Sports
Glenwood Springs’ Molina captures national beach volleyball title
The sun was blazing, the sand was hot, and Glenwood Springs High School’s Kaylee Molina was one point away from the biggest win of her young career. One last swing later, the Demons’ senior-to-be could finally call herself a national champion.
Molina, along with Battle Mountain High School teammate Cynthia Oronoa, won the USA Volleyball Beach National Championship in the girls 18U American Division on July 21 in Virginia Beach, Virginia.
For Molina, who has been dreaming of playing volleyball at the highest level since she first picked up the sport, the win was a milestone moment.
“This was such a good experience,” Molina said. “Getting to nationals is hard enough on its own, so we just wanted to play our game and play our hearts out.”
The pair went 6-0 through pool play before powering through elimination rounds to claim the title. They had finished runner-up at nationals in 2024, and Molina said that experience helped her and Oronoa keep their composure this time around.
“When we ended up getting second last year, it gave us a lot of confidence in ourselves,” Molina said. “This year, as we kept winning, we could start to taste the medal.”
Molina and Oronoa live more than an hour apart and have only been playing together for two seasons, but their chemistry has been evident from the start, said United Volleyball Club of the Rockies beach coach Jason Obreque.
“When we first put them together, it was like they’d been teammates forever,” Obreque said.
Molina said building a friendship off the court was just as important as the time spent on it.
“We’ve gotten closer over the past two years, not just letting volleyball bond us, but also bonding outside of the sport,” she said.
Obreque added that the pair often communicate in Spanish during matches and share a cultural connection that brings them even closer.
“I think the fact that they’re both Latinas helped build another level of camaraderie,” he said.
Obreque said the biggest difference this year was how Molina and Oronoa handled the pressure.
“There were higher expectations,” he said. “We’d already been there, so during day three we really focused on the small things and controlling what we could. We reminded them, ‘We know what this feels like, we’ve been here before, so let’s stay in the moment and do the little things right.’”
That steady approach carried them through the final rounds and ultimately to the title.
The championship marks a breakthrough for Molina, who is now drawing interest from collegiate beach volleyball programs.
“I’m just so proud of her,” Obreque said. “Kaylee has exceeded every expectation we had, and now doors are opening because of the hard work she’s put in behind the scenes.”
Brittany Chilson, head coach of the Glenwood Springs varsity volleyball team, said Molina has been a leader for the Demons and a force on the court.
“Kaylee is an incredible athlete,” Chilson said. “She’s extremely coachable, and if she wants something, she goes after it wholeheartedly. All the credit goes to Kaylee and Cynthia for their hard work, and to their beach coaches for helping them develop their skills.”
Molina said she’s learned to take advice from as many coaches as possible and use it to keep improving.
“Hearing different perspectives kind of scratches a different part of my brain every time,” she said. “Every coach has a different view of the game, and when they give you new techniques and ideas, it helps you grow as a player. You just have to be willing to learn something new.”
With one more year of high school and club volleyball left, Molina is determined to keep building on her momentum — and bring what she’s learned back to the Glenwood Springs Demons Volleyball Program.
Sports
What to know about the 2026 NCAA Convention
The 2026 NCAA Convention begins Tuesday in the Washington, D.C., area, where all three divisions will gather for the annual event, which includes education sessions on important topics, action on legislative proposals and celebrations to honor the achievements of many people in college athletics.
The event runs through Friday. Roughly 3,000 attendees from member schools and conferences across the country are expected to attend. Below is a snapshot of the event. View the full schedule here.
New championships
All three divisions will vote on recommendations to make stunt and acrobatics and tumbling NCAA championship sports. If the measures are approved, the two sports will host their first championships in spring 2027. They would also join the following sports to earn NCAA championship status through the Emerging Sports for Women program: rowing (1996), ice hockey (2000), water polo (2000), bowling (2003), beach volleyball (2015) and wrestling (2025).
Additionally, Divisions II and III will vote on proposals at their business sessions to create division-specific championships for women’s bowling (Division II) and women’s wrestling (Division III). If approved, both division-specific championships first would be held in 2028.
Division I
Division I will hold a full membership vote on a proposal that would add three units each to the men’s and women’s basketball distribution funds: one unit for each team competing in the respective championship games and an additional unit for each national champion. If approved, teams competing in championship games during the 2026 tournaments will begin earning distributions that will be paid out to conference offices starting in 2027.
The Division I Cabinet is expected to consider a proposal to allow additional commercial logos on uniforms, apparel and equipment — except during NCAA Championships. The measure would become effective in August. The Cabinet also will consider proposals to create National Collegiate Championships for women’s stunt and women’s acrobatics and tumbling and may introduce women’s flag football to the Emerging Sports for Women program. Additionally, the Cabinet will review proposals from oversight committees in several sports — men’s and women’s basketball, track and field, wrestling and men’s ice hockey — to adjust notification-of-transfer windows in those sports.
The Division I Board of Directors will receive an update on the Decision-Making Working Group’s recommendation to decentralize certain regulatory areas of NCAA rules and will consider a proposal that requires a supermajority to approve changes to Division I membership requirements, effectively preventing the autonomy conferences from unilaterally acting without the support of at least one other voting member of the Cabinet or board.
Division II
Division II’s Convention week will include key committee meetings, impactful education sessions and its business session.
The business session Friday will include 17 proposals, with 11 membership-sponsored proposals and a resolution specific to the Division II Football Championship date formula. The Division II Official Notice and Question and Answer Guide provide details on all the proposals. In addition, the winner of the 2026 Division II Award of Excellence will be announced during the business session. The finalists were revealed last week.
The Division II Executive Board, Management Council and Student-Athlete Advisory Committee will also meet individually and collectively during the week.
Division II will hold division-specific education sessions on topics covering business models and enrollment strategies, the future of Division II championships, strengthening the Division II academic and compliance framework, and the impact of Division I decisions on the Division II landscape.
Additionally, Eric Gaynor from Bentley will be recognized at a reception Thursday as the 2025 Dr. Dave Pariser Faculty Mentor Award recipient. Also at the reception, Division II will celebrate 20 years of Division II faculty athletics representative institutes, which provide professional development and education.
Division III
Division III will vote on legislative proposals and continue its divisional analysis. The NCAA’s largest division will focus on the betterment of student-athletes and its schools and conference offices.
Key legislative proposals for Friday’s business session include establishing a Division III women’s wrestling championship, redefining how a season of eligibility is used, permitting multiple automatic qualifiers for conferences and requiring use of the Transfer Portal. Dive deeper into the proposals.
The Presidents and Management Councils and Student-Athlete Advisory Committee all will gather. During those meetings — as well as the Presidents and Chancellors Forum and the Issues Forum — delegates will engage in initial discussions of the Division III analysis the Presidents Council is undertaking.
The Division III educational sessions include “Connecting With Generation Z,” “Building Campuswide Relationships for Athletic Success” and “How Technology Can Help an Athletics Department.”
The annual Special Olympics event will occur Wednesday afternoon, and the Division III LGBTQ of the Year Award celebration will be held that evening. This celebration recognizes those in college athletics for their service and leadership. Division III delegates are encouraged to attend these events.
For more information, visit the Division III Convention resources page.
Awards
Several student-athletes, coaches and administrators will be celebrated during the Convention for their success on and off the field, as well as their positive contributions to college sports and society.
The NCAA Honors Presentation will be livestreamed from 5-6:30 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday. The following award winners will be recognized during the event, which will also include the State of College Sports address from NCAA President Charlie Baker. (Livestream)
- Theodore Roosevelt Award: Dikembe Mutombo, Georgetown men’s basketball.
- NCAA Woman of the Year: Sam Schott, The University of Texas at Tyler softball.
- Silver Anniversary Awards: Nick Ackerman, Simpson men’s wrestling; Drew Brees Purdue football; Tamika Catchings, Tennessee women’s basketball; and Dr. Lauren Witmer, Millersville women’s tennis.
- Gerald R. Ford Award: Charlene Curtis, Radford women’s basketball.
- Pat Summitt Award: Nikki Franke, Temple fencing.
- Inspiration Award: Francesca Loiseau, Marymount (Virginia) women’s tennis.
- Award of Valor: Alex Guerra, Radford baseball.
- Impact Award: Ella Brissett, Claremont-Mudd-Scripps women’s tennis; Mia Levy, Yale rowing; Brayden Long, Slippery Rock football; Aino Martikainen, Franklin Pierce women’s soccer; Micaylon Moore, Nebraska men’s indoor and outdoor track and field; and Matt Wrather, John Carroll football.
Featured Association-wide sessions (all times Eastern)
The Power of Partnership: Leveraging Team IMPACT To Transform the Student-Athlete Experience (2:30-3:30 p.m. Tuesday): This panel will highlight how NCAA member schools are partnering with Team IMPACT to create life-changing experiences for children facing serious illness and disability while enhancing student-athlete development. Panelists will share best practices, outcomes and stories that demonstrate the profound influence on community engagement and the leadership development of student-athletes. (Livestream)
Sports Betting (10-11 a.m. Wednesday): This session will educate attendees about prevention and harm-reduction strategies related to gambling and sports betting in collegiate athletics, including educational and mental health resources available for member schools. Experts will also discuss integrity trends and social media abuse research and monitoring techniques. (Livestream)
Sports
Week Ahead: Monday, Jan. 12 to Sunday, Jan. 18
By Jim Fenton
BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — Here’s a look at the week ahead (Jan. 12-18) for the Bridgewater State University athletics teams:
WEDNESDAY
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL, at Anna Maria College, 5:00 PM: The Bears travel to Paxton, Mass., for a game against the AMCATS.
Anna Maria is a new member of the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference after moving from the Great Northeast Athletic Conference.
The AMCATS are 4-7 overall and dropped their lone conference game to Salem State, 71-67.
BSU, after a 1-9 start in non-conference games, are 2-0 in the MASCAC with wins over Fitchburg State and Salem State.
MEN’S BASKETBALL, at Anna Maria College, 7:00 PM: BSU takes on a MASCAC newcomer on the road.
The teams played non-conference games the past two seasons with the Bears winning both. They opened the 2023-24 season with a 119-110 overtime win on the road and defeated Anna Maria, 89-64, in a game played at Wheaton College last season.
The AMCATS are 4-8 overall and 1-1 in the conference with a loss to Salem State and a win over the Mass. College of Liberal Arts.
BSU is 3-10 overall and is 1-1 in the MASCAC, defeating Fitchburg State and losing to Salem State.
FRIDAY
MEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Bates Invitational & Multi, 10:00 AM: Ryker King and Drew Alves will compete in the heptathlon at the two-day meet held at Bates College’s Merrill Gymnasium.
The University of New Hampshire finished first last season while Bates was second in the seven-team field.
SATURDAY
MEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Branwen Smith-King Invitational, 10:00 AM: The Bears will take part in the meet held at Tufts University.
Last season, BSU was third in the six-team field with Kevin McBirney winning the 1,000-meter run, breaking the school record with a time of 2:29.42.
MEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Bates Invitational & Multi, 10:00 AM: King and Alves will wrap up their two-day stay at the Bates College meet in Lewiston, Maine.
WOMEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Branwen Smith-King Invitational, 10:00 AM: The Bears compete in the meet at Tufts University.
Kiara Abrantes led BSU by winning two events last season, setting a school record of 25.26 seconds in the 200 and placing first in the 60.
Serenity Sands was also first for BSU in the high jump, helping the Bears wind up third overall.
WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at home, Brandeis and Keene State, Noon: The Bears have their first competition since Dec. 6 when they host a tri-meet against the Judges and the Owls.
BSU lost to both Keene State, 166-133, and Brandeis, 165-121, in a tri-meet in New Hampshire last year.
MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at home, Brandeis and Keene State, Noon: The Bears return to the pool for the first time since hosting the BSU Invitational on Dec. 6.
In a tri-meet a year ago in New Hampshire, BSU split a pair, defeating Keene State, 145-112, and losing to Brandeis, 184-77.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL, at home, Mass. College of Liberal Arts, Noon: The Bears close out January with four of five games at the Tinsley Center, beginning with a matchup with the Trailblazers.
The teams are meeting for the first time since Feb. 3, 2024.
WRESTLING, at home, Williams College, 12:30 PM: The Bears will host Senior Day at Kelly Gym as part of the final home match of the season.
BSU lost at home to Williams a year ago, 42-9.
Williams was No. 3 in the last New England Wrestling Association rankings.
MEN’S BASKETBALL, at home, Mass. College of Liberal Arts, 2:00 PM: After playing just two home games in the opening two months of the season, the Bears will be playing four of five games at the Tinsley Center to finish January.
BSU and Mass. College split two games last season, each winning at home.
The Trailblazers begin the week 3-8 with three straight losses and are 0-2 in the MASCAC.
SUNDAY
MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at Bentley University, 1:00 PM: The Bears will be in Waltham, Mass., to face the Division II Falcons.
Desmond Ng led BSU last season against the Falcons, winning the 100 breaststroke and placing second in the 200 freestyle. the Bears were defeated at home, 173-50.
WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at Bentley University, 1:00 PM: The Bears compete in the first of two straight road meets, traveling to Waltham, Mass., to take on the Division II Falcons.
BSU lost at home to Bentley, 189-99, a year ago.
Sports
VOTE for the 2025 Las Cruces Sun-News Female Athlete of the Year
Updated Jan. 11, 2026, 1:02 p.m. MT
This post has been updated to correct a duplicate nominee.
Voting is now open for the 2025 Las Cruces Sun-News Female Athlete of the Year award.
100 nominees have been chosen by the Sun-News across Las Cruces-area schools, including Las Cruces, Mayfield, Organ Mountain, Centennial, Mesilla Valley Christian, Gadsden, Santa Teresa, Chaparral and Hatch Valley. They have been chosen from volleyball, basketball, softball, soccer, track and field, cross country, wrestling, golf and tennis teams from all nine of those schools.
The nominees represented themselves, their schools and their communities in the best possible way they could during their respective seasons. They each accomplished something notable and made their friends, family, coaches and loved ones proud. They were All-State players, All-District players, strong performers at state championships, or members of the Sun-News’ Super Teams.
Voting for this honor will be open for the remainder of the month and will conclude at 11:45 p.m. on Jan. 31. The winner will be announced shortly thereafter. There are no restrictions, so vote now and vote often.
The 2024 winner was Las Cruces track and field’s Kaselle Davis. To ensure a new winner, so that someone else can be recognized and have their story told, Corona is not included in this year’s poll.
Please remember these things as you vote:
- Some of the nominees played multiple sports. However, the ones that are will only be listed in the sport in which they were best or most accomplished in 2025.
- Some athletes may no longer be at their respective schools because they have graduated. However, they still participated in high school sports in 2025.
- It is preferred that voters cast their ballots for the athlete you believe had the best year or accomplished the most out of all the nominees. However, you may vote for whoever you want.
If you believe someone should be nominated who isn’t, please email Nick Coppola at ncoppola@lcsun-news.com.
Here are the nominees:
- Las Cruces volleyball’s Addison Massey
- Las Cruces volleyball’s Caleigh Garcia
- Las Cruces volleyball’s Ava Price
- Las Cruces volleyball’s Sydney Pipkin
- Las Cruces volleyball’s Lyza Jackson
- Las Cruces volleyball’s Kalea Romney
- Mayfield volleyball’s Alexa Chavez
- Mayfield volleyball’s Madison Martinez
- Mayfield volleyball’s Sophia Thompson
- Mayfield volleyball’s McKenna Linnan
- Mayfield volleyball’s Isobella Munker
- Centennial volleyball’s Tristan McReynolds
- Centennial volleyball’s Allie Estrada
- Centennial volleyball’s Judy Borham
- Centennial volleyball’s Andrea Sedillo
- Organ Mountain volleyball’s Maggie Coats
- Organ Mountain volleyball’s Annabelle Jorgensen
- Organ Mountain volleyball’s Alexa Edmondson
- Mesilla Valley Christian volleyball’s Addison Hackey
- Mesilla Valley Christian volleyball’s Ella Rice
- Mesilla Valley Christian volleyball’s Julia Black
- Gadsden volleyball’s Krystal Lucero
- Santa Teresa volleyball’s Evelyn Castro
- Santa Teresa volleyball’s Bridgitte Sandoval
- Chaparral volleyball’s Diana Valenzuela
- Las Cruces soccer’s Raylene Carillo
- Las Cruces soccer’s Aubrie Herrera
- Las Cruces soccer’s Alyssa Parra
- Mayfield soccer’s Ashley Chavez
- Mayfield soccer’s Alexia Lopez
- Mayfield soccer’s Nicole Garza
- Mayfield soccer’s Juliette Moreno
- Organ Mountain soccer’s Ariyah Vazquez
- Organ Mountain soccer’s Ashley Black
- Organ Mountain soccer’s Mia Dean
- Organ Mountain soccer’s Koury Judd
- Centennial soccer’s Zia Flores
- Centennial soccer’s Cleo Coca
- Centennial soccer’s Emma Ruiz
- Centennial soccer’s Amorie Moreno
- Gadsden soccer’s Jazbrie Alvarado
- Gadsden soccer’s Sandra Camara
- Gadsden soccer’s Brianna Esparaza
- Centennial softball’s Destiny Perez
- Centennial softball’s Amanda Valles
- Centennial softball’s Aaliyah Betancourt
- Centennial softball’s Addie Moccia
- Centennial softball’s Stevie Jimenez
- Centennial softball’s Amaris Villegas
- Las Cruces softball’s Kaia Renteria
- Las Cruces softball’s Zaysha Hawkins
- Mayfield softball’s Ausaundra Roberto
- Mayfield softball’s Angelina Ramirez
- Mayfield softball’s Payton Oliver
- Mayfield softball’s Emma Enoch
- Organ Mountain softball’s Hannah Justus
- Organ Mountain softball’s Leah Melero
- Mesilla Valley Christian softball’s Maren Fiske
- Mesilla Valley Christian softball’s Briley Eaton
- Gadsden softball’s Jazmin Alcantar
- Gadsden softball’s Alyssa Lujan
- Hatch Valley softball’s Alaya Martinez
- Las Cruces basketball’s Bethzy Quiñones
- Las Cruces basketball’s Danae Pacheco
- Las Cruces basketball’s Jaysha Hawkins
- Mayfield basketball’s Jazlene Ruiz
- Mayfield basketball’s Ceanna McKines
- Mayfield basketball’s Lorrena Viarreal
- Mayfield basketball’s Serena Carrasco
- Organ Mountain basketball’s Siena Gonzales
- Centennial basketball’s Rizaya Cash
- Centennial basketball’s Joy Hunt
- Centennial basketball’s Carli Nunez
- Mesilla Valley Christian basketball’s Neveah Benjamin
- Mesilla Valley Christian basketball’s Katey Black
- Las Cruces wrestling’s Emberlyn Atma
- Las Cruces wrestling’s Paige Atma
- Centennial wrestling’s Paige Jorge
- Centennial wrestling’s Aliyah Salas
- Centennial wrestling’s Anahbel Padilla
- Santa Teresa wrestling’s Jennifer Rico
- Chaparral wrestling’s Kimberly Perez-Lopez
- Organ Mountain cross country’s Ashley Galaz
- Organ Mountain cross country’s Isabella Barlow
- Organ Mountain cross country’s Jaymie McBroom
- Mayfield cross country’s Arabella Richardson
- Centennial cross country’s Eva Nolan
- Las Cruces track and field’s Sofia Herrera
- Las Cruces track and field’s Kian Almanza
- Centennial track and field’s Anniston Lustig
- Centennial track and field’s Ashley Miller
- Centennial track and field’s Sidney Andrade
- Organ Mountain track and field’s Wren Hofacket
- Santa Teresa track and field’s Jazel Torres
- Organ Mountain golf’s Eleanor Warden
- Organ Mountain golf’s Alyssa Serna
- Centennial golf’s Mia Silva
- Centennial golf’s Carly Moore
- Organ Mountain tennis’ Savannah Reiman
- Centennial swimming’s Savannah Skow
VOTE HERE
Sports
UNC Bears volleyball’s busy offseason
The UNC volleyball team’s fall season ended a little more than a month ago, and the Bears are already moving on toward 2026
In a rare occurrence, two freshmen will join UNC this month with the start of the spring semester. The program also said good-bye to associate head coach Pi’i Aiu, who announced his retirement in December.
Freshmen Gillian Walton and Riley Taylor were among six players to sign for 2026, the program announced in November. Walton and Taylor are expected to be on campus for the start of the spring semester Monday with both athletes opting to graduate a semester early from high school.
UNC has since announced the signing of three transfer students in setter Emily Bruss, middle blocker Summer Snead and outside hitter Kylie Cackovic.
Walton was an outside hitter, defensive specialist and opposite hitter at Overland Park High School in Overland Park, Kansas. Taylor was a right-side outside hitter at Green Level High School in Apex, North Carolina.

UNC, 17-16 overall in 2025, turned in one of its most successful seasons under head coach Lyndsey Oates.
After starting their nonconference season with a 3-9 record, the Bears turned things around during the Big Sky Conference season.
UNC won the conference tournament title on its home court, and advanced to the NCAA Tournament. UNC then pushed nationally ranked Creighton to five sets in a first-round match on the Bluejays’ home floor in Omaha, Nebraska.
The match was the final one for Aiu, who’d been with Oates for seven years.
Aiu came to UNC before the 2019 season after 12 years at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He was promoted to associate head coach in January 2020, and was really a right-hand man for Oates.
She said this week the search for a successor will soon begin. Oates was aware of Aiu’s plans to retire long before the end of the season. She said she heard from several people on her coaching connection with Aiu as news of his retirement became public.
“I don’t know that I took that for granted,” Oates said of Aiu as a coaching colleague. “It is maybe true how much success the two of us had together in the last seven years.”
Oates said she previously had the same camaraderie with assistants Jenny Glenn and Tom Hunter, both of whom spent close to a decade in the program.

In the last seven years, UNC’s record is 150-64 with four Big Sky Conference Tournament titles leading to four NCAA Tournament appearances. In the same span, UNC also won a Big Sky Conference regular-season championship (2024). Also in 2024, UNC qualified for the National Invitational Volleyball Championship after a runner-up finish at the Big Sky tournament.
“It just shows you how valuable assistant coaches are,” Oates said. “I mean, they are doing a bulk of the recruiting and their training, and they create our culture as much as a head coach does.”
Sports
WSU volleyball signs Audrey Hollis out of the transfer portal – The Daily Evergreen
Four weeks ago, it was made public that Jackie Carle and Italia Bernal were both hitting the transfer portal. At the time, this left the Cougars with Livia Ward as the only setter on the team.
On Wednesday, the Cougs fixed at least part of the setter shortage by signing setter Audrey Hollis. Hollis will be a true junior in the fall and is a transfer from the University of Hawai’i. Before playing in Hawaii, she played at UC San Diego in 2024.
As a sophomore at Hawai’i, she recorded 125 assists and 49 digs. However, she only played in 16 out of 29 matches and 38 total sets.
At UC San Diego, however, she produced. As a freshman, while playing both setter and opposite, she logged 921 assists, 8.86 assists per set (fifth-most in the Big West Conference in 2024), 188 digs, 48 blocks, 57 kills and 17 service aces. She played in 27 out of 30 matches, starting in 25 of them, and helped the Tritons achieve an overall record of 17–13, which allowed them to qualify for the Big West Championship in the team’s first year of eligibility.
For her freshman-year efforts, she made the Big West All-Freshman team.
Hollis even has championship-level DNA after she helped lead her club volleyball team to win the USA Volleyball 18s National Championship in the National Division in 2022.
Despite her statistically underwhelming season at Hawai’i this past year, head coach Korey Schroeder and company will look to tap into the upside she showed in her freshman year.
“Audrey brings a lot of [experience] and [success] for us at the setter position. Her freshman season she ran a 5-1 for a very successful UC-San Diego team while she was still 17 years old,” Schroeder said about her in a statement posted on the WSU Athletics website upon signing her.
Sports
Lubbock-Cooper Liberty Campbell Beeler is top area volleyball player
Jan. 12, 2026, 4:05 a.m. CT
WOODROW — Like the rest of the Lubbock-Cooper freshmen three years ago, Campbell Beeler faced one of the first major decisions of her life.
Should she stay at her high school, or enter a new frontier as part of the first contingent to attend Lubbock-Cooper Liberty?
There were plenty of factors to consider, including the athletics landscape. What would sports at a new school look like?
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