Hey,
I was off on Sunday and had been looking forward to it. So much golf over the last few months and so little time to do much of anything else on the weekend either for myself or with my fam.
So where did I find myself by 5 p.m. that day? On the range with my AirPods in, working on a new driver feel, listening to the end of the Zurich Classic.
Of course.
If you can relate, you’re at the right newsletter.
Thank you to Holderness and Bourne for sponsoring this week’s newsletter and for sponsoring the last few months. Their sponsorship helps give us resources and space we we need to create something we think you’ll love. We were happy (delighted even!) to turn down several other potential partners for one we actually believed in.
Onto the news.
I had three quick things about Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry from New Orleans last weekend.
1. After Rory and Lowry downed [double triple checks notes] Chad Ramey and Martin Trainer in a playoff, the duo engaged in all manner of giggling antics that two good friends of any age or gender should engage in.
Then they stepped to the microphone, and Rory delivered what he always delivers: gratitude and perspective.
“Yeah, it's amazing. The fans and the atmosphere all week has been incredible. People have come out in the thousands to support us. It's not lost on me how cool that is. Every time I get to play in front of thousands of people, the little boy in me just thinks it's so cool and so exciting.”
Rory always seems appropriately in awe that he became Rory.1 He seems almost taken aback at times — not all the time, but sometimes — that he, of all the other potential candidates — is the recipient of the gifts, the wealth, the fame, this life, all of it. You’ll hear bits and pieces of it trickle out in quotes or the way he handles or discusses different situations.
The first thing to leave the handful of boys whose dreams turn out to be real is the ability to relate. When everything you touch seemingly turns to gold, it is difficult to view yourself differently than how you probably believe most people view you: as a walking transaction. Whether it’s an agency looking for a whale, a business looking to supercharge their product, a journalist looking for a quote …..
…… or a fan looking for an autograph, everybody wants something from Rory.
How difficult it must be to preserve your own humanity.
And yet. And yet, that preservation of his humanity and the self-awareness to interpret his own dream even as he lives it, well, it is perhaps my favorite thing about Rory. Because he has gotten to a place in his life where he understands, accepts and has internalized this truth: At the end of the day, we’re all just boys and girls with dreams who at some point got older.
Most of those dreams fell away, or people like Rory put a dagger in them.2 The tie that binds, though, is that we are all still human beings who have pains, joys, fears, delights, sorrows and triumphs. It sounds like a basic, fundamental thing to understand. I’m constantly surprised at how many people forget it.
2. I, like everyone, was taken by the clear love Lowry and Rory have for one another. I once asked Rory about his closest relationship on Tour, and didn’t think about it for more than .01 seconds.
And in the same way that it seems like Rory is amused by his own success, I think Rory and Shane together can’t believe they somehow both made it all the way from weekends at Carton House in Ireland to … all of this.
I thought of the great interview Paul Kimmage did with them together from the Irish Independent last fall. It’s worth the $4 to subscribe to the publication for a month just to read the interview (I just did so for a second time, and I hope all $8 of my dollars go to Kimmage).
Here’s one snippet from it.
Rory: My first memory of Shane would have been one of the those Boys’ International panel weekends with Neil Manchip [the national coach] at Carton House, and seeing this big fella with glasses and a great short game.
Shane: I remember playing the West of Ireland and crowds following him around. He swung the club better than anyone else, even at that age, and always looked the part. I know Gerry [Rory’s father] was working his nuts off [to pay for it] but he had all the gear. He was this cocky little f**ker from the North [laughs], that’s how I would have seen it.
Rory: I think the first time we played together was the European Youth Championships in Sotogrande in 2006.
Shane: His parents were there. It was our first time to hang out. A year after that we won the European Team Championships at Western Gailes, then he played in the Walker Cup at Royal County Down and turned pro.
Rory: I decide to turn pro and do my thing, and Shane is still playing amateur golf. Fast forward two years to the Irish Open at Baltray and he wins. Brilliant.
Shane: We played a practice round together that week — he had won his first professional tournament that year in Dubai — and I remember him being in the media centre afterwards. “I’ll be seeing a lot more of you,” I said.
Rory: He turned pro.
Shane: Rory was top 50 in the world at the time, so we weren’t in a lot of the same events, but we’d always play a practice round together when we were. I remember playing nine holes with him the week he won the US Open at Congressional and feeling like a 10-handicapper walking off the course. I told Conor [Ridge, his manager at Horizon Sports]: “There’s no way he’ll finish outside the top five this week.”
Update: He didn’t.
One of my favorite things right now is coaching my son’s baseball team. It’s him and all his buddies playing 10-year-old ball, wearing those ridiculous wraparound shades and trying to be Corey Seager or Elly De La Cruz. The other day, I told my buddy who I coach with: Growing up playing ball with your best friends in the neighborhood … what in the world could be better than that?
Rory and Shane are still doing that 25 years later.
Here’s what I wrote in Normal Sport 2 about their journey and their friendship. It still applies to a pair of Open champs and, now, a pair of Ryder Cup winners together.
Probably even more so.
You remember the moment.
We all pressed in on the mini-scrum once we realized what was happening. This famous, mega-wealthy, always-successful superstar of sport just giving you his soul on national television and letting you all the way inside perhaps the most vulnerable moment of his career. I couldn’t believe it when it was happening, and I still can’t believe it happened.
I watched him walk over and embrace Lowry, who finished up behind him and saw these two men in a field by a lake in rural Wisconsin who were once two boys in a field by a sea in rural Ireland embrace and weep over where life had brought them. Then I saw him walk over to his wife, Erica, who hid it all behind lenses as big as dinner plates, and he completely fell apart.
3. Don’t stop Believin’ … really? That was the song Rory belted three weeks before returning to the site of last major championship, which is now 10 years in the rearview?
Come on.
At least make it mildly difficult on us sportswriters!
Two things to add to a video you surely have seen by now.
Normal Sport 2 ‘22 🤝 Zurich Classic ‘24
Here are this week’s normal moments.
1. This ridiculous moment actually reminded me of the first tee at that first LIV London event two years ago. Remember that?? Also, that guy in the front, one follower asked me, is that … Aaron Rodgers?
2. I mentioned Russ Cochran, who is 65 (!), last week in this space. He nearly made the cut alongside Eric Cole. My buddy Brendan Porath had an all-time rant about this in a Shotgun Start episode last week (like, all time all time) in which he was screaming about Bob Charles and the 1963 open.
And then the clip got turned into a bit of outrage (perhaps feigned?!) on PGA Tour Live (see below). The entire thing was amazing.
The disdain with which the word “pod casts” is said in this clip is palpable! Also, there are a couple of pod casters getting two a side that I think I would take against a 65-year-old Russ Cochran!
Your move @BrendanPorath
— Andy Johnson (@AndyTFE)
Apr 26, 2024
3. This gentleman picking up a poofy Brandt Snedeker iron shot on one hop and looking like he was going to turn two had me howling. So hilarious. Imagine wandering onto a football field and picking up a live ball with T.J. Watt barreling toward you!
Also, maybe the best part is the severe overreaction by the broadcaster, a reaction reserved for, idk, 360-ing a 2-footer on the last hole of the U.S. Open to win your first major, not having somebody touch a ball you hit in the middle of a 40th place finish at the Zurich Classic.
4. Gators on the tee box has become pretty standard, run-of-the-mill normal sport fare at this point.
Since January 1, 2022 here are your top two in the following categories.
Category
No. 1
No. 2
Wins
Scottie (11)
Rory (7) (tied)
Top 5s
Scottie (30)
Rory (24)
Top 10s
Scottie (37)
Rory (33)
Strokes gained
Scottie (2.72)
Rory (2.36)
SG tee to green
Scottie (2.75)
Rory (1.98)
SG ball striking
Scottie (2.29)
Rory (1.71)
SG off the tee
Rory (1.05)
Scottie (1.00)
Major top 5s
Scottie (5)
Rory (4)
Major top 10s
Rory (7)
Scottie (6)
Major SG
Scottie (3.27)
Rory (3.02)
Major SG tee to green
Scottie (3.25)
Rory (2.49)
Major SG ball striking
Scottie (2.63)
Rory (2.36)
This is wild. They have (pretty easily?) been the two best overall and also major championship golfers of the last 2+ years.
Nobody deserves anything in golf obviously, but boy — after sitting through month after month after month of discussion about which executives will occupy seats on the board of a new company that nobody actually understands — I do feel like we kinda deserve Rory vs. Scottie at Valhalla, Pinehurst or Troon.
Imagine seeing this screen grab of T-Mac at an NBA playoff game, and your first thought is not about how T-Mac was one of the most complete young players in NBA history, how he was traded to the Rockets for Stevie Franchise, how his inability to get out of the first round affected his legacy or about his role in that dunk contest (you know the one) but rather your first thought is about …….. Live From.
Insane, truly insane stuff.
Also, should we check on whether T-Mac could serve as a reliever for Johnson Wagner on Live From if needed at some point? In researching this part of the newsletter (yes, I researched this part of the newsletter) I learned that T-Mac once got innings for the Sugarland Skeeters!
👉️ Joseph LaMagna on slow play was excellent. This part is tough to read but also … true.
In an alternate world, the best player in women’s golf admitting that she purposefully plays slowly would be received as a damning indictment of a system that incentivizes these kinds of actions. In the current world of professional golf, however, this is just another example of product complacency golf fans have been forced to accept.
Most people in power within the golf world seem to treat slow play as a feature of the product, not a bug.
👉️ Wait, so representatives from the PGA Tour, European Tour and PIF haven’t even … been in the same room together since the framework deal last June 6?
👉️ I enjoyed these thoughts on the LIV event from my good pal, ANGC Burner. Not all negative!
👉️ This thread on what is the best sentence or paragraph you’ve ever come across is awesome. Here’s mine. It’s by Andrew Peterson from a book called Adorning the Dark. Man, I love it so much.
“Remembering that, at least at work, you're not doing the other party any favors by being vague, soft, or obtuse. Radical candor nailed this with the concept of ruinous empathy. Being honest and direct is a gift to the other side.” -DHH
This is extremely embarrassing, but while doing research on the 25/4 club (which Rory joined on Sunday) — that’s 25 PGA Tour wins and four majors, which we will discuss more in Friday’s newsletter — I realized that I left Sam Snead out of a couple of clubs in Normal Sport 3, which I published last December.
Here’s how it looked in the book when I was discussing Rory’s ceiling.
Snead had 82 and 7!
And I somehow didn’t include him here either.
[Raises hand] that’s egregious, especially when the club is only five players wide.
• This made me laugh.
• Very.
• The Falcons war room was in shambles after the Michael Penix Jr. decision.
If you appreciate craft, you should read this paragraph on bike shops and the choices that they make.
My summary: We have traded delighting in a craft for reverse engineering the life algorithm because one pays better, and we pretend like that’s a fair and equal tradeoff.
The rant above reminded me (encouraged me) to build what you want to build. To, as Paul Graham points out in his essay on work, follow the curiosity.
Develop a habit of working on your own projects. Don't let "work" mean something other people tell you to do. If you do manage to do great work one day, it will probably be on a project of your own. It may be within some bigger project, but you'll be driving your part of it.
What should your projects be? Whatever seems to you excitingly ambitious. As you grow older and your taste in projects evolves, exciting and important will converge. At 7 it may seem excitingly ambitious to build huge things out of Lego, then at 14 to teach yourself calculus, till at 21 you're starting to explore unanswered questions in physics. But always preserve excitingness.
There's a kind of excited curiosity that's both the engine and the rudder of great work. It will not only drive you, but if you let it have its way, will also show you what to work on.
What are you excessively curious about — curious to a degree that would bore most other people? That's what you're looking for.
Unfortunately for my wife but perhaps fortunately for you, reader of this newsletter, my answer to “what are you excessively curious about"?” right now involves driving range pool noodles, major championship xWins and all the Ryder Cup theories my brain can handle.
Thanks for reading until the end.
You’re a sicko, and I’m grateful for it.
1 I sometimes compare this to, say, Tiger, who doesn’t really seem at all taken aback by how his life unfolded for this was always the vision. Always the plan. That is neither better nor worse, but it is quite different, and at least some of it speaks to Rory’s willingness (and Tiger’s unwillingness) to engage in the vulnerable act of considering, you know, this isn’t how it had to go.
2 One of my favorite questions to ask people I meet who played sports at a high-ish level but never truly made it: Who did you play against that made you realize you were going to have to go pro in something other than sports?
Edition No. 79 | May 1, 2024
Hey,
I was off on Sunday and had been looking forward to it. So much golf over the last few months and so little time to do much of anything else on the weekend either for myself or with my fam.
So where did I find myself by 5 p.m. that day? On the range with my AirPods in, working on a new driver feel, listening to the end of the Zurich Classic.
Of course.
If you can relate, you’re at the right newsletter.
Thank you to Holderness and Bourne for sponsoring this week’s newsletter and for sponsoring the last few months. Their sponsorship helps give us resources and space we we need to create something we think you’ll love. We were happy (delighted even!) to turn down several other potential partners for one we actually believed in.
Onto the news.
I had three quick things about Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry from New Orleans last weekend.
1. After Rory and Lowry downed [double triple checks notes] Chad Ramey and Martin Trainer in a playoff, the duo engaged in all manner of giggling antics that two good friends of any age or gender should engage in.
Then they stepped to the microphone, and Rory delivered what he always delivers: gratitude and perspective.
“Yeah, it's amazing. The fans and the atmosphere all week has been incredible. People have come out in the thousands to support us. It's not lost on me how cool that is. Every time I get to play in front of thousands of people, the little boy in me just thinks it's so cool and so exciting.”
Rory always seems appropriately in awe that he became Rory.1 He seems almost taken aback at times — not all the time, but sometimes — that he, of all the other potential candidates — is the recipient of the gifts, the wealth, the fame, this life, all of it. You’ll hear bits and pieces of it trickle out in quotes or the way he handles or discusses different situations.
The first thing to leave the handful of boys whose dreams turn out to be real is the ability to relate. When everything you touch seemingly turns to gold, it is difficult to view yourself differently than how you probably believe most people view you: as a walking transaction. Whether it’s an agency looking for a whale, a business looking to supercharge their product, a journalist looking for a quote …..
…… or a fan looking for an autograph, everybody wants something from Rory.
How difficult it must be to preserve your own humanity.
And yet. And yet, that preservation of his humanity and the self-awareness to interpret his own dream even as he lives it, well, it is perhaps my favorite thing about Rory. Because he has gotten to a place in his life where he understands, accepts and has internalized this truth: At the end of the day, we’re all just boys and girls with dreams who at some point got older.
Most of those dreams fell away, or people like Rory put a dagger in them.2 The tie that binds, though, is that we are all still human beings who have pains, joys, fears, delights, sorrows and triumphs. It sounds like a basic, fundamental thing to understand. I’m constantly surprised at how many people forget it.
2. I, like everyone, was taken by the clear love Lowry and Rory have for one another. I once asked Rory about his closest relationship on Tour, and didn’t think about it for more than .01 seconds.
And in the same way that it seems like Rory is amused by his own success, I think Rory and Shane together can’t believe they somehow both made it all the way from weekends at Carton House in Ireland to … all of this.
I thought of the great interview Paul Kimmage did with them together from the Irish Independent last fall. It’s worth the $4 to subscribe to the publication for a month just to read the interview (I just did so for a second time, and I hope all $8 of my dollars go to Kimmage).
Here’s one snippet from it.
Rory: My first memory of Shane would have been one of the those Boys’ International panel weekends with Neil Manchip [the national coach] at Carton House, and seeing this big fella with glasses and a great short game.
Shane: I remember playing the West of Ireland and crowds following him around. He swung the club better than anyone else, even at that age, and always looked the part. I know Gerry [Rory’s father] was working his nuts off [to pay for it] but he had all the gear. He was this cocky little f**ker from the North [laughs], that’s how I would have seen it.
Rory: I think the first time we played together was the European Youth Championships in Sotogrande in 2006.
Shane: His parents were there. It was our first time to hang out. A year after that we won the European Team Championships at Western Gailes, then he played in the Walker Cup at Royal County Down and turned pro.
Rory: I decide to turn pro and do my thing, and Shane is still playing amateur golf. Fast forward two years to the Irish Open at Baltray and he wins. Brilliant.
Shane: We played a practice round together that week — he had won his first professional tournament that year in Dubai — and I remember him being in the media centre afterwards. “I’ll be seeing a lot more of you,” I said.
Rory: He turned pro.
Shane: Rory was top 50 in the world at the time, so we weren’t in a lot of the same events, but we’d always play a practice round together when we were. I remember playing nine holes with him the week he won the US Open at Congressional and feeling like a 10-handicapper walking off the course. I told Conor [Ridge, his manager at Horizon Sports]: “There’s no way he’ll finish outside the top five this week.”
Update: He didn’t.
One of my favorite things right now is coaching my son’s baseball team. It’s him and all his buddies playing 10-year-old ball, wearing those ridiculous wraparound shades and trying to be Corey Seager or Elly De La Cruz. The other day, I told my buddy who I coach with: Growing up playing ball with your best friends in the neighborhood … what in the world could be better than that?
Rory and Shane are still doing that 25 years later.
Here’s what I wrote in Normal Sport 2 about their journey and their friendship. It still applies to a pair of Open champs and, now, a pair of Ryder Cup winners together.
Probably even more so.
You remember the moment.
We all pressed in on the mini-scrum once we realized what was happening. This famous, mega-wealthy, always-successful superstar of sport just giving you his soul on national television and letting you all the way inside perhaps the most vulnerable moment of his career. I couldn’t believe it when it was happening, and I still can’t believe it happened.
I watched him walk over and embrace Lowry, who finished up behind him and saw these two men in a field by a lake in rural Wisconsin who were once two boys in a field by a sea in rural Ireland embrace and weep over where life had brought them. Then I saw him walk over to his wife, Erica, who hid it all behind lenses as big as dinner plates, and he completely fell apart.
3. Don’t stop Believin’ … really? That was the song Rory belted three weeks before returning to the site of last major championship, which is now 10 years in the rearview?
Come on.
At least make it mildly difficult on us sportswriters!
Two things to add to a video you surely have seen by now.
Nothing is more vulnerable than doing karaoke in front of that many people, and he totally leans into it. Emblematic.
This resonates.
Normal Sport 2 ‘22 🤝 Zurich Classic ‘24
Here are this week’s normal moments.
1. This ridiculous moment actually reminded me of the first tee at that first LIV London event two years ago. Remember that?? Also, that guy in the front, one follower asked me, is that … Aaron Rodgers?
2. I mentioned Russ Cochran, who is 65 (!), last week in this space. He nearly made the cut alongside Eric Cole. My buddy Brendan Porath had an all-time rant about this in a Shotgun Start episode last week (like, all time all time) in which he was screaming about Bob Charles and the 1963 open.
And then the clip got turned into a bit of outrage (perhaps feigned?!) on PGA Tour Live (see below). The entire thing was amazing.
The disdain with which the word “pod casts” is said in this clip is palpable! Also, there are a couple of pod casters getting two a side that I think I would take against a 65-year-old Russ Cochran!
Your move @BrendanPorath
— Andy Johnson (@AndyTFE)
Apr 26, 2024
3. This gentleman picking up a poofy Brandt Snedeker iron shot on one hop and looking like he was going to turn two had me howling. So hilarious. Imagine wandering onto a football field and picking up a live ball with T.J. Watt barreling toward you!
Also, maybe the best part is the severe overreaction by the broadcaster, a reaction reserved for, idk, 360-ing a 2-footer on the last hole of the U.S. Open to win your first major, not having somebody touch a ball you hit in the middle of a 40th place finish at the Zurich Classic.
4. Gators on the tee box has become pretty standard, run-of-the-mill normal sport fare at this point.
Since January 1, 2022 here are your top two in the following categories.
Category | No. 1 | No. 2 |
---|---|---|
Wins | Scottie (11) | Rory (7) (tied) |
Top 5s | Scottie (30) | Rory (24) |
Top 10s | Scottie (37) | Rory (33) |
Strokes gained | Scottie (2.72) | Rory (2.36) |
SG tee to green | Scottie (2.75) | Rory (1.98) |
SG ball striking | Scottie (2.29) | Rory (1.71) |
SG off the tee | Rory (1.05) | Scottie (1.00) |
Major top 5s | Scottie (5) | Rory (4) |
Major top 10s | Rory (7) | Scottie (6) |
Major SG | Scottie (3.27) | Rory (3.02) |
Major SG tee to green | Scottie (3.25) | Rory (2.49) |
Major SG ball striking | Scottie (2.63) | Rory (2.36) |
This is wild. They have (pretty easily?) been the two best overall and also major championship golfers of the last 2+ years.
Nobody deserves anything in golf obviously, but boy — after sitting through month after month after month of discussion about which executives will occupy seats on the board of a new company that nobody actually understands — I do feel like we kinda deserve Rory vs. Scottie at Valhalla, Pinehurst or Troon.
Imagine seeing this screen grab of T-Mac at an NBA playoff game, and your first thought is not about how T-Mac was one of the most complete young players in NBA history, how he was traded to the Rockets for Stevie Franchise, how his inability to get out of the first round affected his legacy or about his role in that dunk contest (you know the one) but rather your first thought is about …….. Live From.
Insane, truly insane stuff.
Also, should we check on whether T-Mac could serve as a reliever for Johnson Wagner on Live From if needed at some point? In researching this part of the newsletter (yes, I researched this part of the newsletter) I learned that T-Mac once got innings for the Sugarland Skeeters!
👉️ Joseph LaMagna on slow play was excellent. This part is tough to read but also … true.
In an alternate world, the best player in women’s golf admitting that she purposefully plays slowly would be received as a damning indictment of a system that incentivizes these kinds of actions. In the current world of professional golf, however, this is just another example of product complacency golf fans have been forced to accept.
Most people in power within the golf world seem to treat slow play as a feature of the product, not a bug.
👉️ Wait, so representatives from the PGA Tour, European Tour and PIF haven’t even … been in the same room together since the framework deal last June 6?
👉️ I enjoyed these thoughts on the LIV event from my good pal, ANGC Burner. Not all negative!
👉️ This thread on what is the best sentence or paragraph you’ve ever come across is awesome. Here’s mine. It’s by Andrew Peterson from a book called Adorning the Dark. Man, I love it so much.
“Remembering that, at least at work, you're not doing the other party any favors by being vague, soft, or obtuse. Radical candor nailed this with the concept of ruinous empathy. Being honest and direct is a gift to the other side.” -DHH
This is extremely embarrassing, but while doing research on the 25/4 club (which Rory joined on Sunday) — that’s 25 PGA Tour wins and four majors, which we will discuss more in Friday’s newsletter — I realized that I left Sam Snead out of a couple of clubs in Normal Sport 3, which I published last December.
Here’s how it looked in the book when I was discussing Rory’s ceiling.
Snead had 82 and 7!
And I somehow didn’t include him here either.
[Raises hand] that’s egregious, especially when the club is only five players wide.
• This made me laugh.
• Very.
• The Falcons war room was in shambles after the Michael Penix Jr. decision.
If you appreciate craft, you should read this paragraph on bike shops and the choices that they make.
My summary: We have traded delighting in a craft for reverse engineering the life algorithm because one pays better, and we pretend like that’s a fair and equal tradeoff.
The rant above reminded me (encouraged me) to build what you want to build. To, as Paul Graham points out in his essay on work, follow the curiosity.
Develop a habit of working on your own projects. Don't let "work" mean something other people tell you to do. If you do manage to do great work one day, it will probably be on a project of your own. It may be within some bigger project, but you'll be driving your part of it.
What should your projects be? Whatever seems to you excitingly ambitious. As you grow older and your taste in projects evolves, exciting and important will converge. At 7 it may seem excitingly ambitious to build huge things out of Lego, then at 14 to teach yourself calculus, till at 21 you're starting to explore unanswered questions in physics. But always preserve excitingness.
There's a kind of excited curiosity that's both the engine and the rudder of great work. It will not only drive you, but if you let it have its way, will also show you what to work on.
What are you excessively curious about — curious to a degree that would bore most other people? That's what you're looking for.
Unfortunately for my wife but perhaps fortunately for you, reader of this newsletter, my answer to “what are you excessively curious about"?” right now involves driving range pool noodles, major championship xWins and all the Ryder Cup theories my brain can handle.
Thanks for reading until the end.
You’re a sicko, and I’m grateful for it.
1 I sometimes compare this to, say, Tiger, who doesn’t really seem at all taken aback by how his life unfolded for this was always the vision. Always the plan. That is neither better nor worse, but it is quite different, and at least some of it speaks to Rory’s willingness (and Tiger’s unwillingness) to engage in the vulnerable act of considering, you know, this isn’t how it had to go.
2 One of my favorite questions to ask people I meet who played sports at a high-ish level but never truly made it: Who did you play against that made you realize you were going to have to go pro in something other than sports?
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