Thursday, April 19, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Red River Shootout to remain at Cotton Bowl Stadium: Dallas Morning News reports, In a reversal of Dallas' recent football fortunes, Mayor Laura Miller will announce Friday that the University of Texas and University of Oklahoma will continue to play their age-old annual football showdown in Fair Park's Cotton Bowl - at least through 2015. On Thursday, officials familiar with the announcement had also said Grambling University and Prairie View A&M University will agree to play their annual game at the Cotton Bowl through 2015. The schools' new contracts, which several Dallas officials say will include hundreds of thousands of dollars in new city-funded incentives, ends months of speculation that they soon would leave the aging Cotton Bowl for other venues, including the Dallas Cowboys' new stadium in Arlington, 20 miles away. (Dallas Morning News)Labels: 2007 Storyline, Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, OU-Texas
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 11:15 PM |
Monday, March 12, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Second poll shows further opposition to Cotton Bowl upgrades: Fifty-six percent of respondents to a new poll say the city of Dallas should abandon its $50 million plan to renovate the historic Cotton Bowl in Fair Park. Thirty percent of respondents said the renovations should proceed, while the remainder offered other suggestions. There were 682 responses to the poll, which was conducted online March 1-7 by the Dallas Business Journal after the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic announced it would leave the Cotton Bowl for Arlington in 2010. The results were similar to a Dallas Morning News telephone poll of 601 Dallas residents disclosed March 11. (Dallas Business Journal)
Second scrimmage information; Free and Open to the public: Oklahoma's March 31 football scrimmage will take place at 11 a.m., in Gaylord Family - Oklahoma Memorial Stadium. The event is open to the public and no admission will be charged. The workout will be the final major scrimmage before the April 7 Red/White Spring Game. Oklahoma's other open scrimmage will take place this Wednesday, March 14 at 3:45 p.m., at the stadium. (SoonerSports PR)Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners, Spring Practice
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 4:01 PM |
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Poll: Dallas Citizens oppose Cotton Bowl renovations: Almost half of Dallas residents say the city should pull the plug on a planned $50 million face-lift for the Cotton Bowl, according to a Dallas Morning News poll. Even though the City Council strongly supports the renovation, 48 percent of those polled last week said the investment doesn't make sense now that the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic, the January collegiate bowl game, has announced that it's leaving in 2010. Forty percent said the city should go ahead with the improvements anyway. The remaining 12 percent weren't sure or had no opinion. Six in 10 people said local officials should have tried harder to lure the Cowboys back to Dallas in 2004, when the team announced that it was in the market for a new home. Told of the poll's findings, Dallas Mayor Laura Miller said she still supports further investment in the Cotton Bowl. She noted that local officials are working to lure other collegiate teams. "I feel confident that we will have at least one new football game announcement for the Cotton Bowl before I leave office," said the mayor, whose term expires in June." (In part and more at Dallas Morning News) Note: The poll, conducted for the The News by Blum & Weprin Associates Inc. of New York, was based on telephone interviews with 601 Dallas residents this past Monday through Wednesday. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.Interestingly Dallas voters approved proposition 3, including Cotton Bowl bond by a 81-19% margin in November 2006 election.Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 12:12 PM |
Tuesday, March 06, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Grambling-Prairie View following the Cotton Bowl to Arlington? Grambling would never follow the Cotton Bowl game in abandoning this legendary south Dallas venue, right? Well, there are other emotions at play. The Dallas City Council saw to that a couple of seasons ago when it approved $250,000 in game incentives for GSU and Prairie View through 2009 -- while giving $625,000 apiece to Texas and Oklahoma, who play the following weekend in the same venue. Get [Al] Wash [Promoter of the State Fair Classic], and many Grambling fans, talking about that deal and, well, you can forget another mention of cotton candy and ferris wheels. It gets serious."I don't understand why the State Fair and the city have never seen the fact that we need dollars worse than Texas-Oklahoma need dollars," Wash said this week. "It's a business, and a business decision will be made." (News Star Blog) OU-TEXAS Implications: It would be hard to believe the Dallas City Council would invest bond money (as stated before Dallas isn't obligated to spend bond money, says Dallas CFO), without guarantees past 2009 from GSU-PV and 2010 OU-TEXAS. When all four schools are waiting for improvements passed by the Dallas voters. At the same time, Dallas recruiting LSU, Notre Dame, Texas A&M, Texas Tech to play at the Cotton Bowl stadium, could delay any renovations passed by Dallas voters. "It's absolutely worth significant upgrades to the facility to get four weeks of college football," Dallas Mayor, Ms. Miller.Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 1:05 PM |
Monday, March 05, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Dallas' bond money to stadium uncertain: Now that the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic is primed to leave the Fair Park stadium, Dallas mayoral candidates are divided on what to do with a public fortune earmarked for Cotton Bowl stadium renovations. Some say the $30 million in municipal bonds that voters approved in November as part of a $1.35 billion bond program must remain slotted for the 76-year-old facility. About $20 million in city- and State Fair of Texas-funded Cotton Bowl improvements already are under way, including installation of new seating and a massive video scoreboard. "That money is to be used to bring that stadium up to par. It's imperative that it be used that way, otherwise, the existing stadium will not be viable," former state representative and airline executive Sam Coats said. "I have no qualms spending the money. You have to keep the faith with the voters, period," said Darrell Jordan, a lawyer and 1995 Dallas mayoral election runner-up. "This is a good investment. We have to fight to keep these games," District 3 council member Ed Oakley said. (More at Dallas Morning News)
Boise States' Zabransky on the cover of NCAA '08: Ask any college football fan what sets their chosen sport apart from their professional brothers and odds are most of them will come up with the same answer -- unpredictability. Specifically they'll tell you about this year's Fiesta Bowl where no-name Quarterback Jared Zabransky led his even less known Boise State Cowboys to a thrilling 43-42 overtime victory over the goliath like Oklahoma Sooners. It's that leadership that led EA Sports to choose Zabransky over other household names like Brady Quinn and Troy Smith as their cover-boy for NCAA Football 2008. EA is hoping that Zabransky will be the perfect fit for the game's newest feature, Team Leadership. (MyGamer) Adrian Peterson was widely speculated to grab the cover, as NCAA Football '08 is expected for release summer 2007 for Xbox, Xbox 360, PS2 and PS3.Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 7:50 AM |
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Dallas Official: Dallas isn't obligated to spend bond money: The city of Dallas isn't obligated to spend $30 million in bond funds on the Cotton Bowl, said David Cook, the city's chief financial officer. His statement came in response to the Dallas Business Journal query: "What legal options does the city of Dallas have to make the (Cotton Bowl) renovations, if its leaders no longer see the need to spend that money on the project?" Dallas City Councilman Mitchell Rasansky has been skeptical about spending money renovating the Cotton Bowl, in light of the construction of the Cowboys' new stadium, which is estimated at costing more than $1 billion. "The voters have authorized the city to issue bonds for particular purposes, but the voters haven't mandated that that be done," Cook said, in response to a query from the Business Journal. "From a legal view, the city council doesn't have to issue those bonds and do those improvements. They are authorized to do so. It technically wouldn't take a special vote of the citizens to deauthorize," he said. (Dallas Business Journal)
Live Chat Transcript via Dallas Morning News with Cotton Bowl President Rick Baker: Q: From e-mail: Isn't it true that the city of Dallas failed by not giving a $325 million investment for a $1 billion complex that would have replaced the Cotton Bowl? A: Rick Baker: We are not in the blame game. We just had to make a decision based on the facts laid out before us. The city of Dallas has been a great partner for 71 years and we will continue to need their world-class hotels and infrastructure to be able to produce a premier bowl experience.
Sooners' prospect instead playing Pro Baseball: The bigger question with [Mike] Wilson is why he is a [Seattle] Mariner at all. He grew up in the heart of football country, Tulsa, Okla., and had accepted a full ride to the University of Oklahoma as a linebacker when Seattle came calling. The running joke around camp is the Sooners might have offered more than Seattle did to secure Wilson's services. To be sure, Wilson will always be a fan of Oklahoma football. What Oklahoma couldn't match was the hold baseball had on Wilson's heart. "I played football, and I liked it," he said. "But I always was a baseball player. That was the sport I loved. So when I got drafted in the second round, it wasn't that hard of a decision. "I sat down with my mother and we talked it over. It didn't take long. The average career in football is four or five years. The average career in baseball is longer. And I was hurting; my knees were tired from all the hitting I was doing playing football." (Seattle Post)
Cotton Bowl Offers Texas Tech a free venue to play? A&M? OU?: We speak extensively [News Radio 1420] with the man who is trying to convince Texas Tech and Texas A&M to play their rivalry game in Dallas rather than Lubbock and College Station. His name is Errol McCoy. He is the state fair president. One of his responsibilities is to fill the cotton bowl with high impact football games. Now that the Cotton Bowl game will no longer played in the Cotton Bowl stadium McCoy will renew his efforts to sweet talk Texas Tech. McCoy says the City of Dallas will pay Texas Tech's travel expenses, and he says the state fair will waive the stadium rental. "So, basically the Universities have zero cost in coming to Dallas to play in a neutral site, with the tremendous upside. And in the case of Texas Tech I think they could improve their overall financial situation for the athletic department by $2 million per year; each year!" Of course the average fan says 'Yeah but that's our big rivalry game.' It doesn't get any bigger than Red Raider verses Aggies. We can't give that up! Right? So News Radio 1420 asked Errol McCoy: does it have to be THAT game? What about Tech verses Oklahoma? What about Tech verses ANY other Big 12 team? How about trying to build a brand new rivalry from scratch; say, Texas Tech verses LSU? Here's McCoy's answer. "So it can be any combination; I think any combination of those you just mentioned probably would work and work well." (Newsradio1420)
Cotton Bowl marriage may soon be tested: Dallas Morning News
Change aids chances: Star Telegram
Peterson dynamite player, but few tailbacks carry teams to titles: MSNBC.com
Cotton Bowl finds new home to build legends: Yahoo! Sports Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners, Recruiting, Texas, Texas Tech
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 7:11 AM |
Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Future of OU-Texas at Cotton Bowl Stadium unknown: Tuesday's announcement also could open the door for a move for the Texas-Oklahoma game, played on the grounds of the Texas State Fair yearly since 1929. The possibility of making the game a home-and-home affair, alternating annually between the campuses in Austin and Norman, Okla., has been broached in the past. But last May, the Longhorns and Sooners extended their contract with the Cotton Bowl stadium through the 2010 season. In November, Dallas voters approved a $30 million improvement package to the stadium in addition to $20 million earmarked for the project by the State Fair and the city. The $20 million currently is being spent on new scoreboards and seating. Officials say it's too early to tell if the Texas-OU game will follow the Cotton Bowl Classic to Arlington or break with the neutral-site tradition to go to the home-and-home format. "This move of the Cotton Bowl Classic to Arlington does nothing to change our agreement for the Texas-Oklahoma game," Texas athletics director DeLoss Dodds said in a statement. "We have no plans beyond that." Joe Castiglione, OU's athletic director, said the Cotton Bowl Classic's decision to move was not a surprise. "But I really can't say whether it will have any effect on future (Texas-OU) decisions because that's so far down the road," he said. Castiglione added the majority of Sooner fans want to keep the game in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. "I think our fans really embrace the tradition and uniqueness of the game," he said. "They want to preserve the tradition for as long as they can. It's established itself as one of the unique phenomenons in the pageantry of college football, and people want to see that tradition upheld. "The dynamics for that (bowl) game are totally different than for OU-Texas," Castiglione added. "What they're trying to do is keep the Classic viable to put them in position for a BCS game." (More at Austin American Statesman)
Spring practice schedule change: The University of Oklahoma is making some changes in the dates for spring football practice.The first practice had been scheduled for Monday but is now set for next Wednesday. Scrimmages are planned for March 14th and 31st and the annual spring game is to be April seventh. (KTUL)
With postseason bowl moved, Red River Rivalry can't be far behind in Arlington shift: Daily Texan
Fair question: Founder would have made Classic move: Dallas Morning News Arlington hails Cotton move as important first step: Dallas Morning News Bowl vote unanimous, but emotions were mixed: Dallas Morning News Now Classic can make BCS push: Dallas Morning News Bittersweet: Cotton Bowl moving: Dallas Morning News Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners, Spring Practice, Texas
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 3:11 AM |
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and NotesCotton Bowl to move to new Cowboys Stadium: Hoping to get the Cotton Bowl back on college football's national stage, the board that oversees the game voted Tuesday to move it to the new Dallas Cowboys stadium starting in 2010. "This is one of the most important decisions in the 71-year history of the AT&T Cotton Bowl," Cotton Bowl Athletic Association Chairman Bruce Gadd said in a statement. "Moving the Classic preserves the Classic's legacy and, at the same time, secures its future as one of college football's best postseason bowl games." The move was approved by voice vote during a regular meeting of the Cotton Bowl Athletic Association board of directors. The first game at the new venue in Arlington, between Dallas and Fort Worth, will be on New Year's Day, 2010. Plans for the $1 billion stadium, scheduled to open in 2009, include a retractable roof that would cover a hole similar to the one at Texas Stadium in Irving. A domed stadium is important to bowl game officials because of Dallas' sometimes cold January weather. (Dallas Morning News) This can't be good for the future of the Red River Shootout at the current Cotton Bowl stadium. As the Cotton Bowl has commitments from both Oklahoma and Texas through 2010, only if City of Dallas continues improvements with bond money already approved. In the past, Dallas officials have said they will only continue improvements with long-term commitments. Taylor: Dallas dropped the ball: WFAALabels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners, University of Oklahoma
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 12:34 PM |
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Report: Cotton Bowl Classic on the Move to Arlington: Officials with the State Fair of Texas and the city of Dallas conceded Monday that the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic will almost certainly move from its namesake stadium in Fair Park to the Dallas Cowboys' new stadium in Arlington. "It's been a foregone conclusion that they're leaving," said State Fair president Errol McKoy, who also serves on the board of directors for the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic. "The reason the Cotton Bowl game is supposedly going to move -- and they'll have an announcement here soon -- is all because of one thing, and that's a roof over their head. That's something that we cannot and will not ever provide -- a roof over their head," State Fair chairman Pete Schenkel told The Dallas Morning News, while at once vowing to retain the annual Texas-Oklahoma and Prairie View-Grambling college football games and to attract new ones. A move to the Cowboys' retractable-roof stadium tops the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic board's meeting agenda today. But just about everyone on the board is comfortable that the decision-making process is nearly finished, said Darrell Jordan, a longtime advocate of improving the Cotton Bowl stadium and a candidate for Dallas mayor. "It's my understanding that they are going to vote, unanimously or nearly unanimously, to move the game to the new stadium in Arlington. That is not unexpected," Mr. Jordan said Monday. (Dallas Morning News) Note: Both the Universities of Oklahoma and Texas have agreements with Dallas to play the annual Red River Shootout through 2010. Further agreements are pending.Dallas may challenge for naming rights: The city of Dallas may challenge the Cotton Bowl Classic's right to its name if it loses the annual college football bowl game. At the least, Dallas is exploring its options, it announced in a statement released by city spokesman Frank Librio. The city "has engaged outside counsel to advise us on the scope of our intellectual property rights," including trademark rights, the statement read. The classic's board is meeting today, and a possible move to the Cowboys' new stadium is on the agenda. The use of the name remains an emotional flash point for some. "As far as I'm concerned, I ain't giving up the word Cotton Bowl for any other city," Dallas City Council member Mitchell Rasansky said. "The Cotton Bowl, for whatever it's worth, it is at Fair Park." The city faces major legal hurdles should it mount a challenge. The Cotton Bowl Athletic Association registered the name "Cotton Bowl Classic" in 1999 with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, according to the agency's Web site and documents obtained by The Morning News. The organization confirmed that the document was in use in 2004, as required. (Dallas Morning News) Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 3:46 AM |
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes The future of the Cotton Bowl in hands of other teams if OU/UT don't reach long term commitment: North Texas' baddest football battle is over two stadiums, not in them: an aging Dallas landmark vs. Arlington's sparkling, billion-dollar sports palace now under construction. And for the Cotton Bowl, it may be a fight for survival. Most Dallas City Council members back overhauling Fair Park's 76-year-old Cotton Bowl. The facility, they say, can remain a viable venue for major college football games. And they aren't interested in terminating $50 million in mostly taxpayer-funded renovations to the stadium – even if its namesake contest, the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic, soon bolts to the Dallas Cowboys' retractable-dome stadium two cities westward. On one hand, council members could wait to fund renovations until securing long-term contracts with current college football teams plus prospective tenants, such as Texas A&M University, Texas Tech University, the University of Notre Dame and Louisiana State University. But if they wait too long, they risk renovation delays. On the other, officials could forge ahead, funding renovations as soon as May even without long-term commitments. Not all council members, however, share their philosophy. "The Cotton Bowl is a dinosaur. Yes, it's an institution, but even though it is an institution, I want to see if we're throwing money out the window," said Mitchell Rasansky, chairman of the council's Finance, Audit and Accountability Committee. "Unless we have some long-term commitments soon, I think it is money thrown away. That's only good business to expect that. We, as elected officials, have to be taxpayers' guardians." Meanwhile, negotiations to lure new college football games to the Cotton Bowl have, at best, been slow, although talks with several major college programs and the Big 12 continue, Mr. McKoy said, adding that he's aiming to score commitments for at least one game, to be played during the State Fair of Texas, within the next 45 days. [Dallas Mayor] Ms. Miller says she's optimistic it'll happen. "It's absolutely worth significant upgrades to the facility to get four weeks of college football," the mayor said. "But they've been talking to the same teams for a year now. It's baffling to me why we can't get it done." (In parts and much more at Dallas Morning News) In the past, much of the slow commitments have been on Texas' part. On May 5, 2006 both Texas and Oklahoma agreed to an additional two years running through 2010. Peterson's speed could turn heads at combine: The Oklahoman Labels: Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond, Oklahoma Sooners, Texas, University of Oklahoma
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 1:05 PM |
Thursday, November 09, 2006
Oklahoma Sooner Football Articles and Notes
Dallas Voters pass Cotton Bowl Bond, includes dome study: Deep within a multimillion-dollar contract to renovate Dallas' Cotton Bowl is an easily overlooked item that may resurrect an otherwise defunct idea from last decade -- doming the stadium. The $30,000 study would investigate options for covering the Cotton Bowl with a permanent roof or something semi-permanent, such as an inflatable, retractable or removable dome. The Dallas City Council is scheduled to vote today on the contract, which taps Atlanta-based Heery International Inc. to coordinate the estimated $45.5 million in Cotton Bowl design and construction work. The vote was scheduled to come the day after Dallasites were expected to approve $30 million in Cotton Bowl renovation bond funding to augment millions of dollars that the city and State Fair of Texas already have fronted. These funds will provide a bevy of new amenities for the 76-year-old facility -- seats, scoreboard, bathrooms, concession areas and locker rooms, among others -- and increase its capacity to more than 92,000 fans. It does not, however, allocate funds for doming the stadium. City leaders fear that without some way to keep out wind and cold, the Cotton Bowl will lose its namesake AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic college football game to the Dallas Cowboys' domed stadium in Arlington, which is scheduled to open in three years. (More at Dallas Morning News)Bob Stoops among 10 finalist for Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year: Oklahoma's Bob Stoops is one of 10 finalists named today for the inaugural Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award, which honors the college football coach who best exemplifies responsibility and excellence on and off the field of play. The other candidates are Mack Brown (Texas), Lloyd Carr (Michigan), Danny Hale (Bloomsburg), Bobby Petrino (Louisville), Greg Schiano (Rutgers), Jeff Tedford (California), Mel Tjeerdsma (Northwest Missouri State), Jim Tressel (Ohio State) and Tommy Tuberville (Auburn). "More than a quarter-million fan votes were cast and nearly 80,000 fan testimonials were submitted supporting hundreds of coaches from every level of NCAA competition. We think each finalist embodies what makes this award different than any other: responsibility -- not only to his own team and players, but also to his institution and in society," said Paul Condrin, Liberty Mutual president, Personal Markets. "Honoring responsible coaching is a celebration of the positive influence sports coaches – at every level – can have on young people, their families and entire communities." Selected based on professional competence and achievement in 2006, commitment to the well-being and development of student-athletes, high ethical standards, and civic and charitable stewardship, the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year will receive $100,000 to support civic and charitable activities. In addition, Liberty Mutual will grant $20,000 in scholarship to the alumni association of the winning coach's school. Each of the 10 finalists scored in the top 20 percent of the online fan vote within his division during the first phase of competition (September 8 -- November 6). The public can again log onto www.coachoftheyear.com through November 20 to review bios and fan testimonials supporting each candidate and vote for their selection for the award winner, which will be revealed on December 16, 2006. (SoonerSports PR)Patrick expected to play: OU tailback Allen Patrick, who injured his ankle on his final carry at Texas A&M last week, returned to practice Wednesday. "He did a little bit today. We want to be careful how much," Stoops said. "He'll get more tomorrow. He said he was feeling better and better, so we anticipate him being ready to play." (Tulsa World)Pendleton FWAA Courage Award nominee: Oklahoma defensive tackle Carl Pendleton is this week's nominee for the FedEx Orange Bowl-FWAA Courage Award to be announced at the end of the 2006 season. Pendleton, a junior and a three-year starter, has decided to forgo his senior year of eligibility - but not to turn pro. Instead, Pendleton, who will graduate in December, will continue his education and focus on caring for his 10-year-old brother, Kierstan. He became Kierstan's legal guardian recently while their parents sort through a difficult divorce. Pendleton, who carries a 3.86 grade-point average in sociology with a minor in religious studies, will pursue a graduate degree. In October, he was awarded an $18,000 postgraduate scholarship from the National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame. "With the responsibility of raising my younger brother, I realize football is not the best choice for me," Pendleton said. "Football was a way for me to get my education." Pendleton, a regular speaker at Fellowship of Christian Athletes functions, teaches Sunday school each week at a Norman church. This month, he is taking over responsibility for the church's ministry to fifth- and sixth-graders. (SoonerSports.com)OU notebook: The OklahomanThe list: Best OU backup tailbacks: The OklahomanRunning Away: The OklahomanSooner DBs fired up to face Tech Oklahoma at Texas Tech: The Oklahoman Reggie Smith Video Journal No. 5: SoonerSports.comHe means business: Tulsa WorldKnow the Foe: Texas Tech Red Raiders: Tulsa WorldThe List: Tulsa WorldOU Notebook: Stoops a finalist: Tulsa WorldQuestions with Paul Thompson: Tulsa WorldSooners secondary is better later: Dallas Morning NewsSooners have Tech's number: Dallas Morning NewsLabels: Allen Patrick, Bob Stoops, Carl Pendleton, Cotton Bowl, Dallas Bond
posted by Gilbert Sam, Jr. @ 8:29 AM |
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