Moorhead Previews Egg Bowl In Weekly Press Conference
November 19, 2018 | Football
by Brandon Langlois, Associate Director/Communications
STARKVILLE – Mississippi State head coach Joe Moorhead met with members of the media on Monday afternoon to preview the 21st-ranked Bulldogs' annual bout with rival Ole Miss in the 91st edition of the Battle for the Golden Egg this coming Thursday night in Oxford.
Kickoff between the Bulldogs (7-4, 3-4 SEC) and Rebels (5-6, 1-6 SEC) is set for 6:30 p.m. CT at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium and the contest will be televised nationally Thanksgiving night by ESPN. For complete gameday and stadium information, visit HailState.com/gameday.
Opening Statement
"Excellent way to cap off the 2018 season in Davis Wade [Stadium] with a convincing win on Senior Day and Military Appreciation Day. I thought it was an awesome home crowd and a great alternative gray uniform. Our equipment manager [Preston] "Stick" Rogers did an awesome job coordinating all of that.
I thought it was a complete team win and a performance representative of our standard and expectation level. From a performance indicator standpoint, we won the turnover battle, 3-1, won the explosive play battle, 14-7, won third down, 70 percent to 29 percent, and in the red zone, six touchdowns to zero touchdowns, and drive-start battle, which we won, which was awesome, minus-36 yard line to the minus-28. We are certainly excited for our senior class, who have done so much for this team and this school. They finished 6-1 at home this fall. [We are] appreciative of their individual and collective efforts in their time here in Starkville and at Mississippi State University.
I am sure you guys have seen that the Defensive Player of the Week, as named by the SEC, was Johnathan Abram. The Offensive Lineman of the Week, as named by the SEC, was Deion Calhoun. Selections by the coaching staff, Offensive Player of the Week was Nick Fitzgerald, with honorable mentions to Aeris Williams and Justin Johnson. Defensive Player of the Week was Johnathan Abram, and Special Teams Player of the Week was Chris Rayford. Our Scout Team Players of the Week were Cason Grant for the offense, Aadreekis Conner for the defense and Somon Anderson for special teams. Student-Athletes of the Week were freshman tight end Geor'quarius Spivey and fellow tight end Powers Warren. Those were our Student-Athletes of the Week, and they are doing a great job in the classroom.
From an injury standpoint, really not much that has changed from last week, so if you guys have any individual questions at the end, I will address those. We got out of [the Arkansas] game relatively healthy, so we are feeling good about where are at this point in the year. Thomas Callans and his staff are doing a great job of making sure our guys are healthy and taking the field ready to play.
Moving on to this week, obviously we play Ole Miss. [Head] Coach [Matt] Luke is 11-12 in two years. He began his coaching career as a student assistant at Ole Miss in 1999, mentored by guys like Phil Fulmer, David Cutcliffe and Tommy Tuberville, and is doing a nice job up there in Oxford.
On offense, they are coordinated by Phil Longo, a spread, RPO system and obviously their success and productivity is very well documented. Jordan Ta'amu, their quarterback, has thrown for 3,831 [yards] and 19 touchdowns. [He is] very accurate and a really capable runner. Isaiah Woullard is the running back right now, with Scottie Phillips being injured. We are not sure what [Phillips'] status is, but [Woullard] has filled in there nicely. Obviously, Starkville's own A.J. Brown, his merits speak for themselves, along with the rest of that dangerous and athletic and explosive receiving corps. Number nine, the tight end [Dawson Knox], does a really nice job, and Greg Little, the offensive lineman, is expected to be a high draft pick and there are a ton of accolades there. They are averaging almost 37 points per game, 175 [yards per game] on the ground and 364 [yards per game] in the air, so certainly a very explosive offense. They have moved the ball well the entire season.
Defensively, they are coordinated by Wesley McGriff. A mix of four-down and three-down [fronts] and [a mix of] zone and man coverages. [The unit is] Nationally-ranked at 41st in red zone defense and has created 15 turnovers, which is an extremely high number. On the defensive line, No. 40 [Josiah] Coatney has 51 tackles, three for a loss, and plays very hard. He was preseason All-SEC. The linebacker, No. 46 Mohamed Sanogo, has 104 tackles, 6.5 for loss and one sack. [Sanogo is a] High motor, very physical guy. Then, on the back end, No. 36, Zedrick Woods, has 70 tackles, one tackle for loss and two interceptions. He has great ball skills, instincts and anticipation.
They kind of split the coordinator duties on special teams amongst the staff. One guy that sticks out, the kicker [Luke Logan], who has hit 21 of 26 field goals. They have one kickoff return touchdown [on the season], and had a forced turnover on punt return versus Vanderbilt. Elijah Moore is there returner, 18.5 yards [per return] on kickoff returns. I already mentioned Luke Logan, the kicker, he was five-for-five against Vanderbilt.
It is going to be a heck of a challenge in this game, one we are very excited for. It is a huge game. The Battle for the Golden Egg. We certainly understand the importance and significance of this game to our players, our program, the school, the city, the state and our fans. It is a short week of preparation. [We need to be] incredibly focused and need to take advantage of our reps, both mentally and physically, during the week to earn the right to take the field with confidence. In a very challenging environment, we are going to need to play with tremendous poise, fanatical effort and most importantly, execute with a high level of precision. Once again, we will continue to stick to our process and not compete against an opponent; that will take care of itself on the field, but once again do everything to our standard.
We are certainly very excited."
On the injury staus of RB Kylin Hill and DB Jaquarius Landrews …
"They are both improving. They are day-to-day, both with lower bodies. As the days progress, we are more and more optimistic for their returns this week."
On C.J. Morgan stepping in and performing well at the SS position the last two weeks …
"I think experience and positional flexibility. I think Coach [Bob] Shoop and Coach [Terrell] Buckley have done a good job with some of those guys who can play both the corner and STAR position, getting them reps, number one in fall camp and two throughout the season. Those guys all possess good football IQ, so the ability to bounce back and forth between positions have definitely benefitted us. They have made the most of their opportunities."
On when he was introduced to the Egg Bowl …
"When I got off the plane and started shaking hands and signing autographs, walking around the fence, there were a few people who relayed the importance of the game and what it means. So, that happened pretty quickly. President [Mark] Keenum, in his office after the press conference [talked about it]. Really, everybody that you see in town and around the state, have a lot of passion. This game has a lot of the ingredients of what makes college football and a great rivalry special: two great opponents, the proximity, familiarity, tradition, history, and, quite frankly, most importantly, players from around the state that have played with or against each other. I think that is what makes this game unique and special."
On controlling emotions in a rivalry game …
"I think part of that is going to be inevitable, because this game means a lot to our kids and to our team, and certainly to our school. What we talked about in the preseason and throughout the season, is to handle prosperity and handle adversity, and show our emotions without being emotional. They are going to be fired up. That kind of stands on its own merit and no form of inflammatory rhetoric [is needed] from me to get them fired up. That [emotion] is going to last for about a series or a half of a quarter, but ultimately, when that wares off, you are going to fall back on your preparation and you are going to win the game because of your effort and your execution. Whether or not I give a pregame Knute Rockne, fire them up speech and put my fist through a white board, they will get fired up for a second until they get on the bus. Then the game is going to start and you are going to have to fall back on your habits."
On yards per play averaged in wins against losses …
"I kind of looked up some of those numbers today, as well. In the seven wins, it was over 45 [points] per game and the losses it was at 17 points per game. I would say it is probably caliber of opponent, pointing the finger at me [in terms of] game plan and play calling, and certainly when you look at the teams we have lost to - Kentucky, LSU, Florida, Alabama - you're playing a very good opponent. So, it is probably a combination of all of those factors."
On his awareness of QB Nick Fitzgerald's injury from last year's Egg Bowl before coming to Mississippi State …
"I can't remember how early it happened. First quarter or second quarter? The first quarter. I was watching the very start of the game and it was my middle son's birthday, so I had to run to Target to get him one of those Apple watches. Not realizing that it was Thanksgiving and people shop on that day, so it took a little bit of time. I didn't get back until the second half and my daughter was watching the game and informed me of the injury. That's how I found out it happened, then I watched the rest of the game. Certainly, when your ankle is facing the direction where it's not supposed to be, that takes a physical and mental toll on the person it happened to. Between Nick [Fitzgerald] and our training staff, and everything they have done to fight back and battle through that, and get him ready to play. Certainly, the things that he has been able to accomplish this year after that [type of injury] is credited to him and our training staff."
On playing the game on Thanksgiving …
"After practice today, we will have a training table meal and we'll have all the families in for a pre, pre, pre-Thanksgiving meal. The game will end late, so there won't really be much of a chance for it there. All that turkey, dressing and cranberry sauce, we don't want to be filling our guys with that right before the game. So, Friday and Saturday we will be off and hopefully there are a bunch of leftovers in the fridge that we can eat."
On his message to QB Nick Fitzgerald heading into Thursday's game …
"For him, you really can't afford to be too high or too low at the quarterback position. There's some other spots on the field where you can play with a little bit of emotion and harness it the right way. With the mental and physical challenges of playing [quarterback], and the preparation that goes into it on every snap, he can't be sky high and be worrying about things that aren't important. Certainly, he'll be fired up and want to play well, but of all the positions on the field he really has to be focused on the task at hand."
On his preseason expectations for the defense compared to what they have done so far …
"I thought very highly of Coach Shoop. I've known him, mostly professionally, but somewhat on a personal level, and was impressed with his track record and that's the reason we brought him in here, along with the other defensive coaches, including the ones who were retained, and certainly the level of talent and experience we had on the defensive side of the ball. Coming off a season where [previous defensive coordinator] [Todd] Grantham, I believe they allowed 20 points per game last year, or something in that range, that is very good. For [our defense] to be able to elevate their level of production and performance, I don't think we gave up a rushing touchdown at home and very few points. If I were to classify it, I had high expectations, but in a lot of ways this probably exceeded my expectation level, to be honest with you. That is hard to do, because we have very high standards."
On Scott Goodman's performance on kickoffs this season …
"He's another guy I would say above expectation level. Walk-on guy, preferred walk-on, who came in and won the job. I think he's getting a little bit better every week. When you have a weapon like that on your kickoff team that can put the ball through the end zone and limits the number of returns the team gets. You talk about drive start battle and hitting yardage, to make sure there starting at the 25 [yard line]. Scott's a guy who is doing very well in kickoff, but we are trying to grow [his skills]. He's been working on field goals, and things like that, as well. He can also punt. [He's a] very talented young man and we are happy with him."
On how Ole Miss differs without D.K. Metcalf …
"He is one of the top receivers in the conference and one of the best in the country. [He is] explosive. I don't want to say they haven't missed a beat, because he's that talented of a player, but with the depth, they have at that position and the ability for Coach Longo to disperse the ball amongst there playmakers. You saw [Damarkus] Lodge and A.J. [Brown] had a huge game, and their tight end, rolling some running backs through there. They have thrown for 300 yards nine of eleven games and certainly watching the Vanderbilt game, they are able to throw around pretty good. The scheme lends to that, the play calling and the talent level they have helps. But, certainly, he's sorely missed."
On if the game plan Thursday will be similar to last Saturday's against Arkansas …
"This will be the first practice of the week this evening. We will rep some of that stuff on first and second down today, but like always you put your game plan together and you want to be able to run the ball successively. Everything is built off of that. The one thing you look at, you can win games by running the ball well, but to win championships you have to be balanced. That's one thing we are growing towards, being able to have balance. I'm not really caught up on, 'well, we need to run the ball well' or 'we need to pass well' in this game. Whether it's on the ground or in the air, the ability to generate explosive plays, limit turnovers, convert third downs, and score touchdowns in the red zone. Certainly, the game plan can veer more towards what you do well and what the other team struggles to defend, and a lot of that plays out on game day."
On Ole Miss WR A.J. Brown's ability …
"The better question is what doesn't concern me. I saw him at the Starkville Spring Game and he was on the sidelines. I had never seen him in person and that's a big kid. For him to be able to run the way he does, make plays after the catch and get open … there's a reason why he's one of the top receivers in the country and is going to be drafted real high. I think he's a fantastic player, I really do."
On SEC Offensive Lineman of the Week Deion Calhoun …
"He has been a pivotal cog in the operation of the offensive line. Certainly, we have some young guys out on the edges in Greg [Eiland], Tyre [Phillips] and Stewart [Reese]. I don't want to say steading force, but we talked a bunch about Elgton [Jenkins] for a very good reason. I believe he's the top center in the country and has done an unbelievable job there. Then, Darryl [Williams] and Deion flanking him, I think the middle of our line, has done a real nice job. Deion has been a vital part of that."
STARKVILLE – Mississippi State head coach Joe Moorhead met with members of the media on Monday afternoon to preview the 21st-ranked Bulldogs' annual bout with rival Ole Miss in the 91st edition of the Battle for the Golden Egg this coming Thursday night in Oxford.
Kickoff between the Bulldogs (7-4, 3-4 SEC) and Rebels (5-6, 1-6 SEC) is set for 6:30 p.m. CT at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium and the contest will be televised nationally Thanksgiving night by ESPN. For complete gameday and stadium information, visit HailState.com/gameday.
Opening Statement
"Excellent way to cap off the 2018 season in Davis Wade [Stadium] with a convincing win on Senior Day and Military Appreciation Day. I thought it was an awesome home crowd and a great alternative gray uniform. Our equipment manager [Preston] "Stick" Rogers did an awesome job coordinating all of that.
I thought it was a complete team win and a performance representative of our standard and expectation level. From a performance indicator standpoint, we won the turnover battle, 3-1, won the explosive play battle, 14-7, won third down, 70 percent to 29 percent, and in the red zone, six touchdowns to zero touchdowns, and drive-start battle, which we won, which was awesome, minus-36 yard line to the minus-28. We are certainly excited for our senior class, who have done so much for this team and this school. They finished 6-1 at home this fall. [We are] appreciative of their individual and collective efforts in their time here in Starkville and at Mississippi State University.
I am sure you guys have seen that the Defensive Player of the Week, as named by the SEC, was Johnathan Abram. The Offensive Lineman of the Week, as named by the SEC, was Deion Calhoun. Selections by the coaching staff, Offensive Player of the Week was Nick Fitzgerald, with honorable mentions to Aeris Williams and Justin Johnson. Defensive Player of the Week was Johnathan Abram, and Special Teams Player of the Week was Chris Rayford. Our Scout Team Players of the Week were Cason Grant for the offense, Aadreekis Conner for the defense and Somon Anderson for special teams. Student-Athletes of the Week were freshman tight end Geor'quarius Spivey and fellow tight end Powers Warren. Those were our Student-Athletes of the Week, and they are doing a great job in the classroom.
From an injury standpoint, really not much that has changed from last week, so if you guys have any individual questions at the end, I will address those. We got out of [the Arkansas] game relatively healthy, so we are feeling good about where are at this point in the year. Thomas Callans and his staff are doing a great job of making sure our guys are healthy and taking the field ready to play.
Moving on to this week, obviously we play Ole Miss. [Head] Coach [Matt] Luke is 11-12 in two years. He began his coaching career as a student assistant at Ole Miss in 1999, mentored by guys like Phil Fulmer, David Cutcliffe and Tommy Tuberville, and is doing a nice job up there in Oxford.
On offense, they are coordinated by Phil Longo, a spread, RPO system and obviously their success and productivity is very well documented. Jordan Ta'amu, their quarterback, has thrown for 3,831 [yards] and 19 touchdowns. [He is] very accurate and a really capable runner. Isaiah Woullard is the running back right now, with Scottie Phillips being injured. We are not sure what [Phillips'] status is, but [Woullard] has filled in there nicely. Obviously, Starkville's own A.J. Brown, his merits speak for themselves, along with the rest of that dangerous and athletic and explosive receiving corps. Number nine, the tight end [Dawson Knox], does a really nice job, and Greg Little, the offensive lineman, is expected to be a high draft pick and there are a ton of accolades there. They are averaging almost 37 points per game, 175 [yards per game] on the ground and 364 [yards per game] in the air, so certainly a very explosive offense. They have moved the ball well the entire season.
Defensively, they are coordinated by Wesley McGriff. A mix of four-down and three-down [fronts] and [a mix of] zone and man coverages. [The unit is] Nationally-ranked at 41st in red zone defense and has created 15 turnovers, which is an extremely high number. On the defensive line, No. 40 [Josiah] Coatney has 51 tackles, three for a loss, and plays very hard. He was preseason All-SEC. The linebacker, No. 46 Mohamed Sanogo, has 104 tackles, 6.5 for loss and one sack. [Sanogo is a] High motor, very physical guy. Then, on the back end, No. 36, Zedrick Woods, has 70 tackles, one tackle for loss and two interceptions. He has great ball skills, instincts and anticipation.
They kind of split the coordinator duties on special teams amongst the staff. One guy that sticks out, the kicker [Luke Logan], who has hit 21 of 26 field goals. They have one kickoff return touchdown [on the season], and had a forced turnover on punt return versus Vanderbilt. Elijah Moore is there returner, 18.5 yards [per return] on kickoff returns. I already mentioned Luke Logan, the kicker, he was five-for-five against Vanderbilt.
It is going to be a heck of a challenge in this game, one we are very excited for. It is a huge game. The Battle for the Golden Egg. We certainly understand the importance and significance of this game to our players, our program, the school, the city, the state and our fans. It is a short week of preparation. [We need to be] incredibly focused and need to take advantage of our reps, both mentally and physically, during the week to earn the right to take the field with confidence. In a very challenging environment, we are going to need to play with tremendous poise, fanatical effort and most importantly, execute with a high level of precision. Once again, we will continue to stick to our process and not compete against an opponent; that will take care of itself on the field, but once again do everything to our standard.
We are certainly very excited."
On the injury staus of RB Kylin Hill and DB Jaquarius Landrews …
"They are both improving. They are day-to-day, both with lower bodies. As the days progress, we are more and more optimistic for their returns this week."
On C.J. Morgan stepping in and performing well at the SS position the last two weeks …
"I think experience and positional flexibility. I think Coach [Bob] Shoop and Coach [Terrell] Buckley have done a good job with some of those guys who can play both the corner and STAR position, getting them reps, number one in fall camp and two throughout the season. Those guys all possess good football IQ, so the ability to bounce back and forth between positions have definitely benefitted us. They have made the most of their opportunities."
On when he was introduced to the Egg Bowl …
"When I got off the plane and started shaking hands and signing autographs, walking around the fence, there were a few people who relayed the importance of the game and what it means. So, that happened pretty quickly. President [Mark] Keenum, in his office after the press conference [talked about it]. Really, everybody that you see in town and around the state, have a lot of passion. This game has a lot of the ingredients of what makes college football and a great rivalry special: two great opponents, the proximity, familiarity, tradition, history, and, quite frankly, most importantly, players from around the state that have played with or against each other. I think that is what makes this game unique and special."
On controlling emotions in a rivalry game …
"I think part of that is going to be inevitable, because this game means a lot to our kids and to our team, and certainly to our school. What we talked about in the preseason and throughout the season, is to handle prosperity and handle adversity, and show our emotions without being emotional. They are going to be fired up. That kind of stands on its own merit and no form of inflammatory rhetoric [is needed] from me to get them fired up. That [emotion] is going to last for about a series or a half of a quarter, but ultimately, when that wares off, you are going to fall back on your preparation and you are going to win the game because of your effort and your execution. Whether or not I give a pregame Knute Rockne, fire them up speech and put my fist through a white board, they will get fired up for a second until they get on the bus. Then the game is going to start and you are going to have to fall back on your habits."
On yards per play averaged in wins against losses …
"I kind of looked up some of those numbers today, as well. In the seven wins, it was over 45 [points] per game and the losses it was at 17 points per game. I would say it is probably caliber of opponent, pointing the finger at me [in terms of] game plan and play calling, and certainly when you look at the teams we have lost to - Kentucky, LSU, Florida, Alabama - you're playing a very good opponent. So, it is probably a combination of all of those factors."
On his awareness of QB Nick Fitzgerald's injury from last year's Egg Bowl before coming to Mississippi State …
"I can't remember how early it happened. First quarter or second quarter? The first quarter. I was watching the very start of the game and it was my middle son's birthday, so I had to run to Target to get him one of those Apple watches. Not realizing that it was Thanksgiving and people shop on that day, so it took a little bit of time. I didn't get back until the second half and my daughter was watching the game and informed me of the injury. That's how I found out it happened, then I watched the rest of the game. Certainly, when your ankle is facing the direction where it's not supposed to be, that takes a physical and mental toll on the person it happened to. Between Nick [Fitzgerald] and our training staff, and everything they have done to fight back and battle through that, and get him ready to play. Certainly, the things that he has been able to accomplish this year after that [type of injury] is credited to him and our training staff."
On playing the game on Thanksgiving …
"After practice today, we will have a training table meal and we'll have all the families in for a pre, pre, pre-Thanksgiving meal. The game will end late, so there won't really be much of a chance for it there. All that turkey, dressing and cranberry sauce, we don't want to be filling our guys with that right before the game. So, Friday and Saturday we will be off and hopefully there are a bunch of leftovers in the fridge that we can eat."
On his message to QB Nick Fitzgerald heading into Thursday's game …
"For him, you really can't afford to be too high or too low at the quarterback position. There's some other spots on the field where you can play with a little bit of emotion and harness it the right way. With the mental and physical challenges of playing [quarterback], and the preparation that goes into it on every snap, he can't be sky high and be worrying about things that aren't important. Certainly, he'll be fired up and want to play well, but of all the positions on the field he really has to be focused on the task at hand."
On his preseason expectations for the defense compared to what they have done so far …
"I thought very highly of Coach Shoop. I've known him, mostly professionally, but somewhat on a personal level, and was impressed with his track record and that's the reason we brought him in here, along with the other defensive coaches, including the ones who were retained, and certainly the level of talent and experience we had on the defensive side of the ball. Coming off a season where [previous defensive coordinator] [Todd] Grantham, I believe they allowed 20 points per game last year, or something in that range, that is very good. For [our defense] to be able to elevate their level of production and performance, I don't think we gave up a rushing touchdown at home and very few points. If I were to classify it, I had high expectations, but in a lot of ways this probably exceeded my expectation level, to be honest with you. That is hard to do, because we have very high standards."
On Scott Goodman's performance on kickoffs this season …
"He's another guy I would say above expectation level. Walk-on guy, preferred walk-on, who came in and won the job. I think he's getting a little bit better every week. When you have a weapon like that on your kickoff team that can put the ball through the end zone and limits the number of returns the team gets. You talk about drive start battle and hitting yardage, to make sure there starting at the 25 [yard line]. Scott's a guy who is doing very well in kickoff, but we are trying to grow [his skills]. He's been working on field goals, and things like that, as well. He can also punt. [He's a] very talented young man and we are happy with him."
On how Ole Miss differs without D.K. Metcalf …
"He is one of the top receivers in the conference and one of the best in the country. [He is] explosive. I don't want to say they haven't missed a beat, because he's that talented of a player, but with the depth, they have at that position and the ability for Coach Longo to disperse the ball amongst there playmakers. You saw [Damarkus] Lodge and A.J. [Brown] had a huge game, and their tight end, rolling some running backs through there. They have thrown for 300 yards nine of eleven games and certainly watching the Vanderbilt game, they are able to throw around pretty good. The scheme lends to that, the play calling and the talent level they have helps. But, certainly, he's sorely missed."
On if the game plan Thursday will be similar to last Saturday's against Arkansas …
"This will be the first practice of the week this evening. We will rep some of that stuff on first and second down today, but like always you put your game plan together and you want to be able to run the ball successively. Everything is built off of that. The one thing you look at, you can win games by running the ball well, but to win championships you have to be balanced. That's one thing we are growing towards, being able to have balance. I'm not really caught up on, 'well, we need to run the ball well' or 'we need to pass well' in this game. Whether it's on the ground or in the air, the ability to generate explosive plays, limit turnovers, convert third downs, and score touchdowns in the red zone. Certainly, the game plan can veer more towards what you do well and what the other team struggles to defend, and a lot of that plays out on game day."
On Ole Miss WR A.J. Brown's ability …
"The better question is what doesn't concern me. I saw him at the Starkville Spring Game and he was on the sidelines. I had never seen him in person and that's a big kid. For him to be able to run the way he does, make plays after the catch and get open … there's a reason why he's one of the top receivers in the country and is going to be drafted real high. I think he's a fantastic player, I really do."
On SEC Offensive Lineman of the Week Deion Calhoun …
"He has been a pivotal cog in the operation of the offensive line. Certainly, we have some young guys out on the edges in Greg [Eiland], Tyre [Phillips] and Stewart [Reese]. I don't want to say steading force, but we talked a bunch about Elgton [Jenkins] for a very good reason. I believe he's the top center in the country and has done an unbelievable job there. Then, Darryl [Williams] and Deion flanking him, I think the middle of our line, has done a real nice job. Deion has been a vital part of that."
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