So there are some rumors that have been swirling regarding the Mavs and Cowboys the past week or so. My thoughts on the proposed trades... bad and worse respectively.
First the Mavs. I'm a big Devin Harris fan so I may be biased. I would make a terrible GM because I would be too attached to players and refuse to trade them. But seriously, how much do we really improve our odds of winning a title with Most Definitely on the team. Kidd can still distribute, rebound, and run a break as good or better than anyone at the position. He also does a good job of being old, getting hurt, and bitching. You're lookin at probably 1.5 years of Kidd with a mammoth contract. In my mind, hes always an injury risk. Devin has really worked on his jumper and at this point is a better shooter than Kidd is. Harris is also very good defensively although Kidd might be more effective against other big guards like Baron Davis. However, his crotchety old knees would have a tough time with smaller, quick guards like Nash and Parker. Devin Harris is Tony Parker kryptonite, kids. Also, Harris going to Portland is a scary thought. What a nucleus of young players they would have if they added Harris to the mix. Their biggest hole right now is at PG where Jarrett Jack and Steve Blake pretend to play point kinda like how Hubie Brown pretends to not be a talking corpse. Trading Harris would be admission by the Mavs that they feel their window is closing and its one step towards blowing things up if a title isn't produced. I'm not ready to give into that yet.
MBIII plus draft picks to the Dolphins for their no. 1 pick is laughable. If Jerry's Razorback love has him so blinded that hes actually considering this then he would prove once again that he makes a terrible GM. I don't buy that the Cowboys are actually considering it. Probably just fake trade proposals being planted in the press by the Tuna. Why trade a proven commodity plus draft picks for DMC (even though I don't doubt he will be very good) and a large rookie contract? Especially considering the depth of talent at the running back position in this draft it makes no sense. Again, I doubt this proposal is serious... right?
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Monday, January 28, 2008
Harris out 2-3 weeks
Devin Harris is out 2-3 weeks which is great timing as the Mavs set out on a tough road trip attempting to improve on their lackluster 10-10 road record. No big deal, we only have Boston, Detroit, and Orlando B2B2B. Our offense wasn't exactly a well oiled machine last night after Harris left early in the 4th. Not to mention what he brings to the floor defensively. The Puerto Rican midget can sometimes provide a nice spark off the bench but counting on him to play extended minutes may be asking a bit much.
Friday, January 25, 2008
VY props
So VY has apparently been seen on campus at UT a lot recently and the reason is hes enrolled for the spring semester to finish his degree. Heres proof in the directory... as well as his phone number and address in Houston. Is it funny that he lives on Legend Manor Drive? The legend has returned.
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Here and there
I think that Giants win on Sunday made me feel better about the Cowboys game. Giants are peaking, somewhat shockingly. The Cowboys certainly shot themselves in the foot plenty (we don't need to rehash) but the Giants are a very confident and hot team right now. I had asked previously what exactly has Eli done to deserve all this acclaim? Well, I tip my hat to him for his performance on Sunday. That was stepping up. I just don't know if I'll be able to handle 2 weeks of Eli/Peyton/Archie talk. I've said it before and I'll say it yet again. The Pats can be had (a healthy Chargers team would have won that game) and the Giants just might be able to do it. The pass rush was fierce once again and if they get to Brady like they got to Romo and Favre thats one part of the equation. The other part of the equation is Eli playing like he did on Sunday. That Giants run game will help too as the Pats run defense is fairly average. The Pats may still end up winning just because they always seem to find a way to win, but I will gladly take the 2 TD spread thats out there. Thats just ridiculous. I really see a close game. Pats haven't covered any of their ridiculous 2 TD spreads in about 8 weeks.
Other things that have happened that I never touched on... If there was any question about what will happen to Wade if he fails to win a playoff game again next season, I think those questions were answered. Wade may not have a problem with the situation now, but the media will make his life a living hell next season if the Cowboys struggle at all.
UT's hiring of Major Applewhite is a big deal. How big? Well it may help the Horns land Plano's own Rex Burkhead as he was being recruited by both Major and Will Muschamp at their prior places of employment. Seriously though, Major is serious cred in recruiting. Any kid in Texas knows who he is because of how fans built up his legend. Not only that, its more youth and energy being breathed into a coaching staff that was headed for the geriatric ward. The impact hires of Muschamp and Major were needed. One of those two will be heir to the throne. At the very least this is a sign that Greg Davis has a foot out the door and is probably inching towards retirement.
The ginger infiltration is on. I suggest the Cowboys continue this trend by hiring Carrot Top to replace one of their departing defensive assistants. Perhaps the new LB coach. He certainly looks the part.
Other things that have happened that I never touched on... If there was any question about what will happen to Wade if he fails to win a playoff game again next season, I think those questions were answered. Wade may not have a problem with the situation now, but the media will make his life a living hell next season if the Cowboys struggle at all.
UT's hiring of Major Applewhite is a big deal. How big? Well it may help the Horns land Plano's own Rex Burkhead as he was being recruited by both Major and Will Muschamp at their prior places of employment. Seriously though, Major is serious cred in recruiting. Any kid in Texas knows who he is because of how fans built up his legend. Not only that, its more youth and energy being breathed into a coaching staff that was headed for the geriatric ward. The impact hires of Muschamp and Major were needed. One of those two will be heir to the throne. At the very least this is a sign that Greg Davis has a foot out the door and is probably inching towards retirement.
The ginger infiltration is on. I suggest the Cowboys continue this trend by hiring Carrot Top to replace one of their departing defensive assistants. Perhaps the new LB coach. He certainly looks the part.
Monday, January 14, 2008
2007 Cowboys Eulogy
Most times after a loss you can go back and point at one thing and say, yep, thats what did us in. After a loss like yesterday's, I'm so shell shocked because it was myriad of breakdowns whether it was a component of the team that didn't play well or a singular plays that you want to point out that greatly affected the outcome. Immediately after the game I was stunned. I couldn't put my finger on it. How exactly did we lose a game where late in the 3rd quarter I still felt extremely confident without a doubt in my mind that they would be fine? Then I thought about it. It was a laundry list of items that if one play went differently or one team unit played differently then maybe we'd be looking at an NFC championship game in Dallas next week. Thats what makes this one so tough to swallow. It took so much to go wrong for us to lose by 4 points. Those are always the toughest games to take.
You can say well this team just went into cruise control through December and you can't flip on the switch. I don't buy into that stuff. A wise ex-coach of this team once said "you are what are". I think this teams performance through the last month was more indicative of a regression to the mean, a team showing its true colors. The Cowboys aren't as good as they looked through the first part of the season, nor are they as bad as they looked through the last 5 games, Giants game included. It wasn't about turning off any switch and then fumbling to find that switch later on. Thats all BS to me.
Whereas the defense completely failed this team last year down the stretch, the high flying offense let the Cowboys down this time around. This doesn't absolve the defense of anything, because they certainly had their issues yesterday and have issues that need to be addressed in the off-season. Things like how can we get rid of Roy Williams, is Jacques Reeves really the best we can do at the nickel corner, and why isn't our front 7 capable of imposing their will on another team in terms of a suffocating pass rush (ala the Giants in the 2nd half) like we had hoped? However, lets be honest, this team is about its offense and when you average 15.4 points through your last 5 games, there will be problems. If you want to take out the Skins game, 17.75 ppg. Still unacceptable. Jason Garrett is clearly a rising star but his play calling in the latter part of the year needs to brought into question. Selfishly and truthfully, I'm not sure he's ready to be an NFL head coach.
I'm not an X's and O's expert but I don't believe Garrett managed the game effectively in the 2nd half. With the Giants secondary literally counting on practice squad players, we never took advantage. Credit the Giants for recognizing their problem and saying F it, we're coming after you and hopefully you can't get the ball away. Garrett and the Cowboys never made them pay for that. I assume the lack of throws to TO meant he was being doubled. The Giants manned up/doubled the crucial receivers, the D-line pinned their ears back, and said find a way to beat us. No other receivers stepped up and made plays. There are ways to thwart a blitz and there are ways to get your receivers in single coverage situations and the Cowboys didn't do it.
However, having said all that, two other things really killed the Cowboys offensively which limited Garrett's options and never allowed the offense to get into a rhythm offensively. Pass protection and mental mistakes. These two items put the Cowboys in poor down and distance situations. A good offense is all about getting yourself into manageable down and distances. If you don't, it makes it easy on the opposing defense. The Cowboys D deserves its share of the blame, especially for the 50 second drive at the end of the 1st half which changed the complexion of the game. However, the D gave the offense opportunities to extend or take lead in the 2nd half and it never happened because the offense put themselves in a bad situation on every one of its 2nd half drives.
I'll address the mental mistakes first. The dropped passes, the false starts, the personal foul on Davis, the intentional grounding that never should have been flagged but could have been avoided, and taking sacks when you really shouldn't have. All things poised and prepared teams do not do. The two biggest drops that stand out to me: Crayton's drop on 3rd and long, and Fasano's paddle hands in the endzone on our first drive in the 2nd half. If Fasano catches that ball then the Cowboys are up a TD early in the 2nd half. He didn't, then the Cowboys false started (mental mistake), Romo flutters a pass behind TO and we kick a FG. The defense holds with the help of a big sack from Ware and the offense has a chance to take a 10 point lead and force Eli to make plays. As a side note, I'm really annoyed at all this talk about how Eli has turned the corner and how hes made it now. Give him props for managing the game and driving the bus but if all you're asking for is Trent Dilfer thats awfully low expectations for a number 1 pick. He was never forced to make plays but thats the Cowboys fault. Back to the 2nd drive. Leonard's penalty puts the Cowboys at 2nd and 18. Romo finds Crayton streaking across the middle for a 1st down and then some if you consider the YAC... but he drops it. Who knows what would have been the end result of that drive but that drop prevented the Cowboys from taking control of that game. That play was with 1:18 left in the 3rd quarter. Before that I was still extremely confident. After that, fear started to creep in that we were letting them hang around. The Giants scored on their ensuing drive and then I'm flat out scared. Our next drive we moved into Giants territory but it was stamped out by Romo taking an ill advised sack when he could have and should have gotten the ball away. I don't have many qualms with how Romo played yesterday besides the two sacks that he took. Beyond that, he wasn't really given a chance by his O-line's shoddy pass protection. This leads to the other downfall of the Cowboy's yesterday.
The O-line has been brought into question this year over their run blocking but the pass blocking has been stellar for the most part. My theory for what happened yesterday was a lack of conditioning. We moved down the field in the 1st half with some epicly long drives. Commonly accepted notion would be that the effects of this would really wear on the Giants D in the 2nd half. What seemed to happen instead was that the O-line looked slow coming out of their stances and too gassed to effectively move around and protect Romo in the 2nd half. Perhaps if the Cowboys had the opportunity to pound the ball more in the 2nd half then we could have really worn on the Giants D. However, as mentioned before, our down and distance situations dictated otherwise. Its debatable though because MBIII actually looked tired in the 2nd half as well. Romo was under duress in all of the Cowboys last 3 drives. Two times he had TO and Austin deep but wasn't able to get enough on it because of a defender in his face. The false starts coupled with incompletions due to pressure repeatedly put the Cowboys in 3rd and long. The pass protection was so bad that Witten was forced to stay in on several occasions to help on rush pickup, including the Cowboys last offensive play.
Back to Garrett's playcalling one last time. The decision to run the ball on 2nd and 1 on the last drive ended up being fatal for the Cowboys. I suppose the rationale was to surprise them a bit with a draw, take advantage of the Giants aggressiveness, maybe pick up 10 yards, then spike the ball. What ended up happening was there seemed to be some space for him to run, but a tired Barber got arm tackled, ran into his lineman, lost the ball after hitting the ground, a bit of a scrum ensued... and the clock kept ticking. Even if he picked up a nice chunk of yards, the end result of the play was almost inevitably the clock still running. The Cowboys started on the 48 with 1 TO and 1:50 left, an extremely manageable situation. The Cowboys managed to run only 3 plays in the next 1:19. The Giants managed to accomplish much more in 50 seconds to end the 1st half. Suddenly, :31 left, no timeouts and on the 22 yard line. A false start, a receiver quitting on his route, and a desperation heave into the endzone later, that was all she wrote. Theres a lot to look forward to with this team and we're definitely trending up, but this one sucked... more than any other Cowboys game I've ever watched.
You can say well this team just went into cruise control through December and you can't flip on the switch. I don't buy into that stuff. A wise ex-coach of this team once said "you are what are". I think this teams performance through the last month was more indicative of a regression to the mean, a team showing its true colors. The Cowboys aren't as good as they looked through the first part of the season, nor are they as bad as they looked through the last 5 games, Giants game included. It wasn't about turning off any switch and then fumbling to find that switch later on. Thats all BS to me.
Whereas the defense completely failed this team last year down the stretch, the high flying offense let the Cowboys down this time around. This doesn't absolve the defense of anything, because they certainly had their issues yesterday and have issues that need to be addressed in the off-season. Things like how can we get rid of Roy Williams, is Jacques Reeves really the best we can do at the nickel corner, and why isn't our front 7 capable of imposing their will on another team in terms of a suffocating pass rush (ala the Giants in the 2nd half) like we had hoped? However, lets be honest, this team is about its offense and when you average 15.4 points through your last 5 games, there will be problems. If you want to take out the Skins game, 17.75 ppg. Still unacceptable. Jason Garrett is clearly a rising star but his play calling in the latter part of the year needs to brought into question. Selfishly and truthfully, I'm not sure he's ready to be an NFL head coach.
I'm not an X's and O's expert but I don't believe Garrett managed the game effectively in the 2nd half. With the Giants secondary literally counting on practice squad players, we never took advantage. Credit the Giants for recognizing their problem and saying F it, we're coming after you and hopefully you can't get the ball away. Garrett and the Cowboys never made them pay for that. I assume the lack of throws to TO meant he was being doubled. The Giants manned up/doubled the crucial receivers, the D-line pinned their ears back, and said find a way to beat us. No other receivers stepped up and made plays. There are ways to thwart a blitz and there are ways to get your receivers in single coverage situations and the Cowboys didn't do it.
However, having said all that, two other things really killed the Cowboys offensively which limited Garrett's options and never allowed the offense to get into a rhythm offensively. Pass protection and mental mistakes. These two items put the Cowboys in poor down and distance situations. A good offense is all about getting yourself into manageable down and distances. If you don't, it makes it easy on the opposing defense. The Cowboys D deserves its share of the blame, especially for the 50 second drive at the end of the 1st half which changed the complexion of the game. However, the D gave the offense opportunities to extend or take lead in the 2nd half and it never happened because the offense put themselves in a bad situation on every one of its 2nd half drives.
I'll address the mental mistakes first. The dropped passes, the false starts, the personal foul on Davis, the intentional grounding that never should have been flagged but could have been avoided, and taking sacks when you really shouldn't have. All things poised and prepared teams do not do. The two biggest drops that stand out to me: Crayton's drop on 3rd and long, and Fasano's paddle hands in the endzone on our first drive in the 2nd half. If Fasano catches that ball then the Cowboys are up a TD early in the 2nd half. He didn't, then the Cowboys false started (mental mistake), Romo flutters a pass behind TO and we kick a FG. The defense holds with the help of a big sack from Ware and the offense has a chance to take a 10 point lead and force Eli to make plays. As a side note, I'm really annoyed at all this talk about how Eli has turned the corner and how hes made it now. Give him props for managing the game and driving the bus but if all you're asking for is Trent Dilfer thats awfully low expectations for a number 1 pick. He was never forced to make plays but thats the Cowboys fault. Back to the 2nd drive. Leonard's penalty puts the Cowboys at 2nd and 18. Romo finds Crayton streaking across the middle for a 1st down and then some if you consider the YAC... but he drops it. Who knows what would have been the end result of that drive but that drop prevented the Cowboys from taking control of that game. That play was with 1:18 left in the 3rd quarter. Before that I was still extremely confident. After that, fear started to creep in that we were letting them hang around. The Giants scored on their ensuing drive and then I'm flat out scared. Our next drive we moved into Giants territory but it was stamped out by Romo taking an ill advised sack when he could have and should have gotten the ball away. I don't have many qualms with how Romo played yesterday besides the two sacks that he took. Beyond that, he wasn't really given a chance by his O-line's shoddy pass protection. This leads to the other downfall of the Cowboy's yesterday.
The O-line has been brought into question this year over their run blocking but the pass blocking has been stellar for the most part. My theory for what happened yesterday was a lack of conditioning. We moved down the field in the 1st half with some epicly long drives. Commonly accepted notion would be that the effects of this would really wear on the Giants D in the 2nd half. What seemed to happen instead was that the O-line looked slow coming out of their stances and too gassed to effectively move around and protect Romo in the 2nd half. Perhaps if the Cowboys had the opportunity to pound the ball more in the 2nd half then we could have really worn on the Giants D. However, as mentioned before, our down and distance situations dictated otherwise. Its debatable though because MBIII actually looked tired in the 2nd half as well. Romo was under duress in all of the Cowboys last 3 drives. Two times he had TO and Austin deep but wasn't able to get enough on it because of a defender in his face. The false starts coupled with incompletions due to pressure repeatedly put the Cowboys in 3rd and long. The pass protection was so bad that Witten was forced to stay in on several occasions to help on rush pickup, including the Cowboys last offensive play.
Back to Garrett's playcalling one last time. The decision to run the ball on 2nd and 1 on the last drive ended up being fatal for the Cowboys. I suppose the rationale was to surprise them a bit with a draw, take advantage of the Giants aggressiveness, maybe pick up 10 yards, then spike the ball. What ended up happening was there seemed to be some space for him to run, but a tired Barber got arm tackled, ran into his lineman, lost the ball after hitting the ground, a bit of a scrum ensued... and the clock kept ticking. Even if he picked up a nice chunk of yards, the end result of the play was almost inevitably the clock still running. The Cowboys started on the 48 with 1 TO and 1:50 left, an extremely manageable situation. The Cowboys managed to run only 3 plays in the next 1:19. The Giants managed to accomplish much more in 50 seconds to end the 1st half. Suddenly, :31 left, no timeouts and on the 22 yard line. A false start, a receiver quitting on his route, and a desperation heave into the endzone later, that was all she wrote. Theres a lot to look forward to with this team and we're definitely trending up, but this one sucked... more than any other Cowboys game I've ever watched.
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Soulcrushing
1. Their 50 second drive to end the 1st half
2. Wasting timeouts in the 2nd half
3. Leonard's personal foul penalty (a very questionable call)
4. Crayton's drop on 3rd and long
5. The ridiculous intentional grounding call. Read the rules. The QB has to be in imminent danger for the flag to be thrown. Romo was not.
6. The decision to run on the last drive and the ensuing time that ran off after the supposed fumble
7. Crayton quitting on his route on 3rd down on the final drive
8. Questionable playcalling by Garrett to not make the Giants pay for their blitzes
9. Poor special teams play
10. Romo was pressing, as was everyone else
What a waste of a season.
2. Wasting timeouts in the 2nd half
3. Leonard's personal foul penalty (a very questionable call)
4. Crayton's drop on 3rd and long
5. The ridiculous intentional grounding call. Read the rules. The QB has to be in imminent danger for the flag to be thrown. Romo was not.
6. The decision to run on the last drive and the ensuing time that ran off after the supposed fumble
7. Crayton quitting on his route on 3rd down on the final drive
8. Questionable playcalling by Garrett to not make the Giants pay for their blitzes
9. Poor special teams play
10. Romo was pressing, as was everyone else
What a waste of a season.
Smells like football
Before the prior week's playoff games I was hoping the fallout from the Wild Card round was either a home date with the Redskins or the Bucs. Alas, that was not to be as Eli and company are in town for what figures to be a tough game. I was a little surprised this week as the Giants somehow became media favorites and everyone's pick to pull off the upset today. I suppose its hard to beat a team 3 times in one season, and I suppose the Giants have played some decent football lately, and I suppose the Cowboys finished off the season a bit shaky, and I suppose that there are questions about TO's health. Let me point out that the Giants have won one game in a row. Suddenly Eli has turned a corner cuz he dinked and dunked his way to 180 yards. The phrase you're only as good as your last game rings true. New York media is pretty hilarious. Everything is either the worst or the best. Eli is the toast of the town all of a sudden.
In the playoffs though, last week doesn't matter. It helps that Shockey is out cuz that was a matchup nightmare for Biscuit. Defensively, we will most likely blitz the daylights out of Eli. Lets see if hes really turned the corner. However, this game comes down to one man, two initials: T.O. If hes healthy, its all good. It doesn't matter how our defense plays. We will outscore the Giants if TO can play at a high level today.
Hopefully the Cowboys can add another hilarious entry to this.
In the playoffs though, last week doesn't matter. It helps that Shockey is out cuz that was a matchup nightmare for Biscuit. Defensively, we will most likely blitz the daylights out of Eli. Lets see if hes really turned the corner. However, this game comes down to one man, two initials: T.O. If hes healthy, its all good. It doesn't matter how our defense plays. We will outscore the Giants if TO can play at a high level today.
Hopefully the Cowboys can add another hilarious entry to this.
Saturday, January 12, 2008
Friday, January 11, 2008
Looking ahead for the Mavs
After all the gnashing of teeth over the Mavs start to the season, the Mavs sit at the top of the Southwest division and .5 game out of 1st in the West. It should be noted that only 4 games separate them between 8th in the West as the separation (records wise) between the top 8 teams in the West is very slim thanks to the rise of the Lakers, Blazer, and Hornets this year. Its a pretty good conference. The Pistons game the other night might have been the most complete game I've seen the Mavs play this year. Needless to say, this recent stretch of play has been their best this year and all is well in Mavs-land. Not surprisingly, this win streak has coincided with Dirk hitting his stride. He was fantastic against the 'Stons, as long as his apparent hardwood kryptonite Walter Hermann wasn't on the floor, dropping 23 on 10-15 shooting while looking decisive and confident.
Next up for the Mavs is a stretch of 5 of 6 on the road in which they have an opportunity to put together a nice win streak with games at @ SEA, @ LAC, @ SAC, vs SEA, @ WAS, @ CHA. This leads up to a home showdown against the Lakers, followed by a stretch of interesting games against Denver, Memphis, Boston, Detroit, and Orlando. The Best of the East tour are all road games. The next 12 games will tell us a lot.
Next up for the Mavs is a stretch of 5 of 6 on the road in which they have an opportunity to put together a nice win streak with games at @ SEA, @ LAC, @ SAC, vs SEA, @ WAS, @ CHA. This leads up to a home showdown against the Lakers, followed by a stretch of interesting games against Denver, Memphis, Boston, Detroit, and Orlando. The Best of the East tour are all road games. The next 12 games will tell us a lot.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Musings
Looks like the Mavs are starting to find it. I'm looking forward to the game tonight as it should be another great test. I've always thought Detroit is as good as any team in the league when they decide to care.
I can't overstate how huge of a hire Will Muschamp is. His body of work is pretty amazing for a guy his age. You have to be concerned that he'll be looking to jump ship as soon as he gets offered a nice head coaching gig (as has been the habit of our DC's lately), but if the rumors are true that hes been offered the keys to the program once Mack retires, then that would settle those issues. I would totally ok with that scenario. Muschamp may represent the next era in Texas football.
If JC going pro means we get this guy, then thats totally fine. I'd love for the Cowboys to take a look at Charles as a replacement for Julius Jones. Barber and Charles can be Thunder and Lightning, part deaux (the good version). I think Charles is gonna be a very good NFL running back.
TO is playing this weekend. There is zero doubt in my mind. I don't even know why its even being debated in the press.
Yoko Romo won't be at the game this weekend. Apparently shes working on her new album which to me is a bad business decision. Her failed movie and her soon to be failed album will do a lot less for her than the TV face time she'll be missing out on this Sunday. And no, it doesn't matter that Romo was in Cancun.
I can't overstate how huge of a hire Will Muschamp is. His body of work is pretty amazing for a guy his age. You have to be concerned that he'll be looking to jump ship as soon as he gets offered a nice head coaching gig (as has been the habit of our DC's lately), but if the rumors are true that hes been offered the keys to the program once Mack retires, then that would settle those issues. I would totally ok with that scenario. Muschamp may represent the next era in Texas football.
If JC going pro means we get this guy, then thats totally fine. I'd love for the Cowboys to take a look at Charles as a replacement for Julius Jones. Barber and Charles can be Thunder and Lightning, part deaux (the good version). I think Charles is gonna be a very good NFL running back.
TO is playing this weekend. There is zero doubt in my mind. I don't even know why its even being debated in the press.
Yoko Romo won't be at the game this weekend. Apparently shes working on her new album which to me is a bad business decision. Her failed movie and her soon to be failed album will do a lot less for her than the TV face time she'll be missing out on this Sunday. And no, it doesn't matter that Romo was in Cancun.
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