Английская Википедия:2017–18 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox NCAA team season Шаблон:2017–18 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball standings

Файл:20170329 MCDAAG Deandre Ayton on the wing.jpg
Arizona recruit Deandre Ayton at the 2017 McDonald's All-American Boys Game.

The 2017–18 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Arizona during the 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by ninth-year head coach Sean Miller, and played their home games at McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona as members in the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 27–8, 14–4 in Pac-12 play to win the regular season championship. They defeated Colorado, UCLA, and USC to win the Pac-12 tournament. As a result, they received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament where, as a No. 4 seed, they were upset in the first round by No. 13 seed Buffalo.

Due to 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball corruption scandal, 18 wins from this season have been vacated.[1][2] The following 9 wins against Northern Arizona, UMBC, Cal State Bakersfield, Long Beach State, UNLV, Texas A&M, Utah, Colorado & California would count in the overall record as the player involved in the scandal did not play in these games.

Previous season

Шаблон:Main

Entering the 2016–17 season, Arizona had been ranked in 78 consecutive AP polls and 81-straight Coaches polls. The Wildcats were ranked every week extending their streak to 97 weeks for the AP and 100 weeks for the Coaches poll. The 97 consecutive weeks in the AP poll is currently the second-longest streak in the nation behind Kansas at 161 weeks.[3] Arizona won its first 10 conference games, the best start since the 1997–98 season when they started 16–0. During the season, Arizona was invited and participated in the Armed Forces Classic in Honolulu. Arizona defeated Michigan State. Arizona also defeated Texas A&M in the Lone Star Shootout in Houston. Arizona also defeated Sacred Heart, Northern Colorado and Santa Clara but lost to Butler in the championship game of the Las Vegas Invitational in Paradise, NV.

They finished the season 32–5, 16–2 in Pac-12 play to finish in a first place tie with Oregon. The championship marked the school's 15th Pac-12 regular season championship title. As the No. 2 seed in the Pac-12 tournament, Arizona defeated Colorado, UCLA and Oregon (avenged from 85 to 58 loss on February 4 in Eugene, OR) to win the sixth Pac-12 tournament championship title since 2002. As a result, the Wildcats received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament for the fifth consecutive year (32nd NCAA tournament appearances). As a No. 2 seed in the West region, they defeated North Dakota 100–82 and Saint Mary's 69–60 to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. However, in the Sweet Sixteen, they lost to No. 11 seed Xavier 71–73.

Offseason

style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" | Offseason Departures
style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Name style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Position style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Year style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Hometown style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Reason
Kadeem Allen G RS Senior Wilmington, NC Graduated/2017 NBA draft. Drafted No. 53 overall in the 2nd round to Boston Celtics.[4]
Chance Comanche C Sophomore Beverly Hills, CA Declared for 2017 NBA draft.[5] Went undrafted.
Paulo Cruz G Sophomore San Diego, CA Walk-on; Transferred to Cal Poly.[6]
Ray Smith F RS Freshman Las Vegas, NV Retired from basketball due to multiple injuries[7]
Kobi Simmons G Freshman Atlanta, GA Declared for the NBA draft. Went undrafted.[8] Signed an undrafted free agent deal with Memphis Grizzlies.[9]
Lauri Markkanen F Freshman Jyväskylä, FI Declared for 2017 NBA draft.[10] Drafted No. 7th overall in the 1st round to Minnesota Timberwolves and traded to Chicago Bulls.[11]
Reference:[12]
style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" | Incoming Transfers
style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Name style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Position style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Year style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Hometown style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Previous School style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Remaining Eligibility style="Шаблон:NCAA secondary color cell" |Notes
Chase Jeter F/C Junior Las Vegas, NV Duke 2 Will sit out the 2017–18 season due to NCAA transfer rules.[13]
Reference:[12]

2017 recruiting class

Tempe, Arizona product Alex Barcello was the first commitment in the Arizona class. He committed to Arizona on August 26 at a press conference at his high school. He chose Arizona over Butler, Indiana, Stanford and Virginia. He was a consensus four star prospect, and was ranked the consensus No. 93 overall player by the four main recruiting services.

Deandre Ayton, a Bahamian attending school in Phoenix, was the second commitment in the Arizona class. He committed to Arizona on September 6 live on ESPN. He chose Arizona for an upset over Kansas and Kentucky. He was a consensus five star prospect, and was ranked the consensus No. 2 overall player by the four main recruiting services.

Brandon Randolph, originally from Yonkers, New York, was the third commitment in the Arizona class. He committed to Arizona on October 12. He chose Arizona over Syracuse, Oregon and Wake Forest. He was a consensus top fifty player, ranked No. 42 by the four main recruiting services.

Ira Lee, from Los Angeles, was the fourth commitment in the Arizona class. He committed to Arizona on October 20. He chose Arizona over California and Oregon. He was a consensus top-25 player and ranked as a four-star player by the four main recruiting services Rivals, ESPN, Scout, and 24/7 Sports.

Emmanuel Akot from Winnipeg, CA, was the first commitment in the 2018 Arizona class, but he will reclassified to 2017 class (fifth and final commitment). He committed to Arizona on March 9 at a press conference at his high school. He chose Arizona over Louisville, Oregon and Utah. He was a consensus five star prospect, and was ranked the consensus No. 21 overall player by the four main recruiting services.

Arizona also added Preferred Walk-on Matt Weyand from Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, California.

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School Offers by Recruit

ESPN 100

FBI investigation

Шаблон:Main On September 26, federal prosecutors in New York announced charges of fraud and corruption against 10 people involved in college basketball, including Arizona assistant coach Emmanuel "Book" Richardson.[19] The charges allege that Richardson and others allegedly received payments from financial advisers and others to influence student-athletes to retain their services and in turn used those payments to secure recruits.[20][21] Following the news, Richardson was suspended and relieved of all duties.[22] On January 11, 2018, UA fired assistant basketball coach Book Richardson after his appeal failed.[23]

On February 23, 2018, according to a published report by ESPN, an FBI wiretap revealed that head coach Sean Miller talked with Christian Dawkins (another key figure in the scandal) to discuss paying their top prospect, Deandre Ayton, $100,000 to commit to Arizona, with the monetary situation being dealt with directly with him.[24] While Miller would not coach their next game that day against Oregon, Arizona allowed Ayton to play.[25] Coach Sean Miller subsequently denied the allegation and the University of Arizona announced he will remain the coach of Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team, with Ayton also allowed to continue playing with the team for the rest of the season. However, as a consequence of the report involving Ayton, both of Arizona's remaining committed recruits from the class of 2018, Shareef O'Neal and Brandon Williams, announced they had decommitted.[26]

Personnel

Roster

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  • Aug 23, 2017 – Sophomore walk-on Kory Jones will miss the 2017–18 season after tearing his left ACL.[27]
  • Sept 27, 2017 – Sophomore Rawle Alkins out 8–12 weeks with a broken right foot.[28]
  • Feb 22, 2018 – Junior Allonzo Trier ruled ineligible by NCAA for testing positive of a banned substance.[29]

Depth chart

Шаблон:Basketball depth chart

Coaching staff

Name Position Year at Arizona Alma Mater (year)
Sean Miller Head coach 9th Pittsburgh (1992)
Lorenzo Romar Associate head coach 1st Washington (1980)
Mark Phelps Assistant coach 3rd Old Dominion (1996)
Ryan Reynolds Director of Basketball Operations 9th Xavier (2007)
Austin Carroll Assistant director of Basketball Operations 2nd American (2014)

Preseason

Summer Exhibition Tour

Practices began earlier than otherwise allowed by the NCAA in preparation for a three-game foreign tour to Spain in August. (NCAA rules allow teams to conduct 10 practices in preparation for a foreign tour.) NCAA rules allow for foreign tours once every four years and the Spain tour was Arizona's first since 2012.[30] It was the eighth in program history. The University of Arizona basketball program will travel to Spain in August for a foreign tour, including a trio of exhibition games. The Wildcats will spend time in Barcelona and Valencia Aug. 11 through Aug. 19.

UA will take on Combinado Valenciano on Saturday, Aug. 13 at 7 p.m. local at the Pabellon Municipal Fuente de San Luis in Valencia.

The trip's second exhibition features Arizona and the Mataro All-Stars on Wednesday, August 16 at 7:10 p.m. in Barcelona inside the Pavello Municipal Teresa Maria Roca prior to the final exhibition two days later against Mataro Parc Boet in the same arena.

All three of the exhibitions will be streamed online by FloHoops.com with a subscription required.

Red and Blue game

The annual Red-Blue game will take place at McKale Center on October 20, 2017. After freshman Brandon Randolph won the dunk contest,[31] the Blue team, led by Deandre Ayton, knocked off the Red team, 55–37.[32]

Preseason rankings

For the fifth time in the past six seasons, Arizona Wildcats voted 2017-18 Pac-12 preseason favorite by media poll.[33] On October 19, Arizona was pre-season ranked 5th in USA Today coaches preseason poll.[34] On November 1, Arizona was pre-season ranked No. 3 in AP Top 25 preseason poll.[35]

In its preseason college preview, Lindy's Sports ranked the Wildcats No. 2 in the country. The Blue Ribbon Yearbook ranked UA No. 2 in its preseason rankings. Athlon Sports ranked the Wildcats No. 1 in the country. Street & Smith ranked UA No. 1 in the country. KenPom ranked UA No. 3 in the country. NBC Sports ranked the Wildcats No. 3 in the country. CBS Sports ranked No. 2 for the Wildcats. ESPN ranked No. 2 for the Wildcats. Sports Illustrated ranked UA No. 1 in the country.

Schedule and results

On June 8, Arizona released the non-conference schedule is highlighted by marquee match-ups at McKale Center and across the country.[36] Arizona will also host Alabama, Cal State Bakersfield, UConn, Long Beach State, North Dakota State, Northern Arizona and UMBC in Tucson, AZ. Arizona will travel to Phoenix to play Texas A&M at Talking Stick Resort Arena in the annual Valley of the Sun Shootout, to Nassau, Bahamas to play three of the following teams: (NC State, Northern Iowa, Purdue, SMU, Tennessee, Villanova or Western Kentucky) in the Battle 4 Atlantis at Imperial Arena, to Albuquerque to play against New Mexico, and finally face UNLV in Paradise, NV.

The 2018 Pac-12 Tournament will begin March 7 in Las Vegas and conclude on March 10.[37] Selection Sunday occurs the following day.[38]

In the unbalanced 18-game Pac-12 schedule, Arizona will not play the Washington teams (Washington/Washington State) at home and Los Angeles teams (UCLA/USC) on the road.Шаблон:CBB schedule start |- !colspan=12 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| Spain Exhibition Tour Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry |- !colspan=12 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| Exhibition Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry |- !colspan=12 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| Non-conference regular season Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry Шаблон:CBB schedule entry |- !colspan=12 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| Pac-12 regular season Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry |- !colspan=12 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| Pac-12 Tournament Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry |- !colspan=12 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| NCAA tournament Шаблон:CBB Schedule Entry Шаблон:CBB schedule end Schedule Source: ArizonaWildcats.com[39]

Ranking movement

Шаблон:See also

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Final
rowspan=2 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|Arizona 3 (18) 3 (16) 2 (11) RV RV 23 18T 17 14 17 14 11 9 13 17 14 19 15 12
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Final Postseason (final)
rowspan=2 style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|Arizona 5 (2) 4 RV RV 23 19 18 16 21 17 12 9 13 19 14 22 17 15 RV
  • Number in italic indicates the number of first place votes

^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll.
*AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings

Player statistics

Individual player statistics (Final)
colspan="2" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Minutes colspan="2" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Scoring colspan="3" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Total FGs colspan="3" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |3-point FGs colspan="3" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Free-Throws colspan="4" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Rebounds
scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Player scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |GP scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |GS scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Tot scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Avg scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Pts scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Avg scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |FG scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |FGA scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Pct scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |3FG scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |3FA scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Pct scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |FT scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |FTA scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Pct scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Off scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Def scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Tot scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Avg scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |A scope="col" style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" |TO scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Stl scope="col" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell |Blk
Alex Barcello 16 0 187 11.7 46 2.9 16 44 .364 8 26 .308 6 8 .750 3 17 20 1.3 19 8 3 0
Allonzo Trier 26 26 878 33.8 509 19.6 159 293 .543 61 144 .424 130 153 .850 11 73 84 3.2 81 59 16 11
Brandon Randolph 25 4 323 12.9 109 4.4 38 101 .376 14 44 .318 19 26 .731 4 20 24 1.0 25 19 12 4
Deandre Ayton 26 26 841 32.3 509 19.5 200 331 .604 10 29 .318 96 130 .738 71 207 278 10.7 36 45 12 47
Dušan Ristić 26 26 658 25.3 308 11.8 128 216 .593 3 8 .375 49 61 .803 56 127 183 7.0 26 31 9 15
Dylan Smith 25 6 384 15.4 116 4.6 39 104 .375 25 69 .362 13 15 .867 8 32 40 1.6 31 24 4 5
Emmanuel Akot 22 4 218 9.9 39 1.8 15 39 .385 8 19 .421 1 5 .200 8 18 26 1.2 20 14 4 3
Ira Lee 25 0 273 10.9 60 2.4 23 51 .451 1 2 .500 13 23 .565 19 41 60 2.4 10 12 5 11
Jake DesJardins 3 0 7 2.3 2 0.7 1 2 .500 0 2 .000 0 0 .000 0 3 3 1.0 1 1 0 0
Keanu Pinder 23 0 220 9.6 49 2.1 18 27 .667 0 0 .000 13 21 .619 10 37 47 2.0 1 12 7 12
Matt Weyand 0 0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0
Parker Jackson-Cartwright 26 26 810 31.2 190 7.3 62 144 .431 36 81 .444 30 41 .732 5 51 56 2.2 127 43 37 3
Rawle Alkins 14 12 415 29.6 191 13.6 63 136 .463 23 59 .390 42 56 .750 25 33 58 4.1 39 35 18 11
Talbott Denny 2 0 5 2.5 0 0.0 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 1 0 0
Tyler Trillo 1 0 5 5.0 3 3.0 1 1 1.000 1 1 1.000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 1 0 0
align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|Total align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|26 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| - align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| - align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell| - align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|2128 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|82 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|763 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|1489 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|.512 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|190 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|482 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|.394 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|412 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|539 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|.764 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|251 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|681 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|932 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|36 align="center" style=Шаблон:NCAA color cell|417 align="center" style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" |313 align="center" style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" |127 align="center" style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" |122
Opponents
Legend
  GP  Games played   GS  Games started  Avg  Average per game
  FG  Field-goals made  FGA  Field-goal attempts  Off  Offensive rebounds
 Def  Defensive rebounds   A  Assists   TO Turnovers
 Blk  Blocks  Stl  Steals  High  Team high

Awards and honors

Weekly awards

  • Allonzo Trier
    • Week 1, Pac-12 Player of the Week (Nov. 13) [40]
    • NBC Sports Player of the Week (Nov. 13)[41]
  • Deandre Ayton
    • Week 4, Pac–12 Player of the Week (Dec. 4)[42]
    • Wayman Tisdale National Freshman of the Week (Dec 10)[43]
    • Wayman Tisdale National Freshman of the Week (2) (Feb 25)[44]
    • NCAA Men's Player of the Week (Jan. 1)[45]
    • NBC Sports Player of the Week (Jan. 1)[46]
    • Pac-12 Player of the Week (2) (Jan. 2)[47]
  • Dusan Ristic
    • Pac-12 Player of the Week (Jan. 29)[48]

Watchlists

  • Allonzo Trier
Jerry West Award Preseason Watch List (2018)[49]
Oscar Robertson Award Preseason Watch List (2018)[50]
Lute Olson Award Preseason Watch List (2018)[51]
Naismith Trophy Award Preseason Watch List (2018)[52]
John R. Wooden Award Preseason Watch List (2018)[53]
John R. Wooden Award Midseason Top 25 (2018)[54]
  • Rawle Alkins
Julius Erving Award Preseason Watch List (2018)[55]
Naismith Trophy Award Preseason Watch List (2018)
John R. Wooden Award Preseason Watch List (2018)
  • Deandre Ayton
Karl Malone Award Preseason Watch List (2018) [56]
Oscar Robertson Award Preseason Watch List (2018)
Naismith Trophy Award Preseason Watch List (2018)
John R. Wooden Award Preseason Watch List (2018)
John R. Wooden Award Midseason Top 25 (2018)[54]
Oscar Robertson Trophy Midseason Watch List (2018)[57]
Karl Malone Award Finalist (2018) [58]
Naismith Trophy Award Finalist (2018)
  • Dušan Ristić
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award Preseason Watch List (2018) [59]

Pac-12 awards

  • Deandre Ayton
Pac-12 Tournament Most Outstanding Player (2018)
Pac-12 Player of the Year (2018)
Pac-12 Freshman Player of the Year (2018)

National district awards

  • Deandre Ayton
USBWA District IX Player of the Year (2018)

All-American and national awards

  • Allonzo Trier
AP Pac-12 First Team All-American (2018)
AP Preseason First Team All-American (2017)
Street & Smith Preseason Second Team All-American (2017)
NBC Sports Preseason First Team All-American (2017)
ESPN Preseason First Team All-American (2017)
Sports Illustrated Preseason First Team All-American (2017)
USA Today Preseason First Team All-American (2017)
Blue Ribbon Preseason Second Team All-American (2017)
Athlon Sports Preseason Second Team All-American (2017)
Sporting News Preseason Second Team All-American (2017)
USBWA District IX All-District Team (2018)
NABC District 20 Second Team (2018)
AP All-American Honorable mention (2018)
  • Deandre Ayton
Karl Malone Power Forward of the Year Award (2018)
AP Pac-12 Player of the Year (2018)
AP Pac-12 Newcomer of the Year (2018)
AP Pac-12 First Team All-American (2018)
NBC Sports First Team All-American (2018)
AP Preseason Second Team All-American (2017)
NBC Sports Preseason Third Team All-American (2017)
Blue Ribbon Preseason Third Team All-American (2017)
Athlon Sports Preseason Third Team All-American (2017)
Sporting News Preseason Third Team All-American (2017)
Sports Illustrated Preseason Honorable Mention All-American (2017)
USA Today Preseason Honorable Mention All-American (2017)
USA Today First Team All-American (2018)
Sporting News First Team All-American (2018)
USBWA District IX All-District Team (2018)
USBWA First Team All-American (2018)
NABC First Team All-American (2018)
NABC District 20 First team (2018)
AP First Team All-American (2018)

All-Pac-12 team

  • Deandre Ayton
All Pac-12 First team (2018)
All Pac-12 Freshman team (2018)
All Pac-12 Defensive team (2018)
  • Allonzo Trier
All Pac-12 First team (2018)
  • Dusan Ristic
All Pac-12 Second team (2018)
  • Rawle Alkins
All Pac-12 Honorable mention (2018)

All-Pac-12 tournament team

  • Deandre Ayton
All Pac-12 tournament team (2018)
  • Dusan Ristic
All Pac-12 tournament team (2018)

See also

2017–18 Arizona Wildcats women's basketball team

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Arizona Wildcats men's basketball navbox

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