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Troff on Top; Lone Grandmaster Upends Tourney Leaders

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IM Luke Harmon Vellotti fell to GM Kayden Troff in round 6, and then Troff followed that up with a victory over tourney leader IM Jeffrey Xiong (not pictured) in round 7.


By Brian Jerauld

SAINT LOUIS (June 28, 2014) -- For the 2014 U.S. Junior Closed, GM Kayden Troff decided to change up his tournament strategy -- on the only day he didn’t play chess.

The top seed of the event began his 2014 campaign claiming the expected headlines after taking an early lead in the standings, but then his focus seemed to waver. Back-to-back draws made him momentarily fall out of the limelight and then, literally, the worst: A loss to FM Michael Bodek -- and on the day before the break.

He needed a change.

“I’ve always said: Going into the rest day with a loss is just terrible -- just an entire day to sit around and think about it,” Troff said. “But this year, I turned it into a huge benefit for me. Clear my head, do some fun things and relax, try to come into the second part of the tournament as if it was a new tournament. I just wanted to try and start over.”

The reset button has been pushed. Troff (5/7) emerged from Wednesday’s rest day and walked straight into clear first, by using the most direct line possible: Stepping on literally everyone in his way. Troff has put together two consecutive victories, first over IM Luke Harmon-Vellotti and then Friday on top of IM Jeffrey Xiong -- both of whom shared the tournament lead during the rest day.

His hard work up front places the onus directly on those who chase him, as Troff’s remaining two games in the round-robin format come against the tournament’s two lowest-rated players.

Meanwhile, after the seventh-round loss, Xiong (4.5/7) finds himself without a share of the lead for the first time all tournament -- and also finds himself immediately tested for his share of second place. Today Xiong takes the white pieces against Bodek (4.5/7), who has surged into a tie for second with 3 points over his last four rounds, including Friday’s win over Harmon-Vellotti in a third-place fight.

Friday afternoon delivered the 2014 U.S. Junior Closed it’s longest, yet most-exciting day of chess throughout, another to feature decisions in four out of five games. IM Aleksandr Ostrovskiy (3.5/7) joins a four-way tie for fourth after a slow and stubborn smothering of FM Arthur Shen in a 106-move, six-hour epic; and FM Justus Williams outmuscled FM Josh Colas in their latest chapter of the New York rivalry. The seventh round’s only draw came in a dramatic back-and-forth fight between IM Sam Sevian (3.5/7) and NM Matt Larson, the tournament’s lowest-rated player who has turned in 2.0 points against three of the tournament’s top-four seeds -- and still with a ninth-round meeting with Troff on Sunday.

Crosstable after Round 7

RankNameRating12345678910Score
1GM Troff, Kayden W2494x1 0 1 ½ 1 ½ 1   5.0
2IM Xiong, Jeffrey24370 x 0 1  1 1 ½ 1 4.5
3FM Bodek, Michael H23891  x0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 1  4.5
4IM Sevian, Samuel24420 1 1 x 0 0  ½ 1 3.5
5IM Ostrovskiy, Aleksandr A2423½ 0 ½  x 1 1 0 ½ 3.5
6IM Harmon-Vellotti, Luke24120  0 1  x½ 1 1 0 3.5
7FM Williams, Justus D2278½ 0 ½ 1 0 ½ x  1 3.5
8FM Shen, Arthur23310 0 ½  0 0  x1 1 2.5
9NM Larson, Matthew W2160 ½ 0 ½ 1 0  0 x½ 2.5
10NM Colas, Joshua2247 0  0 ½ 1 0 0 ½ x2.0

Throughout the 2014 event, Troff had seen Xiong arrive daily and blast his opponents with opening over-preparation -- and he looked to remove that advantage early with 5. Nbd2 in a Catalan.

“From what I’ve seen from Jeffrey, especially in this tournament, is he prepares very specifically for his opponents,” Troff said. “I just wanted to avoid all that, take him out of his preparation with this Nbd2 move, which I’ve never really played. Maybe it’s not the best move, but to get someone out of their prep is sometimes more of a benefit than playing the best line.”

The strategy worked, with Troff’s gambit offer accepted at 5...dxc4, sending Xiong into fresh territory. Compensation for the sacrifice was apparent immediately, as white quickly developed while black stayed busy tending to a clog of queenside pawns. The awkward opening set a theme for the rest of Xiong’s afternoon.

As expected between two of the tournament’s highest seeds, both veterans to the annual Junior Closed event, the game’s mistakes were not centered around material loss but instead positional malfunctions. The players agreed Xiong’s troubles started with 11...Be7, a confusing move backwards and a vital loss of tempo in a position that already lagged behind. Troff was able to break open the queenside clog with his a-pawn, who helped recover the gambit plus one with 16. Qxc4. Black soon after sacrificed the exchange, but compensation was too little, too late.

Losing, Xiong went for broke with a late charge at white’s castled king with 22...f4 and began circling his remaining forces for an attack. But it was all technique for Troff, who traded off bishops and eventually black’s remaining rook. After a brief king walk, Troff found his way to a queen trade that sealed his advantage.

 

 

Promising to shake up the top of the standings even further was the third-place battle between Bodek and Harmon-Vellotti, a result that continued the momentum of both players headed in opposite directions. For a long while, however, Bodek’s victory was well in doubt.

Harmon-Vellotti got everything he wanted out of the opening, pushing black through a French Exchange and allowing 7. cxd5 without immediate recapture. Instead, black used the extra tempo to completely unpack his attack, using pins to issue early restraint on two of white’s minor pieces. Harmon-Vellotti reclaimed his material at 23...Nxd5.

The middlegame was a slow positional wrestle, one that Bodek began to lose on the board, but another that Harmon-Vellotti began to lose on his clock. In time trouble, Harmon-Vellotti won a pawn with 37...Bxb3, but overlooked a combination of white queen checks that dropped two of his own.

“I realized objectively I was worse, and all I was trying to do was prevent the knockout blow and avoid losing immediately,” Bodek said. “I was a lot worse, and I got a little lucky in a time scramble before the first time control, finding a trick that got me back into the game and gave me the edge.”

The queen-and-pawn endgame kept the match tense through its finale, though Bodek patiently saw his advantage through. He sacrificed his a-pawn to allow his passed d-pawn a sprint to the seventh rank, then thrust Harmon-Vellotti into zugzwang with 78. f4.

 

 

The 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Championship enters its final weekend, with two rounds remaining on Saturday and Sunday at 1:00 p.m. CST. The rounds will be streamed live at www.uschesschamps.com, with commentary, analysis and player interviews by GM Ben Finegold and FM Aviv Friedman.

 

Pivotal Matchups Await 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Finale

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FM Michael Bodek is turning in a fantastic tournament performance and finds himself just a half point behind the leader, GM Kayden Troff, heading into the final round.


By Brian Jerauld

SAINT LOUIS (June 29, 2014) -- The 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Championship has been decisive in its theme, with victories claimed on four of five boards in each of the tournament’s last four rounds -- and today seems like another good day for a fight.

The final round of the national championship for America’s best players under 21 begins Sunday at 11 a.m. CST, with all of its matchups poised to deliver one last shock to the standings. At stake is the place-distribution of more than $10,000 in prizes as well as an invitation to the 2015 U.S. Championship for the winner, a bid that GM Kayden Troff (6/8) currently holds in his hand.

The tournament’s top seed retook control of the standings after round 7, with two rounds to go against the field’s two lowest seeds -- though there will be no walks through the park here. On Saturday, FM Josh Colas more-than questioned the leader, putting the grandmaster on the ropes before one fatal misstep by his king allowed Troff to desperately squeak past. And now today, Troff takes on tenth-seed NM Matt Larson, the event wildcard who has lived up to the moniker. Larson has scored all 3.5 of his points undefeated in the last six rounds -- two of those points from three opponents who outrate him by more than 300, including his win over IM Aleksandr Ostrovskiy.

Yesterday’s foe now turns into a friend for Troff, as Colas faces the only player who can catch pace in the standings in FM Michael Bodek (5.5/8) on Sunday. Bodek has surged into clear second thanks to 3.5 points over his last 4 rounds, including a fifth-round win over Troff and yesterday’s outmuscling of IM Jeffrey Xiong in a battle for second place.

Also highlighting Sunday afternoon are two third- vs. fourth-place matches, decisions that could flip-flop positions in the standings. Xiong (4.5/8) and IM Luke Harmon-Vellotti (4/8) shared the tournament lead at its rest day, but since then both have fallen to each of the tournament leaders -- and now face each other to end their skids. Also battling over place is Ostrovskiy (4/8) against IM Sam Sevian (4.5/8), on a surge of his own with 3.5 points over the last 4 rounds -- and only one draw all tournament.

If needed, playoffs will be held at 5 p.m. CST on Sunday.

Crosstable after Round 8

RankNameRating12345678910Score
1GM Troff, Kayden W2494x0 1 1 ½ 1 ½  1 1 6.0
2FM Bodek, Michael H23891 x0 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 ½  5.5
3IM Sevian, Samuel24420 1 x1  0 0 ½ 1 1 4.5
4IM Xiong, Jeffrey24370 0 0 x1  1 ½ 1 1 4.5
5IM Ostrovskiy, Aleksandr A2423½ ½  0 x½ 1 0 1 ½ 4.0
6IM Harmon-Vellotti, Luke24120 0 1  ½ x½ 1 1 0 4.0
7FM Williams, Justus D2278½ ½ 1 0 0 ½ x0  1 3.5
8NM Larson, Matthew W2160 0 ½ ½ 1 0 1 x0 ½ 3.5
9FM Shen, Arthur23310 ½ 0 0 0 0  1 x1 2.5
10NM Colas, Joshua22470  0 0 ½ 1 0 ½ 0 x2.0

Bodek has well earned clear second-place with two wins over the last two rounds, the first from a third-place battle with Harmon-Vellotti and then Saturday’s point over Xiong in a fight for second.

As black, Bodek’s Dragon Sicilian seemed to get off to a chunky start, stagnant on the queenside and castled toward white’s activity, bringing Xiong’s attack quickly. His sacrifice 11. h4-h5 opened up a dangerous lane towards Bodek’s king, and then 16. exd5 went to work on the center. Xiong began to pry away black’s defenders, and 19. Qc3+ f6 exposed the black monarch even further. But despite the precarious-looking position, Bodek reportedly found comfort on the next move.

“Out of the opening, I was really struggling at first, but I felt like Jeffrey released some of the pressure with (14. Bxg7),” Bodek said. “Still, I was really not happy with my position at the start, and it was very difficult for me to equalize. But at (20...) Bf5, I felt like I had done so.”

Despite its drafty position on g7, Bodek’s king stood safely on its ground and led a fantastic turnaround assault on white, not being chased until the desperate ending moments of Xiong’s game. Black put together a rook battery on the c-file to coordinate with his f5-bishop, pressure that Xiong released with 27. Rd8 that ultimately gave him control of Bodek’s back rank. Yet the black king still stood safe.

By the time Xiong was finally able to deliver check -- a lone strike at 32. Qg8+ -- Bodek’s pieces lay poised for attack. His 34...Bxc2 forced the action, and 35...Qe4-Qb4-Qe4 offered him the perpetual draw -- as well as pause for thought.

“I realized a draw is basically like giving the tournament away,” Bodek said, who now trails Troff by just a half-point. “So I just decided to go for the win. I figured I had good chances, why not? It’s better than taking a perpetual, then going home and just putting it into an engine.”

Bodek 38...Rc7+ kicked off a combination, ultimately winning white’s bishop and driving Xiong’s king into a hole. Bodek got into a tight spot of his own, cut off on the h-file by both the queen and rook, but all of white’s mating attacks were slow. His 45...Rb7 forced a faster threat, and Xiong bailed out with the hopes of perpetual check. It did not come.

“I don’t control my tournament fate, so all I can do is just play the game,” Bodek said of Sunday’s final round against Colas. “I would have played it for a win, even if I had just one point.”

The 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Championship will stream its final round live at 11 a.m. Sunday at www.uschesschamps.com, with commentary, analysis and player interviews by GM Ben Finegold and FM Aviv Friedman.  If necessary, a playoff will be held at 5 p.m. CST.

 

GM Troff Wins Junior Closed Championship

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Kayden Troff defeated Matt Larson in the final round to win the 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Championship.


By Brian Jerauld

SAINT LOUIS (June 30, 2014) -- When in doubt, just win out.

GM Kayden Troff, the 16-year-old phenom out of Utah, has won the 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Championship in clear first with an impressive 7/9 score, grabbing the national championship for players under 21 by finishing 1.5 points ahead of the field. For his efforts, Troff has won the top prize of $3,000, as well as an invitation to the 2015 U.S. Championship.

“I’m really excited,” Troff said. “This moment has come and gone a few times, where I’ve been excited before and missed. I have just always seemed to struggle in this tournament specifically -- for it to be official and done, it’s a pretty good feeling.”

In his fourth appearance in the Junior Closed, Troff entered as the tournament’s top seed and only grandmaster, ultimately tallying six wins across the 10-player, round-robin event. That is twice the amount of victories Troff has recorded in preceding Junior Championships, his previous-best score coming last year at 4.5/9.

And despite the strong finish, Troff’s new title was anything but certain until the end -- especially after his fifth-round loss to FM Michael Bodek knocked him down into a tie for third place entering the rest day.

“My loss to Michael was a tough moment to get through; it just changed everything,” Troff said. “Everything was going quite well for me before that, and it was just this sudden shift of momentum. Trying to come back from that was probably my hardest moment.”

Troff apparently found zen on the rest day, however, returning to win out the rest of the tournament in convincing fashion. To get back to the top, Troff was forced to go right through it: Both his sixth- and seventh-round opponents, IMs Luke Harmon-Vellotti and Jeffrey Xiong, were tournament leaders at the time. And though a late surge by Bodek brought him within a half-point, Troff handled his own fate just fine by taking down FM Josh Colas and then the feisty NM Matt Larson in the final two rounds. Troff’s impressive score comes out of an extremely hard-fought Junior Closed Championship that featured 33 decisions across 45 games -- and most of the draws were bitter fights to the end.

“I think this tournament makes a good statement on where the U.S. is headed in chess,” Troff said. “All these good players who all play so well, I have so much respect for them. Even Matt Larson, even though he was the lowest-rated by quite a bit, showed his guns and brought it to this tournament.

“Going in, even though people might have thought I was supposed to win this, once the tournament started I have to admit I was a little scared. Everyone was fighting, and even the draws were long and hard fought.”

Winning the national crown caps off an impressive month for Troff, who just earned his new grandmaster title at the Chicago Open and continues to grow as one of America’s ambassadors of chess. The 16-year-old is a promising member of the Young Stars - Team USA program partnership with the Kasparov Chess Foundation, which provides coaching and other support, and is partly responsible for padding more than 200 points to his rating over the last two years. Days before arriving in St. Louis for the Junior Closed, Troff and the Young Stars visited Washington D.C. for the second time to help promote the educational benefits of chess to Congress.

“This has all been so exciting; I’m grateful for it all,” Troff said. “Okay, I’m one of the top players in the country now, yet before all this started I was just some kid from Utah who was pretty good at chess. But I still feel that way: Just some kid from Utah who is pretty good at chess. I just want to work hard and keep it going; all of these opportunities and things that are happening around me, I can only be grateful.”

Bodek (5.5/7) finished in a tie for second with Troff’s fellow Young Star IM Sam Sevian, who scored 4.5 in his last five rounds after suffering three losses in his first four. Xiong (5/7), another Team Stars member, finished in clear fourth after the leading the tournament in its entirety, until Troff knocked him down in round 7.

Final Results

RankNameRating12345678910Score
1GM Troff, Kayden W2494x1 0 1 1 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 7.0
2IM Sevian, Samuel24420 x1 1 0 1 1 0 ½ 1 5.5
3FM Bodek, Michael H23891 0 x1 1 ½ ½ ½ 1 0 5.5
4IM Xiong, Jeffrey24370 0 0 x½ 1 1 1 ½ 1 5.0
5IM Harmon-Vellotti, Luke24120 1 0 ½ x½ 1 ½ 1 0 4.5
6IM Ostrovskiy, Aleksandr A2423½ 0 ½ 0 ½ x1 1 0 ½ 4.0
7FM Shen, Arthur23310 0 ½ 0 0 0 x1 1 1 3.5
8FM Williams, Justus D2278½ 1 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 x0 1 3.5
9NM Larson, Matthew W21600 ½ 0 ½ 0 1 0 1 x½ 3.5
10NM Colas, Joshua22470 0 1 0 1 ½ 0 0 ½ x3.0





March in the 4th of July Parade!

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The Chess Club is participating in the VP Parade that is going to be held in Forest Park this Friday, 4th of July. 

We are excited to be a participant and will be having volunteers walking alongside the famous Chess Club Van.  We welcome all club members and any one else interested in participating.  All participants will receive a t-shirt and refreshments. We will also be handing out candy during the parade. We are looking for children and adults to participate. Fun! Fun! 

If you are interested in participating, please call the Club, 314-361-2437, and notify us of all participant names, their t-shirt size and contact information. 

Participant Directions  ***please note, the Chess Club will be closed for the July 4th holiday

The VP Parade will be in Forest Park, and officially starts at 10 a.m.  There is parking available at Hoyt and Forest Park Parkway on the NE corner of Wash U Campus, and there will be a shuttle that will take you to the parade entrance.  At the parade entrance, you will look for the Chess Club Van and meet there.  The last shuttle leaves the parking lot at 9:30am, so we would suggest being in the parking area around or before 9 a.m. to avoid the rush.  There is no limit to how early you can arrive. 

You will need to print a copy of the parking directions to display to someone at the lot in order to park there
.

Troff on Top; Lone Grandmaster Upends Tourney Leaders

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SAINT LOUIS (June 28, 2014) -- For the 2014 U.S. Junior Closed, GM Kayden Troff decided to change up his tournament strategy -- on the only day he didn’t play chess.

The top seed of the event began his 2014 campaign claiming the expected headlines after taking an early lead in the standings, but then his focus seemed to waver. Back-to-back draws made him momentarily fall out of the limelight and then, literally, the worst: A loss to FM Michael Bodek -- and on the day before the break.

Pivotal Matchups Await 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Finale

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SAINT LOUIS (June 29, 2014) -- The 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Championship has been decisive in its theme, with victories claimed on four of five boards in each of the tournament’s last four rounds -- and today seems like another good day for a fight.

GM Troff Wins Junior Closed Championship

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SAINT LOUIS (June 30, 2014) -- When in doubt, just win out.

GM Kayden Troff, the 16-year-old phenom out of Utah, has won the 2014 U.S. Junior Closed Championship in clear first with an impressive 7/9 score, grabbing the national championship for players under 21 by finishing 1.5 points ahead of the field. For his efforts, Troff has won the top prize of $3,000, as well as an invitation to the 2015 U.S. Championship.

March in the 4th of July Parade!

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The Chess Club is participating in the VP Parade that is going to be held in Forest Park this Friday, 4th of July.

We are excited to be a participant and will be having volunteers walking alongside the famous Chess Club Van.


Chess Club Lecture Series: Advanced

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This video playlist contains all of our advanced-level lectures, taught by some of the best players in the country!

Chess Club Lecture Series: Intermediate

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This video playlist contains all of our intermediate-level lectures, designed for the tournament-level club player.

Chess Club Lecture Series: Beginner/Intermediate

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This video playlist contains all of our beginner/intermediate-level lectures, designed for the player who is just getting accustomed to tournament play.

Chess Club Lecture Series: Chess for Beginners

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This series of lecture videos is designed to teach beginners basic strategy and to introduce tactical ideas. Watch and learn!

Beginner Breakdown with Mike Kummer (Back-Rank Checkmate)

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Mike Kummer presents a lecture for chess beginners on how to recognize, avoid and execute back-rank checkmate

Schoolhouse Rook: Summer Camp Fun!

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Ah, summer! It’s finally here. The kids have been waiting all semester for this long break from school and homework. For them, this vacation represents a break from the everyday routine of the academic year. That means extra fun and games, a chance to hang out with friends, meet new people, learn new skills and find entertaining activities.

Who needs structure? I’ve got vacation, right Mom and Dad?

On Chess: Triple Crowns Bestowed In St. Louis, Carlsen May Return

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This article originally appeared on stlpublicradio.org on July 2.

The Triple Crown of chess is complete, in more ways than one.

Just this past week, Grandmaster Kayden Troff, 16, snagged the U.S. Junior Closed Championship crown after nine rounds of fierce competition against the top players under 21 in the nation. Troff finished the event in style, winning his final four games to finish a point and a half ahead of the rest of the field.


Player Profile: Ronit Kirumaki

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A few weeks ago, while the U.S. Junior Closed was taking place upstairs in the tournament hall, we had our eye on another up-and-coming young player. Since 2012, 12-year-old Ronit Kirumaki and his father, Ashok, have been regular faces at the CCSCSL. From his humble beginnings as an enthusiastic amateur, Ronit has vaulted up through the classes and now sits on the cusp of Expert. Ronit is riding an outstanding hot streak, tying for first earlier this month in Open section of the Amateur and Premiere tournament with IM Levan Bregadze, and winning the Summer Slam Bash.

On Chess: Role Models Abound For St. Louis Girls

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This article was originally posted on stlpublicradio.org on July 7.

It’s a great time to be a St. Louis girl in chess, I think. Just look at what surrounds them: Webster University coach Susan Polgar is adding something new to her resume. Right there at the bottom of page 11.

Lecture with GM Bryan Smith (Steinitz vs. Zuckertort | 1st World Championship) - 2014.07.02

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Chess Grandmaster Bryan Smith presents a game from the first World Championship match between Wilhelm Steinitz and Johannes Zuckertort. 

On Chess: World Chess Hall Of Fame Brings Chess Concepts to Early Learners

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This article was originally published on stlpublicradio.org on July 16.

Bobby Fischer was the youngest-ever American Grandmaster, a title that took him 15 years, 6 months and 1 day to collect. That is, until Hikaru Nakamura came along, besting Bobby by three months and earning the title as the new youngest-ever American GM.

That is, until Ray Robson came along, notching his elite title two weeks before he turned 15.

Help Grow Saint Louis and the CCSCSL

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The Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis is competing for a Grow St. Louis grant -- and you can help! Vote for the CCSCSL as your favorite Saint Louis non-profit, where we will use the $20,000 grant to help expand our scholastic programming around the city. That amount will fund at least 22 instructional programs and reach over 500 students around St. Louis!

Visit the Grow Saint Louis Facebook page and vote for us -- once a day, through August 3!

 

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