Montreal Canadiens vs Anaheim Ducks
March 8, 2010, by Homme De Sept-Iles
Musings and In-Game Scribbles
My English is as good as yours, I just write these in a stream-of-consciousness mode that I insist excuses me from small things like rules of grammar or general etiquette. Let’s call it conversational English, hopped up on beans. You know what kind of beans (no, Carl Mellesmoen, not the magic ones).
Montreal Canadiens (31-29-6) visit Saku Koivu (30-27-7)
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Game Sixty-Seven (score posted following scribbles)
Missed it? Musings capture the game in writing. Based on the RDS telecast, Musings take about 20 minutes to read. More detailed than an article, fresher than a looping highlight and good with morning coffee.
Jonas Hiller and Carey Price are the goalies. Saku Koivu is the former captain.
First Period
Canadiens win the faceoff but lose the puck in the neutral zone. Ducks take it and regroup. Duck captain and chief defenceman Scott Neidermayer moves it ahead. Puck returns to him at the point and he launches a wrister that goes wide.
For Montreal, Scott Gomez line is on and Ryan O’Byrne and Andrei Markov are the defensive pairing.
Markov moves out from behind the net. Short pass to the hash. Canadiens are repelled almost immediately
The intrepid Teemu Selanne gets a shot from the slot. No Duckfin goal this time.
Thomas Plekanec’ line hops on and off quickly and newcomer Dominic Moore’s line follows. Puck goes out of play and the puck is dropped at centre ice.
Moore has to leave the circle. Travis Moen loses the faceoff.
Ducks start out from behind their blue line. They eventually ice it on a missed pass.
Faceoff is to Hiller’s right.
Ducks exit. Price plays it to Josh Gorges behind his net.
Mathieu Darche and Glen Metropolit’s line can’t do much and they leave the ice with the Ducks in charge.
To the corner to Price’s left.
Jaroslav Spacek and Roman Hamrlik are on defence.
Benoit Pouliot enters on the right side for Montreal and shoot-passes it. Puck deflects up out of play.
Koivu is on the ice with Jason Blake and Teemu Selanne. Ducks win the faceoff but have the puck taken from them in the neutral zone.
Andrei K (Kostitsyn) is working hard so far.
Board work is convincing.
Now he gets it from the low circle and wrists it just wide.
Moore line is back.
Blake turns at the circle to Price’s right. To the blue line. Shot and the puck goes out of play.
Moore loses the faceoff and a rifle shot just misses the net.
Ducks are called on the other end for interference.
Pierre Houde tells us that the Ducks are the most penalized team in the league. Randy Carlyle’s crew.
Markov and Hamrlik are the defence pairing (not the usual; Markov is usually with Gorges) with Gomez’ trio on the first wave. Gomez flies up to get a drop-pass and leaves the puck behind. No harm done this time.
Canadiens set up.
Four passes and a Gionta slot pass is stopped by Hiller.
Canadiens retain control.
Markov is lower. By the hash. Pass across is nearly sent in.
Markov continues to play at the hash and lower.
Around the net.
To Pouliot. At the corner to Gomez (Jonathan). Ducks get it out off an errant Gomez pass.
Next entry results in a soft glove by Hiller.
Faceoff will be to his right. Second wave is Plekanec regular line.
Plekanec wins thee faceoff.
Gorges shoots. Awkward handling by Hiller. Ducks survive that.
And the penalty, too.
Montreal is called for hooking. Looks like Gorges. Houde says he will inform us after the break.
Steve Eminger was called for hooking. Montreal goes to l’attaque massive encore. Gomez trio.
Faceoff to Hiller’s left. Won by Anaheim. Chipchura leads a mild two-on-two. Yes, that Kyle Chipchura. The former Bulldogs captain. And Hab.
Canadiens regroup and set up. Gomez has it low. Approaches from the side and banks it off Hiller’s pads.
Metropolit is on with Plekanec for the second wave (AK on the wing). Kostitsyn shoots from the hash advancing to the dot. High and gloved.
Koivu is on the second kill pairing.
Long shot from the point. Contained by Hiller.
Faceoff.
Plekanec beats Koivu and the puck goes to the point. Shot. Rebound is open space and nervous duck. No sticks can Velcro the puck and Anaheim clears it.
Penalty ends with nothing more from the Canadiens.
Getzlaf line is on for Anaheim. Corey Perry is with him. They enter. Fake pass. Shot. Goal.
Anaheim 1, Montreal 0
Down the left side, Corey Perry curls in slightly, fakes a pass to Getzlaf (alone) in the mid-slot and shoots it past Price’s left. Perry made his 23rd of the season look easy. And maybe it was.
Moen, Moore and Sergei Kostitsyn follow. Koivu line is on against them.
Whistle as a puck is sent into Montreal ice from the neutral zone.
Faceoff is outside the Montreal blue line.
Anaheim’s Todd Marchant is asked to leave the dot. Matt Belesky takes his place. Canadiens get some brief control deep but can’t maintain it. Moen chasing again.
They leave the ice as Anaheim moves it down.
And we’re back the other way.
Shot on Hiller results in a bouncy rebound and then the Anaheim net goes off its moorings and play is stopped.
Another whistle as the puck goes into the right corner where O’Byrne bumps a Duck.
Carlyle holds up his fingers to indicate “3”.
Plekanec gets a neutral faceoff result from Hiller’s right and the Ducks exit. Montreal recovers the puck in their zone and is stopped from exiting on the left. Pass goes back to Markov and across to O’Byrne and dumped up the right side.
Selanne gets it and enters. He’s hooked by Pyatt. It’s called.
Selanne takes the faceoff. Wins it. Puck moves to the opposite side. Gionta nearly gets it out but Anaheim retains possession.
Long shot from the blue line. Price descends and gloves high. Spread pads and a whistle. Nice looking save.
Getzlaf stays on the blue line with Neidermayer advancing into the slot. He stays there.
Great offensive sense from the Ducks’ captain and he nearly sets up a goal with a side-door pass.
Whistle.
We resume with Sergei and Gomez together on the kill pairing.
Ducks are exited. They re-enter. Lubomir Vishnovsky on the right. Swerves and slicks his way to the slot and shoots. In the square. Red, white and blue pylons.
Another goal. Another easy-looking one. Nobody closed the valves.
Anaheim 2, Montreal 0
Gill is now struggling with Getzlaf at the end-line. Whistle.
Ducks have a very good mix of players. The full range. They aren’t hampered by politics in building their roster, it would seem. Just how good is Hiller? The answer to that is a Stanley Cup clue.
Randy Carlyle is a masters jacket type of coach. And now he has a ring to go with it. Anaheim’s 2007 win over the Senators, though the Sens played more minutes of quality hockey, is the symbol. The reality is, Stanley Cup or not, Carlyle is one of the best coaches in the game.
Just over five minutes left in the first period.
O’Byrne struggles against Chipchura on the boards under the end line. HE wins that battle with a bit of body and arm-on cheating. Refs overlook it.
Action becomes more physical on both ends and the Canadiens are pushing at the door. The moat outside has become a bit odorous. They want in.
Ducks respond.
Getzlaf and Hal Gill trade blows off screen, Houde informs us.
Plekanec enters on the left. Passes further left to Andrei K. Shot. Saved and held by Hiller.
Ducks have won three straight against Montreal dating back to 2004; we are shown the stat.
Price plays it behind his net. Jason Blake takes it from him. Or at least disrupts the control.
Habs move it out but aren’t able to retain it.
The Ducks are fast and focused. They are showing some respect for their alternate captain. Mister Saku. They’ll give a good game for that reason among others.
Markov enters to make it a four-on three. Shot goes wide. Whistle. Offside.
Martin chews his lower lip. Moves in place. Gazes down at his shoes.
Ducks resume their attack. Visnovsky gets a shot from the blue line.
Canadiens are being taught a lesson in care. The Ducks are playing a high tempo game but without the temporal fuel of emotion. Very together team.
Ducks enter again. Right side. One pass. Two. Neidermayer has it coming down the slot. Backhands it in looking like Gretzky. Yup. Like Gretzky. Something about the follow-through reminded me of the Brantford Bullet. (Surely some writer used it.)
Anaheim 3, Montreal 0
Canadiens’ desperation is evident. But they are able to do little to express it. Lost pucks and lots of chase. It’s ugly. High speed but ugly.
Shots on goal are 15-11 in favour of the visitors.
First Intermission
Anaheim 3, Montreal 0
Lots of time left, says Alain Crete.
True, and teams have not been able to build on two and three nothing leads against Montreal this season, for the most part.
But Saku hasn’t scored yet, either.
On va voir.
Old fan favourite Aaron Ward is interviewed. He’s no longer a Bruin, he’s a Duck but his French-as-a-second language is just as endearing. Interviewer Luc Gelinas est heureux aussi.
Second Period
Anaheim 3, Montreal 0
Halak is in now. Jaro!
I feel a nonsensical surge of hope. Do I really prefer Halak to Price? I assumed no. Thought it was equal. And the change has less to do with Price than it does with shaking the team out of its … well whatever it is.
Brunet says words of similar tenor.
Ducks have it again. Blake is allowed to enter left, go around the net and take aim on the other side. Halak stays with it and nothing comes of it.
Gorges gives it away.
Heritage team recovers the puck.
Canadiens exit.
The flow improves for Montreal and they are about even at creating space now. No shots yet.
Ducks finally get a longer harmless one in. Halak holds it and the faceoff is won to his left.
Plekanec line stays on.
Metropolit is the only Canadien forward who is having consistent success from shift to shift.
Long shot from Chipchura from the point. Halak stops it.
Faceoff.
Canadiens aren’t challenging in their own zone. Ducks skate like swans. Houde says les Ducks s’amusent.
C’est bien vrais.
Man, I need a refresher course. I’d rather speak French than write it. And I’d rather write English than speak it.
Spacek has it behind the net. Turns and awkwardly backhands it up the boards to the hash for Sergei.
Less dithering. More confidence.
The Ducks are easing off a bit.
Huge spaces. Ducs (Ducks) are content to wait. Mistake? Well, it’s the second of two in two nights for the Ducks, too.
Again, the Ducks make an even strength look like a power-play. Again.
Habs exit. Gorges up for Plekanec. He has a bit of space. Makes a mini-breakaway for himself. Shoots. Scores.
Anaheim 3, Montreal 1
Great speed.
Gionta line follows. Givin’ Thomas a breather.
Puck is trapped in the corner to Halak’s left.
And now it’s out.
Ducks crowd is very loud. They sound like a Canadian crowd. Into it. Well, some Canadian crowds. They sound like Buffalo, say, then.
Metropolit checks someone as they jostle for the puck. Now he is leading a small rush. Puck is lost.
Lines change.
Halak has it behind the Montreal net.
Habs move it up. Darche dumps it in.
O’Byrne is pinching. Canadiens are back into it.
Ducks response is not as brisk as the last time Montreal stepped it up. Could be trouble for the Lions. I mean Ducks.
We see a list of goal-getters. Selanne is in the six-hundred club. Talk turns to Ciccarelli. Houde mentions the controversy and the lack of entry to the Hall of Fame for Ciccarelli. Hmm. They begin chuckling as they discuss it.
I see. Indecent exposure and having assaulted some media members. But nobody brings up Pat Quinn. Double-standard. Ciccarelli ain’t a good ol boy. Quinnie is.
To be fair, Ciccarelli is in his own category as his story is more complex; a bit more nefarious.
Canadiens are working hard. Metropolit keeps getting shifts. Good. He should. He works as hard as anyone in the Eastern Conference (I don’t see enough WC games to bring out my big brush).
Neidermayer and Gomez have a brief unintelligible chat.
Gomez came in snow spraying as Hiller covered a puck. Gomez seemed to indicate that he didn’t want any trouble. And nobody responded as if he did. I like those quiet moments of understanding.
Commercial.
Remember when that Hab urinated all over a bank machine? It was a long time ago. I’m sure the machine’s been cleaned by now.
The Ducks aren’t working with great purpose anymore.
Gomez line. They outwork and outlast Anaheim on the boards.
Hamrlik is run over by Bobby Ryan at the blue line. Seemed legit. Hammer is ok. But Ryan wasn’t too friendly. Oh, those old vets. Don’t wake them up.
Brunet says that Hamrlik is not having a good time of it tonight. Hamrlik returns to the bench.
Just under three minutes.
Andrei is working. And then not working. Working. And then… skate Andrei, skate. Which Andrei do you think?
Sergei’s line is on now.
Ducks have a brief sequence. Getzlaf line. And they manage to get the puck to the point, besides. But it bounces out. Montreal is fortunate as they were in stand-around mode at the time.
Hamrlik is back on.
He has some zip to him. Yeah. He’s pepper. He’s awake.
Now he fires at a gaping net and nearly scores.
Darche gets his gloves up after bumping Hiller. Whistle.
Pyatt is helping. Tempers sparkle.
This is the line. They’re back on the bench. But they are the guys that can do it for Montreal tonight.
Faceoff is taken by Gomez. Koivu is asked to leave the circle and Getzlaf wins it.
Hamrlik handles it behind the net.
Hamrlik gets a chance to hit Ryan and he does. Legal. And with good force. I’m sure Hamrlik is not done.
Period ends.
Brunet says some optimistic things and we are shown the shots; 9-7 and 24-18 in Montreal’s favour. Brunet says that even though the team is at the end of a road trip and may be tired, if they work, good things can happen in the third. (That’s why I originally wasn’t going to share that.)
Second Intermission
Anaheim 3, Montreal 1
Demers wonders if Price thinks it’s unfair that he was benched. Dunno.
We see some AK46 shots but some AK46 non-commitals as well.
We see the hit on Marc Savard. We’re gonna be talking about this one for most of this week. Demers is very annoyed and says he is sick of these types of hits. He says that these types of hits are purposeful. He adds that kids are watching this and that this type of play validates it. The replay shows Savard taking a hit as he follows through on his shot. Demers says this is when a player is at his most vulnerable.
Rules were put in place to protect punters so that they wouldn’t take hits at the height of their follow-through on kicks. The NHL’s faux rugged attitude shouldn’t prevail. What will it take? A death? Maybe.
I find it interesting that the guys that make and comment on pro-piracy violence in hockey aren’t on the ice. How about ironic.
Matt Cooke is the perpetrator and, no surprise, he is from the province of Ontario, the great home of thug hockey values. Keep it up.
Third Period
Anaheim 3, Montreal 1
Plekanec line starts. Koivu is against them and Koivu wins the faceoff decisively. Ducks regroup and then rush. They go offside.
Is tonight the last night that Montreal plays Teemu Selanne?
AK46 is forechecking. He is chasing with good effort. Halak skates way out to play a puck. Spacek flips over him. He stays down.
Brunet thinks it’s his knee.
Trainer is out on the ice. Spacek is up on his knees. He’s up now. Back to the bench. Talking with the trainer and sitting on the bench. He appears to be ok. Alright then.
Gorges takes an awkward hit behind the net. And he’s ok.
The action is very low key. Both teams are tired. Montreal has a game to win, though.
Pouliot line hops on.
Pouliot has great speed. He doesn’t have to do much to accelerate, either. It’s rather dramatic.
Faceoff to Halak’s left. Canadiens win it.
Markov. To O’Byrne. Out. And then back in. Plekanec retrieves it. Sends it to O’Byrne whose long pass to Kostitsyn Andrei bounces away.
One more rush. AK. To the middle. Passes it. Shot. Wide.
New lines. Line changes appear slow.
Moore is in the corner. Up for Moen.
Sergei drives in with wild intent now. Through two. Veers right. Taken down. Almost gets a backhander in anyway. It’s called. Jason Blake. Blake effects an Orwellian expression. Hockey-naut.
Early repulsion from Anaheim is followed by another long clear.
Ninety seconds.
Dumped in.
Lobbed to the point.
Montreal keeps it in. They work it.
Markov shows some creativity in turning his back as he drives and pushes down the right side. Lobs it to the under-hash. Not much more. Hamrlik was on with him. Whistle.
Gorges is on with Spacek next. And Pouliot, AK46 and Plekanec are the next wave.
Brunet says that Martin is likely disappointed with AK46. All those days off and the rest from this injury and all we’re seeing is flashes. Brunet says that AK is invisible.
Now some real pressure from Montreal. Best pressure of the night. In the slot. Weaving. Shots from the point.
Now Andrei has it on the hash. Loses it. Penalty ends. Kostitsyn.
Perry gets a shot on the other end which is directly on Halak.
Commercial.
Faceoff is to Halak’s left. Puck trickles to the corner boards and is eventually lobbed out. It’s back in. Ducks are working again.
Moen line is on.
Driven in from the neutral zone. Defenceman Sheldon Brookbank exits and lofts it in for Anaheim.
Plekanec falls and exaggerates it. No call forthcoming.
Koivu is on for Anaheim.
Puck is behind the Montreal net.
Selanne keeps it for more than four seconds. Up along the boards.
Ducks can’t control it.
Work is mostly along the boards now. Gorges makes a nice move and play not to pass to the Montreal slot and gets the puck up and out of trouble.
From behind the Ducks net now, Getzlaf gets an outlet pass but can’t generate a rush.
Pace is increasing for both teams. Eminger carries it up, accelerating all the while.
Canadiens make a nice pinwheel entrance with four players on the prongs. Pouliot can’t get the shot he wants. Puck is taken off his stick.
Canadiens need a break.
Moore is asked to leave the circle. Again. And yet again. Moen takes the faceoff. Canadiens retain possession.
Long shot results. Hiller stops the high wrister from Gorges.
Faceoff.
Montreal wins it. Moore works the boars under the end line.
Loses it eventually. Good effort, though.
Gorges sends a pass from the side boards. It raises Houde’s voice but no shot results.
On the other end now.
Ducks control. They win two boards battles but Gill wins the third. Canadiens try the boards but are stopped. Back pass to Gill finally gets the team out. Just under nine minutes left in the game.
Gomez is on.
Gionta. Gomez. Markov. The offensive guys. All are working harder and putting in the extra effort to make something happen.
Houde says that passes are too long and less and less checks, though. He says the teams are getting tired.
Long glove save. Halak. Pause.
We see a bench shot of the Habs. How many of these guys care as much as, uh, the rest of us? Don’t answer.
Canadiens win the faceoff. They are fast. Pyatt is driving the slot. Kostitsyn is working very hard now. And he relaxes again. So disheartening.
Just under seven minutes left.
Gionta to Pouliot. Whack-oom! Hiller. And a juggle-fumble. Pouliot misses it.
Ducks resume.
Getzlaf makes a fool of a goalie. But as he rounds the net a Hab stick prevents a wrap-around.
Commercial mute.
Well, the hopeful phase is closing up shop early for me tonight. It’s up to these guys to re-ignite my store-front. Uh. Or something.
Five and a half minutes.
Gill and Gorges. Moore and Sergei. At least Moore gives a hoot. Eighteen linebackers? Anyone?
Five.
Minutes.
Deep. AK sends a bad pass to the slot. Turnover burnover.
Selanne and Koivu exit. Pass. Gorgeous. From Teemu to Saku. Halak was there. Saku was right in the slot. Flying in and the puck was placed perfectly.
Faceoff.
And another save almost right off the faceoff.
Rammstein blares over the PA system. What are they up to in the lovely town of Anaheim?
Just under four minutes.
Four on two for Anaheim. Halak stops a sure goal. Great save. Left pad out.
Ryan got boomed to the ice. Wanna bet it was Hammer? No replay.
Ryan is on the bench hanging his head. Those old vets don’t retaliate in the moment. No, oh no. They wait. Until the time is right. And then they getcha. Maybe twice.
Some Tim Brown stories come to mind. And most know that Steve Largent story. He waited half a season.
We see a replay of the Halak save. And Ryan was hit by the stick of his own teammate. So Hammer’s god intervened. Thor?
Uh, no. He’s Czech.
Jagr?
Shut up. And I lost the bet.
Just under two minutes.
Canadiens get too much space all of the sudden. One Hab beat three Ducks to the puck. Sent it to the slot. Gionta fired it in.
And guess who beat the three Ducks … Dominic Moore. I guess I have to call off the dawgs.
Anaheim 3, Montreal 2
Gomez line follows. Disturbed is blaring now.
Faceoff is to Halak’s right.
Gorges is deep. Three Habs trap the puck. Halak leaves the net. Gods, finally.
Habs struggle to get it under control. They give up a shot. Off the side of the net.
Montreal is in.
And out.
And in.
Moving. Waiting. People are there. People are square
We score.
Perry hits Markov in the face. Oh, the character. The lovely Corey Perry. The best that Canada has to offer.
Replay.
Ok. Markov asked for it. Questionable move. He was mocking Perry. He deserved the punch. Sorry. I don’t believe in mocking people. And Markov fell like he was shot.
Montreal 3, Anaheim 3
Carlyle looks infuriated. But he isn’t moving an inch. Fury of a statue. Martin looks irritated but relieved. I can’t stop guffawing. Markov was such a clown on that. He started mocking Perry. Raising his eyebrows, beaking and smiling.
Bottom line, I’ll still take Markov over Perry. Hey. Maybe Perry was being a Klondike thug before that. Hmm?
Overtime
Ok, we see some of the stuff that led up to the dustup. And there may have been more earlier. I’ve never seen Markov mock someone like that. It’s quite hilarious, really.
Neidermayer comes in, stickhandling. Oh, mother of luck, no. Halak slides across and stops it.
Perry hit Markov with his stick. On the wrist causing Markov to drop his glove. Aha. Everyone’s in character.
Sergei tries that “I’ll wait in the neutral zone and hip-check the guy” It fails again. Come on Sergei.
Anaheim is controlling the play. Very high shot from the blue line is trapped by Halak.
Halak is on. When isn’t he.
Faceoff to Halak’s left. They play Saku’s song. Darude.
Plekanec exits.
He has Pouliot with him. Plekanec sends a sneaky high-velocity puck at the net and Pouliot nearly deflects it.
The two rush again. This time it’s Pouliot. Waits. Waits. Shoots. Nice try.
Andrei Kostitsyn. Escapes. Near breakaway. Forced to shoot. Right into the goalie. But the angle wasn’t there.
Faceoff.
Gionta and Gomez.
Pass and shot right off the faceoff. Gomez to Gionta. Stopped
More pressure a sequence later.
But the Ducks create a three-on-two. Halak extends to third defenceman status. Foils it. Then he doesn’t see a puck that he stops. It’s cleared.
Canadiens respond with some awkward pressure of their own.
Saku is on the ice. Not tonight. Just not tonight. Please.
Selanne is with him.
Markov, Pouliot and O’Byrne do good work to keep the puck from the middle. Canadiens re-enter.
Plekanec leaves the ice.
Jason Blake enters on the right. Swerves left and uses the screen. Shot. Little high.
Stopped. Just under the left arm.
Faceoff to Halak’s left. Just fifteen seconds left in the period.
Gomez and Gionta. Spacek advances on the right. Looks for someone. Nobody. Defenced.
Commercial. And the shootout to follow.
Shootout
Brunet says that the Canadiens showed good composure in the third and that they dominated that period. I guess. That’s a bit strong. But they did up their game a tad. Just a tad.
Carlyle is hiding his disappointment behind his ferocity. I’d like a few recordings of him in the locker room. Gold.
After Markov got hit he immediately looked to the ref with this “what did I do” expression. They keep showing and I keep laughing. He’s hilarious. Ah, he’s our guy.
Halak scrapes the crease. I should scrape my kitchen floor before cooking.
Perry is first.
Halak stops him. Loooong swoop from right to left.
Markov is next. Markov is smiling a bit. Hilarious.
Shot and wide.
[Expletive deleted]
Getzlaf is next.
Slow. Then a quick acceleration. Stick and puck, right and left. Through the legs.
Gomez next.
Advances. Hesitates. High shot. Glove save. Hiller is a leftie.
Selanne now.
Brunet and Houde remark that Koivu is not the guy.
Selanne shoots. Too high.
So now one last chance. Gionta.
Score and go on. Miss and go home. Or back on the bus.
Gionta advances. Stopped. But Hiller drops it into the net. Weird.
Tied.
James Wisniewski is next. But now they decide to check the bunker in Toronto. That’s what Brunet called it. And he says it’s the term used.
It’s a goal.
Neidermayer listens to the explanation. He seems unconvinced. “He had it.” More discussion. Who cares.
Wisniewski.
Skates in. Fakes. Freezes him. Misses. Fans. Halak looked beaten.
Plekanec.
In and it’s win.
Eeeeeeee-yaaah!!!
Le but, le but, le but, le but!!!
Montreal 4
Anaheim 3 SO
HDS Stars: Ryan Getzlaf, Scott Neidermayer, Jonas Hiller
RDS Stars: Andrei Markov, Corey Perry, Brian Gionta
Back to normal. None of our stars match. I pick em before they get back from commercial. Bon soir.
I changed my mind.
HDS Stars: Tomas Plekanec, Scott Neidermayer, Jonas Hiller
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