Pitching packs a punch to baseball bettors and more baseball stuff

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Pitching packs a punch to baseball bettors

Maybe it?s the SportsCenter syndrome, or too many highlights on Baseball Tonight, but it sure seems like their have been more blown saves this season then in the past. Talked to a number of people, from normal every day fans to serious baseball bettors and the answer was the same, they agreed, more blown saves in 2009 then in the past. This piqued my curiosity and had to find the correct answer. As it turns out, they are up slightly, however not as much as I and others believed.

This year, save conversions are running about 65 percent, which is actually up from last season?s total of 64 percent. From 2002 to 2007 the range was 66 to 68 percent. This is not earth-shattering news. Over the past seven seasons, the average number of save opportunities per team is just over 63 per year. The difference between the best and worst years is two blown saves per season, which does not automatically mean a team loses the game, as they often come back and win, like the Los Angeles Angels did Thursday afternoon in Toronto.

Where it matters to baseball bettors is the best and worst teams in the big leagues. The top five teams in saves are as follows. (Thru June 3, rounding up numbers)

1) Cincinnati - 93 percent
2) Texas ? 85 percent
3) Boston ? 83 percent
4) N.Y. Mets ? 73 percent
5) Philadelphia ? 73 percent

This group is not necessarily the best teams in baseball; nonetheless they have unique quality every one laying down money wants to see. Collectively, these teams are +29.8 units. When handicapping games, why this is important is if any of these teams have a favorable to somewhat favorable pitching matchup and they can enter the later innings with a lead, chances are they will close the deal with set-up man and closer.

Value is also to be found on the bottom end of the spectrum, playing against teams that have lamentable bullpens. In this case, if the starting pitching matchup is close to dead even and the teams are fairly equal in hitting numbers, the club with relief pitchers that struggle to hold opponents at bay, are intriguing plays. With these types of teams, a one or two run lead means it is slightly better then 50-50 they will hold the advantage and deliver a winning wager. Here is current bottom five teams in save percentage.

30) Washington - 38 percent
29) Houston ? 52 percent
28) Toronto 53 percent
27) Cleveland 55 percent
26) Florida 55 percent

This grouping has lost 35.1 units in combining to blow 52 saves already this year. Though the Blue Jays are actually in the black for units won, they have given up leads, only to rebound and come back to win in last at bats.

While saving games is important, it helps to have depth and quality hurlers who have a great deal to offer. For example, the starting pitcher is cuffed around for five runs in four innings and is pulled. The particular team trails 5-1, but because of the long reliever and his cohorts shut down the opposition, sometimes they end up scoring enough runs and can sneak away with a victory, because the pen held the fort.

There are two units of measurement to identify the entire bullpen, earned run average and WHIP. (For those who forgot about how WHIP is formulated- Divide the number of hits and walks by the number of innings pitched)

The ERA is a fairly accurate method of looking at a bullpen, from a broader perspective. Generally speaking, most good teams will have lower ERA?s and most bad teams will have high ERA?s. Among the weakness of this statistic, it does not take into consideration the affects of ball parks (pitcher?s parks vs hitter?s parks). If a reliever allows the tying or winning run to score, the previous pitcher is held accountable, not the hurler that gave up the hit, which is why the stat ?holds? was invented.
Here is the top and bottom teams in each league by ERA?s for bullpens.

National League
1) N.Y. Mets
2) Milwaukee
3) Cincinnati
4) St. Louis
5) L.A. Dodgers

12) Houston
13) Chic. Cubs
14) Arizona
15) Colorado
16) Washington

American League
1) Boston
2) Chic. White Sox
3) Seattle
4) Tampa Bay
5) Oakland

10) Texas
11) N.Y. Yankees
12) Cleveland
13) Baltimore
14) L.A. Angels
Nearly all the National League teams are in relative harmony with the teams? records; this is not the case in the American League. Four of the top five teams in ERA bullpens in the junior circuit are average to mediocre clubs. Possibly the reasons for this is starting pitching is sordid or the offensive doesn?t generate enough runs, even if the pen does its job. In the bottom assemblage is first place teams the Yankees and Rangers. Both clubs have suffered blowouts that inflated numbers and play in what is today pitcher?s parks. While the jury is still out how good these bullpens will ultimately be, they have been masked in sorts by high scoring offenses.

This is where the WHIP comes into play to tie up the loose ends. The WHIP counts from first pitch by any reliever. Give up a hit or walk, it matters and here we can start to understand why certain ERA?s differ from the WHIP. The Yankees WHIP is 6th in the AL, more in line with how they are playing. The White Sox, they fall to 7th when using this as measuring stick, suggesting they are not quite as effective and the offense is lagging. The most notable differential is the Mariners, who have the 3rd best ERA, yet are next to last in WHIP in the AL. This shows their pitchers create problems for themselves. For the most part the Seattle relievers have avoided major disasters; however, over the course of 162-game season, chances are this will catch up with any team.

Here is how the WHIP?s shake out in each league.

National League
1) Milwaukee
2) St. Louis
3) Philadelphia
4) N.Y. Mets
5) Cincinnati

12) Chic. Cubs
13) Arizona
14) Pittsburgh
15) Colorado
16) Washington

American League
1) Toronto
2) Boston
3) Tampa Bay
4) Minnesota
5) Oakland
10) Texas
11) Baltimore
12) Kansas City
13) Seattle
14) L.A. Angels

Knowing what are the best and worst bullpens, from a complete perspective, will add real dollars to wagering account over the course of a long season.
 
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Fade Teams

Fade Teams

Fade Teams

The baseball season is in full swing and Matt Fargo will be examining teams that are hot and teams that are not and how they can make us some money. This week he takes a look at some cold teams that may be providing some good value to play against in the upcoming schedule.

San Diego Padres 25-28 +0.28 Units





The Padres put together a 10-game winning streak to try and put some pressure on the Dodgers but who are we kidding? San Diego does not have the bats or the pitching to be a player in the National League West. Since that winning streak came to an end, the Padres have gone 2-6 and are looking like another swoon is about to take place. While the end of May was good, the beginning of May was not as they went 2-11 to start the month and that was simply too big of a hole to dig out of.

San Diego has one great pitcher in Jake Peavy but his days in a Pads' uniform are just about numbered. Even he is not having a great season with a 4.10 ERA to go along with a 5-6 record through 12 starts. Considering that is the best ERA among starters, it is easy to figure out that the starting staff is not good at all. Overall, the team ERA is 4.43 which is just below average but it is due to a decent bullpen ranked 11th in baseball with a 4.04 ERA. The offense is dead last in the Majors with a .238 average while their 209 runs scored are third worst.

That big winning streak may still be fresh in the minds of some bettors so we may still see some good value going the other way. The Padres have a weekend series at home against the Diamondbacks starting Friday so we will see some decent numbers to play against as Arizona is not going to be big favorites. After that come five games against the Dodgers and Angels. We may not see the value we would like in those games therefore we will take a look at the runlines in those contests.

Baltimore Orioles 24-30 -3.62 Units

The Orioles are in last place in the American League East but at just six games under .500, is there hope on the horizon? Nah. Baltimore used to be a power team annually but things have gone from bad to worse in recent years. The Orioles are stockpiling young players, some of which we are seeing already, so within a couple years they have the potential to make a move. Right now however, I see a slide coming on following what was a very decent month of May.

Pitching problems are the recurring theme for Baltimore?s lack of success and this year is no different. The Orioles have a team ERA of 5.16 which is ahead of only the Indians in the American League. The starters have a 5.33 ERA while the bullpen has a 5.07 ERA so there is no strength anywhere among the arms. Baltimore has used nine different starters which is a sure sign that problems exist. As far as offense, Baltimore is hitting .268 while scoring 255 runs, both of which are in the top half of the league. The problem is that it is hardly strong enough to make up for the putrid pitching taking place.

The Orioles lost two of three in Seattle before heading to Oakland for a weekend series beginning Friday. We may not see a ton of value going against the Orioles but starting next week that will change. Baltimore is home for nine straight games against the Mariners, Braves and Mets. Being home, playing against Baltimore will be much easier since it will be favored in some games along with being slight underdogs in others. Keep an eye on the upcoming numbers and find those play-against spots to take advantage.
 

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Bullpen Banter

Bullpen Banter

Bullpen Banter

Thriving ? Chicago White Sox

I felt the ChiSox might be a surprise in the A.L. this season. Their pre-season odds to win the World Series sat at 40 to 1 and that was a decent long shot investment in my opinion. They started the season terribly and my forecast looked to be off base. However, now this team has won 10 of their last 14, moved close to .500 and sit in second place in a fairly weak A.L. Central. They are now just 3.5 games out of first place and their bullpen has had a lot to do with that resurgence.

The Chicago bullpen has been extremely solid over the last few weeks with the exception of one GIANT blip. That was a 20-1 loss to Minnesota on May 21st where the relievers contributed heavily to the lambasting. The Sox bullpen in that game allowed a whopping 12 runs. However, since that meltdown, the White Sox are 8-3 and the bullpen?s collective ERA is only 1.48. They have gone six straight games (Tuesday night?s results included) without allowing a single earned run. This set of relievers sit just behind Boston for the A.L. lead in bullpen ERA this season and that includes the 12 run debacle a few weeks ago.



The Southsiders have several individuals having fantastic years out of the pen. Closer Bobby Jenks has an 0-2 record, however he has recorded 12 saves in 13 attempts this season. The middle relief ? set up situation has been lights out for this team. Veteran Scott Linebrink has made 19 appearances and his ERA is a miniscule 1.93. Octavio Dotel has trotted to the mound 20 times already this year and his ERA is barely above 1.00. Right hander D.J. Carrasco has pitched 33 innings in relief and allowed only 9 earned runs. The top left hander out of the pen is Matt Thornton and he has been fabulous with 30 strikeouts in 21 innings and an ERA of 1.71. Those mentioned are a very solid top ?five-some? to work with for fiery manager Ozzie Guillen.

This team will be one to watch as I mentioned before the season started. The starting pitching has been solid with Mark Buehrle having all All-Star year. John Danks and Gavin Floyd are now starting to pitch to their potential after each had a rough start to the season. The bats are coming alive as they have averaged 6.3 runs per game over the last eight outings. Management has also shown a willingness to try and hit a ?home run? in an attempt to deal for Jake Peavy recently. One constant should this team make a run will be the bullpen with some of the best numbers in the Majors.

Struggling ? Colorado Rockies

As of this writing the Rockies have the second worst record in all of baseball. While their performance at the plate has been abysmal hitting just .247 as a team, Colorado?s bullpen has had a lot to do with their struggles this year. Their bullpen numbers have actually gotten worse as of late and if it doesn?t improve soon, this team will stay at or near the bottom of the National League.

Speaking of struggling lately, how are these numbers for you? The Rockie bullpen has an ERA of 14.31 over their last eight games. It?s no surprise they won only two of those games. As for the entire season, opponents are hitting over .300 against this bullpen and their overall ERA is 5.21. That?s good for 28th in the Majors. Only the Angels and Nationals rank lower. That?s also one of the main reasons that Colorado is just 3-10 in one run games. As a whole, the relievers have a record of just 5-10 and have blown five saves.

One argument for the Rockie bullpen might be the terrible pitching venue they perform in. Coors Field has long been known as a grave yard for pitchers, however a recent road stint proved that these relievers can be just as bad on the road as they are at home. A 10-game, mid-May road trip through Atlanta, Detroit and Cleveland showed the struggles of this pen. During that run they allowed 18 earned runs in 23 innings pitched. They also allowed their opponents to hit .300. So while Coors Field has something to do with the inflated numbers here, it?s not the only factor. They have simply been bad.

Of the six relievers making the most appearances this year, only closer Huston Street has an ERA below 5.89. Jason Grilli and Manny Copras have been the biggest disappointments after some past success. Grilli has allowed a terrible 39 base runners in only 18.1 innings pitched. Copras has an ERA of 6.08 in his 23 innings thrown. The starting pitching has been OK, but the bullpen has been a back breaker. Clint Hurdle found that out when he was ousted from his managerial position in May. If replacement manager Jim Tracy has any hopes of taking this job full time at the end of the season, his bullpen better wake up soon.

OTHER BULLPEN SNIPPETS
Kansas City Royals ? KC was a surprise team out of the gate, however they have really fallen flat lately winning just 5 of their last 22 games. They really need closer Joakim Soria back soon. They may get their wish as Soria is reportedly close to returning. Soria was a perfect 7 for 7 in save opportunities and had not allowed an earned run when he went down with an injury in early May. His replacement, Juan Cruz, has really faltered lately allowing 9 hits and 7 earned runs in his last 4 innings pitched.

Washington Nationals ? The Nats bullpen has been outright atrocious this year. They sit at the bottom of the Majors in ERA at 5.80. However, closer Joel Hanrahan appears that he might be a sliver of hope in an otherwise unstable situation. Hanrahan has not blown a save since April and has allowed only one run in his last six appearances. I realize he doesn?t really get a whole lot of save opportunities with Washington, but he has been a positive for the pitching staff.
 

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LVSC Rankings - Week 9

LVSC Rankings - Week 9

LVSC Rankings - Week 9

Las Vegas Sports Consultants still considers the American League East baseball's best division. Rivals New York and Boston remain the top-two ranked teams, but the Yankees have overtaken the Red Sox atop the ratings. New York and Boston are also 1-2 in the AL East standings after 50 games played the first two months of the season.

Toronto is right there in the mix concerning the AL East race, but the Blue Jays have dropped from 11th to 13th in the Week 9 LVSC Power Rankings. Toronto has been a solid club when playing North of the Border with a 19-11 record, but the Blue Jays are a dismal 11-17 on the road. Coach Cito Gaston's squad continues a nine-game homestand that concludes with a three-game set against Kansas City June 5-7.

The Los Angeles Dodgers have remained entrenched at the third spot according to LVSC despite having the best record in baseball. Coach Joe Torre's team is enjoying the biggest lead of any division leader (nine games ahead of second-place San Francisco), and the Dodgers are already halfway through outfielder Manny Ramirez's 50-game league suspension. Los Angeles sports a stellar 19-6 home ledger, and continues a nine-game homestand this week against Philadelphia and San Diego.

St. Louis is locked in a spirited battle atop the National League Central standings with Milwaukee, and both teams have seen their stock rise in the LVSC Power Rankings. The Cardinals jumped from eighth to fourth, while the Brewers have gone from 12th to ninth. St. Louis maintains an 18-10 home record at Busch Stadium, and will play at home until June 9 when the team begins a six-game road trip. Milwaukee is 16-9 at home, but is currently in the middle of a seven-game road trip against Florida and Atlanta. The Brewers are a pedestrian 14-13 when playing on the road.

There are six teams tied for three seperate spots on the Week 9 LVSC Power Rankings, with seventh being shared by Tampa Bay and the Chicago Cubs. Chicago spent the early part of the season as the NL's top-rated team, but the Cubs have fallen slightly after struggling to a 9-15 road record. Tampa Bay has dropped from fifth to seventh, and is currently mired in fourth place in the power-rich AL East. In fact, the defending American League champions are just 1 1/2 games ahead of the lowly Baltimore Orioles who reside in the AL East cellar.

The Los Angeles Angels and Detroit Tigers share LVSC's 10th-spot, although it appears both teams are headed in different directions. Los Angeles is chasing Texas in the AL West standings, and the Angels were ranked ninth in last week's LVSC ratings. Detroit is leading the AL Central, and improved from 13th to 10th by taking a 3 1/2 game lead over Minnesota and Chicago.

Two teams struggling the first 50 games of the season find themselves tied at 19th, a combined 20 1/2 games out of first place. Cleveland and Arizona are hoping to turn things around before the July All-Star break, but the teams appear to be losing more ground as the season progresses. The Indians can make up some ground on AL Central opponents Minnesota and Chicago this week, but those games are on the road where Cleveland is just 10-18. Arizona is also playing on the road this week that includes a four-game set at San Diego.

LVSC is the company that provides odds to almost 90 percent of Nevada's casinos, and these Power Rankings are used when providing lines for every baseball game. Now let's take a closer look at all the numbers.


LVSC MLB Power Rankings - Week 9
Rank Team (Record) Previous Rank
1 N.Y. Yankees (29-21) 2
2 Boston (29-22) 1
3 LA Dodgers (35-17) 3
4 St. Louis (29-21) 8
5 Philadelphia (28-20) 6
6 NY Mets (28-21) 4
7 Tampa Bay (25-28) 5
7 Chicago Cubs (25-24) 7
9 Milwaukee (30-20) 12
10 LA Angels (25-24) 9
10 Detroit (28-21) 13
12 Atlanta (25-25) 10
13 Toronto (29-24) 11
14 Minnesota (25-27) 14
15 Texas (30-20) 15
16 Cincinnati (26-23) 16
17 Chicago White Sox (24-25) 21
18 Florida (23-28) 18
19 Arizona (22-29) 17
19 Cleveland (22-30) 18
21 San Francisco (25-24) 23
22 Oakland (19-29) 21
23 Baltimore (23-28) 24
24 Kansas City (23-27) 20
25 Seattle (24-27) 25
26 San Diego (25-25) 27
27 Colorado (20-29) 26
28 Pittsburgh (22-28) 28
29 Houston (20-28) 29
30 Washington (13-36) 30
 

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White Sox on the way up

White Sox on the way up

White Sox on the way up
Thriving

Chicago White Sox

There was a chance that the ChiSox would be a surprise this season. Their preseason odds to win the World Series sat at +4000 and that was a decent long-shot investment. They started the season terribly and that forecast looked to be off.

Now this team has won 10 of their last 14 games, moved close to .500 and sit in second place in a fairly weak American League Central. They are now just 3.5 games out of first place and their bullpen has had a lot to do with that resurgence.

The Chicago bullpen has been extremely solid over the last few weeks with the exception of one giant blip. That was a 20-1 loss to Minnesota on May 21, where the relievers contributed heavily to the lambasting. The Sox bullpen in that game allowed a whopping 12 runs. But since that meltdown, the White Sox are 8-3 and the bullpen?s collective ERA is only 1.48.

They have gone six straight games heading into Wednesday without allowing a single earned run. This set of relievers sit just behind Boston for the AL lead in bullpen ERA and that includes the 12-run debacle a few weeks ago.

The Southsiders have several relievers riding fantastic years. Closer Bobby Jenks has a 0-2 record, but he has recorded 12 saves in 13 attempts this season. The middle relief and set up situation has been lights out for this team. Veteran Scott Linebrink has made 19 appearances and his ERA is a miniscule 1.93. Octavio Dotel has trotted to the mound 20 times already this year and his ERA is barely above 1.00. Right hander D.J. Carrasco has pitched 33 innings in relief and allowed only nine earned runs. The top left hander out of the pen is Matt Thornton and he has been fabulous with 30 strikeouts in 21 innings and an ERA of 1.71. Those mentioned are a very solid five-some for fiery manager Ozzie Guillen.

This team will be one to watch. The starting pitching has been solid with Mark Buehrle having all All-Star year. John Danks and Gavin Floyd are now starting to pitch to their potential after rough starts to the season. The bats are coming alive as they have averaged 6.3 runs per game over the last eight outings. Management has also shown a willingness to hit a ?home run? in an attempt to deal for Jake Peavy recently. One constant should this team make a run will be the bullpen with some of the best numbers in the majors.

Struggling

Colorado Rockies

As of this writing the Rockies have the second-worst record in all of baseball. While their performance at the plate has been abysmal hitting just .247 as a team, Colorado?s bullpen has had a lot to do with their struggles. Lately, the bullpen numbers have actually gotten and if it doesn?t improve soon, this team will stay near the bottom of the National League.

The Rockies bullpen has an ERA of 14.31 over their last eight games. It?s no surprise they won only two of those outings. As for the season, opponents are hitting over .300 BA against this bullpen and their overall ERA is 5.21. That?s one of the main reasons why Colorado is just 3-10 in one-run games. As a whole, the relievers have a record of just 5-10 and have blown five saves.

One argument for the Rockies bullpen might be the terrible pitching venue they perform in. Coors Field has long been known as a grave yard for pitchers. However, a recent road stint proved that these relievers can be just as bad on the road as they are at home. A 10-game, mid-May road trip through Atlanta, Detroit and Cleveland showed the struggles of this pen. During that run they allowed 18 earned runs in 23 innings pitched. They also allowed their opponents to hit .300 BA.

Of the six relievers making the most appearances this year, only closer Huston Street has an ERA below 5.89. Jason Grilli and Manny Copras have been the biggest disappointments after some past success. Grilli has allowed a terrible 39 base runners in only 18.1 innings pitched. Copras has an ERA of 6.08 in his 23 innings thrown.

The starting pitching has been OK, but the bullpen has been a back breaker. Clint Hurdle found that out when he was ousted from his managerial position in May. If replacement manager Jim Tracy has any hopes of taking this job full time at the end of the season, his bullpen better wake up.

Bullpen snipits

Kansas City Royals ? Kansas City was a surprise team out of the gate but it has really fallen flat lately, winning just five of its last 22 games. The Royals really need closer Joakim Soria back soon. They may get their wish as Soria is reportedly close to returning. Soria was a perfect 7-for-7 in save opportunities and had not allowed an earned run when he went down with an injury in early May. His replacement, Juan Cruz, has really faltered lately, allowing nine hits and seven earned runs in his last four innings pitched.

Washington Nationals ? The Nats bullpen has been outright atrocious this year. They sit at the bottom of the majors in ERA at 5.80. However, closer Joel Hanrahan appears that he might be a sliver of hope in an otherwise unstable situation. Hanrahan has not blown a save since April and has allowed only one run in his last six appearances. He doesn?t get a whole lot of save opportunities with Washington, but he has been a positive for the pitching staff.
 

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Recent trend shows under cashing for MLB total bettors

Recent trend shows under cashing for MLB total bettors

Recent trend shows under cashing for MLB total bettors

What a difference a month makes.

Nearly 30 days ago, bettors who played the over in Major League games were thriving, as the total went over in nearly 54 percent of games the first month of the season. In the offensive-oriented American League, that number was almost a percent higher. For the first five weeks of the season, 20 of the 30 teams were even averaging more runs than a year ago.

But those numbers have fallen back to Earth ? hard.

From Monday, May 25 through Sunday, May 30, all MLB teams were a combined 37-58-1 against the total. National League teams were 22-28, but the American League ? with all its offensive prowess and designated hitters ? was a wretched, 15-30-1.

?The AL has always been the bettors? favorite spot to bet the over on,? Randy Scott, sportsbook manager for betED.com, said. ?We see approximately 20 percent more over bets in the AL, than we do NL. The NL over/unders usually produce balanced action.?

For the season, the under entered Thursday night?s games covering 50.6 percent of the time in both leagues combined.

?Usually, the lopsided action will balance as the trend fades or swings back,? Scott said. ?In these cases, there is usually a small window of opportunity for the bettors to recognize the swing back of a trend before the action has time to subside and the books to again react to the swing.?

And it appears that teams going over the total now reside in the National League. Entering Thursday?s games, Milwaukee, Florida and San Francisco each had over streaks of three games, with no other teams in baseball topping the total more than once.

Ironically, the two longest under streaks in baseball are in the AL, where Oakland (four straight) and the Chicago White Sox (three straight) are failing to light up the score boards.

?Sometimes crazy things happen and they happen in a cycle,? Scott Rickenbach, a professional handicapper at Covers Experts, said. ?Like when it seems like most games every night are seeing a ton of rally-killers. Double plays, caught stealing, guys getting picked off, line drives seemingly always hit right at somebody.

?Sometimes the bloop hits versus the big hits are the most important thing to understand because that doesn't show up in the box score. Sometimes line drives are always hit right at guys or there seems to be no clutch hitting going on anywhere in the league. This cycles do come up sometimes but they don't last long and the key is to pull back carefully during a time like this if you're an over player.?

Even weirder for the American League, is that it has two of the best over teams ? Cleveland (31-23) and Baltimore (29-24) ? and two of the best under bets ? Chicago White Sox (22-33) and Seattle (24-30).

And as the weather warms up, don?t necessarily look for a huge swing back toward offensive domination, but instead for trends to fade and results to become more consistent.

?Weather is warming up and the bats will warm up as well. The key is just finding the right spots,? Rickenbach said. ?The nice thing about the overs in the summer is not that they?re so much more prevalent - because the reality is that they're not. It's just that the weather doesn't tend to hurt an over like it can earlier in the season.?
 
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