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Kansas City gets clobbered by Astros Monday, 9-2

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — George Springer homered in his fourth straight game and went 4 for 4 with three RBIs and scored five runs in the Houston Astros’ 9-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Monday night.

The Astros have won three straight, matching their longest winning streak this season, and snapped a six-game losing streak to the Royals.

Springer led off the eighth with a home run off Louis Coleman, his fifth homer in four games. He is the first Houston rookie to homer in four straight games.

Springer also had two doubles and became the first Astro to score five runs in a game since Cody Ransom on Sept. 24, 2007 against St. Louis.

Scott Feldman (3-2) held the Royals to two runs and eight hits over six innings.

Royals rookie right-hander Yordano Ventura (2-5) left in the third inning with discomfort in his elbow.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals fall to Yankees in 12 innings

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Brett Gardner’s leaping catch in the 11th inning gave the New York Yankees life. Patient at-bats and their first hit since the fifth inning put them over the top.

“I just tried to get back there as fast as I could,” Gardner said of his catch at the top of the left field wall that denied Yadier Molina of at least extra bases and perhaps a game-ending two-run homer in the Yankees’ 6-4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in 12 innings Monday. “It was an easy play, just go back and make sure I get the ball in the glove before my back hits the wall.”

Brian Roberts’ bases loaded single was the go-ahead hit in a three-run 12th fueled by two walks and a hit batter. The Yankees won for the fourth time in extra innings on the season, three of them in the last six games.

“It’s a grind,” Gardner said. “But we’ve been playing pretty well and we seem to really stay focused.”

Pinch-hitter Alfonso Soriano and Brendan Ryan each added an RBI for the Yankees, who took the opener of a three-game interleague series for their third straight win. Alfredo Aceves (1-2) worked two scoreless innings and David Robertson earned his 11th save in 12 chances.

“At that point, you’re just trying to get the guy in,” Roberts said. “You need to be selective and find ways to win.”

Jon Jay had an RBI double in the 12th for the Cardinals, who lost for the third time in 12 games.

“Just a really bad day,” reliever Randy Choate said. “I felt fine coming in, just didn’t have good stuff.”

A standing-room crowd of 47,311, the third-largest at 9-year-old Busch Stadium, showed up to see an opponent making only its second appearance in St. Louis since losing to the Cardinals in the 1964 World Series.

The enthusiasm did not appear to be dampened by a 61-minute weather delay — for rain that did not materialize — before the first pitch.

Cardinals pitchers retired 20 of 21 batters before the 12th, when Choate (0-2) faced five batters and four reached safely.

Five Yankees relievers were stingy, too, permitting two hits in seven innings.

“It comes down to doing little things and getting big hits,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “That’s no secret. We had a couple of opportunities to get the big hit. You can’t do it all the time.”

Jacoby Ellsbury got the rally started when he walked to lead off the inning and stole second, a call upheld after Matheny challenged. After coming through, Roberts is 3 for 6 in extra innings.

“Another big hit for us,” manager Joe Girardi said. “I thought the bottom of the lineup was extremely productive.”

Molina slammed his helmet in frustration after Gardner came down with his drive at the top of the fence with a runner on and one out in the 11th.

Derek Jeter got a standing ovation before his first at-bat, and thousands stood again when he singled, although they also roared when he took a called third strike to end the eighth against Carlos Martinez after Molina’s pinpoint throw on Gardner attempting to steal.

Michael Wacha dealt with a rain delay for the fourth time in his 11 starts — total idle time of 4 hours, 52 minutes. After nine pitches the Yankees had the lead, with a walk by Gardner and a single by Jeter setting up Ellsbury’s RBI single.

The first three batters reached in a two-run fifth, too, with Kelly Johnson’s RBI single and Gardner’s sacrifice fly putting the Yankees up 3-1.

New York rookie starter Chase Whitley was vulnerable early, too. The Cardinals needed two at-bats to tie it in the first when Matt Carpenter tripled off the right-field wall and Kolten Wong doubled, but they missed a chance for more when Wong overslid third and was caught stealing for the first time in eight attempts this season.

Whitley qualified for a win for the first time in three career starts, but left with the bases loaded and none out in the sixth before the Cardinals tied it against Preston Claiborne. Allen Craig had an RBI groundout and Jhonny Peralta followed with a sacrifice fly.

Wacha bounced back after taking a foul liner off his elbow while sitting in the dugout his last time out, giving up three runs on four hits in seven innings. He had a season-low two strikeouts, the first against Ellsbury leading off the sixth.

— Associated Press —

Nebraska earns No. 2 seed in NCAA Tournament’s Stillwater Regional

NebraskaFor the first time since 2008, the Nebraska baseball team is headed to the NCAA Tournament. The Huskers, who are 40-19 on the year, earned an at-large invitation during the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Selection Show Monday morning on ESPNU and will play in the Stillwater Regional. Nebraska’s 40 wins are the most by a Husker program since 2008 when the Huskers ended the year with 41 wins.

Nebraska opens play on Friday, May 30, at Noon (CT) on ESPNU in Stillwater, Okla. and will play No. 3 seed Cal State Fullerton, who the Huskers played four times last season. Regional host Oklahoma State will then meet No. 4 seed Binghamton at 6 p.m. on ESPN3.

Since taking over as the 23rd head coach in NU baseball history prior to the 2012 season, Darin Erstad and the rest of the Husker coaching staff have been a quest to get the Huskers back in the postseason.

“I’m just excited for our guys,” Erstad said. “They’re the ones that have put all the work in. This is their time and their opportunity to play bonus baseball.”

Nebraska has played some of the best baseball across the country over the past two months, with NU posting a 25-6 record over their past 31 games after starting the season 15-13.

The Huskers’ 2014 tournament resume was supported by an 15-7 record against teams in the RPI top 100, including a 6-6 record against RPI top-50 teams.

Monday’s selection snaps a five-year postseason drought for the Huskers, who will be making their 13 appearance in the NCAA Tournament and their ninth since 2000. Nebraska made five straight trips to the NCAA Tournament from 1999 to 2003.

The Huskers made back-to-back appearances at the College World Series in 2001 and 2002, before returning to the championship event in 2005.

— NU Sports Information —

Kansas baseball earns NCAA Tourney birth for first time since 2009

riggertKUFor the first time since 2009, the Kansas baseball team heads to the NCAA Tournament as the No. 3 seed in the Louisville Regional and faces No. 2 Kentucky, Friday, May 30, at 1 p.m., inside Jim Patterson Stadium.

The Jayhawks (34-24, 15-9 Big 12) built a strong resume down the home stretch in the regular season, winning 11 of their last 13 games that included nine-straight in conference play after sweeping three-straight league opponents (at Baylor, then-No. 19 Texas Tech and West Virginia). The third-place finish in the Big 12 is the highest finish for KU in the 18-year history of the conference and the best league performance since 1994 when Kansas finished third in the Big Eight.

“Obviously, I am really excited for our players,” head coach Ritch Price said. “You saw the celebration and euphoria that was in the room. When you grind six months, it is a great, great feeling to see your name come up.”

Kansas will battle No. 2 Kentucky to open up the Louisville Regional, which also features No. 1 Louisville and No. 4 Kent State. Friday’s contest marks the fifth NCAA Tournament appearance in program history (1993, 1994, 2006, 2009 and 2014), and the third NCAA appearance under Price (2006, 2009 and 2014), who is in his 12th season at the helm of the Jayhawks.

“This is why you coach,” Price said. “You coach for the relationship with your players and the kind of opportunities a few men get to experience in life and enjoy. This might be as close of a team that I have coached in my career. The team chemistry is off the charts. You can see how much those guys care for one another and I think each one of those guys here wanted it for their teammate, and that is the greatest feeling you can have as a head coach.”

KU has made five appearances in the NCAA Tournament, including a trip to the College World Series in 1993. The College World Series team also made history, as that was the first berth earned by the Jayhawks into the NCAA postseason. The team followed in 1994, making its second-straight appearance, but didn’t earn another trip until 2006, when Kansas, under the direction of Price, won the Big 12 Tournament for the automatic bid.

The Jayhawks will face Kentucky, Friday, May 30, at 1 p.m., in the double-elimination format regional, with Louisville and Kent State to follow at 5 p.m.

— KU Sports Information —

Royals blow 3-0 lead against Angels to lose series finale

RoyalsANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — With all the power they possess in the middle of their lineup, the Los Angeles Angels don’t usually need home runs from Chris Iannetta.

Yet that’s what they got in a three-game series with the Kansas City Royals.

The veteran catcher hit a tiebreaking homer in the eighth inning Sunday to lift the Angels to a 4-3 victory. He also connected Friday night for their first run in a win.

Iannetta’s latest go-ahead drive sailed into the lower seats in the left-field corner.

”I didn’t know if it was going to go out or not. I was just hoping it would stay fair. I’m glad it did,” he said.

Reliever Tim Collins (0-3) retired the first batter in the eighth before Iannetta hit his fifth homer of the season.
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”I just missed. I was trying to go away,” Collins said. ”You can’t miss your spots in those situations. That’s what I did, and that’s what happens.”

Michael Kohn (2-1) pitched a scoreless inning. Ernesto Frieri got three outs for his sixth save, retiring Alcides Escobar on a popup with a runner on third.

Garrett Richards, trying to preserve some arms in the Angels’ bullpen following Saturday night’s 13-inning 7-4 loss, pitched seven innings and allowed three runs on five hits. He struck out seven and walked two.

”I was prepared to go back out for the eighth, with the bullpen being taxed from last night,” Richards said. ”But I always try to go deep in game because I know that if I do, I’m doing my job. I’m going as hard as I can for as long as I can.”

Royals starter Jason Vargas was charged with a run and three hits over 6 1-3 innings in his return to Angel Stadium, and was lifted after 109 pitches with a 3-0 lead.

Kelvin Herrera took over with a runner at first and gave up a single by No. 9 hitter Collin Cowgill on his first pitch. Mike Trout hit an RBI double with one out, Albert Pujols was hit by an 0-2 pitch and David Freese had a tying, two-run single.

Pujols tried to score the go-ahead run from second on C.J. Cron’s sharp single, but Lorenzo Cain – starting in right field for the first time this season after 28 starts in center – threw him out at the plate.

Vargas struck out six and tied a career high with five walks. This was the sixth time in 165 big league starts that the 31-year-old left-hander has walked as many as five batters, and the first time since July 20, 2011, with Seattle.

”I think he was being extra careful with Pujols and Trout – and Howie Kendrick’s also tough,” manager Ned Yost said. ”That’s a powerful lineup over there. So either he was going to make his pitch, or he wasn’t going to make a mistake to those guys and let them drive it out of the ballpark.”

Vargas walked his first batter in the second, third and fourth innings after giving up a leadoff single in the first, but the Angels couldn’t capitalize. He walked his first two batters in the third before retiring Pujols on a double-play grounder to shortstop and striking out Freese.

”It was just one of those games where I had to battle through some innings,” Vargas said. ”I was just missing and wasn’t able to get ahead on some of those guys, but I was fortunate to get back into some counts later in the inning and ended up getting out of it.”

The Royals, who scored first in all three games of the series, took a 3-0 lead in the second. Pedro Ciriaco hit a bloop double that scored Jimmy Paredes, who singled and advanced on Richards’ first balk in 291 1-3 career innings to that point.

Jarrod Dyson reached on a fielding error by Gold Glove shortstop Erick Aybar, and Eric Hosmer followed with a sacrifice fly before Alex Gordon capped the rally with an RBI single.

Richards retired his next 11 batters, striking out the side on 11 pitches in the fifth.

”Other than the third inning, it was good,” Richards said.

Vargas was 9-8 with a 4.02 ERA in 24 starts with the Angels last season after four years with Seattle. He signed a four-year, $32 million contract with Kansas City on Nov. 21.

— Associated Press —

Wainwright gets 8th win, St. Louis beats Cincinnati 4-0

CardsCINCINNATI (AP) — Adam Wainwright became the National League’s first eight-game winner by dominating Cincinnati again, and the St. Louis Cardinals pulled away to a 4-0 victory Sunday night that completed another successful series against their division rival.

The Cardinals are 6-3 against the Reds this season. They’ve won 10 of their last 11 series together.

Overall, St. Louis has won nine of its last 11 games and moved to within 1 1-2 games of first-place Milwaukee in the NL Central.

Wainwright (8-2) beat Johnny Cueto and the Reds on opening day in Cincinnati, allowing only three hits during seven innings of a 1-0 victory. On Sunday, the right-hander gave up five hits in eight innings and matched his career high with 12 strikeouts.

He set the tone by striking out five of the first six batters on a total of 24 pitches. He got Brandon Phillips on three pitches that clocked 73, 91 and 93 mph.

Tony Cruz and Kolten Wong each had a pair of singles and drove in a run off Mike Leake (2-4). Wong also stole a pair of bases.
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The game drew 42,273 fans, the Reds’ third sellout crowd of the season. All three sellouts have come against the Cardinals.

Leake went six innings and continued his streak of solid pitching. The right-hander hasn’t allowed more than two runs in any of his last five starts, giving up a total of eight earned runs.

With Wainwright on his game again, it was two runs too much. Wainwright, the NL’s Cy Young runner-up last season, lowered his ERA to 1.67. In his last two starts, he has given up only six hits and no runs in 17 innings.

Cruz led off the third inning with a single and advanced on Wainwright’s sacrifice bunt. Wong singled up the middle with two outs for a run.

Matt Adams singled, Allen Craig walked and Cruz singled home a run with two outs in the sixth. The Cardinals added a pair of runs in the seventh with the help of two errors by the Reds, who lead the majors in fielding percentage.

Wainwright pitched out of Cincinnati’s best threat in the fifth, when the Reds got runners to second and third with two outs. He got Billy Hamilton on a called third strike to end the inning.

Hamilton struck out four times against Wainwright on opening day and three more times Sunday, leaving him 0 for 7 with seven strikeouts and a walk off the right-hander.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals sweep Arizona with 4-2 win Thursday

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — After returning from Triple-A Memphis a day earlier, Shane Robinson didn’t take long to make his presence felt with the big club.

Robinson was given a start and made the most of it by going 3 for 4 with two RBIs and a run scored and the St. Louis Cardinals completed a three-game sweep of Arizona by beating the Diamondbacks 4-2 Thursday night.

“It was a good feeling to be able to get in there and help out the club and get a win tonight,” Robinson said. “I’m just feeling blessed to be up here.”

Allen Craig drove in the go-ahead run with a two-out double in the seventh inning. Craig was 2 for 4 and also scored a run.

The sweep was the first of a three-game series this season for St. Louis, which has won seven of eight.

Pat Neshek (1-0) pitched scoreless seventh and eighth innings to pick up his first win as a Cardinal.

“You try to throw strikes and keep the game within reach and maybe our hitters will score,” Neshek said. “Tonight, they did.”

Trevor Rosenthal retired Arizona in order in the ninth for his 14th save in 16 chances.

Arizona’s Paul Goldschmidt had an RBI single and Aaron Hill drove in a run with a sacrifice fly. Diamondbacks starter Wade Miley (3-5) lasted 6 2/3 innings and allowed three runs and seven hits and four walks with three strikeouts.

Miley seemed poised to get through seven innings as he retired Matt Carpenter and Peter Bourjos on groundouts to start that inning.

But he walked Matt Holiday, and Craig hit his next pitch into the gap in right-center to score Holliday and give St. Louis a 3-2 lead.

“He was trying to hit the ball the other way in that situation and get back on track,” Miley said of Craig. “I make a better pitch and it’s a different situation.”

Matt Carpenter gave the Cardinals some insurance with a two-out RBI single off Arizona reliever Joe Thatcher in the eighth.

Arizona manager Kirk Gibson credited the Cardinals for their ability to extend innings.

“They scored two-out runs on us this whole series,” Gibson said. “They’re very good at that.”

The Diamondbacks jumped on St. Louis starter Lance Lynn early.

Gerardo Parra led off the game with a single to right and went to second on a walk to Martin Prado. Goldschmidt singled to right to score Parra and move Prado to third. Hill then made Arizona’s first out, but it was a productive one as his sacrifice fly to right made it 2-0.

But those were all the runs that Lynn allowed. He lasted six innings and allowed seven hits and a walk while striking out six.

“I stopped throwing the ball down the middle,” Lynn said. “I left a few balls up in the first. I was able to regroup.”

St. Louis scored twice in the sixth to tie it at 2-2.

With one out, Craig reached on an infield single to second.

One out later, Craig moved to third on Jhonny Peralta’s double down the line in left. Robinson then scored both of them when he followed Peralta with a double to the gap in left-center to tie it 2-2.

“My swing feels pretty good right now,” Robinson said. “I had a chance to work on it down there (at Memphis) I think it helped getting in right away.”

— Associated Press —

Two Bearcats compete on day one of NCAA Championships

Northwest2013riggertNorthwest Missouri State had two individuals compete on day one of the 2014 NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships at Grand Valley State University on Thursday.

Ashton Nibert finished 12th in the 400 meter dash prelims, running 55.26. She finished fourth in the first heat of the prelims. Anne Herbert ran the steeplechase on Thursday as well in the preliminary heats. She was listed as a disqualification on the final results.

Northwest will have three more individuals and one relay compete later this weekend. John Petroff is scheduled to throw tomorrow at 1 p.m. CST in the discus finals. The 4×400 relay team of Nibert, Alexis Boyd, Haley Manning and Audrey Bolinger will run in the qualifying heats at 7:05 p.m. On Saturday, Will Haer will compete in the pole vault at 1:30 p.m. and Lekiesha McKnight will be in the shot put finals at 4:05 p.m.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Husker baseball hangs on against Michigan State to advance at Big Ten Tourney

NebraskaOmaha, Neb. – In front of more than 11,000 fans at TD Ameritrade Park on Thursday night, the Nebraska baseball team (39-18) improved to 2-0 at the Big Ten Tournament with a 3-2 victory over the Michigan State Spartans (30-24). With the win, the Huskers will have tomorrow off and will be back on the field at 9 a.m. on Saturday morning against either Iowa, Michigan or Indiana.

Junior lefty Aaron Bummer brought his best stuff to the park, as he allowed just four hits and two unearned runs over 7.0 innings of work, while striking out a career-high tying seven. Outside of the fifth inning when the Huskers committed a pair of errors that turned into two unearned runs, Bummer never allowed more than one base runner in an inning, including no one past second base. Bummer picked up his seventh win of the season in the victory, while Zach Hirsch earned his fourth save of the year with 2.0 innings of scoreless relief.

The top of Nebraska’s lineup combined to go 6-for-14 at the plate with three RBIs, including two hits, two RBIs and a double from freshman Ryan Boldt. Along with Boldt, four other Huskers notched a double on the night, including the eventual game-winning RBI double by Michael Pritchard in the seventh. Thursday night marked the fifth time this season the Huskers have had at least five doubles in a game, while their last five-double game came in their series opener at Michigan on April 25.

With a 10-to-5 advantage in hits, the Huskers notched their 29th double-digit hit game of the year and improved to 30-1 on the year when out-hitting their opponent.

Nebraska took a 1-0 lead in the top of the third when Steven Reveles led off with his 11th double of the season and Boldt followed with a double on the ninth pitch of his at-bat for his 28th RBI of the year. Jake Placzek then laid down a bunt single and the Huskers had runners on the corners with no outs for their 3-4-5 hitters. MSU starter Cam Vieaux would only allow one run in the inning though, as he escaped major damage by striking out Pritchard, getting Pat Kelly to pop up and Blake Headley to line out.

After Bummer set the Spartans down in order in the bottom of the third, Tanner Lubach nearly notched the Huskers first ever home run at TD Ameritrade Park, but the 1-2 offering from Vieaux hit the top of the left field wall and Lubach had to settle for a leadoff double. Austin Darby moved Lubach to third base with a sacrifice bunt, but then Vieaux struck out Ben Miller looking on a full-count. With a runner still on third and two down, Reveles worked a walk that rolled over the Husker lineup and Boldt delivered again with a RBI single that put NU ahead 2-0.

With Bummer allowing just two hits through the first four innings, Nebraska’s defense let down its pitcher in the fifth by committing two errors and the Spartans took advantage with a pair of unearned runs to tie the game. Ryan Richardson led off the frame and reached on a throwing error by Placzek. Richardson later scored on a one-out single by Justin Hovis, who then moved to second on the play on a throwing error by Headley. After back-to-back walks loaded the bases, Blaise Salter hit what would have been the third out of the inning, but instead it was a sacrifice fly that scored Hovis. With the go-ahead run at third base, Bummer ended the inning on his own with his fifth strikeout of the night.

Nebraska’s offense got the lead back for Bummer in the seventh with its fourth and fifth doubles of the game on consecutive pitches. Placzek ripped the first pitch he saw into the left-field gap and then Pritchard followed with his 20th double of the year to put the Huskers ahead 3-2.

With his 20th double of the season, Pritchard became the eighth NU hitter to notch 20 or doubles in a season since 2000.

Holding a one-run lead, Bummer toed the rubber in the seventh and sat the Spartans down in order, including his seventh strikeout of the night to end the inning.

The Spartans made a late rally in the eighth when they got a two-out single and a walk to put the tying run in scoring position, but Hirsch got Richardson to groundout 6-3 to end the threat. The senior lefty then sat down MSU in order in the ninth to secure the win.

Nebraska continues through the winners bracket and will play on the Big Ten Network at 9 a.m. on Saturday morning. The loser of tonight’s game between Indiana and Michigan will play an elimination game against Iowa tomorrow, with the winner of tomorrow’s game facing the Huskers on Saturday.

— NU Sports Information —

Griffons’ Bishop named First-Team All-American; Gillaspy also honored

MWSUMissouri Western softball had two players named to All-American teams which were released Wednesday. Pitcher, Jackie Bishop was selected to the first team by the National Fast Pitch Coaches Association (NFCA) and second team by Daktronics while Tiffany Gillaspy earned third team All-American honors from Daktronics at first base.

Bishop is completed one of the most successful playing careers in Missouri Western softball history. This marks the first time in her career being named first team All-American. She was a first team selection by the NFCA and a second team selection by Daktronics. The Kirksville, Mo., native is a four-time First Team All-MIAA selection, two time MIAA Pitcher of the Year (2012-2014), four-time First Team All-Region recipient and an second team All-American selection in 2012. Bishop was also the MIAA Freshman of the Year in 2011. Bishop holds MWSU softball career records for wins (96), strikeouts (977), innings pitched (828.0), appearances (142) complete games (105) and shutouts (29). Additionally the two-time MIAA Pitcher of the Year holds MWSU single-season records for strikeouts (291) and shutouts (12) and is an integral member of a senior class that went 159-62 in its time dawning the Black and Gold. This season, the right-handed pitcher finished with a 26-10 overall record with a 1.36 ERA. The 26 wins is the most she had in a single season. She finished leading the MIAA with 291 strikeouts. She pitched 31 complete games with 12 shutouts and two saves this season. She gave up just 4.4 hits per games while striking out 8.3 per game. She threw three no-hitters this season and four in her career. She was named the MIAA AstroTurf Pitcher of the Week four times this season and 11 times in her career.

Gillaspy topped off an impressive junior campaign being named third team All-American by Daktronics as well first team All-Region by Daktronics and the NFCA. She was a first team All-MIAA selection for the first time in her career. Gillaspy a two-time MIAA AstroTurf Hitter of the Week finished her season getting a hit in 23 of her last 25 games and had an 19 game hitting streak during that run. She also hit safely in 45 of the Griffons 57 games this season. She finished the season leading the Griffons and was in the top-10 in the MIAA in batting average (.390), hits (73), doubles (13), home runs (13), RBI (60), total bases (125) and slugging percentage (.668). Gillaspy was an honorable mention All-MIAA selection a in 2013. She had double digit hits in 21 games including going 4-for-4 against Central Missouri on March 14. She has also had five RBI in a game three times and hit two home runs and a double against Lincoln on April 12. On the final day of the season she went 4-for-7 with two runs scored, four RBI a double and a home run in the NCAA Central Regional.

The Griffons finished their season 39-18 overall and won their first ever MIAA Tournament Championship going 4-0 and outscoring their opponents 41-9. They Griffons have won 30+ games in four straight seasons.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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