
Neil’s Notebook: Spartans Gear Up to Host No. 5 Wisconsin
3/4/2021 11:40:00 AM | Men's Ice Hockey
By Neil Koepke
MSUSpartans.com staff writer
EAST LANSING – Five weeks ago, Michigan State played two games at Wisconsin.
The first one didn't go so well. The Badgers dominated, 6-0.
The second game was competitive and the Spartans were in it late in the third period. But a 1-1 tie turned into a 4-1 loss, ignited by an untimely penalty which led to two power-play goals.
With No. 5-ranked Wisconsin coming to Munn Arena this weekend, Michigan State's challenge is to find a way to play the offensively powerful Badgers like it did in the "competitive" game" on Jan. 30.
And most likely, play even better because Wisconsin will be highly motivated to sweep the Spartans since the visitors still have a great opportunity to capture the Big Ten's 2020-21 regular-season championship and earn a first-round bye in the conference tournament.
"They're a good hockey team. They play fast, they play hard and they defend well,'' MSU coach Danton Cole said. "They do present a challenge. They throw a lot at you.''
Despite having several key players out of the lineup in their last meeting, the Spartans played one of their grittiest games of the season. They battled, had good energy and pushed the Badgers.
"It was the way the guys competed, hung in there and contested time and space all over the ice,'' Cole said. We had four regulars out (with injuries) and a fifth out with a suspension. We were banged up but found a way to work and compete.
"Wisconsin has a lot of talent but that doesn't mean much if they don't work hard but they do. You better be ready to match their compete level. We did a good job with that the second night at Wisconsin.''
The sixth-place Spartans (7-15-2 overall, 5-14-1, .275 winning percentage, Big Ten) and second-place Badgers (17-8-1, 15-6-1, .705) meet at 4 p.m. on Friday and 2:30 p.m. on Saturday. Friday's game will be streamed on Big Ten Network Plus and Saturday's televised on the Big Ten Network.
Michigan State has faced some huge challenges this season but this weekend's series may be the biggest.
How do you stop the third-highest scoring team in the nation, one that averages 3.88 goals per game?
How do you contain three of the highest scorers in the country in sophomores Cole Caufield and Dylan Holloway and senior Linus Weissbach?
How do you stop the Badgers' five-forwards power play, which is converting at nation-leading 30.9 percent? How, besides not taking ANY penalties.
Caufield, arguably the favorite for the Hobey Baker Award, leads the nation in goals with 22 goals and points with 42 in 26 games. Linemate Weissbach is No. 3 nationally. He has 11 goals and 24 assists for 35 points.
And Holloway, who plays on the second line but is a major threat on the No. 1 power play, is tied for fourth in the national scoring race with 33 points – 11 goals and 22 assists.
Caufield is a first-round NHL draft pick by the Montreal Canadiens – 15th overall in 2019. Holloway was selected by the Edmonton Oilers in the first round – 14th overall – in 2020. And Weissbach was drafted in the seventh round by the Buffalo Sabres in 2017.
For sure, the Badgers are not a three-forward team. They're pretty balanced with several forwards adding to their offense.
Senior Ty Pelton-Byce, who centers Caulfield on right wing and Weissbach on the left, has 11 goals and 14 assists for 25 points. Roman Ahcan, a junior, has seven goals and 12 assists for 19 points and junior Brock Caufield, Cole's older brother, has chipped in with seven goal and nine assists for 16 points.
The Spartans will try to always keep Cole Caufield in their sights but it's not like they'll be assigning one play to shadow him all over the ice.
"You obviously have to play attention to him. He's a heck of a hockey player and, as a goal scorer, he's probably as good as we've seen in a long time,'' Cole said. "In the old days, you'd put a guy on someone – shadow him – but that's not a thing that's done much anymore.
"It's paying attention to how you play defensively, how you play with the puck and limit his chances and being aware when he's on the ice. Those are things you certainly can do.
"But they also have Holloway and Weissbach and several other guys that are very good offensive players. The way you play defensively, you can't change. And your coverage has to be tight. You have to take care of things, you have to close and not give them time and space and be diligent with that up and down your lineup.''
Since sweeping the Spartans, Wisconsin is 6-1-1, including a sweep of then-No. 1 Minnesota in Minneapolis, and has outscored opponents, 34-17. The Badgers are coming off a sweep of Ohio State – a 2-1 win in overtime and a 7-0 romp in their home finale.
Caufield had two assists in the first game against OSU and three goals, his second hat trick of the season, in the second contest.
Since the start of 2021, Caufield has 16 goals and 14 assists for 30 points in 16 games.
"If you're going to give him a lot of time and space and not contest the puck and not gap up and not close in the neutral zone, he's going to get a lot of looks,'' Cole said. "You want good tight coverage on guys and not open it up and give them opportunities.''
While the Spartans brace for Wisconsin's offense, they're also focusing on what ails their team the most – lack of scoring. MSU had some good chances in last Saturday's 2-0 loss but couldn't finish. The scenario was similar in Friday's 2-0 defeat.
"The guys did a decent amount of things right (last weekend) but the one thing we didn't do right was score goals,'' Cole said. "But the process and some of the things the guys did was good. We had chances, breakaways. You have to keep battling through and continue to work on things.''
Dealing with not scoring and losing is tough on the players, especially when they work hard, play with energy and don't get rewarded.
Defenseman Dennis Cesana said team morale is still high and players are still working hard to end the slump.
"I think sticking together is the biggest thing. We're a pretty tight group,'' Cesana said. "Obviously, we all want to win. It's the same for every team.
"We've just been having trouble finding the back of the net. It's sticking with it. We're not on each other. We're grown men and know how to act. We're trying to battle through it as a group.
"We're in good spirits. It's being as positive as we can through all of this.''
MSU enters the weekend in sixth place with a .275 conference winning percentage. Ohio State is seventh at .273. But the Spartans need to win one game or tie both games to finish sixth and avoid last place. The Buckeyes' winning percentage won change this weekend because they're playing a non-conference series against Arizona State.
If Michigan State finishes sixth, it'll play the third-place team – Michigan or Notre Dame – in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament March 14 in Notre Dame, Ind., the tourney site.
If the Spartans end up seventh, they'll play the second-place team – Wisconsin or Minnesota.

THE MSU-UW RIVALRY: There's a one-game difference in the Spartans-Badgers series with MSU holding a 59-58 edge. Last season, Michigan State went 3-1 against the Badgers, sweeping at Munn Arena, 3-0, 5-4, and splitting in Madison, winning the series opener, 4-0, and losing the second game 3-1.
This season, the Badgers swept the Spartans, 6-0, 4-1, in Madison, Jan. 29-30.
Over the last six seasons, including 2020-21, Wisconsin holds a 12-9-1 edge.
SCOUTING THE BADGERS: A year ago, despite having one of best freshman classes in the nation, Wisconsin never got in sync as a team and struggled with consistency.
As a result, the Badgers finished last (7th) in the Big Ten with a 7-15-2 record and were 14-20-2 overall. And despite ending the regular season at 4-1-1, Wisconsin was eliminated in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament by Ohio State, 9-1 and 2-1.
This season, the Badgers found the right team chemistry and with
a potent offense, improved goaltending and solid defense, if not particularly offensive-minded, they developed into a Big Ten title contender and NCAA Tournament team.
A high-powered offense is what Wisconsin is known for in 2020-21 but this is a complete team with few weaknesses. It's not that the Badgers are unbeatable but if they're playing with speed, attacking and getting strong goaltending, it's a team that could make a long run in the NCAA Tournament and end up in Frozen Four in Pittsburgh in April.
The defense is led by senior Tyler Inamoto, a product of the U.S. National Team Development Program and a tremendous shot-blocker, and junior Ty Emberson. The defense includes senior Josh Ess, freshman Anthony Kehrer, junior Jesper Peltonen, sophomore Mike Vorlicky and freshman Luke LeMaster.
In goal, the Badgers have been sharing the duties between Robbie Beydoun, a graduate transfer from Michigan Tech, and freshman Cameron Rowe in the last six series.
Rowe, a 6-foot-3, 212-pounder from Wilmette, Illinois, has an 8-1-1 record, a 1.77 goals-against average and a .939 save percentage. Beydoun, a 6-0, 185-pounder from Plymouth, Michigan, is 9-7, with a 2.75 GAA and a .914 saves percentage.
At one point in his junior career, Beydoun was teammates with current Spartans Brody Stevens and Tommy Miller. Beydoun played at Michigan Tech for three seasons before transferring.
The Wisconsin roster includes seven players from Wisconsin, seven from Minnesota, six from Illinois, one from Michigan, two from Europe and only two Canadians – Dylan Holloway (Alberta) and Kehrer (Manitoba).
Wisconsin has had three straight losing seasons and hasn't made the NCAA Tournament since 2013-14, under Coach Mike Eaves.
The Badgers haven't won a conference championship since 1999-2000 when they finished first in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association under Coach Jeff Sauer.
Wisconsin can win the 2020-21 Big Ten regular-season title if it sweeps Michigan State and Minnesota loses one game or ties twice this weekend against Michigan.
Wisconsin's last NCAA title came in 2005-06, one year before Michigan State won its last national championship in 2007.
SAVES LEADER: Michigan State's Drew DeRidder has stopped more pucks than any other goaltender in college hockey. DeRidder leads the nation with 704 saves, an average of 30.61 per game. Tommy Nappier of Ohio State is second with 640.
DeRidder also leads the Big Ten in saves in conference games with 592, with Nappier second with 576.
The junior goalie has a 2.64 goals-against average and a .926 saves percentage, fourth in the Big Ten.
MSU UPDATES: Mitchell Mattson has sat out the last six games with an unspecified injury or illness, but he could return the lineup this weekend against Wisconsin.
"There were some medical issues that had to be resolved. Those are cleared up and he's feeling better,'' Coach Danton Cole said. "He had a good week of practice and hopefully we can be back in there.''
Mattson, a 6-foot-4, 205-pound junior center/wing from Grand Rapids, Minnesota, has two goals and four points in 18 games.
"He's done a nice job for us killing penalties. And he did get some points early on in the year and that helped us out when that line was getting goals,'' Cole said. "We'll take them anywhere right now.''

SPARTAN POTPOURRI: Senior forward Mitchell Lewandowski is MSU's top scorer against Wisconsin with 11 goals and five assists for 16 points in 14 games. He scored the Spartans' only goal against the Badgers in their 4-1 loss in late January.
Lewandowski, with six goals and five assists for 11 points, shares the team scoring lead with sophomore center Josh Nodler (3-8-11) and junior defenseman Dennis Cesana (1-10-11). Lewandowski is one point away from the career 100-point mark. He has 49 goals and 50 assists.
Lewandowski and fellow senior, defenseman Tommy Miller, have never missed a game in their Spartan careers. They played in 132 consecutive games.
Meanwhile, Miller leads the Big Ten and is tied for second in the nation in blocked shots with 65. Miller's 267 career blocks are tied for second most in MSU history.
IN THE BIG TEN: Two series will determine which team – Minnesota or Wisconsin – skates off with the regular-season championship on Saturday.
First-place Minnesota (15-5-0, .750 Big Ten winning percentage) closes out at home against Michigan on Friday and Saturday. The Gophers, who've been in first place most of the season, can capture first place with two victories or one win, if Wisconsin splits at Michigan State.
The Badgers (15-6-1, .705 Big Ten winning percentage) need to sweep the Spartans and hope Michigan beats the Gophers once, or the teams play to a pair of ties. That would give Wisconsin a better winning percentage, which is how the Big Ten is determining the final standings.
The change from points to winning percentage was made because not all teams will be able to finish the regular season with the same number of games because of Covid-19 cancellations.
In the other conference series, Penn State is at Notre Dame on Friday and Saturday. The Nittany Lions haven't played since Jan 30 because of Covid-10 issues.
Ohio State wraps up its regular season with a non-conference series at home against Arizona State on Thursday and Friday.
Michigan can still finish third or fourth, Notre Dame can finish third, fourth or fifth, Penn State can end up fourth or fifth, and Michigan State and Ohio State can place sixth or seventh.
The Big Ten Tournament in Notre Dame, Indiana, begins Sunday, March 14, with quarterfinal games at noon, 4 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
The three winners advance to the semifinals on March 15 with the lowest-seeded team playing the regular-season champion, which receives a first-round bye. The No. 2 and 3 seeds meet in the other semifinal.
The semifinals are set for 4:30 and 8:30 p.m.
The Big Ten championship game is at 8 p.m. on March 16. All six games in the tournament will be televised by the Big Ten Network.
MSUSpartans.com staff writer
EAST LANSING – Five weeks ago, Michigan State played two games at Wisconsin.
The first one didn't go so well. The Badgers dominated, 6-0.
The second game was competitive and the Spartans were in it late in the third period. But a 1-1 tie turned into a 4-1 loss, ignited by an untimely penalty which led to two power-play goals.
With No. 5-ranked Wisconsin coming to Munn Arena this weekend, Michigan State's challenge is to find a way to play the offensively powerful Badgers like it did in the "competitive" game" on Jan. 30.
And most likely, play even better because Wisconsin will be highly motivated to sweep the Spartans since the visitors still have a great opportunity to capture the Big Ten's 2020-21 regular-season championship and earn a first-round bye in the conference tournament.
"They're a good hockey team. They play fast, they play hard and they defend well,'' MSU coach Danton Cole said. "They do present a challenge. They throw a lot at you.''
Despite having several key players out of the lineup in their last meeting, the Spartans played one of their grittiest games of the season. They battled, had good energy and pushed the Badgers.
"It was the way the guys competed, hung in there and contested time and space all over the ice,'' Cole said. We had four regulars out (with injuries) and a fifth out with a suspension. We were banged up but found a way to work and compete.
"Wisconsin has a lot of talent but that doesn't mean much if they don't work hard but they do. You better be ready to match their compete level. We did a good job with that the second night at Wisconsin.''
The sixth-place Spartans (7-15-2 overall, 5-14-1, .275 winning percentage, Big Ten) and second-place Badgers (17-8-1, 15-6-1, .705) meet at 4 p.m. on Friday and 2:30 p.m. on Saturday. Friday's game will be streamed on Big Ten Network Plus and Saturday's televised on the Big Ten Network.
Michigan State has faced some huge challenges this season but this weekend's series may be the biggest.
How do you stop the third-highest scoring team in the nation, one that averages 3.88 goals per game?
How do you contain three of the highest scorers in the country in sophomores Cole Caufield and Dylan Holloway and senior Linus Weissbach?
How do you stop the Badgers' five-forwards power play, which is converting at nation-leading 30.9 percent? How, besides not taking ANY penalties.
Caufield, arguably the favorite for the Hobey Baker Award, leads the nation in goals with 22 goals and points with 42 in 26 games. Linemate Weissbach is No. 3 nationally. He has 11 goals and 24 assists for 35 points.
And Holloway, who plays on the second line but is a major threat on the No. 1 power play, is tied for fourth in the national scoring race with 33 points – 11 goals and 22 assists.
Caufield is a first-round NHL draft pick by the Montreal Canadiens – 15th overall in 2019. Holloway was selected by the Edmonton Oilers in the first round – 14th overall – in 2020. And Weissbach was drafted in the seventh round by the Buffalo Sabres in 2017.
For sure, the Badgers are not a three-forward team. They're pretty balanced with several forwards adding to their offense.
Senior Ty Pelton-Byce, who centers Caulfield on right wing and Weissbach on the left, has 11 goals and 14 assists for 25 points. Roman Ahcan, a junior, has seven goals and 12 assists for 19 points and junior Brock Caufield, Cole's older brother, has chipped in with seven goal and nine assists for 16 points.
The Spartans will try to always keep Cole Caufield in their sights but it's not like they'll be assigning one play to shadow him all over the ice.
"You obviously have to play attention to him. He's a heck of a hockey player and, as a goal scorer, he's probably as good as we've seen in a long time,'' Cole said. "In the old days, you'd put a guy on someone – shadow him – but that's not a thing that's done much anymore.
"It's paying attention to how you play defensively, how you play with the puck and limit his chances and being aware when he's on the ice. Those are things you certainly can do.
"But they also have Holloway and Weissbach and several other guys that are very good offensive players. The way you play defensively, you can't change. And your coverage has to be tight. You have to take care of things, you have to close and not give them time and space and be diligent with that up and down your lineup.''
Since sweeping the Spartans, Wisconsin is 6-1-1, including a sweep of then-No. 1 Minnesota in Minneapolis, and has outscored opponents, 34-17. The Badgers are coming off a sweep of Ohio State – a 2-1 win in overtime and a 7-0 romp in their home finale.
Caufield had two assists in the first game against OSU and three goals, his second hat trick of the season, in the second contest.
Since the start of 2021, Caufield has 16 goals and 14 assists for 30 points in 16 games.
"If you're going to give him a lot of time and space and not contest the puck and not gap up and not close in the neutral zone, he's going to get a lot of looks,'' Cole said. "You want good tight coverage on guys and not open it up and give them opportunities.''
While the Spartans brace for Wisconsin's offense, they're also focusing on what ails their team the most – lack of scoring. MSU had some good chances in last Saturday's 2-0 loss but couldn't finish. The scenario was similar in Friday's 2-0 defeat.
"The guys did a decent amount of things right (last weekend) but the one thing we didn't do right was score goals,'' Cole said. "But the process and some of the things the guys did was good. We had chances, breakaways. You have to keep battling through and continue to work on things.''
Dealing with not scoring and losing is tough on the players, especially when they work hard, play with energy and don't get rewarded.
Defenseman Dennis Cesana said team morale is still high and players are still working hard to end the slump.
"I think sticking together is the biggest thing. We're a pretty tight group,'' Cesana said. "Obviously, we all want to win. It's the same for every team.
"We've just been having trouble finding the back of the net. It's sticking with it. We're not on each other. We're grown men and know how to act. We're trying to battle through it as a group.
"We're in good spirits. It's being as positive as we can through all of this.''
MSU enters the weekend in sixth place with a .275 conference winning percentage. Ohio State is seventh at .273. But the Spartans need to win one game or tie both games to finish sixth and avoid last place. The Buckeyes' winning percentage won change this weekend because they're playing a non-conference series against Arizona State.
If Michigan State finishes sixth, it'll play the third-place team – Michigan or Notre Dame – in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament March 14 in Notre Dame, Ind., the tourney site.
If the Spartans end up seventh, they'll play the second-place team – Wisconsin or Minnesota.
THE MSU-UW RIVALRY: There's a one-game difference in the Spartans-Badgers series with MSU holding a 59-58 edge. Last season, Michigan State went 3-1 against the Badgers, sweeping at Munn Arena, 3-0, 5-4, and splitting in Madison, winning the series opener, 4-0, and losing the second game 3-1.
This season, the Badgers swept the Spartans, 6-0, 4-1, in Madison, Jan. 29-30.
Over the last six seasons, including 2020-21, Wisconsin holds a 12-9-1 edge.
SCOUTING THE BADGERS: A year ago, despite having one of best freshman classes in the nation, Wisconsin never got in sync as a team and struggled with consistency.
As a result, the Badgers finished last (7th) in the Big Ten with a 7-15-2 record and were 14-20-2 overall. And despite ending the regular season at 4-1-1, Wisconsin was eliminated in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament by Ohio State, 9-1 and 2-1.
This season, the Badgers found the right team chemistry and with
a potent offense, improved goaltending and solid defense, if not particularly offensive-minded, they developed into a Big Ten title contender and NCAA Tournament team.
A high-powered offense is what Wisconsin is known for in 2020-21 but this is a complete team with few weaknesses. It's not that the Badgers are unbeatable but if they're playing with speed, attacking and getting strong goaltending, it's a team that could make a long run in the NCAA Tournament and end up in Frozen Four in Pittsburgh in April.
The defense is led by senior Tyler Inamoto, a product of the U.S. National Team Development Program and a tremendous shot-blocker, and junior Ty Emberson. The defense includes senior Josh Ess, freshman Anthony Kehrer, junior Jesper Peltonen, sophomore Mike Vorlicky and freshman Luke LeMaster.
In goal, the Badgers have been sharing the duties between Robbie Beydoun, a graduate transfer from Michigan Tech, and freshman Cameron Rowe in the last six series.
Rowe, a 6-foot-3, 212-pounder from Wilmette, Illinois, has an 8-1-1 record, a 1.77 goals-against average and a .939 save percentage. Beydoun, a 6-0, 185-pounder from Plymouth, Michigan, is 9-7, with a 2.75 GAA and a .914 saves percentage.
At one point in his junior career, Beydoun was teammates with current Spartans Brody Stevens and Tommy Miller. Beydoun played at Michigan Tech for three seasons before transferring.
The Wisconsin roster includes seven players from Wisconsin, seven from Minnesota, six from Illinois, one from Michigan, two from Europe and only two Canadians – Dylan Holloway (Alberta) and Kehrer (Manitoba).
Wisconsin has had three straight losing seasons and hasn't made the NCAA Tournament since 2013-14, under Coach Mike Eaves.
The Badgers haven't won a conference championship since 1999-2000 when they finished first in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association under Coach Jeff Sauer.
Wisconsin can win the 2020-21 Big Ten regular-season title if it sweeps Michigan State and Minnesota loses one game or ties twice this weekend against Michigan.
Wisconsin's last NCAA title came in 2005-06, one year before Michigan State won its last national championship in 2007.
SAVES LEADER: Michigan State's Drew DeRidder has stopped more pucks than any other goaltender in college hockey. DeRidder leads the nation with 704 saves, an average of 30.61 per game. Tommy Nappier of Ohio State is second with 640.
DeRidder also leads the Big Ten in saves in conference games with 592, with Nappier second with 576.
The junior goalie has a 2.64 goals-against average and a .926 saves percentage, fourth in the Big Ten.
MSU UPDATES: Mitchell Mattson has sat out the last six games with an unspecified injury or illness, but he could return the lineup this weekend against Wisconsin.
"There were some medical issues that had to be resolved. Those are cleared up and he's feeling better,'' Coach Danton Cole said. "He had a good week of practice and hopefully we can be back in there.''
Mattson, a 6-foot-4, 205-pound junior center/wing from Grand Rapids, Minnesota, has two goals and four points in 18 games.
"He's done a nice job for us killing penalties. And he did get some points early on in the year and that helped us out when that line was getting goals,'' Cole said. "We'll take them anywhere right now.''
SPARTAN POTPOURRI: Senior forward Mitchell Lewandowski is MSU's top scorer against Wisconsin with 11 goals and five assists for 16 points in 14 games. He scored the Spartans' only goal against the Badgers in their 4-1 loss in late January.
Lewandowski, with six goals and five assists for 11 points, shares the team scoring lead with sophomore center Josh Nodler (3-8-11) and junior defenseman Dennis Cesana (1-10-11). Lewandowski is one point away from the career 100-point mark. He has 49 goals and 50 assists.
Lewandowski and fellow senior, defenseman Tommy Miller, have never missed a game in their Spartan careers. They played in 132 consecutive games.
Meanwhile, Miller leads the Big Ten and is tied for second in the nation in blocked shots with 65. Miller's 267 career blocks are tied for second most in MSU history.
IN THE BIG TEN: Two series will determine which team – Minnesota or Wisconsin – skates off with the regular-season championship on Saturday.
First-place Minnesota (15-5-0, .750 Big Ten winning percentage) closes out at home against Michigan on Friday and Saturday. The Gophers, who've been in first place most of the season, can capture first place with two victories or one win, if Wisconsin splits at Michigan State.
The Badgers (15-6-1, .705 Big Ten winning percentage) need to sweep the Spartans and hope Michigan beats the Gophers once, or the teams play to a pair of ties. That would give Wisconsin a better winning percentage, which is how the Big Ten is determining the final standings.
The change from points to winning percentage was made because not all teams will be able to finish the regular season with the same number of games because of Covid-19 cancellations.
In the other conference series, Penn State is at Notre Dame on Friday and Saturday. The Nittany Lions haven't played since Jan 30 because of Covid-10 issues.
Ohio State wraps up its regular season with a non-conference series at home against Arizona State on Thursday and Friday.
Michigan can still finish third or fourth, Notre Dame can finish third, fourth or fifth, Penn State can end up fourth or fifth, and Michigan State and Ohio State can place sixth or seventh.
The Big Ten Tournament in Notre Dame, Indiana, begins Sunday, March 14, with quarterfinal games at noon, 4 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
The three winners advance to the semifinals on March 15 with the lowest-seeded team playing the regular-season champion, which receives a first-round bye. The No. 2 and 3 seeds meet in the other semifinal.
The semifinals are set for 4:30 and 8:30 p.m.
The Big Ten championship game is at 8 p.m. on March 16. All six games in the tournament will be televised by the Big Ten Network.
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