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Khachanov Forced To Battle In Monte-Carlo Opener

  • Posted: Apr 15, 2018

Khachanov Forced To Battle In Monte-Carlo Opener

Zverev escapes tough #NextGenATP Auger-Aliassime

Karen Khachanov was made to work at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters on Sunday when the Russian beat Australian wild card Thanasi Kokkinakis 7-5, 6-4 in one hour and 51 minutes.

Khachanov had to bide his time to gain the first service break – missing out on break point chances in the fifth game (three) and ninth game (one) – before winning seven of 11 points. Kokkinakis, making his debut at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournament, fought hard, but cracked under pressure at 3-3 in the second set. Khachanov, who picked up his second ATP World Tour title at the Open 13 Provence (d. Pouille) in February, will now meet a Frenchman in No. 16 seed Adrian Mannarino or wild card Gilles Simon.

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Germany’s Mischa Zverev won his first match at the historic tournament by beating #NextGenATP Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime 6-2, 6-7(4), 6-1 in two hours and 36 minutes. Zverev led by a set and 3-1 before the 17-year-old wild card, with a devastating forehand that delighted the Court Rainier III crowd, found his range to clinch the second set. The 30-year-old will next challenge seventh seed and last year’s semi-finalist Lucas Pouille in the second round.

In the only other main draw match, Hungary’s Marton Fucsovics plays Denis Medvedev of Russia. The victor will face Czech No. 12 seed and 2015 runner-up Tomas Berdych or Kei Nishikori of Japan.

Andreas Seppi, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Pierre-Hugues Herbert, Jeremy Chardy, Dusan Lajovic, Marco Cecchinato and Ilya Ivashka all qualified for the main draw in overcast conditions on Sunday.

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Colombians Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah, who are 10-14 in tour-level finals — including a runner-up finish at the Australian Open in January, knocked out Spanish duo Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez 6-3, 6-4 in 65 minutes. They will next face second seeds Henri Kontinen and John Peers.

Marseille titlists Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus stormed past Lucas Pouille and Andrey Rublev 6-1, 6-1 in 46 minutes for a second-round meeting against sixth seeds Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau.

Did You Know?
Khachanov was No. 8 on the ATP World Tour in service games won this season entering the tournament according to Infosys ATP Scores & Stats (86.72 per cent). The Russian did not face break point Sunday.

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Kyle Edmund: British number one beaten by Pablo Andujar in Marrakesh final

  • Posted: Apr 15, 2018

British number one Kyle Edmund lost his maiden ATP Tour final as he was beaten by Spain’s Pablo Andujar at the Grand Prix Hassan II in Marrakesh.

Andujar, 32, a two-time former champion who has fallen to 355th in the world after a series of elbow operations, won 6-2 6-2 in 83 minutes.

Edmund, 23, won twice on Saturday but struggled on a slow surface and had his service broken six times.

Andujar’s fourth career title was his first since the Swiss Open in 2014.

Previously ranked as high as 32nd, Andujar is the lowest-ranked ATP singles champion since Lleyton Hewitt won the Adelaide International in 1998 ranked 550th in the world.

Despite the loss, Edmund will rise to a career-high of 23rd in the world rankings.

He is set to compete in the Monte Carlo Masters, which began on Sunday in Monaco.

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Sealed With A Splash: Mirnyi/Oswald Triumph In Houston

  • Posted: Apr 15, 2018

Sealed With A Splash: Mirnyi/Oswald Triumph In Houston

Belarusian-Austrian duo claim third team title

There is no stopping Max Mirnyi, even at the age of 40. ‘The Beast’ captured his 52nd tour-level doubles title on Saturday evening at the Fayez Sarofim & Co. U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championship, teaming with Philipp Oswald.

The Belarusian-Austrian duo rallied past Andre Begemann and Antonio Sancic 6-7(2), 6-4, 11/9 under the lights at the River Oaks Country Club. They captured their third team title and second of the year, having emerged with the trophy on the indoor hard courts of New York in February. 

“I’m definitely coming to the end of my career and I hope I have another go here next year,” said Mirnyi. “It’s my first title in Houston after all these years. I want to thank my partner Philipp after coming from Davis Cup in Russia last week and fighting through jet lag and different weather conditions. And I also want to thank my daughter, manager and coach Petra. She’s done a great job this week.”

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Mirnyi and Oswald needed two match points to prevail after one hour and 36 minutes, surviving a close championship clash. They improved to 20-7 together, taking their third consecutive Match Tie-break after securing a comeback win over Scott Lipsky and Tennys Sandgren and tight affair over six-time winners Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan in the semis.

“It’s a really nice club here in Houston,” said Oswald. “It’s my second year here and just a special place to play.”

You May Also Like: All-American Final Set In Houston

The unseeded duo earn 250 ATP Doubles Rankings points and split $30,190 in prize money. Individually, Oswald earned his eighth doubles title and sixth on clay. 

Meanwhile, Begemann and Sancic were competing together for the first time this week. The German fell to 4-6 in ATP World Tour finals, while Sancic drops to 0-3.

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All-American Final Set In Houston

  • Posted: Apr 15, 2018

All-American Final Set In Houston

First-time finalist Tennys Sandgren to face defending champ Steve Johnson on Sunday

For just the second time in the past 15 years, the Fayez Sarofim & Co. U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championship will feature an all-American final. Tennessee native Tennys Sandgren will clash with California’s Steve Johnson for the title, after both battled through tricky semi-final encounters on Saturday.

Johnson and Sandgren are slated to meet for the first time, marking the first championship clash in Houston between home hopefuls since 2015, when Jack Sock defeated Sam Querrey. That year, Sock lifted his maiden ATP World Tour trophy and Sandgren will look to do the same on Sunday.

The 26-year-old toppled Ivo Karlovic 7-6(2), 7-6(4) in one hour and 38 minutes, surviving an offensive onslaught from the big-hitting Croatian. Karlovic fired 35 winners and 10 aces in total, while claiming 83 per cent of first serve points, but the defensive-minded Sandgren grinded to victory on the red dirt. 

“I didn’t feel like I could get to the final this week. I was just trying to win a few matches,” said Sandgren. “But I put myself in that position.” 

In front of friends and family at the River Oaks Country Club, Sandgren surged into his first ATP World Tour final. What a difference a year makes. Exactly one year ago, the American qualified for his first tour-level main draw in Houston and now he is one step from lifting his first trophy. Projected to rise to a career-high inside the Top 50 of the ATP Rankings regardless of Sunday’s outcome, the he is on a tear since progressing from the ATP Challenger Tour to open the season. A quarter-finalist at the Australian Open in January, he has carried the momentum into Houston and will look to become the third American winner of the year (Tiafoe in Delray Beach; Isner in Miami).

Few players can say they have rallied from a break down against Karlovic and his imposing serve, but Sandgren did just that to take the opener. A sublime lob snatched the break back and he would take the first set on an unreturned serve. Sandgren would once against escape the Croatian’s grasp in the second set, forcing another tie-break after sliding into a full split to fire a cross-court pass at 5-6. And he would once again grab the initiative with the set – and match – on the line, emerging victorious after more than an hour and a half.

“I feel like I’m better at engaging myself when things don’t go right,” Sandgren added. “I don’t have a lot of experience at this stage and against [Karlovic’s serve], you just guess. You can only take a stab at it and guess. I tried to read where he liked to go. And the second set was difficult. I double faulted three times in a row to get broken back. The wind was swirling and he likes to run around and hit big forehands. One double fault became two and then it was three.”

In Saturday’s second semi-final, Steve Johnson overcame a stern test from #NextGenATP star Taylor Fritz to move into his second straight final in the Texas metropolis. The defending champion advanced 7-5, 6-7(4), 6-2 in two hours and 22 minutes, converting four of 15 break chances.

Johnson is seeking to become the first player to go back-to-back in Houston since Andy Roddick in 2001-02, when the tournament first moved to River Oaks Country Club. It will be his fourth ATP World Tour title match, having finished runner-up in Vienna in 2015, followed by victories on the grass of Nottingham and clay here last year.

“I’m happy to be back in the final,” said Johnson. “This court has a lot of special memories for me. I’m happy to be in another final and get a title tomorrow. It was windy and gusty today and the shadows were moving in. I was able to find the break early in the third and that made the big difference.”

With two match points while returning at 6-5 15/40 in the second set, Johnson was on the verge of shutting the door in straights. But his 20-year-old counterpart would not go down quietly, fighting to force a tie-break and eventually a decider. Momentum was squarely on Fritz’s shoulders, but Johnson’s experience saw him across the finish line, grabbing a pair of breaks in the third set to return to the championship match.

Following the match, Johnson was presented with the tournament’s sportsmanship award. The Langston Trophy is annually awarded to the player(s) who demonstrate great sportsmanship during the competition. This year’s award goes to a group of players — Johnson, John Isner, Sam Querrey, Frances Tiafoe and Bob & Mike Bryan — who participated in kids clinics at Sunnyside Park this week after donating money to support the resurfacing of the park’s courts following Hurricane Harvey.

Johnson

Did You Know?
Sandgren will bid to join the honour roll of American champions in Houston and become the eighth winner at River Oaks. Previous home grown titlists include Andy Roddick, Andre Agassi, Mardy Fish, Ryan Sweeting, John Isner, Sock and Johnson.

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Edmund Moves Into Maiden Final

  • Posted: Apr 14, 2018

Edmund Moves Into Maiden Final

Brit to face two-time former champion Andujar in Sunday’s final

Kyle Edmund reached his first ATP World Tour final at the Grand Prix Hassan II on Saturday, beating Richard Gasquet 6-3, 6-4.

In a battle of the last two remaining seeds in Marrakech, it was Edmund who came out on top to win his second match of the day after beating Malek Jaziri in the delayed quarter-finals on Saturday morning. The second seed hit 11 aces throughout the 72-minute clash to earn his second win in three matches against the Frenchman.

Edmund will face experienced competition in Sunday’s championship match, with two-time event titlist Pablo Andujar winning the second semi-final against Joao Sousa 6-4, 6-4. The 2011 and 2012 winner moved one step closer to becoming the most successful player in the history of the tournament after an 88-minute triumph, breaking his Portuguese opponent on four occasions. Andujar and Argentina’s Guillermo Perez-Roldan (1992-93) are the only two players in the history of the Moroccan event to win multiple titles.

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“I’m extremely happy today,” expressed Andujar. “I didn’t expect to be in the final at as I’m just coming back from injury. Playing in Morocco is always very special for me as I’ve won here in the past. Tomorrow will be a tough final against Kyle (Edmund), he’s an excellent player. I’m a bit tired right now, but very much looking forward to the final and very happy with my two wins today.”

Andujar goes into the final in great form, having won the ATP Challenger Tour event in Alicante seven days ago. The Spaniard is bidding to become the first player since Ryan Harrison (2017 Dallas, Memphis) to win a Challenger event and an ATP World Tour title in consecutive weeks.

This is the first match in the FedEx ATP Head2Head series between Edmund and Andujar, but the Brit did win their meeting in the first round of 2016 China Open qualifying.

Did You Know?
Entering the ATP Challenger Tour event in Alicante last week, Pablo Andujar was a combined 2-12 at all levels since September 2016, having underwent three elbow surgeries. Andujar now enters the Marrakech final against Kyle Edmund on a nine-match winning streak.

 

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Scouting Report: 10 Things To Watch In Monte-Carlo

  • Posted: Apr 14, 2018

Scouting Report: 10 Things To Watch In Monte-Carlo

An executive summary of what every fan should know about the coming week on the ATP World Tour

The ATP World Tour continues its clay swing at the first clay-court ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event of 2018, the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters. World No. 1 Rafael Nadal, a 10-time champion in Monaco, leads the field as he attempts to become the first player during the Open Era to claim victory at a tournament 11 times. Four of the Top 5 players in the ATP Rankings will be in action, as will two-time titlist Novak Djokovic.

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1) Nadal On Top: World No. 1 and 10-time Monte-Carlo champion Rafael Nadal is playing his first tournament since the Australian Open in January. The Spaniard has been sidelined with a hip injury before returning last weekend to help Spain to a 3-2 Davis Cup win over Germany. This is the 170th week he’s ranked No. 1, tying John McEnroe for sixth-most in the history of the ATP Rankings. The Spaniard must defend his Monte-Carlo crown to remain No. 1 or Roger Federer will take over on 23 April.

2) Rafa A Perfect 10: Last year, Nadal became the first player in the Open Era to win a tournament 10 times. He first accomplished the feat in Monte-Carlo, then in Barcelona and Roland Garros. Nadal, who is playing in Monte-Carlo for the 15th time, and fourth occasion as World No. 1, has a 63-4 record at the event.

3) First-Time Winner Streak: The last three ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments have been won by first-time champions: Jack Sock (2017 Paris), Juan Martin del Potro (Indian Wells) and John Isner (Miami). The last time this occurred was in 2003 when Felix Mantilla triumphed in Rome, Guillermo Coria in Hamburg and Andy Roddick in Montreal.

4) Novak Eyes Turnaround: No. 9 seed Novak Djokovic is playing in Monte-Carlo for the 12th time in 13 years (except 2011). The Serbian has a 30-9 record at the tournament, capturing titles in 2013 and 2015, while reaching finals in 2009 and 2012. Djokovic is back working with coach Marian Vajda.

5) Thiem Returns: No. 5 seed Dominic Thiem returns to action after retiring due to an ankle injury in the third round at Indian Wells against Pablo Cuevas on 12 March. Seven of Thiem’s nine career ATP World Tour titles have come on clay, including Buenos Aires in February. He is 3-4 in Monte-Carlo, reaching the third round in 2016 and 2017.

6) 500 Wins Club: Fernando Verdsaco is two wins away from becoming the sixth Spaniard in the Open Era to earn 500 career tour-level victories. Richard Gasquet is three triumphs away from becoming the first Frenchman in the Open Era to reach the milestone. Seven active players have 500 or more wins.

You May Also Like: Five Must-See First-Round Matches In Monte-Carlo

7) British Breakthrough: British No. 1 Kyle Edmund is set to compete in his maiden ATP World Tour final in Marrakech on Sunday (vs. Andujar). Edmund will break into the Top 20 of the ATP Rankings if he captures his first trophy.

8) Wild Cards: The wild cards in Monte-Carlo are from four different countries: #NextGenATP star Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN), Lucas Catarina (MON), Thanasi Kokkinakis (AUS) and Gilles Simon (FRA).

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9) Strong Doubles Field: Seven of the Top 10 in the ATP Doubles Team Rankings are in the draw, led by the Top 4 of Oliver Marach/Mate Pavic, Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan, Juan Sebastian Cabal/Robert Farah and Jamie Murray/Bruno Soares.

10) Doubles Champions: Last year’s champions Rohan Bopanna and Pablo Cuevas are playing with different partners (Roger-Vasselin and Granollers, respectively). The Bryans are five-time winners (2007, 2011-12, 2014-15), while Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut (2016) are the other former champions in the draw.

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Kyle Edmund beats Malek Jaziri & Richard Gasquet to reach Marrakesh final

  • Posted: Apr 14, 2018

British number one Kyle Edmund won two matches in a day to reach his first ATP Tour final at the Grand Prix Hassan II in Marrakesh.

The second seed beat Tunisia’s Malek Jaziri 6-2 6-1 after heavy rain forced Friday’s quarter-final to be moved to Saturday.

Edmund, 23, then beat French fourth seed Richard Gasquet 6-3 6-4.

The world number 26 will play Spain’s Pablo Andujar or Portugal’s Joao Sousa in Sunday’s final.

Edmund breezed past world number 91 Jaziri in 52 minutes, hitting four aces and winning 89% of points on his first serve.

He beat Gasquet, who came through a two-hour quarter-final against compatriot Gilles Simon, in 73 minutes.

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Mektic/Peya Clinch First Team Title

  • Posted: Apr 14, 2018

Mektic/Peya Clinch First Team Title

Mektic and Peya were appearing in their third final of 2018

Nikola Mektic and Alexander Peya won their second match of the day to capture the Grand Prix Hassan II title in Marrakech, defeating Frenchmen Benoit Paire and Edouard Roger-Vasselin 7-5, 3-6, 10/7 on Saturday.

Mektic and Peya, who beat Divij Sharan and Jan-Lennard Struff earlier in the day in the semi-finals, won 72 per cent of points behind their first serves in the championship match to win their first title as a team in 86 minutes. It is Mektic’s third tour-level triumph, and the 16th time Peya has lifted a trophy. The Croatian-Austrian duo was appearing in its third final of 2018, after runner-up finishes in Rio de Janeiro and Sofia.

“It was our third final together. We didn’t want to lose again,” explained Peya. “It was a very tough match and we are extremely happy.”

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The top seeds were forced to save three consecutive set points at 4-5 (15-40) in the first set, before reeling off three consecutive games to establish a lead. Paire and Roger-Vasselin forced a Match Tie-break after a strong reply in the second set, serving the set out to love after breaking in the eighth game. But it was Mektic and Peya who established control of the decider to enter the winners’ circle, securing the title on their second championship point.

“It was a crazy match,” admitted Mektic. “Benoit (Paire) was on fire in the second set. It was a tough week for us as I was sick in the beginning.”

Mektic and Peya will receive 250 ATP Doubles Ranking points and share €27,220 in prize money for clinching the crown. Paire and Roger-Vasselin gain 150 ATP Doubles Rankings points and will split €14,310.

Did You Know?
Only one team has ever successfully defended the doubles title in Morocco since its inaugural edition in 1990. Robert Lindstedt and Horia Tecau won back-to-back titles in 2010 and 2011.

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Five Must-See First-Round Matches In Monte-Carlo

  • Posted: Apr 14, 2018

Five Must-See First-Round Matches In Monte-Carlo

Tantalising matchups are plentiful in the first round at Monte-Carlo

It will not take long for breathtaking tennis to be played at the Monte-Carlo Country Club, with plenty of jaw-dropping first-round matchups. The ATP World Tour’s best are set to get things underway on Sunday at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, the first clay-court ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event of the season.

Tomas Berdych v Kei Nishikori
Any time two players who have climbed to No. 4 in the ATP Rankings meet at a tournament, it’s must-see action. And when they clash in the first round of an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event, you need to grab extra popcorn. Nishikori leads the pair’s FedEx ATP Head2Head series 4-1, but interestingly enough, the bigger-hitting Berdych earned his lone victory on clay six years ago, also in Monte-Carlo. He is also the 2015 runner-up at the event.

The key will be how well the Japanese superstar will be able to defend on the dirt against an onslaught of lasered groundstrokes from the baseline coming from Berdych. Nishikori, who is still working his way back to form after missing five months due to a wrist injury, will have to neutralise the Czech’s offence on his home courts — Berdych resides in Monte-Carlo and trains at the Monte-Carlo Country Club — and force him to take more risks from difficult positions. Their last match came at the 2015 Nitto ATP Finals.

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Mischa Zverev v Felix Auger-Aliassime
Experience against youth. Serve-and-volleyer against baseliner. Who wouldn’t want to watch that? Mischa Zverev, a savvy veteran, takes on #NextGenATP Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime, who last year became the fourth-youngest player to crack the Top 200 of the ATP Rankings. And just a month ago at Indian Wells, the 17-year-old became the youngest player to win an ATP World Tour Match since Denis Shapovalov at the 2016 Rogers Cup.

But perhaps what is most intriguing in this matchup is the clash of styles. The left-handed Zverev almost exclusively uses the serve and volley, venturing to the net with great variety on the serve and pure, simple technique on his volleys. Will Auger-Aliassime be able to move well enough on the slippery clay to position himself for key passing shots? Perhaps more importantly, on his own serve, the World No. 176 will need to stay on top of the baseline on his own serve, and not allow the German to venture forward even more if he is to earn a second-round meeting against No. 7 seed Lucas Pouille.

You May Also Like: Felix Leads #NextGenATP Charge

Karen Khachanov v Thanasi Kokkinakis
If you like big hitting from the baseline, you will love this first-round encounter in Monaco. Karen Khachanov, the 21-year-old, has already established himself as a force to be reckoned with on the ATP World Tour. The Russian won his second tour-level title this February at the Open 13 Provence in Marseille, and owns five Top 20 victories over the past year. But Thanasi Kokkinakis is fresh off the best win of his career at the Miami Open presented by Itau, ousting then-World No. 1 Roger Federer before falling in a third-set tie-break against veteran Fernando Verdasco in the third round.

It will be of the utmost importance for each player to control the baseline. If either competitor gives up a short ball, they will immediately be put on the defensive by the other’s powerful groundstrokes. According to Infosys ATP Scores & Stats, Khachanov is eighth on the ATP World Tour in 2018 in service games won, holding 86.72 per cent of the time, and coming in at No. 10 in first-serve points won (76.98 per cent). If he can hold easily against Kokkinakis, it might put pressure on the Australian in his service games on the red clay.

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Fernando Verdasco v Pablo Cuevas
When you pit two players who have won well over 100 matches on a surface against one another in the first round of a tournament, it will certainly be one to watch. When you throw in that the pair have split four FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings, all on clay, the prospect of a great battle becomes even greater. Fernando Verdasco (213 clay wins) looks to move within one triumph of No. 500 in his career against Uruguayan star Pablo Cuevas (128 clay wins).

It will be fun to watch rallies between Verdasco’s dangerous left-handed forehand and Cuevas’ immaculate one-handed backhand, and it will be interesting to see who is brave enough to break that pattern and play aggressively down the line first. All signs point towards a grueling baseline duel between the 2010 finalist, Verdasco, and last year’s doubles champion (w/ Bopanna), Cuevas, who also beat Stan Wawrinka en route to the quarter-finals.

Albert Ramos-Vinolas v Jared Donaldson
Spaniard Albert Ramos-Vinolas returns to the scene of his best career result in Monte-Carlo. A year ago, the left-hander advanced to his maiden ATP World Tour Masters 1000 final (l. to Nadal), which propelled him into the Top 20 of the ATP Rankings for the first time. But across the net in the first round for the No. 15 seed will be an eager young American who is plenty familiar with the court surface.

Jared Donaldson, who qualified for the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals and recently advanced to the semi-finals at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC, actually trained in Argentina for two-and-a-half years as a teenager. And while he lost against Ramos-Vinolas at this year’s Australian Open in straight sets, he is a consistent performer who will play a steady brand of tennis and look to take advantage of any sitters or short balls. If Ramos-Vinolas is not able to get his heavy-topspin forehand bouncing high on the clay to move Donaldson around and control the action, this can be a fun one.

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