Rec Sports
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Tyrese Haliburton and becoming one in a million — Andscape
OKLAHOMA CITY — Vaughan Alexander makes no bones about how wonderful he’s felt about watching his oldest son, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, living his dream. Indeed, living an entire family’s dream.
His 26-year-old son is the All-Star guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder, the NBA Most Valuable Player and has the Thunder one game away from winning the franchise’s first NBA championship.
What’s not to love? Life is good.
“This is going to be a year that is going down in the books,” Vaughn Alexander said during a recent conversation with Andscape.
As long as I’ve covered sports and watched young people and their parents, what has fascinated me more than anything is the one-in-a-million phenomenon. Out of tens of thousands of aspiring basketball players around the world, how does a player who grows up in Canada — like Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, for example — find his way through the youth sports maze, the high school gauntlet, receive a college scholarship, find his way to the NBA, becomes a league MVP and put himself on the verge of winning an NBA championship?
How did he beat the odds? How much is talent? How much is drive?
“It’s more drive,” Vaughan said. “It’s more mental, it’s more who you are, its more discipline. There are so many talented people out there. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t force them to drink. They just won’t take the teaching you give them. It’s more about making that kid be a receptive, principled, respectful-minded person; they’ll probably listen to their teachers, they’ll listen to other elders besides you.
“Who wants to be that one who does what people don’t want to do? It’s hard work, it’s not easy. You’re going to have to do some stuff that most people don’t want to do. If you’re comfortable in your own skin, and comfortable with saying, ‘I’m not going to parties, I’m not going to do this, I’m not going to do that.’ That’s one way to get yourself in that elite space.”

Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images
How do you become that one in a million?
I suppose you can ask the same question about anyone in any profession who has achieved success. There is something admirable and challenging about climbing the pyramid, especially in the bloodsports of basketball and football. Black athletes often, not always, have to traverse a minefield of a less-than-ideal environment and the lack of family wealth and connections.
“It’s more about being that sponge, being humble, understanding that you’re a kid and you don’t know anything,” Vaughan said. “Kids today know everything. I’d say eight out of 10 think they know everything because of social media.
“Be that two out of 400, be that kid who’s really humble, realizing, ‘I got to listen, ask a lot of questions.’ See the people who are doing the things you want to do and be around them.”
Vaughn and his former wife, Charmaine Gilgeous, were born in Antigua. Charmaine participated in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. Vaughn played high school basketball in Toronto, Canada. In addition to Shai, Vaughan and Charmaine’s youngest son also plays college basketball.
What advice does Alexander give parents as they put their children in the youth sports cauldron. Most simply want their children to have a good experience. Many want their kids to become pros.
He encourages parents to have their children embrace the qualities that make them different rather than aspiring to fit in with the crowd. Most of all, he advises parents to develop an unshakeable sense of self in their children.
They’ll need it.
“Sometimes you’ll see your kid moving around and you’ll say, ‘Hey, chill. Who do you think you are?’ But you’d rather that than under-confidence, not being confident in yourself. It’s hard to build that back up.”

Petre Thomas-Imagn Images
My frame of reference for the one-in-a-million question is Bronx-born Rod Strickland, the former point guard who enjoyed an All-America college career at DePaul and a 13-year NBA career. Strickland is currently the head men’s basketball coach at Long Island University.
You never know where young people you’re involved with will end up. For the last 25 years, I’ve run a sports and recreation program at the Church of the Intercession in Harlem. A number of years ago, when Strickland was with the Washington Wizards, I happened to mention the program.
His eyes lit up. He said that when he was 10, Intercession was where he played in youth basketball tournaments at halftime of the older kids’ games. I’m sure back then if we asked the kids on his team how many of them wanted to play in the NBA, everyone would have raised their hands. Then the adults in the room would recite the familiar refrain about how nearly impossible it is to become that one in a million who reaches the league.
After Strickland told me he was one of the 10-year-olds in the gym, I changed my perspective from lecturing about the insurmountable odds of being that one in a million to preaching that somebody has to be that one in a million and it might as well be you.
The question then becomes how do you get to be one of those needles in a haystack? How do you get to be that one in a million?
Fact is, no one thought Strickland would be the one. After Strickland reached college, one of his early mentors told him there were other 10-year-olds who were favored.
“He was like, ‘Back then, there were other people that they might’ve thought was the one,’ ” Strickland recalled during a recent phone conversation. ” ‘Nobody thought you were the one at that time.’ At 10 years old, I probably was one of the better kids, but then at some point between 10 and 15, I might’ve dropped off a little bit and had to recover.”
Strickland, 58, said the difference between his journey and more recent generations is that his aspirations were different.
“I think now, everybody thinks they’re going to be a pro, like it’s automatic,” he said. “I didn’t think I was going to be a pro. I admired guys; I wanted to be like Magic [Johnson] and pass, I wanted to be like Dr. [Julius Erving] with the layups. I wanted to be George Gervin with the finger rolls. I had all these idols, I had this vision, I had a creative mind and I wanted to be something, but I never knew what I was. I kept trying to attain the goal of being good and then getting better and then being able to compete against people, so there were steps to it.”
Because he always played against older competition, Strickland said he spent most of his early life trying to prove himself — in junior high and even college.
“There was never a time where I just thought I was a pro,” he said.
Then there was a game against Georgetown when he was a freshman at DePaul when he made one of his patented drives, showing the ball then going to his other hand to finish. The late Al McGuire, who was broadcasting the game exclaimed, ‘A star is born.’ At that point, Strickland felt he had a chance.
“So, for me, being that one in a million was a journey,” Strickland said. “I was just trying to figure myself out.”

Joe Patronite/Getty Images
Before getting the LIU head coaching job, Strickland spent several years as an assistant coach where he worked in the youth basketball space.
Many young players never had to go through a journey. Some received too much too soon.
“There’s a lot of kids who are the chosen ones, but they are the outliers,” he said. “There’s these other kids who everybody puts in play to be the next pro. Sometimes they don’t make it because you’re telling them they’re there already, so they don’t get to go through the journey. It’s almost like you already know.
“I never knew until I knew.”
The secret to being that one in a million is a combination of confidence and humility; resilience and defiance.
“People can throw you off so easily, you have got to have some ‘F-you’ in you,” Strickland said.
I began covering Strickland when he was at Truman High School in the Bronx. As a junior, he led Truman to the New York State High School Championship. Strickland transferred to Oak Hill Academy (Va.) for his senior year, then went to DePaul University where he was a first-team All-American as a junior.
Strickland was drafted in the first round (19th overall) by the New York Knicks in the 1988 NBA draft and played 13 NBA seasons. He knew how to play the point guard position. He understood at an early age that the essence of the position was giving, sharing and putting teammates in a position to be successful.
“You have to be talented, but you have to be self-aware, you have to know how to make others feel good,” Strickland said.
That’s what impresses him about Gilgeous-Alexander and Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton. They are star players—one in a million—who made the journey by making their teammates better.
Gilgeous-Alexander has created space that’s allowed a teammate like Jalen Williams to break out and become a star. Haliburton, while not a prolific scorer like Gilgeous-Alexander, knows how to put his teammates in position to be successful.
“All you got to do is listen to them talk,” Strickland said. “Their sophistication and their maturity and their thought process of the game and their teammates. You got two unselfish dudes, and they play differently. Shai is scoring that ball. You could see how his teammates love him and how he embraces them and all that.
“And then you watch Tyrese play in the way he plays; he’s about everybody else. But they’re mature, articulate, they have creative minds and their thought process is just different.”
Before I ended the conversation with Vaughan Alexander, I wondered how he has maintained the father-son relationship with a son who is not only well known but wealthy. He admires his son, admits that he enjoys being in the limelight, but he is not his son’s employee or a groupie along for the ride.
“The upbringing, the product of his environment, it just doesn’t change because he’s got hair on his chest,” he said. “I’m still going to give you advice, whether you want to take in or not. They can tune me out, I’m going to tell them the right thing. That’s just how you’ve got to move with your kid.
“You’ve got to deal with them like men from early on. When they become men, you let them go do their own thing, make their own decisions. But at the end of the day, I’ll always be his father.”
There are myriad formulas for a young athlete to become that discovered needle in a haystack. Vaughan Alexander and Charmaine Gilgeous had a formula for Shai and it has worked fabulously.
The formula is rooted in a tenacious belief in possibility. Someone has to be that on in a million. It might as well be you.
Rec Sports
NFL Teams Approve $32 Million Investment in Professional Flag Football League
Key Takeaways
- NFL teams unanimously voted to invest $1 million each, totaling $32 million, to develop and launch a professional flag football league with both men’s and women’s teams.
- The league intends to sell media rights for the venture and expects to begin play after the 2028 Summer Olympics, where flag football will make its Olympic debut in Los Angeles.
- Two potential operating partners have emerged: TMRW Sports, founded by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, and a group led by former NFL running back Curtis Martin with former Bucks part-owner Marc Lasry.
- Flag football participation has reached 20 million players worldwide, with 2.4 million kids under 17 playing organized flag football in the United States.
- The sport is now offered at the high school level in 38 states, with hundreds of colleges and universities also providing flag football programs.
Financial Commitment Marks Strategic Expansion
NFL teams took a definitive step into professional flag football Wednesday, voting unanimously to invest up to $32 million in the development and launch of a new pro league. The virtual vote during a league meeting authorizes 32 Equity, the NFL’s investment arm, to enter into an agreement with an operating partner for the planned league.
Each of the league’s 32 teams is committing $1 million to the venture. A source familiar with the matter confirmed to Front Office Sports that the approval was unanimous, signaling broad support across ownership groups for expanding the NFL’s footprint in flag football.
Troy Vincent Sr., executive vice president of football operations for the NFL, described the vote as “a critical step in establishing flag football as a premier global sport.” Vincent added that the league is “developing the infrastructure to accelerate the game’s growth to new heights by creating a clear pathway for aspiring athletes to progress from youth and high school programs through college and now to the professional level.”
Partnership Landscape Narrows to Two Contenders
The NFL has been fielding inbound interest from potential partners for months. In May, a source familiar with the league’s thinking told Front Office Sports that “more than a dozen parties” were still in consideration. By October, according to Bloomberg, that field had narrowed to two finalists.
The first is TMRW Sports, the company founded by professional golfers Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy that launched the indoor golf league TGL. The second is a group led by former NFL running back Curtis Martin that includes former Milwaukee Bucks part-owner Marc Lasry.
An NFL representative told Front Office Sports Wednesday that the league is “not commenting on specific partners at this stage, but there has been tremendous interest in the marketplace in developing a professional flag football league.”
The structure under consideration involves an entity that the NFL supports financially but does not directly operate. This approach allows the league to leverage its brand and resources while enabling specialized partners to handle day-to-day operations.
Olympic Timing Shapes Launch Strategy
The NFL’s push into professional flag football aligns with the sport’s debut at the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Flag football will be included in the Olympic program for the first time, creating a global stage and potential inflection point for mainstream adoption.
While the NFL didn’t specify an exact launch date for the new league, the expectation is that play will begin sometime after the 2028 Summer Olympics conclude. This timing positions the league to capitalize on heightened visibility and fan interest generated by Olympic coverage.
In February, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said the league was exploring both men’s and women’s pro flag leagues. A source familiar with the matter told Front Office Sports Wednesday that there will be one league featuring both men’s and women’s teams. The NFL also intends to sell media rights for the venture, creating additional revenue streams and broadcast exposure.
Earlier this month, the New York Jets committed $1 million to a new women’s college flag football venture from the Eastern College Athletic Conference, which will begin play in February. That commitment was made through a grant from The Betty Wold Johnson Foundation, a philanthropic organization named for the mother of Jets owner Woody Johnson.
Participation Growth Validates Investment
Youth and recreational flag football participation has expanded substantially in recent years. The International Federation of American Football, the global governing body responsible for growing American football worldwide, reported earlier this year that 2.4 million kids under 17 are playing organized flag football in the United States, with millions more participating internationally.
Overall, 20 million flag football players exist worldwide, according to the NFL’s Wednesday statement. The sport has gained traction at the high school level, now offered in 38 states. Hundreds of colleges and universities also provide flag football programs, creating a pipeline of experienced players who could transition to professional competition.
This participation base provides the NFL with both a talent pool and a built-in audience for a professional league. The growth spans demographics, with particular momentum among girls and women. Many state athletic associations have added girls’ flag football as an official high school sport, addressing long-standing gaps in athletic opportunities.
Strategic Implications for Youth Sports Market
The NFL’s commitment to professional flag football represents a calculated expansion into a segment of the sports market with lower barriers to entry than tackle football. Flag football requires less equipment, carries reduced injury concerns, and can be played in smaller venues, making it more accessible to a broader range of participants and communities.
The league’s investment creates a professional endpoint for a participation pyramid that now extends from youth programs through high school, college, and into the Olympics. This pathway could attract athletes who might not pursue tackle football while also appealing to those seeking alternatives to traditional contact sports.
By establishing media rights and partnerships before launch, the NFL is positioning flag football as a viable commercial product rather than a developmental initiative. The inclusion of both men’s and women’s teams in one league structure also reflects evolving approaches to gender equity in professional sports.
The $32 million investment, while substantial, is modest compared to the NFL’s overall financial scale. For context, NFL revenue exceeded $20 billion in 2024. The per-team commitment of $1 million represents a low-risk exploration of whether professional flag football can sustain itself as a business venture with sufficient fan interest and media demand.
via: FOS / YAHOO
photo: RCX Sports
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Rec Sports
Athletic Directors Head to Tampa, Florida, to Continue Focus on Education-based Programs
The busiest and most impactful people in our nation’s schools? A strong case could be made that athletic directors are the ones who keep the engines running in our nation’s schools – particularly for the more than 8.2 million participants in high school sports.
Starting Friday, about 2,500 leaders of high school and middle school athletic programs will make their way to the Tampa Convention Center in Florida for the 56th annual National Athletic Directors Conference co-sponsored by the NFHS and the National Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (NIAAA).
Their mission? Professional development is at the top of the list for most meeting attendees. High school athletic directors are entrusted with key leadership roles, and continuing their education helps to provide a safe and fun experience for student-athletes in their schools.
Attendees at this year’s conference have signed up for almost 1,900 Leadership Training Institute courses sponsored by the NIAAA. The 59-course topics address legal issues, as well as marketing and promotion, technology, sports medicine, mental health, hiring and mentoring coaches, emergency management, managing athletic fields and equipment, building positive culture and many more.
In addition to leadership training opportunities, 48 workshops will be offered in six sessions during the five-day conference. While there are a few workshops on topics that are making national news headlines, such as NIL Impact on High School Athletics, most of the sessions focus on ways that athletic directors can continue to emphasize the education-based nature of high school sports and other activities.
Our nation’s athletic directors are aligned with state high school associations to keep high school sports educationally focused. Athletic directors in our nation’s schools want to protect opportunities for other students, promote school and team unity, and maintain the community-based nature of high school sports.
In line with this philosophy, following are some of the workshop topics at this year’s conference: Developing and Implementing Effective Emergency Action Plans, Proactive Strategies for Partnering with Parents, Title IX Updates and Best Practices, Aligning Middle and High School Athletic Programs, Mental Health and Wellness, How to Celebrate Success of Student-Athletes/Teams/Coaches, Getting Back to the Basics of Education-based Athletics for Parents, Competing with Character: Sportsmanship in Interscholastic Athletics, among many others.
The NFHS and our member state associations, along with the NIAAA, are focused on keeping high school sports unique, and the nation’s high school athletic directors are the key individuals in our schools to maintain the educational focus. With youth leagues and travel teams geared toward specialization and winning, and college sports now driven by money and success, there is a push by some for high school sports to “be like the others.”
There’s a reason that participation in high school sports continues to rise every year – and for the overwhelming majority it has nothing to do with NIL or transferring to another school to join a winning program. As a result, the National Athletic Directors Conference continues to focus on the educational aspects of sports and other activities in our nation’s schools – because the main reason most students are involved in school activities is to participate with their friends and be part of the school’s team in the community where they live.
High school athletic directors work long hours and are not in the limelight, but they are the heart and soul of education-based programs. We salute these individuals and encourage school administrators and school boards to support athletic directors in their schools.
The success of organized sports in an education-based setting in our nation’s schools for more than 100 years has been due in large part to these individuals. Local schools depend on athletic administrators to lead their programs, our member state high school associations depend on these individuals, and the NFHS and NIAAA look to athletic directors for leadership at the national level.
Collectively and collaboratively, we can meet the challenges ahead to protect and promote education-based sports and activities.
Read all NFHS Voice columns here.
Rec Sports
Van Ho expands community ski programs | News, Sports, Jobs
ORDA’s Senior Manager of Sport Strategy and Engagement Kris Cheney-Seymour, middle, smiles with a group of young skiers at Mount Van Hoevenberg.
(Provided photo — ORDA)
LAKE PLACID — The state Olympic Regional Development Authority recently announced an expanded slate of community cross-country skiing programs and events for the 2025-26 winter season at Mount Van Hoevenberg. These feature new offerings and returning favorites; the lineup is designed to make Nordic skiing more accessible for participants of all ages and abilities while complementing the venue’s daily skiing and year-round activities.
These community programs and events are available in addition to daily skiing and other activities available to all visitors:
Youth Skiing Programs are offered for two different age groups to provide area youth with safe opportunities to discover cross-country skiing as a healthy and fun recreational alternative.
¯ Wee Ski — for youth ages 3 to 6 (with an adult), this 11-week program provides a playful setting for youth to take their first strides on cross-country skis. From 10 a.m. to noon on Saturdays from Saturday through Feb. 21. Single-day options are also available.
¯ Pathfinders — for youth ages 7 to 12, this 12-week program offers dynamic opportunities for more independent skiers to develop skills and discover more. From 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday through Feb. 28.
¯ Through a collaboration with the New York Ski Educational Foundation and other partner organizations, MVH also offers additional skiing opportunities.
Snowboomers is a weekly guided ski session that provides camaraderie, coaching and fun for active adults aged 50 and older. From 1 to 3 p.m. each Thursday from Thursday through March 12. Free for season pass holders, while the $28 non-passholder drop-in fee includes a trail pass as well as equipment rental if needed.
ADK Tour De Ski is a citizen race series offering both youth and adults a chance to explore six different cross-country ski venues across the North Country with events of multiple distances throughout the winter months. The series begins on Sunday.
Full Moon Parties are guided group ski adventures for all ages that explore the MVH trails at night while allowing everyone to ski their preferred distance at their own pace. Includes bonfires and an apres ski party with live music inside the Mountain Pass Lodge. Tickets are $6 per person with parties on Saturday, Jan. 3, Jan. 31, Feb. 28 and March 28.
Lake Placid Loppet is a long-standing traditional celebration of Nordic skiing that provides events for all ages and abilities. The event’s signature 50K and 25K races are on challenging courses, while a Citizen’s Series provides three shorter distance events (2, 7.5 and 13K) on relatively flat terrain for those newer to the sport or looking for a simpler experience. All races can be skied using either the classic or skate technique. Start times vary from 9 a.m. to noon on Jan. 25.
In addition to youth-skiing classes, MVH will offer cross-country ski lessons for all ages and abilities through Discover Cross-Country Skiing, as well as a biathlon experience combining Nordic skiing with marksmanship. For visitors interested in the venue’s Olympic heritage, guided Legacy Tours are also available and the Mountain Pass Lodge features an indoor climbing center for year-round adventure.
Cross-country skiing at MVH officially opened for season pass-holders Nov. 15 and for the general public on Nov. 28. Season passes for the 2025-26 winter are available now and can be purchased online through the MVH website or in person at the Mountain Pass Lodge. Daily conditions reports for the Nordic ski trails at MVH are available on the venue’s website.
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Spectate and Recreate
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In addition to community skiing and lessons, MVH will host several elite international events this winter.
The venue will welcome the International Biathlon Union Cup from Feb. 26 to March 1 and March 4 to 7, featuring sprint, pursuit, individual and mixed relay races at the recently upgraded biathlon stadium. From March 19 to 22, the Lake Placid Finals, the Coop FIS Cross-Country World Cup, will bring the world’s fastest Nordic skiers to the venue for the season’s culminating cross-country ski event — the first time the U.S. will host the World Cup Finals since 2001. These marquee competitions complement MVH’s full winter calendar of youth programs, recreational skiing, lessons and guided tours, with full event schedules and ticket information available on the venue’s events page.
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Parks, Recreation & Culture Financial Assistance
Apply for the Naturally Fun Scholarship
Income verification is due at the time of application approval. To save time, upload your required documents with your online application. Once approved you will receive an award letter with registration details. This scholarship is valid for 12 months from the date of the award letter.
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- Current Federal Income Tax Return
- Proof of residency (utility bill or lease agreement)
- If you did not file taxes, submit a brief explanation of your financial situation, including income/support sources (e.g., official verification letters). For questions, call 817-459-5474.
Income Eligibility
Annual incomes are subject to change based on HUD guidelines.
Household Members / Annual Income (Less Than)
- 1 member – annual income less than $22,400; not exceeding $59,750
- 2 members – annual income less than $25,600; not exceeding $68,300
- 3 members – annual income less than $28,800; not exceeding $76,850
- 4 members – annual income less than $32,000; not exceeding $85,350
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- 6 members – annual income less than $37,150; not exceeding $99,050
- 7 members – annual income less than $39,700; not exceeding $105,850
- 8 members – annual income less than $42,250; not exceeding $112,700
Important Information
Each recipient is responsible for the remaining payment after the scholarship discount is applied. Scholarships cannot be used for rentals, private swim lessons, or activities outside of the listings above. Memberships are non-refundable. Explore our website for details on facility hours, fitness class schedules, aquatic programs, and to register for activities.
For more information, call the Administrative Office at 817-459-5474.
In addition to the scholarship program mentioned above, the Arlington Parks & Recreation Department has multi-child discounts for our camp and after-school childcare programs. For more information, please email us.
Rec Sports
Asunción Paraguay; Bangkok, Thailand; and Santiago, Chile invited into a Targeted Dialogue for the Youth Olympic Games in 2030
The YOG Working Group will continue to study the potential and relevance of future editions of the YOG to benefit young athletes and the entire sports movement, in consultation with stakeholders such as the International Federations (IFs), the NOCs and continental organisations, as part of the Fit for the Future review process.
“The strong interest in the 2030 edition from new regions of the world demonstrates the value that potential hosts see in the Youth Olympic Games,” said Hrbeková. “The YOG have offered tens of thousands of young athletes and volunteers a unique, global, multi-sports experience, helping to form the basis for their future careers. The YOG are also an important laboratory for innovation in Olympic sports events.”
All three projects are aligned with local and national long-term plans for development, sports, education and health, to deliver a wide range of socio-economic community benefits.
They were put forward for Targeted Dialogue based on their unique opportunities:
Rec Sports
Mason Athletics to Host National Girls and Women in Sports Celebration with Carnival on Jan. 31
Come early and attend a pre-game sports and games carnival on the concourse, consisting of sports-oriented games like Double Shot Basketball, Softball Toss, Kick & Score Soccer, and Skee Ball! The games will be run in partnership with the George Mason Panhellenic Council and sororities, as well as several Patriots women’s sports teams. The student-athletes will be available to meet and teach each sport to fans, as well as sign autographs!
Doors to EagleBank Arena will open at 2 p.m. for the pre-game festivities held around the concourse for all patrons.
The women’s basketball team will also honor alumni of the program for their contributions and commitment as players, coaches, and alumni with an on-court recognition. Any alumni planning to attend should register HERE.
About National Girls and Women in Sports Day
NGWSD began in 1987 as a special day in our nation’s capital to recognize women’s sports. The day united premiere organizations and elite female athletes to bring national attention to the promise of girls and women in sports. NGWSD is celebrated annually across all 50 states with community-based events, award ceremonies, and other celebratory activities. NGWSD is organized by the members of the National Girls & Women in Sports Day Coalition.
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