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NIL

Star Power

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Star Power


GAINESVILLE, Fla. — He played well enough in his first season to earn Freshman All-American honors, rejuvenated the Gators and their hungry fan base by winning six of his seven starts, and enters his sophomore season as one of college football’s marquee players.

No disrespect to 7-foot-9 Gators center and O’Dome favorite Olivier Rioux – a marketing standout on the rise in his own right – but UF sophomore quarterback DJ Lagway is currently the undisputed big man on campus.

“He is QB1 at a top-five brand in college football,” said Ben Chase, Florida’s director of name, image and likeness (NIL) strategy. “When you come to play at a place like Florida, and you attach your brand to the Gators’ brand, this is what happens in the NIL era.”
 
Lagway, much to the relief of Florida fans, is back on the field after an offseason hampered by injuries. He will make his first career start in a season opener on Saturday night when the Gators host Long Island University.
 
While much of the football-centric news over the past eight months centered on Lagway’s aches and pains, the 20-year-old Lagway’s business profile has thrived, much like Apple stock in the late 1990s, when Steve Jobs returned to the company. Lagway’s latest deal was announced on Friday, when Jordan Brand revealed an NIL partnership with Lagway, who joins a select roster of handpicked talent, including NFL quarterbacks Jalen Hurts and Bryce Young, on Jumpman’s roster of football players.
 

Lagway, DJ (2025 preseason photo shoot)
(Photo: Anthony Garro/UAA Communications)

The Jordan Brand deal is just one of a string of Lagway endorsements that have made him a national figure – 192 passes into his college career. Lagway’s agreements stretch far and wide.

On the national level, Lagway has partnered with headphone company Beats by Dre, shot a T-Mobile commercial with Patrick Mahomes and Rob Gronkowski, signed an NIL deal with Gatorade, and appeared on the cover of the EA Sports College Football 26 Deluxe Edition video game.

Lagway also has a strong local portfolio.

DJ’s Cast Iron Burgers, a food truck located off West Newberry Road in Gainesville, features The Lagway Burger. Lagway has a NIL deal with Lamborghini Orlando and an equity partnership with NIL Launchpoint, a mobile and web platform designed to connect college athletes with brands for NIL deals.

Lagway has also demonstrated a philanthropic spirit, partnering with UF Health for a $50,000 donation through the DJ Lagway Foundation. In March, he reportedly donated $100,000 to Florida Victorious to support the NIL efforts of the UF women’s athletic programs.
 
“Football has given me so much, and NIL has opened doors I could never have imagined,” Lagway said when his foundation announced the UF Health partnership. “Now, I want to use those opportunities to pay it forward.”

Napier discussed the potential of such opportunities with Lagway and his family long before the Texas native made his collegiate debut in last season’s opener against Miami. Napier understood the changing landscape of college athletics in the NIL era and, as of July 1, the revenue-share era.
 
Lagway, the No. 1-rated dual-threat quarterback in the nation coming out of Willis (Texas) High, was going to have opportunities at UF that might not exist at places without such national recognition.
 
“You see NFL quarterbacks that are literally two and three years older than him. His level of contribution here is the same, what he does for our football team, what he does for our athletic department, and in reality, what he does for our university,” Napier said. “Sports are the front porch, right? Think about what our basketball team accomplished this past spring. There is no bigger spotlight on the University of Florida than your team in the Final Four, in the SEC Tournament, and winning the national championship, and not only doing it on the court, but the way they did it and the type of team they had.

“DJ is no different. I think he’s representing the university in a first-class manner, the way he has given back. He’s not showing up with an attitude of ‘I’m here to be served,’ he’s showing up with an attitude of ‘I’m here to serve.’ He’s using his platform and being a good example for others in the future.”

As Lagway’s personal brand has grown, so have expectations. He has become more ubiquitous in the psyche of Gator Nation than any player since Tim Tebow.

So much of the buzz surrounding Saturday night’s opener revolves around Lagway’s presence and what that could mean for a program that opens the season ranked No. 15 in the AP Top 25, marking the first time since 2021 that Florida has started a season ranked.

The man ultimately responsible for Lagway being at Florida is confident in his star prospect.

He made a name for himself last year with the way he competed as a freshman,” Napier said. “You saw the talent; you saw the ability was there. Now is the fun part. He knows what it’s like. We’ve built the team around him.
 
“The most important thing here is that he has consistently been consumed by improvement. This is a guy, regardless of his status, whether he’s been successful or struggled at times, he has shown up with an attitude of ‘I want to get better.’ He wants to be at his best for his team.”

Lagway Burger (2025 preseason)
Gators quarterback DJ Lagway has a hamburger named after him at a local food truck. (Photo: Scott Carter/UAA Communications)

Those who spend the most time around Lagway – his teammates – say that whatever star power he owns outside the Heavener Football Training Center is turned off inside the building. Lagway strives to be one of the guys, a young player who is willing to work to fulfill all that untapped promise in his 6-foot-3, 247-pound frame.

Running back Ja’Kobi Jackson’s journey is apples to oranges when compared to Lagway’s. He missed out on opportunities after graduating from high school due to the COVID-19 pandemic, eventually spending parts of three seasons at a junior college in Mississippi.
 
Jackson sits across from Lagway in Florida’s locker room and applauds how Lagway has responded to his high-profile position.
 
“He has handled it very well,” Jackson said. “You wouldn’t notice that he has been on all those commercials. He’s the same way every day when I talk to him. He is a really cool guy.”

That is what Napier wants to hear – not that he ever had any doubts.
 
“He’s built for it,” Napier said. “The key is that he has the levelheadedness to not let it change who he is, his perspective, his non-negotiables on life. I think that’s where he is a little bit different. He wants to be his best, and then he wants to be the best, and he’s willing to work for that.”

He has also worked on fitting in away from the football team.

Lagway, DJ (2025 SEC Media Days)
DJ Lagway has become a popular product endorser in the NIL era. (Photo: Alyssa Morrison/UAA Communications)

Lagway struck up a relationship with Gators softball player Ava Brown after enrolling at UF in January 2024, welcomed to town by none other than Gators legend Emmitt Smith. The two have shared photos on social media, and Lagway is a regular at Seashole Pressly Stadium during softball season.
 
Chase, who works closely with UF athletes in the NIL space, said Lagway’s engagement with Gators fans and the student body has shown there is a person behind the brand.
 
“He cares more about what’s on the field than all these other opportunities,” Chase said. “I remember seeing him at softball in the spring. It was a doubleheader against Texas, and we lost both games. He stayed the whole time, something like six hours. That level of loyalty to the university and his girlfriend shows you who he is.”

Lagway will make his eighth career start on Saturday night. We know a great deal about him as a campus celebrity and the face of the NIL era in college athletics. There is much we don’t know about him as a player.

Napier has a good idea of what type of player Lagway can be. And like the rest of us, he is eager to see what that means on the field.

“There is even more out there for DJ to accomplish,” Napier said. “He’s just getting started.”
 

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NIL

Kirby Moore Adds Brad Larrondo, Seven Assistants to Cougar Coaching Staff

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PULLMAN, Wash. (Jan. 5, 2026) – Washington State University Head Football Coach Kirby Moore Monday announced that Brad Larrondo has been named the program’s Executive Senior Associate Athletic Director / General Manager, while also naming seven more assistants to his first coaching staff in Pullman.
 

Larrondo is a veteran of college athletics for more than two decades. Larrondo brings a wealth of experience to Pullman having spent the previous three seasons working closely with Moore at Missouri. For the 2024-25 seasons, Larrondo served as the CEO of Every True Tiger Brands, an NIL Marketing and Branding agency for Missouri athletes. The NIL marketing and brand agency has established itself as a leading collective in college football. Larrondo spent the 2023 season as an assistant athletic director/director football external relations & recruiting at Missouri. Prior to Missouri, Larrondo was the football chief of staff for Bryan Harsin at Auburn for two seasons and served in a similar role under Harsin at Boise State.

“This is a transformational step for Washington State Football,” said Moore. “The work required to manage a roster, including contract negotiations, player evaluation, strategic planning, recruiting and retention requires full time focus. Brad’s extensive experience in the SEC will help us improve our process and program. I look forward to working alongside Brad as we look ahead to great things for WSU Football.”

 

Of the seven new assistant coaches, three will be on the offensive side of the ball and four on defense. The 2026 Cougar coaching staff will include Jack Abercrombie (offensive line), Andrew Browning (rush/defensive run game coordinator), Greg Burns (secondary/safeties), Derham Cato (run game coordinator/tight ends), Eti Ena (defensive tackles), Derek Sage (wide receivers/special teams coordinator) and Brandyn Thompson (cornerbacks).

 

“Adding these seven members to our staff is an exciting step for our program,” said Moore. “Each of them brings experience, energy and a clear commitment to developing our student-athletes on and off the field.”

 

Last week, Moore announced both coordinator positions, Trent Bray (defensive coordinator/linebackers) and Matt Miller (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks), as well as Malcolm Hardmon (director of football athletic performance).

 

Below are brief overviews for the seven new assistant coaches:

Jack Abercrombie – Offensive Line: Spent past three seasons working alongside Kriby Moore at Missouri, the last two as assistant offensive line coach… in 2025, Missouri rushing offense ranked eighth nationally at 234.1 yards per game, led by consensus All-American running back Ahmad Hardy…has also coached at VMI, Mississippi State and Gannon.

 

Andrew Browning – Rush/Defensive Run Game Coordinator: Arrives in Pullman after spending previous eight seasons at California, last seven as defensive line coach…Cal’s defense posted 24-plus sacks in five of those seven years…also coached at UTEP for five seasons…began coaching career at Boise State in 2010, where he spent three seasons when Moore and Miller were teammates.

 

Greg Burns – Secondary/Safeties: A coaching veteran with nearly three decades working with defensive backs at both the professional and collegiate levels…has coached throughout the west, including stops at USC, UCLA, Cal, Arizona, Arizona State and most recently, San José State…played at WSU from 1991-95 under coach Mike Price and was a part of two bowl teams.

Derham Cato – Run Game Coordinator/Tight Ends: Begins his Cougar coaching career after spending previous three seasons working alongside Kirby Moore at Missouri, the last two as tight ends coach…also has coaching stints at Washington, Davidson, Vanderbilt and his alma mater, Dartmouth…following college, played professionally in NFL Europe, the CFL and Arena League.

 

Eti Ena – Defensive Tackles: A veteran coach with two decades of collegiate experience…spent the past two seasons at New Mexico State preceded by two years at Hawai’i…member of Eastern Washington staff from 2016-21 as the Eagles reached the 2018 season championship game and 2016 semifinal…a native of Inchelium, Wash., graduated from Eastern Washington.

 

Derek Sage – Wide Receivers/Special Teams Coordinator: Has spent two decades coaching collegiately, most recently working with tight ends at Toledo the past two seasons…making his second stint in Pullman after coaching outside receivers on Mike Leach’s staff in 2017…has also coached at UCLA, where he was tight ends/special teams coordinator, Nevada, New Hampshire and Wyoming.

 

Brandyn Thompson – Cornerbacks: Thompson arrives in Pullman after spending the 2025 season coaching cornerbacks at Cal Poly…also has coached at Sacramento State and Sacramento City College…2011 seventh-round selection in NFL Draft by Washington after playing at Boise State, where he was a teammate of Kirby Moore…played one season in Washington and then five in CFL.

 



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The Indiana model arrives at Oklahoma State, where new ‘triplets’ could star

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When Oklahoma State hired coach Eric Morris, attention quickly turned to the spoils of the roster he left behind at North Texas. 

Quarterback Drew Mestemaker was the crown jewel, the No. 3 overall player in Cooper Petagna’s 247Sports transfer rankings after leading the nation in passing yards. Running back Caleb Hawkins was close behind, the No. 15 recruit and No. 1 running back transfer after leading the nation in rushing touchdowns. Wide receiver Wyatt Young came in at No. 43 after ranking No. 7 nationally in receiving yards. 

In the first 48 hours of the transfer portal, Morris and his staff managed to lock all three players in. And now, the triumvirate is the perfect foundation to build the future of Oklahoma State. 

College football transfer portal: Indiana, Oklahoma State among teams off to hottest starts in 2026 cycle

Cody Nagel

College football transfer portal: Indiana, Oklahoma State among teams off to hottest starts in 2026 cycle

Mestemaker is one of the great stories in college football, a former walk-on who never started a varsity game in high school. In his second season, he threw for 4,379 yards and 34 touchdowns, the latter of which trails only Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza. Other major programs had interest in Mestemaker, but Morris closed the deal. Young was his favorite target, even posting a 295-yard game against Rice. 

While 247Sports rated Hawkins as a high-end three-star recruit, the rest of the industry was far less optimistic. His only other reported offers were Emporia State and Central Oklahoma. However, Hawkins rushed for 1,434 yards and 25 touchdowns as a true freshman, one of the nation’s best seasons for a running back. 

Immediately, the trio becomes the best set of “triplets” at Oklahoma State since the legendary 2017 combination of Mason Rudolph, Justice Hill and James Washington. And more importantly, the additions announce nationally that Morris and highly-touted general manager Raj Murti are ready to compete on the national stage. 

“Having the relationships with the new coaches helped land all three guys, but they also had to pay them what they’re worth and pay serious money for the first time,” GoPokes’ McClain Baxley told CBS Sports. “Until this week, the highest reported player was running back Ollie Gordon in 2024 and that was less than $1 million. Oklahoma State has stepped up by making scoring points a priority and given other prospects in the portal something to think about.” 

The Cowboys are coming off arguably the worst season in program history, a 1-11 disaster that lacked a single FBS win. Oklahoma State ranked last in nearly every category in the Big 12 as the final year of the Mike Gundy era ended with a thud. 

Gundy was reluctant to embrace the new world of college football, often dismissing NIL and the transfer portal. It seemed to bottom out with a stunning 3-9 season in 2024, after which Gundy claimed he “bought” his first roster for 2025 with 65 new additions, plus nine new assistant coaches. Between bad identification and bad development, the Cowboys rated as one of the worst power conference programs of the past several years. 

As of publication, Oklahoma State has 15 total commitments to hold the No. 2 transfer class in the nation. Eleven commitments are directly from North Texas. James Madison running back Ayo Adeyi also ironically started his career with the Mean Green and reunited with Morris in Stillwater.

The strategy echoes that of Indiana coach Curt Cignetti, who brought 13 highly-touted transfers from James Madison in 2024. Now, many of them are All-Americans and the leader of the national title favorite. Like James Madison, North Texas finished 11-1 in Morris’s final season. 

The transition to the major college level could come with complications. The Mean Green struggled against Tulane and South Florida, the two most talented teams they played in The American. North Texas is bringing several starting linemen, but it’s unclear how they’ll translate. Gundy’s disastrous finish leaves almost no existing foundation on the roster, especially in the trenches. 

However, the triplets give Oklahoma State something to build around. The Cowboys are spending big money and competing with the best. With Morris’s history of creating the best offenses in college football, Boone Pickens Stadium should be rocking once more. 





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How to fix the college football transfer portal

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Yahoo Sports Daily hosts Caroline Fenton and Jason Fitz are joined by College Football Enquirer host Steven Godfrey to discuss how to fix the college football transfer portal window. Watch the full episode of Yahoo Sports Daily on YouTube or YahooSports.TV.

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Video Transcript

My problem is the fact that the transfer portal opened on January 2nd when we We’re still in the middle of the playoffs.

So there areyes, That is athat is a problem.

So, if you’re the star of college football It is a major problem, yeah.

How do you fix that?

Yeah.

Well, you move it to April, but then we’d start Talking about this thing like it was a professional sport and people don’t want to do That.

Um, no.

We should get it, even though it is out of the way of the playoffs.

We should… What?

Now, whatever do you mean?

Are you implying that it’s a billion-dollar industry that people have made money off of for years, but all of a sudden, when the kids started getting paid, Everything was going to hell in a handbasket?

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Except the television ratings are up and Interest has never been higher, so back of the line, nerds.

No, I’m sick of the idea of pearl-clutching over this.

Ah.

I think that it does need revision, and it does need a certain amount of… Again, I feel like I say this in some way, shape or form every time I’m on the show.

We talk about a problem in college sports.

We have no central governance, okay?

We have no one who is in charge of college.

Football, who’s looking out for just college football?

Everything is, like, feudal and it’s these little confederacies of conferences and they They can’t agree on much.

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And so the portal is the latest example.

Now, before you feel bad for your local coach who is talking about how tough things are.

On him and his staff right now, the coaches voted for this date.

Okay?

The coaches wanted to have the portal here, And they didn’t want two portals.

So before you’re like, Oh, man.

It’s just so, it’s so tough on my coach right Now, think about just the distractions on and off.

No, no, no.

They wanted this.

What’s funny is some of these staffs aren’t even complete yet.

Next week, I’m going to Charlotte for AFCA, which is the college coaches convention where a A lot of these hires are still taking place, and it’s not, Like, the big ones.

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It’s, “Do I have a linebackers coach?”

“Is this guy gonna go…” You know, “Is this assistant gonna go to this team?”

And so At the same time, you’re out there trying to make aggressive offers and also… By the way, it’s two-sided.

You are recruiting players who are in the portal, or might get in the portal, but then you’re also recruiting your players to not get In the portal.

So, is this an ideal system?

No, not at all.

I just don’t care if the kids are getting paid.

And the kids can move around.

That’s fine with me.

I mean, you look at the very top of this graphic right here.

You’re seeing two kids offensively who helped define North Texas’ season.

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Especially Mesta Maker, who’s considered to be one of the best quarterbacks in this class.

They’re following their coach.

That should be okay.

Right?

That should be allowed.

And by the way, don’t think for a second that when Eric Morris was interviewing to be Hired at Oklahoma State… Trust me.

He very casually mentioned, “Hey, I might have a really good quarterback that we can go pick up in the portal.”

So it’s, like, kind of a package deal, Which is, like, a whole other dirty thing that we could talk about sometime.



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NCAA college football transfer portal. When does 2026 portal close?

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Jan. 5, 2026, 2:46 p.m. CT

As the college football season draws to a close, players’ decisions about their futures are set to significantly shape the landscape of the sport.

Some players have already made their intentions clear, announcing their plans to enter the transfer portal. Several Oklahoma players, including running back Jovantae Barnes, linebacker Kobie McKinzie and quarterback Michael Hawkins Jr.



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Is College Football Becoming Major League Baseball

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Starting to seem like the smaller schools are becoming farm systems for the schools with elite NIL funding. Much like Major League Baseball were we see small market teams pillaged by the likes of the Mets, Dodgers, Yankees, Red Sox, Blue Jays, Cubs. Has this what College football has become in the age of NIL and the transfer portal? How is it going to be stopped? Feels like we are going to see anyone not getting playing time go to a mid level school develop and off to the elite. I’m afraid college football is becoming MLB, about 6 to 8 of the same teams with a legit shot year in and out.



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Nick Saban and Kirby Smart weigh-in on college football portal ‘chaos’

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ATHENS — College football calls the current period of player transactions the “transfer portal,” but Nick Saban refers to it as “chaos.”

More than 4,000 college football players, including more than 120 starters, per Saban, have entered their name into the portal alerting their own and other programs of their intention/willingness to change schools.

“We created a system that only allows you to gain advantage if you want to leave,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said during the lead up to the Bulldogs’ CFP quarterfinal in the Sugar Bowl last week in New Orleans.

“You’ve created a system that inherently rewards what defies a team concept, and in a team sport, it just makes no sense.”

But it does make dollars for some players who make themselves available to the highest bidder, via collegiate sports’ version of free agency.

There was some optimism last June when the House vs. NCAA case was settled that collegiate athletes could find some order with a then-$20.5 million “cap” put in place for schools to pay out to student-athletes.

Roster sizes were to be reduced, but there would be no scholarship limits and an exception was in place for student-athletes to secure their own NIL deals outside of the school’s cap, provided it met the standards as determined by a clearinghouse.

“This new framework that enables schools to provide direct financial benefits to student-athletes and establishes clear and specific rules to regulate third-party NIL agreements marks a huge step forward for college sports,” NCAA president Charlie Baker penned in a letter in response to the case settlement.

It seems like so long ago, and now, here we are after a season that saw 11 Power 4 coaches fired before the end of this season, including five from the SEC — and a sixth change when Lane Kiffin left Ole Miss before the start of the College Football Playoff to accept the LSU head coaching job.

Saban, citing the unprecedented scenario currently playing out at Ole Miss, said it’s a matter of the football “calendar” of events, which includes the early signing date (Dec. 3-5) and the transfer portal window date (Jan. 2-16).

“Ole Miss has six (assistant) coaches going to LSU, trying to take guys to LSU from their (current Ole Miss) team,” Saban said on College GameDay. “But they’ve got to play a game.

“Is that chaos, or is that chaos? So this whole college football calendar needs to change, that would be my New Year’s resolution.”

To Saban’s point, Ole Miss did beat Georgia 39-34 in the Sugar Bowl to advance to play Miami in the College Football Playoff Fiesta Bowl semifinal at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday in Glendale, Arizona.

In the meantime, Kiffin is working to rebuild the LSU roster with transfer players who, no doubt, will be wanting to meet and talk with the Rebels’ offensive coaches who plan to join the LSU staff once Ole Miss is eliminated from the CFP.

Clearly, it’s not an optimal situation for the student-athletes, even as some of the current Ole Miss players are considering transferring elsewhere.

There’s no alternative, however, with the playoff schedule and transfer portal overlapping.

Indiana, the CFP No. 1 seed that will face Oregon at 7:30 p.m. on Friday in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl semifinal, has already received a commitment from TCU quarterback Josh Hoover among five other transfer portal additions, per reports.

“The NCAA doesn’t seem to be in control of the way things are happening right now, and I think if we’re going to change things in college football, we’ve got to get Congress to have some kind of antitrust legislation because the NCAA can’t enforce their own rules,” Saban said. “So even if they tried to change this, somebody might sue, and they might not be able to do it, that’s how we got where we are now.”

Former Auburn basketball coach Bruce Pearl proposed on TNT programming that collegiate eligibility needs to be capped at five years, with no appeals.

Further, Pearl echoed Saban on the matter of congressional oversight, which could lead to players signing enforceable contracts of two or three years to eliminate the year-to-year free agency turnover.

Saban, a seven-time championship coach at Alabama and LSU, suggests the transfer portal date be moved back to May, in line with the academic calendar, and that offseason football training be moved from the spring semester to the summer semester.

“You can get your team together and work over the summer, just like an NFL team does — they don’t have their team together until after the (NFL) draft and after free agency, in May,” Saban said. “So do the same thing in college football and you wouldn’t have these issues with coaches changing jobs, because everybody could finish the season with their team, which is what’s best for the players.”

Smart, who led the charge at SEC spring meetings for the January portal date, admits the situation is overly complicated.

“I wish I could solve it, everybody will tell you there’s an answer,” Smart said. “I can tell you that the answer isn’t currently where we stand. I can promise you that.”



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