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Second-straight comeback win pushes FHSU women’s soccer win streak to five

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State pushed its win streak to five matches on Thursday evening (Oct. 30) in Kearney, Neb., with a 4-1 comeback win. The Tigers moved to 11-4-2 overall and 9-2-2 in the MIAA with the win, while the Lopers fell to 4-11-2 and 4-8-1 in the MIAA.

Nebraska-Kearney took the early lead in the match with a goal at 7:51 by Meaghan Pasbrig, but the Tigers found the equalizer just before the half at 42:31 as Mallory Diedrich bent a corner kick all the way into the goal.

Diederich, one of Fort Hays State’s defenders, was not done with her scoring act as she put the Tigers in front at 61:03 on an 18-yard kick from the right side of the box. That would be the start of a three-goal half for the Tigers as they ran away to earn a regular season sweep over the Lopers.

At 81:59, Hailey Davey added a goal from about 20 yards out on a breakaway after an assist from Hannah Smith. Fiorella Fustagno put an exclamation point on the win with a goal at 88:22 on a kick from the right side of the box from about 12 yards out. Jasmine Beaulieu notched an assist on the goal.

The Tigers doubled up the Lopers in shots in the match, 14-7. Goalkeeper Kristen Thompson moved to 11-4-2 on the season, making three saves.

Fort Hays State wraps up the regular season at home on Sunday (Nov. 2) when it hosts Washburn at FHSU Soccer Stadium. Match time is set for 3:30 pm and the five seniors on the squad will be recognized prior to the match.

The Tigers have locked up hosting a first-round conference tournament match, which will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 5 at 6 pm. Opponent is still to be determined following the final weekend of conference play.

No. 22 FHSU men’s soccer ties Upper Iowa in final MIAA game of regular season

FHSU Athletics

No. 22 Fort Hays State played to its second consecutive draw on Thursday (Oct. 30), tying Upper Iowa, 1-1, in Fayette, Iowa.

The Tigers (11-3-3, 8-2-2 MIAA) extended their unbeaten streak to 11 games with the draw, which closed out the conference portion of its schedule.

After over 75 minutes of scoreless play, Fort Hays State grabbed a lead in the 79th minute when Brian Ness netted his third goal of the season. Austin Clifton assisted the play, firing a shot of his own that rebounded off the crossbar into Ness’ possession, who scored the game’s first goal.

As regulation wore down, Upper Iowa tied the match at 87:59 – sending the teams to overtime after Johnny McBeth’s seventh goal of the year.

Tanner Brock and Clifton led the team with three shots on the afternoon, each putting one on goal, while Joe Albright and Addison Pauler had two shots apiece.

Goalkeeper Kent Frenud picked up seven saves on the afternoon, allowing one goal in 110 minutes played.

The Tigers have locked up a berth to the MIAA postseason, beginning Nov. 6 in Olathe, Kan., and were the No. 2 team in the most recent NCAA Central Region rankings, released Wednesday.

FHSU returns to Hays on Sunday (Nov. 2) for Senior Day, taking on West Texas A&M at 1 p.m.

Bumgarner, Giants beat KC to win World Series

By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A giant, indeed.

Madison Bumgarner punctuated his World Series performance for the ages by pitching the San Francisco Giants to their third championship in five years with a 3-2 win over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

The big left-hander came out of the bullpen to throw five scoreless innings on two days’ rest, saving a Series pushed to the limit. And by winning Game 7 on the road, Bumgarner and the Giants succeeded where no team had in 3 1/2 decades.

“I wasn’t thinking about innings or pitch count. I was just thinking about getting outs, getting outs, until I couldn’t get them anymore and we needed someone else,” Bumgarner said in a monotone that made it sound as though he was talking about batting practice.

A two-out misplay in the ninth almost wrecked it for him.

Bumgarner had retired 14 in a row when Alex Gordon sent a drive to center field. The pitcher pointed his glove in the air, thinking it could be the final out, but the ball fell in front of Gregor Blanco for a single.

Blanco allowed it to skip past him to the wall, and left fielder Juan Perez kicked the ball before throwing to shortstop Brandon Crawford in short left, holding Gordon at third.

“When it got by him, I had a smile on my face. I thought maybe I could score, but he got to it quickly enough,” Gordon said. “I just put my head down and ran, almost fell around second base, was just waiting for Jirsch (third base coach Mike Jirschele) to give me the signal. It was a good hold. He had the ball in plenty of time.”

From there, Blanco hoped for the best.

“We just need one more out. We got this. Let’s do it,” he thought to himself.

Bumgarner, the Series MVP, retired Salvador Perez on a foulout to third baseman Pablo Sandoval near the Giants’ dugout. The 25-year-old ace was immediately embraced by catcher Buster Posey, and the rest of the Giants rushed to the mound to join the victory party.

Most of the San Francisco players tossed their gloves high in the air as they ran to the center of the diamond.

“What a warrior he is, and truly incredible what he did throughout the postseason,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “I just told him I just can’t believe what he accomplished through all this. He’s such a humble guy, and we rode him pretty good.”

Three days after throwing 117 pitches in a four-hit shutout to win Game 5, Bumgarner tossed 68 more and dropped his record-low career Series ERA to a minuscule 0.25. He’s allowed one run and 14 hits in five outings covering 36 innings.

“Yeah, it was hopeless,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Bumgarner initially was credited with the win. But nearly an hour after the final out, the official scorers awarded it to Jeremy Affeldt, who was in the game when San Francisco took the lead.

Affeldt pitched 2 1-3 innings of scoreless relief in his longest outing since July 2012. He was helped by the first World Series reversal in the era of expanded replay, which gave the Giants a double play on Eric Hosmer’s sharp grounder.

Rookie second baseman Joe Panik made a diving stop and flipped to Crawford with his glove for the relay, a key play that prevented a potential Royals rally.

Bumgarner joined Cincinnati’s Rawley Eastwick in 1975 as the only pitchers with at least two wins and a save in a World Series, and the 15-out save set a Fall Classic record.

With it all, Bumgarner etched his place in postseason lore among the likes of Christy Mathewson, Babe Ruth, Sandy Koufax, Bob Gibson, Reggie Jackson, Randy Johnson, Curt Schilling and David Ortiz — players whose indelible October performances led their team to titles.

Posey expected Bumgarner to throw three innings, then turn over the game to setup man Sergio Romo and closer Santiago Casilla — who threw four pitches in the entire Series.

“But he just kept rolling,” Posey said. “I mean, it’s unbelievable.”

Consecutive sacrifice flies by Michael Morse and Brandon Crawford put the Giants ahead 2-0 in the second against Jeremy Guthrie, but Tim Hudson gave the lead right back in the bottom half on Gordon’s RBI double and Omar Infante’s sacrifice fly.

Morse hit a go-ahead single in the fourth on a 99 mph fastball from reliever Kelvin Herrera to break a 2-all tie, and the Giants eked out a battle of bullpens on a night when both starting pitchers made unusually quick exits.

The Giants were dubbed a “Band of Misfits” in 2010 when they beat Texas to win the franchise’s first title since 1954 in New York. Two years later, they swept Detroit for another championship.

And this time, they became the second NL team with three titles in a five-year span, matching Stan Musial’s St. Louis Cardinals of 1942-46.

Every other year. It’s the closest thing to a baseball dynasty in the 21st century.

Home teams had won nine straight Game 7s in the Series since Pittsburgh’s victory at Baltimore in 1979, including the Royals’ 11-0 rout of St. Louis in 1985. Teams hosting the first two games had won 23 of the last 28 titles, including five in a row. And the Giants had lost all four of their previous World Series pushed to the limit.

But before a pumped-up, blue-and-white-clad crowd of 40,535 that hoped noise and passion could lift the small-market Royals to a title that seemed improbable when Kansas City was languishing two games under .500 in mid-July, the Giants won the second all-wild card World Series, 12 years after losing Game 7 to the Angels in the first.

Hudson and Guthrie combined for 15 outs — matching the fewest by Game 7 starters. Hudson, at 39, became the oldest Game 7 starter. The 35-year-old Guthrie took the loss.

With his shaggy hair making him look every bit a gunslinger, Bumgarner entered to boos in the bottom of the fifth for his first relief appearance since the 2010 NL playoffs. He coated his long arms with rosin and groomed the pocked-up mound with his spikes.

Bumgarner gave up an opposite-field single to his first batter, Infante, and didn’t allow another runner until the ninth. Bumgarner yielded two hits, struck out four and walked none. He pitched 52 2-3 postseason innings, 4 1-3 more than the previous mark set by Schilling for Arizona in 2001, and finished with 270 innings combined, including the regular season.

MadBum became king of SoMa, and from Nob Hill to North Beach, from The Marina to The Mission, San Francisco celebrated another title won by Kung Fu Panda and Hunter Pence.

Pence batted .444 in the Series and Sandoval, a free-agent-to-be playing perhaps his last game for the Giants, finished at .429 following a three-hit night. In an era when pitching and computer-aided defense has supplanted steroids-saturated sluggers, baseball’s dominant team established itself in the tech-fueled, boomtown by the Bay.

The Giants, a 20-1 longshot when 2014 odds were first posted a year ago, won their eighth title and third since moving from New York to San Francisco after the 1957 season. They also have won 10 straight postseason rounds, one shy of the record set by the New York Yankees from 1998-01.

Most of it this year was due to Bumgarner.

“He didn’t lose a bit of energy. He didn’t lose a bit of stuff,” injured teammate Matt Cain said. “Sometimes you wonder if he’s got a pulse.”

THE CORE

Eight players have been on all three Series rosters for the Giants in the past five years: Affeldt, Bumgarner, Casilla, Tim Lincecum, Javier Lopez, Posey, Romo and Sandoval. Cain, a member of the first two title teams, was hurt this October. Before this run, manager John McGraw (1905, ’21-’22) was the only Giant with three titles. Bochy became the 10th manager to win three World Series titles — the other nine are all in the Hall of Fame.

FHSU wrestling tabbed third in MIAA Preseason Poll

FHSU Athletics

After a fourth place finish in last year’s MIAA Championships and NCAA Central Super Regional, the Fort Hays State University wrestling team was picked to finish tied for third in the MIAA Preseason Coaches’ Poll entering the 2014-15 season.

The Tigers trail only Nebraska-Kearney, which finished second at the NCAA Championships last season, and Lindenwood, second at last year’s MIAA Championships.  UNK received all five first-place votes and 25 total points, while LWU had 20 points.

FHSU’s 15 points was tied with Central Oklahoma, pairing the two teams in the third spot for the poll.  The Tigers went 9-5-1 last season in duals last season, finishing 3-3 overall in conference matchups.  Five wrestlers (Jon Inman, Tanner Kriss, Mitchell Means, C.J. Napier and Josh Rodriguez) competed at the NCAA Championships last season, with Napier and Kriss earning All-American nods after fourth and sixth-place finishes at their respective weight classes.  Inman (184 pounds), a sophomore this season, and Rodriguez (174 pounds), a senior, return for FHSU this season and were ranked sixth in the first set of individual rankings for NCAA Division II, released earlier this week.

Other key returners for Fort Hays State are seniors Bryce Lewis (165 pounds) and Trey Page (285 pounds) and juniors Noah Killip (141 pounds), Bradley Little (165 pounds), Adam Ludwin (125 pounds) and Symon Seaton (133 pounds).  Page and Ludwin were both one match away from reaching the NCAA Championships last season.

Rounding out the final two spots in the poll is Central Missouri (10 points) and Newman (five points).

The Tigers open the 2014-15 season with the Black and Gold Scrimmage on Tuesday, Nov. 4. FHSU’s regular season opener is Saturday, Nov. 8 at the Bethany Swede Open in Lindsborg, Kan.

The complete MIAA preseason poll is below…

Rank Team (First-Place Votes) Points
1 Nebraska-Kearney (5) 25
2 Lindenwood 20
T3 Fort Hays State 15
T3 Central Oklahoma 15
5 Central Missouri 10
6 Newman 5

 

Fort Hays State holds weekly football press conference

Fort Hays State Weekly Football Press Conference
October 28, 2014

Head Coach Chris Brown

 

 

Linebacker Brock Long

 

Offensive Lineman Luke Edney

 

Defensive Lineman Jesse Trent

 

Royals rout Giants to force Game 7 in Series

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A couple hundred fans stood behind the Royals dugout for more than a half-hour after the final out, screaming and waving white rally towels.

Bring on Game 7!

Yordano Ventura, a 23-year-old rookie pitching with a heavy heart and the initials of late St. Louis outfielder Oscar Taveras on his cap, allowed three hits over seven stifling innings. Kansas City’s batters broke open the game with a seven-run second and battered the San Francisco Giants 10-0 Tuesday night to tie the World Series at three games apiece.

“This is what we all prepared for. This is why we play the game,” Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer said.

As bouncers rolled by infielders and bloops dropped in front of outfielders, the raucous roar at Kauffman Stadium swelled with every hit in the second and then got louder the rest of the night. Lorenzo Cain looped a two-run single — one of eight Royals to get hits in the seven-run burst — and Hosmer chopped a two-run double over shortstop.

“Guys stepped up in a big way tonight,” Cain said.

Lornezo Cain hits a soft fly ball to center field scoring Mike Moustakas and Alcides Escobar in the Royals 7-run 2nd inning Tuesday at Kauffman tadium. Photo: Chris Vleisides)
Lornezo Cain hits a soft fly ball to center field scoring Mike Moustakas and Alcides Escobar in the Royals 7-run 2nd inning Tuesday at Kauffman Stadium. (Photo: Chris Vleisides)

Jeremy Guthrie starts Wednesday night for Kansas City and Tim Hudson for San Francisco in a rematch of Game 3, won by Kansas City 3-2. Hudson, 39, will become the oldest Game 7 starter in Series history.

“We’re confident,” the Royals’ Billy Butler said. “Jeremy, every time out, gives us a chance to win.”

Lurking is Madison Bumgarner, ready to pitch in relief after suffocating the Royals on a total of one run in winning Games 1 and 5. Giants manager Bruce Bochy elected not to start him on two days’ rest.

“This guy is human. I mean, you can’t push him that much,” Bochy said. “He’ll be available if we need him, but to start him, I think that’s asking a lot.”

Kansas City can be comfortable in this bit of history: Home teams have won nine straight Game 7s in the Series since Pittsburgh’s victory at Baltimore in 1979, including the Royals’ 11-0 rout of St. Louis in 1985. And the Giants have lost all four of their World Series finales pushed to the limit.

“I had a very, very strong feeling that whoever won Game 6 was going to win Game 7,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We have to wait until tomorrow to see if my theory’s correct.”

Teams with the home-field advantage have won 23 of the last 28 titles, including five in a row. This Series has followed the exact pattern of the only other all-wild card matchup in 2002, when the Giants won the opener, fell behind 2-1, took a 3-2 lead and lost the last two games at Anaheim.

“I can’t wait to get out there tomorrow and have some fun,” Hudson said.

There was a moment of silence before the game in honor of Taveras, the 22-year-old killed in an automobile accident Sunday in the Dominican Republic. Ventura wrote “RIP O.T #18” in silver marker on the left side of his cap and brought a Dominican flag to his postgame interview.

“From the minute that I found out about Oscar, I said this game was going to be dedicated to him,” Ventura said through a translator. “I prepared myself mentally and physically for this game, and I’m very proud to be a Dominican, and that’s why I brought the flag.”

He escaped his only trouble in the third, when he walked the bases loaded with one out and got Buster Posey to ground a 97 mph fastball into a double play. Ventura threw fastballs on 81 of 100 pitches, reaching up to 100 mph. Yost was able to rest the hard-throwing back of his bullpen: Kelvin Herrera and Wade Davis enter Game 7 with two days off and closer Greg Holland with four.

Alcides Escobar scores on Lorenzo Cains soft fly ball to center field giving the Royals a 3-0 lead in the 2nd inning of Game 6 of the World Series at Kuaffman Stadium. Photo: Chris Vleisides)
Alcides Escobar scores on Lorenzo Cains soft fly ball to center field giving the Royals a 3-0 lead in the 2nd inning of Game 6 of the World Series at Kuaffman Stadium. (Photo: Chris Vleisides)

Kansas City out-hit the Giants 15-6 in another blowout in the first Series in which five games were decided by five runs or more. All nine Royals had hits by the third, matching the mark set by Arizona against the Yankees in Game 6 in 2001.

Cain drove in three runs and was among six Royals with two hits each. Mike Moustakas homered in the seventh against Hunter Strickland, ending a 36-inning homerless streak in the Series, the longest since 1945.

Peavy was charged with five runs and six hits in 1 1-3 innings, leaving with a career Series record of 0-2 with a 9.58 ERA in three starts. His record at Kauffman Stadium is 1-7 with a 7.28 ERA.

“It’s hugely disappointing. It’s as disappointing as it can get,” he said.

San Francisco had scored 15 straight runs entering the night, but the Royals rocked Peavy and Yusmeiro Petit in the 32-minute bottom of the second.

Moustakas grounded an RBI double over the first-base bag, past Brandon Belt and down the right-field line. Alcides Escobar hit a one-out bouncer to Belt. With Peavy yelling “Home!” Belt checked Salvador Perez at third and then tried to out-race Escobar to first base rather than throw to second baseman Joe Panik, who already was at the base. Escobar slid past Belt’s failed tag attempt and into first to reach on the infield hit.

“It’s a play you can definitely learn from,” Belt said. “Unfortunately, it happened in the World Series.”

Nori Aoki chased Peavy after 42 pitches with an RBI single, Cain’s blooped double off Petit made it 4-0 and Hosmer chopped a ball that hopped over drawn-in shortstop Brandon Crawford for a double that made it 6-0. The rout was on.

“We’re going to make history. The only way to make history is to win,” Jarrod Dyson said.

HOME COOKING

Home teams are 23-3 in Games 6 and 7 combined since 1982. The last eight home teams that won Game 6 to even the Series also went on to win Game 7, and no road team has lost Game 6 and rebounded to win the title since the 1975 Cincinnati Reds at Boston’s Fenway Park.

TMP-Marian boys soccer advances in 4-1A regional

The TMP-Marian boys soccer team advances to the finals of the 4-1A South Central Regional #1 with a 2-1 win over Wichita Independent Monday afternoon at the Bickle-Schmidt Sports Complex. Eduardo Gonzalez scored two second half goals as the Monarchs rally from a 1-0 halftime deficit.

TMP-Marian (9-7-1)will now face top-seeded Rose Hill Friday in Rose Hill. The Rockets improve to 16-1 with a 9-0 shutout of Buhler Tuesday.

FHSU volleyball’s win streak snapped by No. 4 UNK

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State saw its five-game win streak snapped at the hands of No. 4 Nebraska-Kearney on Tuesday (Oct. 28), dropping a 3-0 (25-17, 26-24, 25-14) contest at Pass, Set, Pink Night.

FHSU slipped back to one game under .500 with the loss, sitting at 12-13 overall on the season and 6-10 in conference play.  The Tigers remain just one game short of tying their single-season conference win mark as members of the MIAA.

FHSU hung tough until 8-all in the first set, but allowed a 5-0 run by the Lopers that gave the visitors breathing room to finish out the set, 25-17.

Coach Kurt Kohler Interview

The Tigers had a chance to tie the match in the second set, but couldn’t pull off the set win after looking at set point (24-23).  Earlier in the set, tied 10-all, the Lopers broke out to a 13-11 lead, but FHSU answered, setting in motion back-and-forth play that brought the game to 21-all.

FHSU grabbed control at 22-21, 23-22 and 24-23, but all three times saw UNK answer.  At FHSU’s set point, 24-23, UNK broke off with three straight points to take the set, 26-24, and spoil the Tigers’ win.

Out of the break, FHSU led 3-1, but was UNK answer to take a 4-3 lead.  Soon after, tied 5-5, UNK used three straight kills from Caitlin Broadwell to take the lead for good (up 8-5).  The Tigers couldn’t recover, falling in the third set, 25-14.

Mallory Flagor led the team with 10 kills on the evening, hitting double-digits for the 18th time this season.  Flagor’s three blocks (one solo) was also tied for the team lead, with Callie Christensen.

In the back row, Keanu Bradley dug up 18 attacks, while Kristen Conor had nine digs to go with 13 assists, second on the team behind Reagan Vanderplas (17 assists).

The Tigers close out the home portion of their 2014 schedule this weekend with matches against Lindenwood on Saturday (Nov. 1) and Central Missouri on Sunday (Nov. 2).  Senior Day is Sunday at Gross Memorial Coliseum.

HHS boys soccer falls in regional final

The Hays High boys soccer team gave the No. 2 seed Augusta Orioles all they wanted, but in the end, Augusta advances to the 4-1A South Central Regional #2 finals with a 4-3 win Tuesday in Augusta. The Indians end their season 3-12-3 while Augusta improves to 12-4-1.

Augusta scored three goals in the first seven minutes, but Hays rallied over the next 70 minutes to make a game of it. Ethan Nunnery scored in the 13th and 29th minute to pull the Indians within a goal at the half. Nunnery scored his third goal of the match seven minutes into the second half to tie the match 3-3.

The Orioles scored what proved to be the game winning goal in the 26th minute of the second half.

In the 38th minute, Nunnery scored what appeared to be the equalizer but the goal was not allowed because of a foul.

K-State ninth in inaugural college football playoff rankings

Kansas State Athletics

MANHATTAN, Kan. – With its 6-1 record heading into this weekend’s matchup with Oklahoma State, Kansas State was ranked ninth in the inaugural College Football Playoff Top 25 rankings announced Tuesday on ESPN by the 12-person committee.

The Wildcats were one of five Big 12 teams to debut in the poll with TCU (7th), Baylor (13th), Oklahoma (18th) and West Virginia (20th) also ranked. Auburn, one of K-State’s non-conference opponents this season, was ranked third.

The selection committee will prepare six more rankings this season, including the final one on Selection Day, Sunday, December 7. The top four teams in the final rankings will play in the semifinals on January 1, 2015, at the Rose Bowl and the Sugar Bowl.

K-State (6-1, 4-0) returns to action on Saturday when the Cowboys (5-3, 3-2) visit Bill Snyder Family Stadium for a 7 p.m., ABC-televised matchup.

FHSU men’s soccer up two spots in NSCAA Rankings

FHSU Athletics

The Tiger Men’s Soccer program jumped two spots to No. 22 in the latest NSCAA National Rankings, released Tuesday by the organization. Fort Hays State, slotted 24th in last week’s rankings, stretched its unbeaten streak to 10 games after going 1-0-1 in MIAA competition last week.

FHSU, tabbed second in the first regional rankings (released last Wednesday), is joined in the national poll by MIAA opponent Northeastern State, which moved up one spot to No. 14. The Tigers and RiverHawks played to a 1-1 draw on Sunday.

The Tigers have two games remaining in the season, closing out conference play at Upper Iowa on Thursday (Oct. 30) before returning to FHSU Soccer Stadium for Senior Day on Nov. 2, versus West Texas A&M.

The complete NSCAA Top 25 is below…

1. University Of Charleston 2 14-0-1
2. Seattle Pacific University 3 14-0-1
3. Young Harris College 5 12-0-1
4. Lynn University 4 11-1-1
5. Southern New Hampshire University 1 13-1-1
6. Quincy University 6 14-0-2
7. Southern Connecticut State University 7 13-1-0
8. Mercyhurst University 11 14-2-0
9. Limestone College 12 12-1-0
10. Cal Poly Pomona 8 15-1-1
11. Colorado Mesa University 10 13-2-1
12. Tiffin University NR 11-3-1
13. St. Edward’s University 16 11-2-1
14. Northeastern State University 15 12-3-1
15. California State University-Los Angeles 17 13-2-0
16. Christian Brothers University NR 12-2-0
17. Notre Dame College 19 10-3-2
18. Saginaw Valley State University 20 11-2-2
19. Saint Leo University 9 10-2-2
20. New York Institute Of Technology 21 11-1-1
21. Barton College NR 10-2-0
22. Fort Hays State University 24 11-3-2
23. Midwestern State University RV 10-2-2
24. Drury University 13 13-3-0
25. Merrimack College 23 11-2-2

Also receiving votes: Azusa Pacific University (12), Wingate University (10), Bloomsburg University (9), Metropolitan State University of Denver (6), Francis Marion University (5), University of Alabama-Huntsville (4), West Virginia Wesleyan (1)

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