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NASCAR Cup Series race at Dover: Live updates, highlights, leaderboard

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Denny Hamlin held on late with older tires to win the AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 NASCAR Cup Series race on July 20 at Dover Motor Speedway.

Hamlin held off Christopher Bell, Kyle Larson and Chase Briscoe on three successive restarts following a 58-minute red flag delay for rain that halted the race with 14 laps to go.

Hamlin earned his fourth win of the season and his second straight win at Dover.

Chase Elliott led 238 laps but got shuffled back among the leaders via pit strategy and finished sixth. Elliott did take the regular season points lead ahead of William Byron, who crashed late and finished 31st.

Recap the race below.

Refresh for the latest live updates!

LIVE LEADERBOARD: Full field leaderboard of NASCAR Cup Series AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400

Recap | Results | Points standings | Winners and losers | In-season tournament semifinal results

Chase Briscoe had the fresher tires, but Denny Hamlin is Denny Hamlin. Hamlin gets the edge with two laps to go, then surges ahead of Briscoe at the white flag. That was impressive on old tires.

Caution is out, and we’re headed to overtime. Chase Briscoe has four new tires and is in second.

Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell are side-by-side for a full lap, and Bell spins off of turn 4 underneath Hamlin. It was another instance of Bell losing it in a bad aero spot. No contact by Hamlin. William Byron and Noah Gragson also crash down the frontstretch, with both getting damage. Bell has little damage. Hamlin leads, and we’ll see about Elliott vs. Larson for second.

Bubba Wallace JUST missed Bell as he was spinning in the middle of the track.

Ryan Blaney is the first car to come down pit road, and a good chunk of the rest of the lead lap cars come down pit road too. Blaney was toward the back of the top 10.

The top seven cars stayed out along with Noah Gragson, so Tyler Reddick in ninth will be the first car with tires.

Cars are rolling off of pit road with 13 laps to go. What do you do re: tires?

The red flag was 58 minutes long.

Drivers are hopping back inside their race cars, and the track looks good. The sprint to the finish will be coming soon. They will need to dry pit road before opening it.

The sun is already back out, and the radar provides optimism for a restart once the track gets dry. Given the surface and the sun light, it shouldn’t take too long to dry though it did get pretty soaked by the passing storm.

With 14 laps to go, the red flag has been displayed for rain. The cutoff time for darkness at Dover is 8:10 p.m. ET/7:10 p.m. CT. Pit road had not opened for stops, so Hamlin remains the leader.

Ross Chastain is in the wall on the backstretch, and the caution is out with 17 laps to go.

Well then. Tires have been necessary, but so has clean air. And the skies are getting cloudier.

Denny Hamlin is doing a solid job defensively driving with the lead, but Christopher Bell is right there. So is another weather cell. What gives first?

Denny Hamlin has a great restart and leads Christopher Bell on older tires, with Chase Elliott ahead of Austin Dillon for third but two seconds back.

Christopher Bell and Austin Dillon pit as it appears NASCAR believes this race will go back green, while Chase Elliott changes right-side tires only.

Denny Hamlin will be the leader.

Christopher Bell leads as the caution comes out. Wow. Rain is in the area. Six cars are on the lead lap: Christopher Bell, Austin Dillon, Chase Elliott, Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson and Alex Bowman. William Byron is the free pass.

Well done on strategy by the Nos. 20 and 3 teams. Bell was about to come down pit road on the previous lap but stayed out.

Chase Elliott remains ahead of Denny Hamlin as the leaders all pit under green. Only Christopher Bell, Austin Dillon and Justin Haley remain on pit road.

Joey Logano and Josh Berry were each penalized for speeding on pit road.

Kyle Larson passes Chase Briscoe and is up to fourth. Chase Elliott’s lead over Denny Hamlin is now 2 seconds with lap traffic being a factor, as is weather close by.

Chase Elliott leads Denny Hamlin by 3.6 seconds with 100 laps to go. Hamlin passed Alex Bowman for second place about 15 laps ago. Elliott has caught lap traffic and is managing it well so far.

Rain is apparently coming toward the track, a scattered storm cell from the north. We’ll see how long until it gets to Dover Motor Speedway. In theory, final pit stops would start in about 25-30 laps. though weather could impact it.

Chase Elliott has been a very good restarter today, clearing Denny Hamlin by three car lengths into turn 1 on the restart. Alex Bowman passes Hamlin for second.

Chase Elliott and Christopher Bell go side-by-side on the restart after Elliott jumps up two spots to second on pit road, and Bell spins on the outside in turn 3! No apparent contact from Elliott, and that is going to virtually end Bell’s chances to win given the difficulty to pass.

After watching the replay, looks like Bell was already out of control when he turned into the corner. Was that an aero-aided spin?

Bell does not hit anything, but he’ll be at the back for this restart. What a turn of events.

Christopher Bell wins Stage 2 by about four seconds over Alex Bowman, who passed Denny Hamlin for second late in the stage.

The top 10:

  1. Christopher Bell
  2. Alex Bowman
  3. Denny Hamlin
  4. Chase Elliott
  5. Kyle Larson
  6. William Byron
  7. Chase Briscoe
  8. Ty Gibbs
  9. Ryan Blaney
  10. Bubba Wallace

AJ Allmendinger has an issue and is in for an unscheduled stop. Yet another mishap for the No. 16 Kaulig Racing team.

Allmendinger is back down pit road a couple laps later and goes behind the wall with a right-rear brakes issue. Carson Hocevar and Cody Ware have also driven to the garage.

Christopher Bell leads Denny Hamlin by more than three seconds. The current top five:

  1. Christopher Bell
  2. Denny Hamlin
  3. Alex Bowman
  4. William Byron
  5. Chase Elliott

Kyle Larson is in sixth, his highest spot in the running order today.

Chase Elliott will not be the leader once the pit cycle completes under green. Elliott’s crew had an issue on the left side, and he is now fifth among the leaders who had pitted. Denny Hamlin has the lead among that group after pitting a lap earlier.

Carson Hocevar and Daniel Suarez are the only ones who need to pit.

Alex Bowman is up to fourth as the leaders catch lap traffic. Chase Elliott only needs about a lap to lap Daniel Suarez this time. Elliott’s lead is 0.7 seconds over Christopher Bell with Denny Hamlin close by. Bowman is 2.8 seconds behind.

AJ Allmendinger again has some of the fastest lap times as they click off in stage 2, but he’s in 24th after the tire issue to end the first stage.

Chase Elliott has the restarts down so far today, as he again clears Christopher Bell by a couple car lengths off of turn 2. Denny Hamlin, in third, had the best car late in the last run. But we’ll see how long these guys run. It’s almost certainly going to be a two-stop final 150 laps. How about this stage, at 130 laps?

Chase Elliott earns his first stage victory of the season, holding off Christopher Bell after taking 10 or more laps to put Daniel Suarez a lap down. 28 cars are on the lead lap.

The top 10:

  1. Chase Elliott
  2. Christopher Bell
  3. Denny Hamlin
  4. William Byron
  5. Alex Bowman
  6. Chase Briscoe
  7. Ty Gibbs
  8. Kyle Busch
  9. Joey Logano
  10. Kyle Larson

AJ Allmendinger had a tire come apart on the final lap of the stage, sliding from ninth to 26th. Erik Jones was also in the wall late in the stage.

Alex Bowman was the fastest car there midway through the run, and he is up to sixth. AJ Allmendinger has been consistently one of the fastest cars since the field got stretched out, and he is up to 10th and trying to work around Joey Logano for ninth.

Several drivers are trying to best manage tire wear on a longer run. Kyle Busch, in sixth, tells his team that the right-front tire is doing a lot of the work through the corners, and he would like to help that. Joey Logano wants more rear grip.

Chase Elliott’s lead over Christopher Bell is 2.6 seconds, and lap traffic is about to become a chore for Elliott until stage end. Alex Bowman is up to 8th and is more often than not the fastest car on the track.

Chase Elliott has a very good restart and puts multiple car lengths ahead of a battle for second through turns 1 and 2. Teammates Christopher Bell and Chase Briscoe battle for second behind Elliott. Kyle Busch is in the top five after a good pit stop.

Meanwhile, Todd Gilliland was penalized for being too fast on pit road and had to restart at the tail end of the field.

Chase Elliott leads as the competition caution waves. His lap times had fallen off by about a second from the beginning of the run, so tires will be a factor today.

Shane van Gisbergen had a right-front tire issue earlier, and he’s now four laps down.

Chase Briscoe’s lap times are slipping, and Chase Elliott takes advantage via a pass for the lead.

“There might be something broken in the front,” Shane van Gisbergen tells his team. He is back outside the top 30 after starting sixth. He will come in for a pit stop under green.

Chase Briscoe works past Chase Elliott by the end of Lap 1 and takes the lead.

The 37-car field is rolling around Dover Motor Speedway for pace laps. Green flag soon.

NASCAR has set a competition caution for Lap 35 after no on-track activity on Saturday.

Chase Elliott is on the pole after Saturday’s qualifying session was rained out.

The top 10:

  1. Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
  2. Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
  3. Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
  4. Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
  5. William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
  6. Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
  7. Michael McDowell, No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
  8. Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford
  9. Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
  10. Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

Find the full starting lineup here.

The AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 will be aired on the radio by the Performance Racing Network. PRN has affiliates all across the country, and their feed can also be streamed on NASCAR.com as well as the NASCAR app. The race can also be heard on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, channel 90.

  • Green Flag Time:  Approx. 1:15 p.m. CT on Sunday, July 20
  • Track: Dover Motor Speedway (1-mile concrete oval) in Dover, Delaware
  • Length:  400 laps, 400 miles
  • Stages:  120 laps, 130 laps, 150 laps
  • TV coverage: TNT
  • Radio:  PRN
  • Streaming: Watch FREE on Fubo;; MAX app for in-car cameras (subscription required); NASCAR.com and SiriusXM on Channel 90 for audio (subscription required)

The AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 will be broadcast nationally on TNT. Other streaming options for the race include MAX for in-car cameras for each driver.

  • 2024: Denny Hamlin
  • 2023: Martin Truex Jr.
  • 2022: Chase Elliott
  • 2021: Alex Bowman



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Motorsports

FIA President praises Qatar’s role in promoting F1, motorsports

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Dubai: President of the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) Mohammed Ben Sulayem affirmed that the 2025 Formula 1 Qatar Airways Qatar Grand Prix will set a new standard for the importance of the Middle East in the Formula 1 Championship and in the future of motorsports globally, as the battle for the drivers’ title approaches its decisive moments.

The penultimate round of the Formula 1 Championship for this year will take place next Sunday at Lusail International Circuit, which has come to play a pivotal role in nurturing future talent and supporting the FIA’s efforts to expand global participation in motorsports.

QNA file photo from 2024 of President of the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) Mohammed Ben Sulayem

Qatar provides an ideal environment for ambitious young and professional drivers, offering a clear and progressive pathway to reach the highest levels in Formula 1. The expansion of karting programs is the latest evidence of this, with the Middle East Formula 4 Championship as well as investments in training race officials and volunteers.

The FIA President said that the Qatar Grand Prix was not merely a race, but a symbol of the country’s ambition in developing it from grassroots to the global stage.

He added that Lusail International Circuit is more than a global platform for Formula 1, as it stands as a testament to their shared vision, integrating innovation, sustainability, and a deep commitment to the future of motorsports.

He pointed out that the Middle East has become a central player in the Formula 1 calendar, saying that the Qatar Grand Prix demonstrates their confidence in the region and its vital role in promoting inclusivity and building an enthusiastic fan base, which is essential to FIA’s strategy for growth and development.

Since Qatar began hosting Formula 1 races in 2021, Lusail International Circuit has become an essential stop on the championship schedule, thanks to its advanced design featuring 16 turns and multiple overtaking zones that add high competitiveness to the races.

The circuit is also known for its stunning night lighting, which adds a unique visual atmosphere to the race, along with the modern facilities introduced during upgrades to the 5.38-kilometer track, aimed at enhancing the experience for both drivers and fans.

The FIA continues its efforts to make motorsports more inclusive and diverse, with a focus on providing equal opportunities for talent through pioneering global programs that ensure the sport’s continued success in the Middle East.

The FIA Karting Nations Cup for the Middle East and North Africa, launched by Ben Sulayem in 2020, is an important part of this vision. This year’s edition, held last month in Lusail by the Qatar Motor and Motorcycle Federation (QMMF), achieved remarkable success, attracting more than 170 drivers from 18 countries across the region.



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Toni Breidinger Wants to Leave a NASCAR Legacy That Transcends Her Results on Track

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Toni Breidinger may be only 26 years old, but she carries ambitions far beyond her years. She wants her mark on motorsports to echo in the same way Danica Patrick’s influence reshaped NASCAR.

Patrick carved out space for women in the sport and showed she could run toe-to-toe with stock car racing’s best, as evidenced by her 2013 Daytona 500 pole and a top-10 finish in that same race. Breidinger hopes to spark that same fire in young female racers, and considers that impact just as meaningful as anything she might accomplish behind the wheel.

While several drivers measure their success solely by the wins, trophies, or championships they bag, Breidinger builds her vision of legacy on something different.

“There’s so much I want to achieve, career-wise, but I think if I look at something as my legacy, I want to hopefully create a more welcoming environment, hopefully pave a path for females in the sport. I think that’s been the most rewarding thing for me this year is just the young girls coming up to me and saying that I inspire them or that they’re starting to race because of me,” she said.

For her, that response and the drive to leave an impact outweigh any finish she has recorded or any campaign she has represented. Breidinger sees herself in those young girls because she once stood exactly where they stand now, wide-eyed, ambitious, and searching for a reflection of what might be possible.

When she speaks to younger generations of women trying to break barriers, whether in motorsports or in another male-dominated field, or any pursuit they feel drawn to, she offers the same message every time: “Don’t be afraid to be the first you.”

Breidinger urges women and young girls to learn from her experiences, given that her own path to NASCAR has looked nothing like she imagined as a child. It has not been perfect, predictable, or linear and has come with challenges, moments of doubt, and stretches filled with highs and lows. Yet she believes those wrenches shape athletes for competition, and her story offers crucial insight to those looking in.

With a season-best finish of P18 at Rockingham Speedway, two top-20s, and 13 top-25s during her first full-time Truck Series stint this year, the California native accepted her big leap to the first rung of the top 3 series in the sport. “I think it was more of a learning curve than what I was probably anticipating,” she added.

Yet, she maintains that the same results are not the sole measure of her year, with her sights set on making a larger impact, while climbing the ranks towards the front of the field.



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From Need for Speed, Speedhunters to Race Service: Rod Chong

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Taro Koki from the Creative Drive sits down with creative polymath Rod Chong – filmmaker, agency leader, ex-Need for Speed creative director, and partner at Race Service – for a deep, inspiring conversation on creativity, AI, motorsports, and building world-class teams. Rod shares the story of his winding creative journey: from art school to music videos, into video-game culture, to launching the globally influential Speedhunters, and now shaping the future of automotive culture at Race Service.

  • Why not giving the answer makes teams stronger
  • How Race Service built its “creative squad” model
  • The power of authentic community in the car world
  • The coming wave of AI disruption — and why humans still matter more than ever
  • The future of motorsport entertainment and augmented reality
  • The shrinking gap between sim racing and real-world driving
  • How creatives can stay inspired and avoid burnout
  • The skills young (and stalled) creatives really need today

If you’re a creator, filmmaker, motorsport fan, or someone navigating the fast-changing world of AI and culture — this one is for you. Rod Chong is the former Creative Director for Need for Speed, founder of Speedhunters, and now Partner & Chief Creative Officer at Race Service, where he blends automotive culture with art, fashion, film, and technology. He’s worked with Ferrari F1, Porsche, AMG, McLaren, Michelin, and more.



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Damning Tony Stewart interview resurfaces after brutal NASCAR texts – Motorsport – Sports

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NASCAR’s reputation has been dragged through the mud of late, with the organization’s executives having come out of recent pre-trial depositions particularly poorly as preparations continue for 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports’ antitrust lawsuit against it to go to trial.

The lawsuit centers around the new charter agreement, which was signed by all teams barring 23XI (Which is co-owned by Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan) and FRM in 2024, with the two outliers alleging “monopolistic” behaviour on the part of NASCAR. And while talks were recently held over a potential settlement, an agreement could not be reached, hence the ongoing pre-trial depositions and the rapidly approaching trip to the courtroom in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Dec. 1st.

This deposition has seen previously private messages between NASCAR executives emerge, in which 23XI co-owner and Joe Gibbs Racing driver Hamlin was labeled “plain stupid” for his participation in the now-defunct rival Superstar Racing Experience (SRX), with NASCAR President Steve O’Donnell going on to say, “Need to put a knife in this trash series.”

NASCAR commissioner Steve Phelps has also come out of the past few days poorly, with messages from 2023 having been revealed in which he called Hall of Famer Richard Childress “an idiot,” adding, “Childress needs to be taken out back and flogged. He’s a stupid redneck who owes his entire fortune to NASCAR.”

Unsurprisingly, Childress’ team has since released a strongly worded statement claiming that it may yet seek legal action in response. 

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But while all of this trash talk may come as a shock to many on the outside, it appears that insiders have been well aware of growing tensions between NASCAR brass and teams for some time.

A recently reemerged 2018 interview with three-time Cup Series champion Tony Stewart suddenly makes a whole lot more sense, with the now 54-year-old having sent a stern warning out regarding the direction NASCAR was heading in.

“If it changes at the same rate, we won’t even recognize it from when I started,” Stewart told Kyle Petty. “I remember 20 of us drivers went about, I don’t know, five years ago maybe, six years ago, and sat with NASCAR and said, ‘These are the things that we think will help make the sport better.’ 

“And a person in NASCAR that I won’t name sat there and looked me square in the eye and said that everything that we were talking about and what I was saying was 180 degrees backwards from what they thought was going to fix it. 

“And this is a guy that never worked on a racecar, never driven a racecar, that worked for an auto manufacturer that came in and all of a sudden he was smarter than everybody that’s ever been around the sport and driven racecars for 20 plus years. 

“And that’s kind of when I was like, ‘We’re in bad shape, we’re in trouble, having somebody like this guy that’s changing the direction of what’s going to happen.’”

Now, seven years later, NASCAR is heading to the courtroom, with teams and executives having taken their disagreements over the direction of the series to the public forum.



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Trackhouse Racing makes major Red Bull announcement after SVG switch – Motorsport – Sports

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After Trackhouse Racing’s owner, Justin Marks, recently teased an increase in its partnership with energy drink brand Red Bull beyond its NASCAR Cup Series team, the team has now announced a major expansion in its sponsorship package with the Austrian company for the 2026 season.

Spearheaded by Red Bull-sponsored athletes and Trackhouse teammates, Shane van Gisbergen and Connor Zilisch, the brand will sponsor 25 races next NASCAR season combined across the former’s No. 97 and the latter’s No. 88, marking a major increase from its six combined last season. It will also continue to serve as the team’s official energy drinks partner, as it did for the first time in 2025.

Trackhouse’s Red Bull liveries were revealed on Tuesday, with the energy drink brand’s enigmatic deep blue, red, and yellow scheme, as has become a staple in the Formula 1 world over the last two decades, proudly on display.

“It means a lot to have the number No. 97 on my Cup car,” Shane, who just completed his first full-time Cup Series campaign, stated. “It’s a number that means so much to my family and me, so to see it on my car for the first time was surreal. I love the red flash designs on both sides of the car. It’s going to look epic on the track.”

The now six-time race winner’s switch from No. 88 for 2026 was recently revealed in a video by Trackhouse, in which he, Zilisch, and Ross Chastain all read letters regarding their choice of number. Shane’s proved particularly touching, with his dad, Robert, reading aloud a letter from back home in New Zealand, reflecting on the family’s racing history with the No. 97.

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“Hi, mate. I hear you’re running 97, NASCAR Cup Series next year,” Robert said in the video, which saw Shane get understandably teary-eyed. “It means so much to our family. Right from the beginning, both of us ran 97 in motocross. We both ran it in speedway. Mum (Karen) would have been absolutely trapped. 

“Over the years, 97 was the legacy in New Zealand and Australia in all forms of motorsport. So, so proud you’re running it in the USA. And also, even when you won national titles, where you’re obliged to run number one, you still carried on 97. So proud, mate.”

Shane, having taken a moment to collect himself, commented, “Yeah, that’s nice. The stuff he wrote about mum gets me, so, yeah.” Karen tragically passed away aged 64 in 2024.

“Blown away by it,” the 36-year-old Cup Series Rookie of the Year later said. “To be able to represent my number in NASCAR and hopefully people know me as 97 now.”

As for 19-year-old Zilisch, who is carrying over the No. 88 from his record-setting Xfinity Series season during which he also ran part-time in the Cup for Trackhouse, he commented on the Red Bull livery, “It’s so cool to be driving No. 88 in the Cup Series. The number is historic and so many great drivers have driven it. I certainly have big shoes to fill but I can’t wait to get the season started. 

“I love the blue streaks across the side of car. The dark matte blue allows the light blue streaks to pop. I’m excited to have it on track next year.”

The 2026 season will mark Zilisch’s first full-time Cup Series campaign, making the move to replace Daniel Suarez after winning 10 Xfinity races in 2025.



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Childress Considers Legal Action Against NASCAR

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Richard Childress (pictured) issued a statement Monday following the release of  comments from NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps that were made public last week during trial preparations for the upcoming antitrust lawsuit. Childress says he is considering legal action.

Phelps’ comments were originally made back in 2023 after Childress was a guest on SiriusXM. Phelps called Childress “a stupid redneck who owes his entire fortune to nascar”.

RCR statement:

“RCR and Richard Childress are deeply disappointed by the insensitive and defamatory statements made about Mr. Childress in recently surfaced text messages between NASCAR executives Steve Phelps and Brian Herbst. These comments reflect the way certain NASCAR executives have historically viewed and treated many team owners like Mr. Childress, who have devoted their lives to strengthening the sport for its fans, its sponsors, and all who compete in it. RCR and Richard Childress are equally disappointed for the NASCAR fans, with whom Mr. Childress closely identifies given his humble and hard-working background.

Mr. Childress and the organization will issue no further statements regarding these or other defamatory text messages that have recently surfaced, as legal action is being contemplated and discussed with legal counsel.”

Phelps’ comments can be seen on page 2 of the document below:

457-2



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