Professional Sports
The History of the NBA on NBC
This fall, after more than 20 years away at other networks, the NBA will return home to NBC. The renewed partnership between league and network has many basketball fans nostalgic for the 1990s, when NBA on NBC was appointment TV for sports lovers everywhere, and has new fans wondering just how important that programming bloc was to league […]


This fall, after more than 20 years away at other networks, the NBA will return home to NBC. The renewed partnership between league and network has many basketball fans nostalgic for the 1990s, when NBA on NBC was appointment TV for sports lovers everywhere, and has new fans wondering just how important that programming bloc was to league history.
So, in anticipation of basketball action (and “Roundball Rock”) hitting NBC‘s airwaves again this October, let’s take a closer look at the history of NBA on NBC, its most iconic features, and what’s next.
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The history of NBA on NBC
Though NBC also broadcast professional basketball in the mid-1950s and early 1960s, when most fans talk about NBA on NBC, they’re talking about the 1990s. In the 1980s, though numerous stars were rising in the league, basketball didn’t have the same high-profile as football or even baseball at the time. Nationally televised games were hard to come by, and some broadcasters were still airing games on a tape delay, which meant that fans could sometimes find out the score before they’d even tuned in.
The rise in NBA stars and sneakers and merch sales in the second half of the ’80s meant that the league’s profile was growing, and it needed a partner to help cement that rise. It got that partner when NBC signed on to broadcast NBA games, including playoffs, beginning with the 1990-1991 season. What happened next was a kind of a perfect storm that might never be seen again in sports broadcasting.
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“The confluence of circumstances can never be duplicated,” NBA on NBC broadcaster Bob Costas told Front Office Sports last year. “The Bulls’ dynasty with Michael Jordan at the center of it. The original Dream Team. All the biggest games on NBC when the media landscape was very different. Double- and triple-headers on weekends, prime-time games throughout the playoffs. The promos on Seinfeld, ER, Cheers, [Johnny] Carson, [Jay] Leno, the Olympics…”
The combination of new NBA stars and dynasties and the might of NBC‘s broadcast slate brought the NBA to greater heights than ever before, creating an environment in which new stars and new attitudes could flourish in front of a national audience. The run ended with the 2002 season, when the NBA signed a new agreement with different partners, but now it seems poised to enter a new era in 2025.
What Michael Jordan meant to the NBA on NBC
As Costas mentioned, the NBA on NBC partnership exploded in popularity in no small part because of its association with the rise of Michael Jordan. The basketball superstar won his first NBA Championship with the Chicago Bulls at the end of the 1990-1991 season, the first NBA Finals broadcast on NBC, and would go on to win five more over the course of the 1990s. Looking back on Jordan’s career, many of his most memorable moments — from his “Flu Game” during the 1997 NBA Finals to his return to basketball after taking time off to play professional baseball — were broadcast on NBC, forever linking Jordan’s exploits with NBC broadcasters like Marv Albert and Bob Costas.
But Jordan was not alone in the NBA on NBC spotlight. His visibility, and the elevation of the league that came with it, almost meant that a whole new generation of stars came alive on NBC‘s airwaves. Shaquille O’Neal, Reggie Miller (who’s set to return to NBC as part of the broadcast team), Charles Barkley, Patrick Ewing, David Robinson, Hakeem Olajuwon, and many more all hit their prime during the NBC era, and many fans still remember discovering their game through NBA on NBC.
As for the greatest game ever played on NBA on NBC? Well, every fan has their own answer, but the most memorable might be Game 6 of the 1998 NBA Finals, which saw Jordan hit the game-winning shot with seconds remaining to win his sixth and final NBA title.
But the games weren’t the only selling point. NBA on NBC also drew its viewers in with the help of broadcasters like Costas, and through dramatic lead-in packages meant to capture the stakes of big games, all part of a larger broadcasting scheme that made it one of the highest-rated shows on TV.
“Roundball Rock” and NBA on NBC
For all its star power and broadcasting polish, though, NBA on NBC would not be the well-remembered institution it’s become if not for John Tesh and “Roundball Rock.” Composed specifically for the NBA on NBC and debuting during the 1990 season, Tesh’s instrumental composition has become synonymous with basketball glory, so much so that it will return as the theme for the NBA on NBC revival this fall.
Tesh, a new age musician and broadcaster who’d done sports coverage before moving on to co-anchor Entertainment Tonight, was covering the Tour De France when he got the call that NBC wanted a new basketball theme. According to Tesh, after thinking about it for a while, the tune exploded into his head while sleeping in his hotel room, and he had to quickly find a way to get the melody out so he could work on it.
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“In the middle of the night, at 2 o’clock in the morning, I got a theme in my head,” Tesh later told The Ringer. “I was awakened by the thought. And I knew if I went back to sleep, it would be gone. My synthesizers were in the production truck. I didn’t have any manuscript paper. But even if I did, with a musical theme, when you write down the notes, you don’t always capture its essence. I didn’t have a tape recorder with me. And no cellphone. I had nothing—nothing! The only way to record the idea was to call my Radio Shack answering machine back in Los Angeles. It took me two messages to get the whole thing out.”
What followed was an iconic, synth-driven theme that still says “basketball is coming” to a whole generation of fans.
The return of NBA on NBC
More than 20 years after it went off the air, NBA on NBC will return to NBC in October of 2025, kicking off a new era with a broadcast team led by Mike Tirico and Noah Eagle. Tuesday night games will arrive weekly on NBC, while Mondays will bring exclusive streaming games on Peacock. In 2026, the whole agreement expands again with the introduction of Sunday Night Basketball, a new series adding even more NBA action to the NBC family.
For more NBA news, head to NBC Sports.
High School Sports
Crispus Attucks men's basketball finishes runner up in Class 3A
Support local news Our journalism will always be free because of donations from readers like you. No history of Indiana is complete without mention of the basketball team at Crispus Attucks High School, once the only high school for Black students in segregated Indianapolis. For instance, how many schools do you know that belong to […]

No history of Indiana is complete without mention of the basketball team at Crispus Attucks High School, once the only high school for Black students in segregated Indianapolis.
For instance, how many schools do you know that belong to the National Register of Historic Places? Or connected to a museum? Attucks is.
Thus the 2025 Attucks Tigers upheld a tradition like no other — 70 years after Attucks became the first all-Black school in the nation to win a state title. That Oscar Robertson was a few thumbstrokes away brings it full circle in the Circle City.
“They built their own legacy,” said coach Chris Hawkins, who has exchanged texts with the Attucks great since last summer. “We felt like this team could really do something special.”
In the end, in the Class 3A boys state championship game March 29, the Tigers lost. They don’t have a first-place trophy. They don’t need hardware to accent hardship.
Other schools tried to recruit their players. They shared one gym with the girls program, freshmen and junior varsity. The boys often were at school from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., assembled at study tables after classes, so the girls could practice first. They lost their best player to injury at midseason, then trailed by 11 points to start the fourth quarter of their first postseason game.
So no apologies. Maybe one regret: Attucks’ 22-7 record was not 29-0.
“I feel if I hadn’t got hurt this year, we could have been undefeated, the group we had,” said Dezmon Briscoe, a 6-foot-9 center and one of the four finalists for Indiana’s Mr. Basketball.
Crispus Attucks ‘deeply personal to so many people’
Playing basketball at Attucks is, well, not like playing elsewhere in this state. Indeed, to be a student there is not like it is elsewhere.
Principal Lauren Franklin said teachers try to instill what the school has meant to Indiana and Indianapolis. It was built near Indiana Avenue, the business and cultural center of the city’s Black community, and opened in 1927. The red brick building occupies just two square blocks, requiring some sports teams to leave campus for practice and games.
Because of declining enrollment, Attucks was converted to a junior high in 1986 and a middle school in 1993. It reverted to a high school in 2006.
Franklin said the school is “deeply personal to so many people.” Her own parents met at Attucks, and all four grandparents attended there.
“You’re hard-pressed still, in 2025, to find Black folks in the city who don’t have some connection to Crispus Attucks,” she said. “Whether it’s ‘my grandmother went here, my great-grandmother went here, my uncle went here, my grandfather played with this person or played with that person.’”
Hawkins and Franklin credited alumni with coming out to support the Tigers, especially in the championship game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse, where South Bend Saint Joseph ended Attucks’ 12-game winning streak, 56-52.
“They’re incredibly invested in how our students perform and how the games go. And then academically as well,” Franklin said.
Attucks’ graduation rate is 97%, she said, compared with a statewide average of 90%. The school population is 58% Black, 35% Hispanic and 4% multiracial.
An unusual characteristic of this year’s basketball team is that it featured nine seniors. All nine will attend college on scholarship, according to Hawkins. They will be in Divisions I or II or III, NAIA or junior college.
“We try for excellence across the board. Not just in basketball,” Franklin said.
Crispus had ‘never-say-die attitude’
For Briscoe, this season was like an heirloom to be protected. His brother, Derrick, was on the Attucks team that beat Twin Lakes 73-71 for the 3A state championship in 2017.
That was Attucks’ first state championship since 1959. Except for Tech in 4A boys basketball in 2014, it was the first for Indianapolis Public Schools in any sport since Broad Ripple in boys basketball in 1980.
Hawkins’ second season as Attucks coach was in 2017. He remembers young Briscoe as a “fat, chunky, 2-liter Pepsi drinker.”
As the youngster grew, so did the attention. Briscoe said he had “a lot” of coaches try to lure him to other schools. He said his stepfather wanted him to go to North Central. But as early as fourth grade, Briscoe told people he would enroll at Attucks.
“I just knew it was going to be the best fit for me. You can see the legacy I had here,” he said.
Briscoe became such a local celebrity that when he stepped off the bus to play tennis for Attucks last fall, those on the other team recognized him and asked for autographs.
He was city player of the year as a sophomore and junior. As a senior, he averaged 15.8 points, 9.4 rebounds and 5.1 blocked shots in 19 games. He committed to Iowa before a coaching change, then switched to Kent State.
An ankle injury kept him out of four of Attucks’ losses, three to elite opponents: La Lumiere, a perennial prep school power; Fishers, the 4A state champion in 2024 and runner-up in 2025; Jeffersonville, the 4A state champion that ended Fishers’ 43-game winning streak.
Briscoe didn’t sulk or become detached. Hawkins said Briscoe sat by him on the bench and stayed engaged. Moreover, the Tigers continued to play with a chip on their shoulders, the coach said.
While they did not win a sectional in five seasons while in 4A, the pairing in 3A against Cathedral was daunting. Not only had Cathedral beaten Attucks 71-63 for the city championship, Cathedral was No. 2 behind Fishers in statewide computer rankings, irrespective of class.
Cathedral led 48-37 after three quarters in a sectional opener before a comeback sparked by Briscoe resulted in a 59-54 victory. He finished with 20 points.
“Our players had a never-say-die attitude, just stayed together,” Hawkins said.
Chris Hurt named city player of the year
After getting past Cathedral, the pathway to state became easier.
Attucks beat Shortridge 71-55 in the sectional, Northview 57-46 in the regional, No. 6 Princeton 61-55 and No. 3 New Palestine 67-49 in the semistate.
“With this group, it was real competitive,” Hawkins said. “There were no days off. The competitive juices, I think, helped this team grow in certain situations.”
Point guard Chris Hurt grew as much as anyone. He became city player of the year.
He was so quiet as a freshman, the coach implored him to talk more, on and off the court. The Tigers couldn’t get Hurt to attempt 3-pointers, either, and he shot 39% from the arc this season.
“Being able to open up, talk, really helped me,” he said.
Six seniors averaged five or more points per game: Briscoe, Hurt (14.1), Kayden English (9.8), Imon Cousins (8.1), Che Brownlow (7.9), Ronsione Thomas (5.7).
Hawkins said he pushed the 6-foot-4 Thomas, in particular, because of unrealized potential. Not only did Thomas “step up big in a lot of games,” the coach said, but this year finally recognized his role and trusted himself.
“I think I came a long way, for sure,” Thomas said.
Saying goodbye is hard
The downside to all this?
Not that the team didn’t win a state title, but that it can never be a team again. Not like this.
The players won’t congregate in a corner on the school’s second floor, doing what they do: joking, dancing, shadow boxing. When players are that close, Hawkins said, those coalesce into the best teams.
Losing a final game didn’t change any of that.
“Being there, on the big stage with them, being able to fight that last game together, it felt good,” Hurt said. “I didn’t really feel down. I did, but I also felt excited for us because we were able to compete all season, have fun with each other for our last year.”
Hawkins said he will miss the players’ togetherness. Said he will miss seeing them daily.
Briscoe said he will miss practices. Said he will miss everything. “We’re always winners around here.”
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David Woods is a Mirror Indy freelance contributor. You can reach him at dwoods1411@gmail.com. Follow him on X: @DavidWoods007.
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College Sports
Fort Myers beach volleyball beats Estero for Class 2A
History doesn’t repeat itself often, but for the Fort Myers beach volleyball team, it resulted in the hoisting of a trophy once again against a familiar opponent. And for Estero, the agony of being one set win away once more stung even more than it did the first meeting. The Green Wave closed out the […]

History doesn’t repeat itself often, but for the Fort Myers beach volleyball team, it resulted in the hoisting of a trophy once again against a familiar opponent.
And for Estero, the agony of being one set win away once more stung even more than it did the first meeting.
The Green Wave closed out the Wildcats in the Class 2A-Region 4 championship game, beating them for the second time this season, and just 13 days apart, in an identical 3-2 decisions.
“The fact that we are so tiny, our team is chugging along like a train,” Fort Myers coach Kelly Corr said. “They pull together, they do their part, they cheer when they have to, they play their hearts out, we try to touch every ball, we’re working in practice hard so that when we come to the game, they’re just seeing our skills.
“We still have some work to do each and every day just to get ready for state, but I’m proud of the fact that we’re hanging in there. We’re pushing through, and we’re fighting.”
Corr didn’t make any lineup changes relative to the last match against Estero, rolling with her best three pairs on the No. 1, No. 3, and No. 5 courts. After a dramatic three-set win in the district title game two weeks ago, Isabella Higby and Erin McDowell exploited the serve receive of Avery McCarthy and Jordyn Selander on the No. 5 court, cruising to a 21-13, 21-11 win.
It was a welcoming sign for Corr, who saw Higby and McDowell squander a 20-14 lead in the second set in the first meeting, losing 22-20 after McCarthy and Selander went on an 8-0 run.
“It was relieving,” Corr said. “It stresses me a little because sometimes they can get a little back and forth with it and give a little too much and get in their heads a little bit, but they pulled it together. They proved they deserve to be there. You could tell they wanted it more than anyone out here. The way they were looking and playing and communicating, their one mistake, they just let it fuel them to get the next point.”
Kasey Corr and Amber Englehart moved to 17-0 on the season with an easy 21-9, 21-5 win over Lilly Engle and Capri Phillipine, while Estero got a 21-17, 21-5 win on the No. 4 court from Katie Kuieck and Julia Martus. The No. 2 court saw the Wildcat tandem of Casey Kennedy and Kassia Perkins beat Briley Dodge and Addi Sprecher 21-14, 21-11.The drama then shifted to the No. 1 court, with a battle between Fort Myers’ Gabby Dwyer and Ashlee Tenkley and Brooke Smith and Delayna Kerry of Estero. Dwyer and Tenkley had their way through the duration of the district title match, but received a stiffer fight on Tuesday, especially early.Smith and Kerry capitalized at the service line on misplays from the Fort Myers seniors, and nearly handed them their first set loss of the season. Level at 19-all, Dwyer and Tenkley ended things on a tip to the near side that went past Kerry’s outstretched arms.”Of course you’re pulling for them at that point,” Estero coach John Ban said. “I have so much faith in that team. They’re such great beach volleyball players, I thought we had every shot in the world to take them down in the first set. That would’ve changed the whole momentum of the match.”
Smith and Kerry would fall behind early in the second, trailing 7-1. Dwyer and Tenkley would hold that mid-single digit lead the rest of the way, pulling away to win 21-12 with the regional trophy shortly in hand thereafter.For Ban and the Wildcats, Martus and Kuieck are the lone seniors set to graduate from the program, giving them the foundation to be arguably the area’s top squad in 2026.”The team was amazing this year,” Ban said. “We went 15-2 and lost to the same team twice. That’s the only team we lost to. The girls are a bunch of very good volleyball players and can play on the beach as well. Moving forward into the future, we’re just locked and loaded for next year.”But the loss was definitely bittersweet. I’m happy for the Fort Myers kids that I coached in middle school at Saint Francis and the kids I’ve been able to coach in club over the years.”
The Green Wave will now head to Tallahassee to take on Gulf Breeze, the No. 2 seed in Region 1, which beat Chiles 3-2 with wins on the No. 2, No. 3, and No. 5 pairs.Having Final Four experience on the roster this year will only help, as Kelly Corr coached Bishop Verot to Tallahassee a season ago. Kasey Corr and Higby were on the team that advanced last year.”We led with that at the beginning of the season,” Kelly Corr said. “These goals are attainable, they’re reachable, they are tough, but you can do it if you put your mind to it. That was literally one of our goals, was to get (to Tallahassee) for our seniors, for the experience of our underclassmen.”To do that, and to be able to say you did it, very few teams get to do that. That’s always been one of the goals and one of the things we’ve talked about… They all know that experience, what it’s like, and they’ll be able to talk it up and hopefully that’ll fuel them to want to play even harder.”Follow Sports Reporter Alex Martin on X: @NP_AlexMartin. For the best sports coverage in Southwest Florida, follow @newspresssports and @ndnprepzone on Instagram.
Professional Sports
Aspiring Paralympian overcoming odds time and time again!
May 7, 2025 | Paul Stimpson Ten-year-old Taylor Lewis is dreaming of competing in table tennis at the Paralympics – and is already showing he has the skills to succeed. Taylor contracted meningococcal septicaemia when he was just eight months old and lost both his legs, and his fingers and thumbs. He has had more […]


Ten-year-old Taylor Lewis is dreaming of competing in table tennis at the Paralympics – and is already showing he has the skills to succeed.
Taylor contracted meningococcal septicaemia when he was just eight months old and lost both his legs, and his fingers and thumbs.
He has had more than 90 operations in his short life but has battled through everything and is making great progress in table tennis since first joining the Draycott & Long Eaton club around 18 months ago.
He has been working with para athlete Simon Heaps, who himself is a double leg amputee as a result of diabetes, and Simon’s brother Nick.
And he’s even had Rolls Royce engineers working on designing prosthetics to help him hold a bat and to pick up the ball to serve.
We caught up with Taylor, his mum Terri and Simon at the Mark Bates Ltd National Championships. Watch the film below.
Simon said: “I think Taylor is an absolute inspiration to anybody of any age. I think that word is said very, very lightly, especially about people with disabilities. But this young man really is. He’s not only a lovely lad, but he’s a true inspiration to everybody.”
Been inspired to try table tennis? To find a place to play that suits you, visit the red button below.
Professional Sports
Home Favourite FLORO Impresses on Opening Day in Bratislava
Only 16 years old, Damian FLORO made a strong start on home soil at the 2025 European Under 21 Championships in Bratislava. Playing at Tipos Arena, the Slovakian, seeded 53rd, defied expectations by defeating croatia’s Ivan HENCL, the 29th seed. “I felt a little pressure before the start because it’s not easy playing at home. […]


Only 16 years old, Damian FLORO made a strong start on home soil at the 2025 European Under 21 Championships in Bratislava. Playing at Tipos Arena, the Slovakian, seeded 53rd, defied expectations by defeating croatia’s Ivan HENCL, the 29th seed.
“I felt a little pressure before the start because it’s not easy playing at home. It also takes time to adjust to the venue and its conditions. However, once the game started, I felt the ball well, found my rhythm, and that boosted my confidence,” said FLORO.
FLORO previously made his mark by finishing second at the Europe Youth Top 10 two years ago in the Under 15 category in Bucharest. Last year, he was part of the Slovakian Under 19 team that secured bronze at the European Youth Championships in Sweden after a semi-final loss to Germany. In the quarterfinals, Slovakia beat Croatia, with FLORO winning his match against HENCL.
“That win was very important to me today. Despite the ranking difference, I felt confident,” added FLORO.
When asked about his ambitions for the tournament, FLORO was optimistic:
“Now I think I have a good chance to get through the group stage, and hopefully the next round too. I know reaching the knockout phase is very ambitious—but why not?” he said with a smile.
The opening stage of the tournament features 48 players divided into 12 groups (Groups 1–12). The top two players from each group will advance to Stage 2, producing 24 qualifiers. Tomorrow, the eight top-seeded players will join them in the main draw.
Top seeds in the men’s event: Eduard ONESCU (Romania), Andre BERTELSMEIER (Germany), Flavien COTON (France), Iulian CHIRITA (Romania), Tiago ABIODUN (Portugal), Balazs LEI (Hungary), Andrei ISTRATE (Romania), Kas VAN OOST (Netherlands).
See the pictures by T. SEREDA here.
Follow the results here.
College Sports
BEACH VOLLEYBALL
PORT CHARLOTTE — At the start of the season, the Port Charlotte beach volleyball team made a checklist of all the things they wanted to accomplish this season. They were to finally beat Venice, beat Charlotte, win the district title, win the regional title and win the state title. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript […]


PORT CHARLOTTE — At the start of the season, the Port Charlotte beach volleyball team made a checklist of all the things they wanted to accomplish this season.
They were to finally beat Venice, beat Charlotte, win the district title, win the regional title and win the state title.
Professional Sports
Shawne Merriman says why he thinks the UFC and Dana White are so far ahead as he …
Shawne Merriman has opened up about why the UFC is so successful as he aims to provide an opportunity for fighters to progress from his shows to the world’s premier mixed martial arts organization. On May 10, the NFL legend’s Lights Out Xtreme Fighting returns with LXF 24 at Thunder Studios in Long Beach, California, […]

Shawne Merriman has opened up about why the UFC is so successful as he aims to provide an opportunity for fighters to progress from his shows to the world’s premier mixed martial arts organization.
On May 10, the NFL legend’s Lights Out Xtreme Fighting returns with LXF 24 at Thunder Studios in Long Beach, California, USA, with a main event between PFL veterans, Tyrell Fortune and Carl Seumanutafa.
However, while the headline attraction will undoubtedly deliver a barnburner, the former Chargers star is equally excited to give up-and-comers like Jake Babian an opportunity to thrive.
After Merriman fell in love with MMA through a brutal training session with Randy Couture, he’s made it a massive part of his life, and now hopes to increase his involvement even further.
WOW: Dana White named his favorite fight in UFC history… ‘The roof nearly came off that building’

Shawne Merriman says the UFC did a great job of building a brand
Shawne Merriman has enormous praise for what Dana White and the UFC have managed to achieve in MMA.
Now, with his next big card coming up, he’s excited to continue on the journey to making his company one of the most respected in the fight game.
In an exclusive interview with Bloody Elbow, he explained: “Carl Seumanutafa vs Tyrell Fortune — I’m really looking forward to seeing this one. It’s crazy, we’re starting to get more marquee guys.
“We believe that a lot of these guys can have an opportunity to go to the UFC if they have a streak with us. We want to get as many fighters on the verge of that and build a lot of the ones that we believe in that are already state champions as amateurs and already have a following. That’s the recipe for us.
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“We’re not trying to jump out of the gate with big-name fighters, and I hate to throw other promotions under the bus. This is not an easy business; from the production side to the fight side, there are a lot of nuances that go on in this business.
“There’s a lot of smoke and mirrors because everybody wants to be that next step to the UFC. We’re doing it the right way, we’re going to keep building.
“This is the honest truth. The UFC is the UFC because they built the brand for 30 years, and to build the brand, you need to do things the right way, with the right promotion, letting people know who you are.
“So, you have to build and gain trust with the fans. We wanna be around for the long haul, we wanna be one of the most legitimate promotions in the country, and I think we will.”
Shawne Merriman calls out NFL legend for a massive fight between two football icons
While Merriman is dedicated to promoting the stars of the future, he’s also passionate about training himself.
After growing up boxing with his uncles, who were professional fighters, and then honing his craft extensively with Randy Couture, the ex-Buffalo Bills superstar has an itch to compete that he’s not yet scratched.
With that in mind, he’d love the opportunity to put on the gloves and go to battle.
Recently, Merriman called out a fellow NFL legend for an epic superfight.
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