Public Voting Now Open for Cartier Racing Awards

The public is now able to vote on the 2020 Cartier Racing Awards at www.cartierracingawards.co.uk. Forms for those wishing to vote by post will be available in the coming days in the Daily Telegraph and Racing Post. All current standings across all Cartier Award divisions are available at the Cartier Racing Awards website above.

“It has been an incredible sporting season, albeit an unusual one in light of the new regulation the racing world has adapted to,” said Cartier UK Managing Director Laurent Feniou. “I am truly inspired by these displays of resilience, capturing the true essence and spirit of the sport.”

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Haggas Draft Tops Brighter Trade

NEWMARKET, UK–It’s a conundrum of the training profession: do you serve your client better by exhausting every last ounce of a horse’s potential, or by preserving a degree of residual value when the time has come to cash out and restock?

You see exemplary operators at both ends of that spectrum, but only rarely does anyone manage to reconcile both obligations as expertly as William Haggas did with his principal draft on the second day of the Autumn Horses-in-Training Sale at Tattersalls.

Of 17 Somerville Lodge horses into the ring, three would emerge first, second and joint-fifth in the table of the sale’s top lots to date. This, to be clear, is no mean addition to their trainer’s many credits as one of the consummate practitioners of his calling.

This is the kind of thing that ensures ringside interest at this auction, regardless of the tempo of business. And it proved a session when several other trainers salvaged rather better returns for their patrons, in this most difficult of years, than on a slow opening day.

Yes, turnover was again down on the equivalent day last year, if hardly to the same extent as Monday. But the caveats mentioned then still apply: the year-on-year variability of stock, even at the best of times, at sales of this nature; and the compression of so much quality, between the Juddmonte draft and the colt that started favourite for the Derby itself, in Wednesday’s catalogue.

The session turned over 6,570,700gns, down 19% from 8,134,300gns last year. That translated into a mild decline in average, to 27,264gns from 31,286gns; though the median was well down at 12,000gns from 18,000gns. For once, the year’s strongest trend could not match a remarkable 91% clearance at the equivalent session in 2019, but remained healthy at 86%.

These indices have moved the first half of the sale much closer, in overall performance, to last year: despite a much lower aggregate, the average hitherto has closed to 22,081gns, compared with 30,154gns; and the median to 10,000gns, as against 16,000gns.

Piranesi Leads Sale at 300,000gns

Top billing among the Haggas draft went to Piranesi (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), who had dropped back to a mile at Ascot earlier in the month to win for the second time in four starts. He is bred with no ceiling, as a half-brother to G1 Racing Post Trophy winner Rivet (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) out of a Galileo (Ire) half-sister to Superstar Leo (Ire) (College Chapel {GB}), the flying filly who has gained fresh celebrity as second dam of dual G1 Prix de la Foret winner One Master (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}).

And Jane Chapple-Hyam, who signed a 300,000gns docket for the 3-year-old gelding (lot 675), felt that he has plenty of scope to keep developing with maturity. “I’m just the caretaker trainer,” she said. “He’ll be off abroad, but I can’t say where yet. He’s for an overseas client, we work together, and we felt he was a good-looking horse who liked the distance the other day and hopefully there’s more improvement in him.”

Since himself leaving Haggas, sibling Rivet has been campaigned in Hong Kong and Australia and it may yet prove significant that Chapple-Hyam has good connections in both locations. But there was no guesswork required about the destination of stakes-placed 4-year-old Desert Icon (Fr) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and 84-rated 3-year-old Born A King (GB) (Frankel {GB}), for whom John Ferguson gave 210,000gns and 120,000gns as Lots 664 and 668, respectively.

He was acting on behalf of Chris Waller, as indeed would be the case when he gave 190,000gns for Crystal Pegasus (GB) (Australia {GB}) in the draft of Sir Michael Stoute. This Sir Evelyn De Rothschild home-bred, presented as lot 697, had taken seven attempts to break his maiden but then followed up in a Yarmouth handicap last month. He is certainly entitled to keep progressing, being out of a half-sister to elite scorers Crystal Ocean (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and Hillstar (GB) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}).

Another six-figure yield from the Somerville Lodge draft, meanwhile, was the juvenile Royal Address (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}), acquired as a Doncaster yearling by Blandford Bloodstock for £45,000 and sold here–a month after completing a hat-trick in listed company at Chantilly–for 170,000gns to Emmanuel de Seroux of Narvick International.

Lot 687 will continue her career in California in the silks of Marsha Naify. “A beautiful mover and she looks the type to do well out there,” de Seroux said. “She has plenty of speed, she’s athletic, and looks very sound. Of course, she’s a stakes winner already so will have breeding value one day, but she’ll only be turning three so let’s hope she can win a Grade I first.”

Gaining Admission to the Ballydoyle Party

De Seroux had already shown his faith in the graduates of a top-class stable when signing the first six-figure docket of the sale for Numen (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) (lot 223) the previous day. Acting for the same, unnamed client, he gave 160,000gns for the 3-year-old Party Season (American Pharoah) (lot 627) just four days after the colt broke his maiden in good style at Dundalk.

This looked a good buy. A half-brother to Airdrie’s promising young stallion Upstart (Flatter), he had cost $1 million as a Saratoga yearling-bred by Mrs. Gerald A. Nielsen and sold through Summerfield–and his two previous starts for Ballydoyle had both been on heavy ground. There could be plenty more to come in a different environment.

“He won well on the all-weather the other day,” de Seroux reasoned. “So maybe he could switch to dirt. But I don’t say that he is necessarily going to America. As with yesterday’s horse, we will keep all the options open for now. But we love the American Pharoahs, and bought a few last year.”

The latent potential even in graduates of a stable as thorough and accomplished as Ballydoyle had been reiterated just before the sale by the G1 Cox Plate success of Sir Dragonet (Ire) (Camelot {GB}). And the top lot of the Ballydoyle draft, Keats (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), will also be heading to Australia after Armando Duarte landed lot 623 with a single bid at 200,000gns for Ballymore Stables Australia / Paul Moroney Bloodstock.

Keats, who crowned a busy campaign with a listed success at Cork last month, is out of the very fast Airwave (GB) (Air Express {Ire}), whose daughter Meow (Ire) (Storm Cat) has produced dual Classic winner Churchill (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and his sister Clemmie (Ire), who emulated Airwave’s success in the G1 Cheveley Park S.

Moroney’s brother Mike will take charge of Keats at Flemington. Duarte has been serving as their eyes and ears here.

“I’ve known Paul 16 or 17 years, we’ve become good friends, and I know just what he likes and doesn’t like,” Duarte explained. “So since he couldn’t make the trip this year–he’s in quarantine in Australia having gone to the Gold Coast for the sales–I video every single thing that may be a fault until we make sure we’re all right. And this was our pick of the sale. Normally we’d be looking for a stayer but he looks a miler, or will maybe get a mile and quarter. And he came very highly recommended by Mick Flanagan, who works closely with Coolmore Australia. It was perhaps more than we wanted to pay, but we think we have a nice horse with a future.”

Perhaps the best-bred horse in the whole catalogue, never mind just in the Ballydoyle draft, was Nobel Prize (Ire) (Galileo)–a brother to Highland Reel (Ire) and his accomplished siblings. Their dam Hveger (Aus) (Danehill) is herself out of a no less celebrated mare in Circles of Gold (Aus) (Marscay {Aus}), so even the nose by which Nobel Prize landed a Group 3 prize at Dundalk this summer might make him eligible as a stallion in some jurisdictions or disciplines.

Such is certainly the way John Walsh was thinking in giving 170,000gns for lot 714 on behalf of an unnamed patron, who will now export Nobel Prize for a stud career. “It’s a fabulous page and he’s a big, strapping 16.1 horse,” the agent said. “My client has pursued him for a while. I remember being impressed when the horse won at Naas as a 2-year-old, though a very late foal [May 7]. There’s been interest in various countries. It’s an international pedigree and would work anywhere, the same Galileo-Danehill cross as Frankel.”

The Force Is with Fawzi

The compliments earlier extended to William Haggas would doubtless prompt him to remark that he could have had no better mentor, in terms of a professional approach to this sale, than Sir Mark Prescott.

The discipline and demeanour of the Heath House string was as impressive as ever, and came as no surprise to Oliver St Lawrence, who gave 160,000gns for Glen Force (Ire) (Gleneagles {Ire}) on behalf of Fawzi Nass.  “He came highly recommended by the trainer,” the agent said. “We have horses with him so if he has put us away, he’ll be for the high jump.”

That typical flourish of mischief did not alter the fact that lot 721, unusually for the stable, had only tried a distance beyond a mile when winning for a second time in a Nottingham handicap last month.

Other yards to achieve excellent overseas dividends for clients included Roger Charlton, who mustered 140,000gns from Californian interests to help defray costs of the monarch’s Turf operation through her 89-rated homebred Evening Sun (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}) (lot 750); Sir Michael Stoute, whose productive sale of Crystal Pegasus was noted earlier and who later secured a 150,000gns private sale (with Australian trainer Annabel Neasham through Blandford Bloodstock) for dual Group 3 winner Zaaki (GB) (Leroidesanimaux {Brz}) (lot 706); and David O’Meara, who has nursed King’s Charisma (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) from a rating of 65 to 86 in winning three handicaps to gain a 170,000gns transfer to Australian Bloodstock / Ronald Rauscher (lot 770). King’s Charisma was bought out of Book 2 here a couple of years ago by Jeremy Brummitt for just 20,000gns.

A Profitable Adventure

The coup of the day was supervised by that astute horseman Andrew Slattery, who counts jumps champion Faugheen (Ire) (Germany) among his many discoveries among young bloodstock.

Ascot Adventure (GB) (Mayson {GB}) was originally purchased as a Tattersalls Ascot yearling by Five Star Bloodstock for just £4,800, but was scratched from the Goresbridge breeze-ups by Clenagh Castle Stud. Having been saddled by Slattery to score impressively on debut at Cork last month, he arrived here as wildcard lot 746B–and realized 150,000gns from Woodhurst Construction.

That is the Potters Barr business of Kevin Bailey, who will be putting a syndicate together with John Fitzpatrick. The two friends were standing with Roger Fell, but teasingly remarked that no trainer will be chosen until the remaining shares were sold.

“He’s a very nice 2-year-old and won his maiden really well,” said Fitzpatrick. “We think he will make a really nice sprinter next year.”

“He has a bit of size about him as well, so there is some improvement as he grows and that is what you want,” added Bailey. “We’ll give him a break now, and next year will go to war.”

Bailey had a stake in that splendid globe-trotter Presvis (GB) (Sakhee), who amassed over £4 million in prizemoney at places like Meydan, Sha Tin and Kranji. “Let’s hope this fellow will take us to some nice places too,” he said.

Station Stays on Fast Track

Three smart operations converged productively in Dubai Station (GB) (Brazen Beau {Aus}), who realized 150,000gns as lot 554. One of many modestly priced yearlings to have achieved Pattern success for Karl Burke–a 30,000gns graduate of Book 2, he was placed at Royal Ascot as a juvenile and this year added the G3 Pavilion S.–he is now to join a stable that has excelled in the recruitment of elite sprinters. He will do so in the colours of Middleham Park Racing, who have enjoyed such prolific success in 2020.

“He’ll be our first horse with Robert Cowell,” said Tim Palin, director of racing for the syndication umbrella. “We decided we’d try to get a bit of quality if we could, and this horse has a serious engine. It’s now up to the trainer to mastermind some future glories.”

Cowell is embracing that challenge with due excitement. “I’m delighted to get on board with Middleham Park, with their fantastic record,” he said. “This is a plan we’ve been putting together for two or three months. He’s a very good-looking horse that doesn’t have too many miles on the clock, and he’s rated to run potentially in very smart handicaps or stakes races. So he has options. We’ll sit down and have a glass of wine at some point, and come up with a plan.”

International Options for 95-rated Pair

One of the benchmark types at this sale is the hard-knocking 3-year-old that has earned a handicap rating that might be hard work over here, but has established his eligibility for pastures new. Two such, each rated 95, made six figures within a few minutes around lunchtime: Prince Of Naples (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}) went to John Egan for 120,000gns as lot 591, while Byline (GB) (Muharaar {GB}) brought 110,000gns from Alastair Donald (lot 597).

Both may well be on their way to the Middle East, though Egan was non-committal pending discussion with “a longstanding client” regarding Prince Of Naples, who had put in a timely advertisement when fourth in listed company at Leopardstown just 10 days previously.

“We could keep him here, we might look at Dubai,” Egan said. “I just loved the horse. He’s had a few things going on this year, and that gave us a chance because he would have been too expensive this time last year. He’s a bonny horse, one we can crack on with, and I’m sure there’s a lot more to come: I had a long chat with his trainer Sheila Lavery. I’ve a lot of respect for her, and everything just added up.”

This was another of the day’s well bought horses, as a €36,000 Fairyhouse yearling who has been racing in the silks of Lavery’s brother John. But Donald could see why Byline, for his part, had last visited this ring in Book 1, when bought by Stephen Hillen and trainer Kevin Ryan for 140,000gns. Racing for Highclere, he had won at two and added a Leicester handicap in June.

“He’s a very good-looking horse,” Donald remarked. “One of the best here. He’s a very solid, straightforward, consistent type and I’d say pretty good value for the level, rated 104 by Timeform. And he should do well on fast ground where he’s going.”

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Exercise Riders a Shrinking Pool of Talent

When Lorna Chavez moved from England to the United States in 1995, the land of abundance had a surfeit of skilled participants willing and able to don helmet and boot and join the nation’s ranks of exercise riders.

“I started in Delaware,” said Chavez, a former jockey, of her time as an exercise rider for Hall of Fame trainer Jonathan Sheppard. But that was a quarter-century ago. “Now, there aren’t enough riders around,” she said. “Especially good ones.”

And that means busy racetracks of a morning are increasingly populated with riders sometimes ill-equipped to helm their equine vehicles–a potential thorn for the other riders on the track, Chavez said. “Some of them are dangerous,” she added. “It’s dangerous enough being out there anyway without some of these other riders that are out there. And there aren’t any [riders] to replace them.”

The dangers aren’t restricted to humans. There’s also the cyclical wear-and-tear that bad or inexperienced riders can inflict–the uneven grind on joints from a horse that hangs, or the heavy load on the front legs from an iron-mouthed run-off. The sorts of things that pre-dispose horses to catastrophic injury.

Of course, posterity is a keen advocate for the past, when time can cast history in a rosy glow. But Chavez is far from the only industry figure bemoaning a growing scarcity of talented riders. “It is definitely getting tougher,” said California trainer, Sean McCarthy. “There are lots of reasons for it.”

“Those facilities are disappearing”

One common equation bandied around concerns shifting societal trends and a long-in-effect rural flight: The average American is three generations removed from an agrarian lifestyle.

“That’s really the core of it,” said McCarthy. “Kids are not growing up around horses and livestock as they once did, and don’t consequently develop an interest in riding–in the States, anyway.”

What’s more, many young riders seeking exercise rider positions at the track today “haven’t learned to ride properly in the first place,” said McCarthy, pointing to the fundamentals necessary before stirrup-irons can be safely hoisted up and the speed work begins. “In other words, proper equitation and general horse mastership,” he said.

Compounding the problem is a shrinking pool of farms and training centers where young riding talent can be nurtured–a development hitting California especially hard, said McCarthy.

“I think on the East Coast they’ve got a whole host of training centers that are still active,” he said. And while California used to have a good number of these facilities, too–“especially in the Santa Ynez Valley, across the Central Coast,” McCarthy said–they’re disappearing.

“Those were great platforms for kids to get involved in the racing industry, and obviously, learn how to gallop properly from the ground up,” he said. “We don’t have that as much any more–that’s a big part of it.”

The impacts from this aren’t felt uniformly across the board.

“We rarely struggle with exercise riders,” said trainer Mike Stidham. And it’s not because he has had to lower his standards.

“We just will not put up with bad exercise riders,” he said. “Whatever it takes, we’ll hire the best we can.”

In that regard, what helps, Stidham said, is how larger stables like his have in-built appeal attractive to the more talented riders: Better quality of horse, larger more frequent payment of “stakes,” and assurances of reliable work year-in year-out.

“The smaller trainers with either fewer horses, worse horses, or people who have to rely on freelancers, I think that would be a lot tougher,” Stidham said.

A more intractable problem, he said, concerns the number of riders from Central and South America, and the federal government’s hardline immigration policies that are making an already difficult hunt for good riders that much harder.

“Two of my best riders are old,” said Stidham. “They’re not going to be doing this forever, and when they go, I’m going to have to find two more to replace them. That’s going to be hard,” he added. “The government’s making it tough, for sure.”

But the problem as former exercise rider, trainer and jockey Pam Little sees it is one couched upon simple economics, and an evolving job market ever more averse to manual labor–especially when it comes to the American-born workforce.

“Back when I started working in racing, it was always kind of glamorous–they’d put you on a pedestal if you were a good gallop person,” she said, adding how a typical exercise rider’s salary was one that could appeal to a broad demographic.

But over the years, Little said, the average exercise rider salary hasn’t kept up with inflation and spiking living costs in urban centers, so that the job has become an anachronism with unsociable hours waging a losing battle against an ever-increasing number of other less arduous careers paths.

Indeed, Little admitted that she had steered her own children away from a possible career in racing. “I just didn’t want them to have this life,” she said. “It’s seven days a week, and there’s no getting ahead.”

A bad rider–so the saying goes–can undo in minutes the work of months, if not years.

But as outrider Alan Love Jr. sees it, industry veterans–especially the exercise riders and outriders–are too quick to hoard rather than share their knowledge with the latest generations.

“They want to make them look bad so they lose their jobs so they don’t lose their [own] jobs,” said Love, who has been at the job for 16 years.

And it’s not just the nuances of navigating the track of a morning–the getting a horse to settle on a long rein, for example, or to properly engage its hind-end–that aren’t being passed down, Love said. It’s also the subtler diagnostic skills–like accurately pin-pointing lameness–that are becoming a dying art.

“Half these riders couldn’t tell you if they were bad or if they were good, front or back,” he said. “Trainer came by, asked his rider one day, ‘how did your horse go?’ ‘Oh, he went good.’ Trainer turns around to me: ‘that horse is three-legged lame.'”

But education is a two-way street, and patience a virtue.

“A lot of these guys, they don’t want to go to the farm and learn how to ride babies before they come to the track,” he said. “They just want to come to the track, get on a horse and gallop around there. It ain’t as easy as their friends make it look.”

Nor are trainers immune from criticism.

“Some don’t care. As long as they’ve got a rider, that’s all they’re happy about,” Love said. “Every track I’ve been to, I’ve seen that.”

 

Never a High Priority

“The industry itself has never taken the education of racing personnel to be a high priority,” said Reid McClellan, executive director of the national Groom Elite program. As an example, McClellan pointed to a component of the North American Racing Academy that he helped devise focusing on exercise riders.

“If an outrider didn’t think an exercise rider was doing good, for example, they could have sent them over there,” said McClellan. But the course was short-lived. “The industry thought it wasn’t necessary,” he said.

As farms and training centers continue to disappear, however, training schools, like the British Racing School, profiled in a video series in the TDN last year–could offer an obvious substitute. “It would need to be in one of those areas where there used to be a concentration of horses, and maybe a farm where people are retiring or getting out of the business,” he said.

As for a swifter fix, McClellan believes in comparable pay for comparable experience as an incentive for riders to continue honing their skills.

In other words, the industry broadly needs to figure out a better system of recompense so that the more qualified personnel are more uniformly rewarded the higher dividends–something that currently isn’t necessarily the case, McClellan said, pointing to the flat per-horse rates for freelancers.

Towards this end, “owners bear a certain amount of responsibility,” McClellan said. “If a trainer is willing to hire a more qualified exercise rider,” he added, “the owner should be willing to pay the additional cost.”

Other equine disciplines, like show jumping and Western riding, provide horse racing with a relatively untapped pool of riding talent, said McCarthy. He suggested outreach programs, whereby industry representatives target these disciplines, offering things like work experience opportunities to young interested riders.

“That could be a great way to go,” he said, adding that the industry’s Off-Track Thoroughbred program is one such pipeline already connecting horseracing to the broader equine community.

In the same vein, the tracks themselves and the community populating them need to be more receptive to fresh faces, said Little. “If a kid came walking through the gate and said, ‘I want to learn how to gallop.’ What trainer do you know would say, ‘sure–I’ll take you under my wing and teach you’?” she said.

For sure, a towering mountain range stands between the industry and meaningful redress of the problem. But as 2020 has been the year when established norms have been up-rooted, perhaps the socioeconomic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic can offer a few tentative signs for optimism.

A recent Harris Poll found that that nearly 40% of city dwellers are considering moving out of the city as the coronavirus pandemic rages on, and an op/ed in Progressive Farmer speculated that more young people are considering a return to the family business. Many warn, however, that the racing industry cannot passively sit back and hope.

At the end of the day, the industry needs to engage in a “sharing of ideas,” McClellan said. “And we might have to change the way we do business.”

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Alcohol Free Half-Sister Anchors Tattersalls December Yearlings

The catalogue for the Tattersalls December Yearling Sale, featuring a Starspangledbanner (Aus) half-sister to Group 1 winner Alcohol Free (Ire) (No Nay Never), is now online. One of 173 yearlings set to sell at Park Paddocks on Nov. 23, the half-sister to the G1 Cheveley Park S. heroine and French listed winner Alexander James (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) (lot 119) will be offered by Knockatrina House. Overall, there are full- or half-siblings to 37 group and listed winners in the catalogue, among them five Group 1/Classic winners. There are 13 yearling that qualify for the £20,000 Tattersalls October Book 1 Bonus Scheme, an additional 12 yearlings are eligible for the £150,000 Tattersalls October Auction S., as well as fillies eligible for the Great British Bonus Scheme and yearlings eligible for French Owners’ Premiums.

Lot 11 is a Gleneagles (Ire) half-brother to Angara (GB) (Alzao), winner of the GI Beverly D. S. Stateside from Annshoon Stud. The chestnut is also a half-brother to GSW Actrice (Ire) (Danehill), and SW & GSP Arlesienne (Ire) (Alzao). The last-named is already the dam of three black-type winners and the SP dam of G1 Prix du Moulin second Akatea (Ire) (Shamardal).

Genesis Green Stud offers lot 16, a Pivotal (GB) colt out of a half-sister to G1 French 2000 Guineas hero Landseer (GB) (Danehill), who is also a half to SW and G1 Prince of Wales’s S. third Ikhtyar (Ire) (Unfuwain); and the dam of group winner and G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. bridesmaid I Can Fly (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}). South African Grade 1 winner Queen Supreme (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus})’s Caravaggio half-sister sells as lot 27 from the draft of Monksland Stables.

A son of Bungle Inthejungle (Ire) hails from the draft of Rathasker Stud as lot 64. The bay counts GI Garden City S. heroine Alexander Tango (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}) as his half-sister. Another lot to keep an eye on is the Sea the Stars (Ire) colt (lot 160) who is a half-brother to Group 2 winner and G1 Prix Jean Romanet runner-up Ambition (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) out of 2013 G1 Oaks victress Talent (GB) (New Approach {Ire}). Consigned by Ashbrittle Stud, he is also a half-brother to the stakes-placed duo of Skilful (GB) (Selkirk) and King Power (GB) (Frankel {GB}).

In 2019, 131 yearlings were marked as sold for an aggregate of 4,149,500gns. The average was 31,676gns and the median was 25,000gns.

“The Tattersalls December Yearling Sale is a consistent source of top-class performers with a well established reputation for combining quality and value for money,” said Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony. “The catalogue for the 2020 renewal has consignments from many of Britain and Ireland’s most successful nurseries and as well as plenty of outstanding pedigrees, buyers will find a large number of yearlings eligible for valuable £20,000 Tattersalls October Book 1 Bonuses and the ever–popular £150,000 Tattersalls October Auction S., as well as the well-received Great British Bonuses.”

 

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