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Medvedev Soars 21 Spots, Mover Of The Week

  • Posted: Aug 27, 2018

Medvedev Soars 21 Spots, Mover Of The Week

ATPWorldTour.com looks at the top Movers of the Week in the ATP Rankings, as of Monday, 27 August 2018

No. 36 (Career-High) Daniil Medvedev, +21
The Russian captured his second tour-level title of the season at the Winston Salem Open, defeating American Steve Johnson 6-4, 6-4 in the championship match. Medvedev, who also defeated 15th seed Alex de Minaur in a repeat of the Sydney International final, did not drop a set en route to the title. The 22-year-old climbs 21 positions in the ATP Rankings to a career-high No. 36. Read More & Watch Highlights

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No. 31 Steve Johnson, +3
The 28-year-old reached his third tour-level championship match of the season without dropping a set before his loss to Medvedev. Johnson defeated Top 3 seeds Kyle Edmund and Pablo Carreno Busta to reach the final, where he was bidding to become the ninth player since 2010 to claim a tour-level trophy on all three surfaces in one season, and the first American to do so since Sam Querrey in 2010. The American rises three spots to No. 31, with a return to the Top 30, for the first time since 25 June 2017, within touching distance.

No. 42 (Career-High) Nicolas Jarry, +5
The Chilean reached his seventh tour-level quarter-final of the season in Winston-Salem, falling to Taro Daniel of Japan in the last eight. Jarry, who owns a 24-17 tour-level record this season, beat Andreas Seppi and Jan-Lennard Struff in straight sets on his debut in North Carolina. The 22-year-old jumps five places to quickly return to a career-high No. 42 position in the ATP Rankings. Jarry first reached the No. 42 spot on 13 August.

Other Notable Top 100 Movers This Week
No. 53 Ryan Harrison, +3
No. 57 Matteo Berrettini, +3
No. 64 Taro Daniel, +12
No. 92 Bradley Klahn, +3

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Muller's Magical Ride Begins Final Chapter

  • Posted: Aug 27, 2018

Muller’s Magical Ride Begins Final Chapter

Luxembourg star to retire after the US Open

Fourteen years ago, Luxembourg’s Gilles Muller stepped on court at the Citi Open for his first ATP World Tour semi-final. It was like the 21-year-old was living a dream, as childhood idol Andre Agassi stood across the net.

Muller had celebrated only one ATP World Tour win before the D.C. tournament. But when the left-hander curled a forehand winner down the line to clinch his first Top 10 victory, Muller shocked himself and his country, becoming the first player from Luxembourg to reach a tour-level final.

“That was probably the moment I realised that I made it for the first time,” Muller, who was No. 124 in the ATP Rankings at the time, told ATPWorldTour.com. “When I played against him there, it was kind of a dream come true. I think it was one of the nicest moments of my career.”

Muller would lose to former World No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt the next day, but that was just the beginning of a fruitful career for Luxembourg’s greatest tennis player, who will retire after the US Open. He made his decision public right before leaving for the Dell Technologies Hall of Fame Open in Newport, Rhode Island. But most of all, he was happiest to tell his sons, Lenny (7) and Nils (6).

“It was a nice moment because I’ve been traveling a lot. It’s not easy for the kids. They were very supportive all these years, but I felt that they were very happy when I told them that this would be my last year and that pretty soon I was going to be home all the time,” Muller said. “They were very happy about it and I was very happy also to tell them.”

Muller

Now 35, Muller has competed professionally for 18 years. During that time, he has earned 233 tour-level match wins, climbed as high as World No. 21, and won his first two ATP World Tour titles last year (Sydney, ‘s-Hertogenbosch), all records for players from his country. So why stop now?

“It was going through my mind many times. I just felt like I had to make the decision and also be firm on it because I was going back and forth all the time. ‘Maybe I could play another year, maybe I could do this, maybe I could do that’,” Muller said. “But then because I was thinking so much about it, I felt that it was the right time now to do it, to stop and to move on.”

But Muller has not spent the past few months reflecting on what he has done, like earning 12 wins against Top 10 opponents and just a year ago, beating Rafael Nadal to reach the quarter-finals at Wimbledon. Instead, he has maintained his focus to make the most of his remaining time as a professional.

Nadal, Muller

“I think the biggest goal is to cherish every moment. Over the last years, you don’t realise what a chance you have as a professional tennis player to travel around. There comes a point when everything becomes a lot sometimes, traveling around, all the stress and you forget the nice parts about it,” Muller said. “I want to do that again like when I started as a junior, seeing everything for the first time. I want to cherish everything and have fun, be happy and just also give it 100 per cent until the last point is played.”

And really, it’s that focus and determination that has helped make Muller one of the more consistent players of his generation, finishing inside the Top 100 nine times. He has become known for his pinpoint lefty serve and overall toughness on the court, which has helped him trouble some of the best players in the world. Beating Nadal twice at Wimbledon (also in 2005) and ousting Andy Roddick at the 2005 US Open are a few of the wins — besides defeating Agassi — that stick out. Muller also became the second qualifier to reach a US Open quarter-final, achieving the feat in 2008.

“I’m very happy [with my career]. A lot of people that I play with now, those guys are coming from countries where tennis and sports have a big tradition. Where I come from, when you’re like 10 or 12 years old and you say, ‘I want to be a tennis pro’, people kind of laugh at you because nobody believes in themselves,” Muller said. “Nobody thinks that you can do it, so there are many positive things about it, being from Luxembourg.”

And while in hindsight, Muller believes he could have done a few things differently to have enjoyed an even more successful career, he says he does not believe in regrets. The father of two is simply proud of his accomplishments.

“Firstly, I’m proud of what I did for myself, for my family,” Muller said. “I was always very proud to represent Luxembourg in Davis Cup or at the Olympics. One of my nicest memories is going to be when I was the flag bearer at the Rio Olympics. That’s a memory that I will always keep for the rest of my life.”

muller

Muller isn’t sure what’s next for him, and he does not want to rush into anything. However, he’d love to stay involved in tennis, which he loves. “It’s my passion. I would love to help kids fulfill their dreams in any sport in Luxembourg. I think there’s a lot of potential there, but it hasn’t been exploited all the way,” he said.

‘Mulles’, who started playing tennis at age 5, remembers being that kid with big dreams.

“I think I never forgot where I came from,” Muller said. “I think it’s very important to stay with both feet on Earth, and I think I did that pretty well.”

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Rojer/Tecau Attempt Double-Double In New York

  • Posted: Aug 27, 2018

Rojer/Tecau Attempt Double-Double In New York

Sixth seeds captured their 18th tour-level team title in Winston-Salem

One year ago, Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau won 10 consecutive matches to clinch back-to-back titles in Winston-Salem and New York. This year, the Dutch-Romanian duo returns to the US Open with the same goal in mind, leading the field in the final Grand Slam of the year.

Rojer and Tecau, who recently triumphed in North Carolina, will enter the US Open confident of completing a unique ‘double-double’ in Flushing Meadows. The sixth seeds, who own an 18-7 record this season, are bidding to lift their 19th tour-level title as a team. Rojer and Tecau have won two Grand Slam championships, clinching their maiden major crown at Wimbledon in 2015 before their title run 12 months ago in Flushing Meadows.

Rojer and Tecau, who will face Sander Arends and Antonio Sancic in the first round, have won seven of their nine tour-level encounters so far during the North American hard-court swing. The defending champions share the second quarter of the draw with red-hot pairing Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares. The fourth seeds have lifted titles at the Citi Open and the Western & Southern Open, their maiden ATP World Tour Masters 1000 triumph, en route to New York.

In the third round, Rojer and Tecau could meet 10th seeds Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez in a repeat of the 2017 final. The Spanish duo open against Americans Patrick Kypson and Danny Thomas.

You May Also Like: Built To Last: Bryans, Cabal/Farah, Rojer/Tecau Take The Long Road To Success

Top seeds Oliver Marach and Mate Pavic will be aiming to reach their third Grand Slam final of the season at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. The Australian Open champions, who also reached the championship match at Roland Garros, meet Leonardo Mayer and Joao Sousa in their opening match. Marach and Pavic have suffered first-round losses in two of their three events since reaching their eighth tour-level final of the season in Hamburg last month.

Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut also feature in the top quarter. The 2015 champions, who defeated Marach and Pavic to win their third Grand Slam crown at Roland Garros in June, enter the US Open having played just one match since Wimbledon, at the Rogers Cup (l. to Anderson/Djokovic).

The Frenchmen are seeded to meet Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo in the third round. Kubot and Melo, who reached the 2017 Nitto ATP Finals championship match, have won just two of their seven most recent tour-level clashes since retaining their Gerry Weber Open title in June.

Headlining the bottom half of the draw are second seeds Henri Kontinen and John Peers. The reigning Nitto ATP Finals champions reached the semi-finals in New York on their event debut as a team last season. Kontinen and Peers enter the US Open in fine form, having lifted their 13th tour-level team trophy at the Rogers Cup earlier this month.

Kontinen and Peers are joined by Colombian duo Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah in the bottom quarter. The fifth seeds, making their seventh US Open appearance, will face Andrey Rublev and Denis Shapovalov in the first round.

Mike Bryan and Jack Sock will be hoping to repeat their Wimbledon heroics in New York. Bryan, who currently shares the all-time record for men’s doubles Grand Slam titles (17) with John Newcombe, is aiming to lift his sixth title in Flushing Meadows.

Read More: Bob Bryan Sitting Out 2018 US Open

Bryan, competing at the US Open for the first time without twin brother Bob Bryan, will aim to improve his 8-3 tour-level record alongside Sock this season with victory over Italians Daniele Bracciali and Marco Cecchinato in the first round.

Bryan and Sock could face Wimbledon finalists Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus in the quarter-finals. Having also reached the Rogers Cup final, Klaasen and Venus will be confident of making a deep run at the final Grand Slam championship of the season. They open their title campaign against Lukas Lacko and John Millman.

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Fiery Ferrer Ready For Nadal Showdown In Final US Open

  • Posted: Aug 27, 2018

Fiery Ferrer Ready For Nadal Showdown In Final US Open

Ferrer won the pair’s only previous meeting here in 2007

Goodbyes are never easy, but saying farewell in New York will be particularly difficult this year for David Ferrer, who announced this will be the last US Open of his career. The 36-year-old Spaniard is one of the most successful players his country has ever produced and while he’s seemed an ageless wonder, the end of the road now seems to be near.

What has motivated Ferrer throughout the 2018 season, aware it may be the last in which he enters a Grand Slam, has been knowing he’ll get the chance to wave goodbye to the crowd in Flushing Meadows come late August, 15 years since the first time he stepped foot onto a court at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center as a professional. His opening-round opponent this year? World No. 1 Rafael Nadal, the same player who denied him a chance at a major title by defeating Ferrer in the 2013 Roland Garros final.

Of course, Ferrer will have plenty of time to go back on his decision and soldier on instead of hanging up his racquet for good, should he so choose. The plan for now is to play at Auckland, Buenos Aires, Acapulco, Barcelona and Madrid in 2019. It’s there, on the clay of “Caja Magica” that Ferrer is planning his last “hurrah” in a decorated career that has seen him earn 27 ATP World Tour titles, another 25 finals, 726 match wins, and a career-high No. 3 in the ATP Rankings.

Ferrer knows himself better than anyone. He’s seen the telltale signs of retirement coming for a while now, and is looking forward to making the stop in Madrid his last. And while he feels his level of play is still up to par, it’s his 36-year-old body that’s betraying him. With that breakdown comes a lack of motivation.

“You notice that you can’t react the way you once did, and that you don’t recover from matches as quickly,” Ferrer told Spanish newspaper El Espanol, where he first announced the news of his imminent retirement. “I’d like to finish the 2019 season, and my career, in front of my people in Spain. It isn’t that I’m not playing good tennis; rather it’s a physical thing. I can’t play more than one or two consecutive matches without feeling the effects.

“I love tennis and I don’t feel like calling it quits, but the level at which I can compete is not fulfilling enough to make the effort to go out and play at lower-level tournaments.”

This season, Ferrer has drifted further from the numbers that distinguished him as one of the tour’s premiere players in the past decade. His record in 2018 is 9-17, dropping him to 148th in the ATP Rankings and placing him out of Top 100 for the first time since he broke into it in July 2002. For a player who has posed as the picture of consistency, it’s all been tough to bear. Still, being the fighter he is, Ferrer is finding ways to compromise.

“It takes its toll at first, but then you learn to deal with it and come to terms with the fact you aren’t the same player,” Ferrer said. “There are characteristics I still maintain to this day, at my age. Run down one more ball, force the opponent to win the point over and over again, hustle from side to side, scrape a shot together when your opponent is already celebrating, defend until the end. I still have that in me.”

There’s no questioning the competitive gene will always be a part of Ferrer’s DNA. It should also provide for a fun and competitive first-round match when Ferrer faces his old foe and countryman Nadal on Monday night. The two have grown on a tennis level over the years and know each other well.

“I want to win, and I’ll play against Rafa with that intention because that’s just part of who I am, it’s in my blood. I’m knocking on the door of retirement, but I won’t go down without a fight,” said Ferrer, who knows what it takes to compete on a stage like Arthur Ashe Stadium.

You May Also Like: Dimitrov-Wawrinka Blockbuster, Nadal Headline Day 1 At US Open

What were the 2007 and 2012 semi-finalist’s thoughts when he found out it was the World No. 1 and defending champion he would be facing in the first round?

“In the end I was happy,” Ferrer said. “It’s going to be my last Grand Slam and for me it’s an honour to get the chance to play against Rafa on the grandest stage at the US Open. I’m happy because tennis has given me that gift.”

Ferrer will be playing in his 47th match in Flushing Meadows. He’ll be doing so without the immense pressure of having to win, a pressure that has accompanied him throughout all his previous appearances. This year, he intends on enjoying and savoring every moment, every point and every shot. It’s his last big date in New York and he has nothing to lose. And all of that could wind up making him that more dangerous.

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Meet Two #NextGenATP Poised For US Open Breakthroughs

  • Posted: Aug 26, 2018

Meet Two #NextGenATP Poised For US Open Breakthroughs

Lloyd Harris and Ugo Humbert are ready to translate Challenger success to the Grand Slam stage

It happens every year. The cream rises to the top during the North American hard-court summer and future stars are introduced on one of tennis’ biggest stages: the US Open.

In 2017, Denis Shapovalov continued his ATP Rankings ascent at Flushing Meadows, storming through qualifying to reach the main draw. The Canadian found himself peaking at the perfect time after lifting his second ATP Challenger Tour trophy just weeks earlier. And one year later, Shapovalov has cemented himself in the Top 30 of the ATP Rankings, with the teen also up to third in the ATP Race To Milan.

This year, two budding #NextGenATP stars have been taking the circuit by storm in July and August and are poised to follow the same path. If you aren’t familiar with Lloyd Harris and Ugo Humbert, here’s your introduction to two of the hottest players on the planet.

The battle to qualify for the Next Gen ATP Finals will reach a critical phase in New York, with the entire Top 14 in the ATP Race To Milan competing in the main draw. Five of those budding stars emerged from this week’s qualifying competition, including Harris and Humbert, who will be making their Grand Slam debuts under the bright lights.

ATP Race To Milan Standings

To say that the 21-year-old South African and 20-year-old Frenchman have been dominating the competition in recent weeks is no hyperbole. Consider this: Harris and Humbert have combined for 26 wins from 31 matches on the ATP Challenger Tour since transitioning to hard in mid-July. That includes a total of five finals and maiden titles for both.

And like Shapovalov a year ago, their success has translated to the US Open, combining to drop just one set in storming through qualifying at Flushing Meadows. 

Harris
Lloyd Harris lifts his first Challenger trophy in Lexington, Kentucky

“It’s massive,” Harris told ATPWorldTour.com. “In the juniors, I did the best here. I have good memories and I’ve enjoyed playing on the hard courts. So far, it’s a great experience. I’m very excited to compete in my first main draw.”

Like his countryman Kevin Anderson, at 6’5″ Harris is an imposing presence on the court with a rocket forehand, blistering serve and deceptive agility. It has been many years since his native South Africa had a youth movement to pin their hopes on, and now the Cape Town native is looking to become a household name.

Harris was a ruthless force at the Challenger stops in Lexington and Aptos earlier this month, reeling off a stunning 18 sets in a row en route to back-to-back finals. He would lift his first trophy at the $75,000 event in Lexington, vaulting to a career-high No. 145 in the ATP Rankings. 

“I’ve been playing really good tennis this summer and I’m looking forward to continue that and build on it. This couldn’t have come at a better time. As soon as I stepped on the hard courts, I’ve been playing well. It bolsters your confidence for sure. You feel you can beat anybody and play well on any given day. It helps with all my shots. Maybe my body is a little more tired than I want it to be, but I’m still feeling strong and I’m playing as good as ever.”

You May Also Like: Five Things To Know About France’s #NextGenATP Ugo Humbert

Humbert, meanwhile, has been just as dominant. Having posted a 5-8 record in his Challenger career prior to July, his remarkable rise included three finals in three weeks, including his maiden title in Segovia, Spain. The 20-year-old crashed onto the scene with that sublime stretch, rising more than 100 spots in the ATP Rankings to a career-high No. 139.

“Those finals gave me a lot of confidence,” Humbert added. “I played well for three weeks in a row in Gatineau, Granby and then winning my first title in Segovia. Without that, I am not sure I could have done this in New York. Playing more matches and winning them helps my confidence a lot.”

Humbert
Ugo Humbert celebrates his maiden Challenger title in Segovia, Spain

Next up: the Frenchman’s tour-level debut at the US Open. He defeated Pedja Krstin, Brandon Nakashima and fellow #NextGenATP Marc Polmans to qualify.

“It’s just beautiful, because it’s my first Grand Slam main draw. It feels incredible and I’d like to see how I do in best-of-five matches, because I’ve never played that before. It’s important for me. I’ve been trying to come to the net with my game and just be aggressive. Taking the ball early is important.”

Both kick off their Grand Slam careers on Monday, with Harris first on Court 12 against Gilles Simon and Humbert second on Court 8 against fellow qualifier Collin Altamirano. The spotlight beckons for two of the surging stars of summer.

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With Bag Of Tricks, Rafa Ready To Defend US Open Title

  • Posted: Aug 26, 2018

With Bag Of Tricks, Rafa Ready To Defend US Open Title

Coach Roig confident Nadal is well-rested and ready to compete for fourth trophy

There is always room for improvement. It is an approach that has defined Rafael Nadal throughout his distinguished career, and it’s a sentiment the World No. 1 has not been shy about proclaiming when given the opportunity.

Francisco Roig, coach of Nadal, also feels there is always room for his charge to improve. Roig, along with fellow coach Carlos Moya, will be courtside at the US Open when Nadal attempts to capture his fourth title at Flushing Meadows.

It might be difficult to poke holes in Nadal’s game and find an extra level following the Spaniard’s title run at the Rogers Cup, an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event, earlier this month. But such is the case, and Team Nadal made that clear by agreeing to skip the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati to rest up and fine-tune even the most minor details to guarantee that when Nadal steps on to the court at this year’s US Open, he is ready for anything that might come his way.

“After Toronto, we spent a few days working with Rafa on a physical level. Despite the fact he won the event, we felt Rafa’s body wasn’t operating at its best,” Roig told ATPWorldTour.com from the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.

You May Also Like: Defending Champ Nadal Sizes Up US Open Competition

During his Masters 1000-winning week in Toronto, Nadal defeated Benoit Paire, Stan Wawrinka, Marin Cilic, Karen Khachanov and, ultimately, Stefanos Tsitsipas to claim his fifth title of the season and 33rd Masters 1000 crown overall. Currently, he is 40-3 in 2018, putting him at the top of the ATP Race To London with a 2,140-point lead over second-placed Roger Federer. 

“We had some time to go through things when we arrived [last Sunday] in New York and Rafa was already in good shape,” Roig said. “It’s a shame the US Open doesn’t start this Sunday, because Rafa has found his form.”

On Saturday, Nadal squeezed in last-minute preparations by taking to the court against Argentine Guido Pella in a practice session under the watchful eyes of his coaches. The 32-year-old begins his 2018 US Open campaign against countryman David Ferrer on Monday night.

“Rafa is moving very well, he’s transitioning from the back of the court to the front very well, he’s changing directions very well, he’s well-rested, his serve is clicking… Overall, all I can say is he’s doing everything very well,” Roig said.

Roig’s reasons for liking his pupil’s chances extend beyond how Nadal looked on the practice court, his No. 1 ranking, or the five titles he has won this season. According to Roig, it’s an intangible, indefinable quality Nadal possesses that allows him to lift his game and win championships with whatever tools he possesses at that moment. As Roig likes to say, Nadal has a deep bag of tricks.

“Rafa has the ability to win with what he has,” Roig said. “He can pull something out from that bag and change things around the way other players can’t.”

Just how deep is that bag going into the final Grand Slam championship of the year?

“The bag is quite full, but another matter is knowing when to use what,” Roig said. “On top of that, every match is different; [there are] different tricks for different match-ups. If he only has a few things at his dispense going into a particular match, he will manage what he has with 100 per cent efficiency. When it comes to managing those things, Rafa is better than anyone; he plays with what he has accordingly.

“At the moment, he is in a position to come out firing; he is in a position to charge on to the court aggressively with everything at his disposal. We all know what Rafa is capable of. He is the defending champion and he learned from his performances in 2017. He didn’t have the best start last year and it nearly cost him early on. Sometimes, he is on his bicycle from the get-go; I think that’s the way he’s feeling going into the event this year.”

Although it’s way too early to look beyond the first round, it’s also hard to hide the fact that the 17-time Grand Slam champion is in a solid position to contend for his fourth US Open crown. But he isn’t without stiff competition. Five-time titlist Roger Federer and Career Golden Masters winner Novak Djokovic are also serious prospects to lift their second major trophy this year.

Roig isn’t surprised by Djokovic’s resurgence. He knew Nadal’s long-time rival was bound to bounce back in a forceful manner eventually and that when he did, he’d pick up from where he left off.

“I had no doubt that Djokovic was going to come back, because he is too good not to do so,” Roig said. “He was playing at such a high level for so many years and it is very difficult to maintain that level of consistency for so long. He had that dip for a little bit but he is proving all his doubters wrong and all I know is that I was never one of those to doubt he would be back.”

Another of Nadal’s main rivals will also be in action at the US Open. Andy Murray, the 2012 champion, will be back in Flushing Meadows after missing the 2017 event due to a hip injury. That means the ‘Big Four’ of Nadal, Federer, Djokovic and Murray will meet in the same tournament for the first time since Wimbledon 2017.

“Of the ‘Big Four’, maybe it’s Murray who has fallen a step behind,” Roig said. “But falling a step behind means nothing; I don’t know how he’s playing right this moment. If he’s recovered physically, he’s obviously a threat to Rafa’s With Bag Of Tricks, Rafa Ready To Defend US Open Title defence. A match between Rafa and Murray is always 50-50.”

In 2018, for the sixth time in history (also 2005-08 and 2010), Nadal and Federer will be the top seeds at the US Open. Federer topped the list of seeds from 2005-2007, while top seed Nadal also  led the seeding chart in 2008 and 2010. Roig tips his hat to both the longevity and raw ability of both players.

“Rafa and Roger are two phenomena,” Roig said. “They have each made comebacks, they have dodged pitfalls, their rivalry goes back years, they both push each other and, honestly, each is pulling for the other. I can honestly say that if one wasn’t playing, the other might have retired by now as well.”

All that said, Team Nadal still has its sights firmly set on the US Open crown. With little time to spare before Nadal steps on the court to kick off his 2018 US Open campaign, his team is confident that his bag of tricks is fully packed, and that their charge is in great shape to lift a fourth trophy in New York.

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