment. I’ve had problems with the knee since Wimbledon and I thought it was going to be OK, but it’s not, so tough times.

“He was playing a very good game today and I wasn’t surprised, because I know on a good day he can be very solid.”

Norrie, 22, had already enjoyed a successful week at Flushing Meadows by coming through three rounds of qualifying at a Grand Slam at the first time of asking.

Carreno Busta was too strong, however, saving six of seven break points and recovering from a break down in the third.

“It’s just been a great experience,” said Norrie. “I’m proud of myself but a little bit disappointed.”

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