Tag: Justin Upton

Updating the Hottest Questions of the 2015-2016 MLB Offseason, Week 9

The glacial market for bats is slowly beginning to thaw, which means the long winter wait for Yoenis Cespedes, Chris Davis and Justin Upton should soon draw to an end as Week 9 of the 2015-2016 MLB offseason comes to a close.

While those unemployed sluggers dominate the conversation, there’s also room for some talk about a retired masher and a former ace whose Hall of Fame credentials are in the headlines.

Plus, an important question has popped up in Southern California following the latest executive addition to the Los Angeles Dodgers’ All-Star front office.

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Post-New Year Predictions for the Rest of the MLB Offseason

Yoenis Cespedes, Chris Davis, Alex Gordon and Justin Upton have historically bad luck.

As Joel Sherman of the New York Post sees it, the market for free-agent game-changers has never developed at a slower pace.

“Never has there been this many talented free agents unsigned this late into the offseason.”

While those unfortunate and unemployed stars wait to find out where they’ll be playing in 2016, let’s play a game of offseason musical chairs and predict where everyone will end up when the music stops.

Free-agent hitters dominate the conversation, but there’s also room on the list for a prediction about one trade target who smashed 40 home runs during the season that was.

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Assessing Justin Upton’s, Yoenis Cespedes’ Worth After Jason Heyward’s Megadeal

For a brief moment in time, the entire belief made a lot of sense. 

It was too logical not to.

Major League Baseball’s free agency and trade market had seen the predictable run on starting pitchers, and even a bunch of relievers. Then, somewhat predictably, the biggest position player on either market, Jason Heyward, signed his megadeal with the Chicago Cubs for $184 million over eight seasons.

After that, if figured to be time for the best of the rest, especially the outfielders. Among them, Justin Upton and Yoenis Cespedes were the headliners, but surprisingly, they remain on the marquee going on two weeks after news of Heyward’s agreement came to light.

While those two are still on the board, it is certainly worth examining why and how much each is worth, obviously using Heyward’s massive contract as a barometer. Neither Upton nor Cespedes should reach those heights in years or total money, but both deals stand to be significant—sooner or later.

“I don’t remember it ever being separated like that,” Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein told ESPN’s Jerry Crasnick days before his team agreed to terms with Heyward. “There was just more supply and more demand for pitchers than anywhere else, and outfielders came next. Everyone is just waiting for the first one to sign.”

The first one has now, yet there is still little to no movement on the markets for Upton or Cespedes, as well as Alex Gordon, who is seen as another premier outfield option, though one who will receive a lighter contract than the other two because he will be 32 years old next season.

All three can make cases to top $100 million in the open market, but Upton and Cespedes are locks to do so.

Upton, a former No. 1 overall pick by the Arizona Diamondbacks, is going into his age-28 season and is coming off three very good seasons, all of which were played in the traditional pitcher-friendly parks of Turner Field and Petco Park. In those three seasons with the Atlanta Braves and San Diego Padres, Upton has averaged 27 home runs a year and put up a 126 OPS+.

He has been durable and consistent, a knock on him during his five seasons with the Diamondbacks, as his OPS+ totals fluctuated from as low as 107 to 141 in that time. That unpredictability, which led him to be tabbed by his first organization as an underachiever with five-tool talent, led to Upton being traded to the Braves, who flipped him to the Padres after two productive seasons in Atlanta.

Having absolutely proven he can be a middle-of-the-order bat, Upton’s market figured to be flush with suitors this offseason. But through November, the winter meetings and now headed into Christmas and the end of the year, there has been only quiet rumors regarding Upton. The Baltimore Orioles seem to be a realistic option and fit—the Orioles need an impact bat, could use an outfielder, and Upton is from bordering Virginia—but there’s been little traction there since CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman reported the team met with Upton’s agent before Heyward signed with the Cubs.

The San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Angels have a need for a power-hitting outfielder, but the Giants took themselves out of that market after signing Johnny Cueto last week, and Angels owner Arte Moreno told reporters (per Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times) his team will not pursue Upton or Cespedes. We should not completely count out either club, though.

If they truly are out on either player, it would hurt both players’ leverage. However, Upton being the youngest of the remaining options and still a premier outfielder in his prime means a huge contract is in play. Tim Dierkes of MLB Trade Rumors predicted a seven-year, $147 million contract, and that kind of deal, and maybe even a richer one, still seems plausible considering what outfielders like Matt Kemp ($160 million), Jacoby Ellsbury ($153 million) and Carl Crawford ($142 million) have received.

In the current market, Upton is worth something along the lines of a $20-23 million average annual value. Despite being older, Jeff Todd of MLB Trade Rumors predicted during the winter meetings that Cespedes would receive around the top end of that range, at $140 million over six years.

FanGraphs’ Dave Cameron predicted Cespedes would get $150 million over seven years. That total monetary value seems accurate, considering he is 30 and his recent and projected production, according to Cameron’s FanGraphs teammate Craig Edwards.

Cespedes has proven to be a power hitter with plus defensive value, and his value spiked last season during a six-week span with the New York Mets when he batted .309/.356/.691 with a 1.048 OPS, 10 doubles and 17 home runs. That red-hot stretch sparked premature MVP consideration and had Cespedes looking like he might be the best bat on the market this offseason.

Unfortunately for his stock, he cooled in the final two weeks of the regular season and was mostly unproductive in the postseason. In a free-market system prone to overreactions based on October performances, it was a bad time for Cespedes to go cold.

Now teams will value him properly, and that means $150 million, or its surrounding areas, is where Cespedes’ eventual price should end up residing, and probably for six years. That would be reasonable based on his history and projections, especially if he finds himself in an extreme hitter’s park like Baltimore’s Camden Yards—the Orioles have had recent contact with Cespedes (per Buster Olney of ESPN), but nothing serious has come of it yet:

Heyward’s contract is a decent barometer, and if more teams were involved in the Upton/Cespedes rumors, whoever signed second could use the other’s deal as more leverage—they both have qualities the other does not, which could be used in negotiations. However, the fact that the market seems small for both, and Gordon, could lead to one of them jumping on a deal, as the other is not necessarily assured to top it afterward.

While we can somewhat gauge for how much Upton and Cespedes might sign, the more intriguing part of this is which club will lock down one of them first. The outfield market has yet to truly open up, and that could end up leading to a race to the negotiating table before the money and options dry up.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Impact MLB Offseason Deals That Will Still Go Down Before the New Year

The 2015 MLB offseason has been an exercise in patience for prime-time outfielders like Yoenis Cespedes, Alex Gordon and Justin Upton.

Now that Jason Heyward has inked an eight-year, $184 million deal with the Chicago Cubs, the market has been set and the offseason game of outfield musical chairs can begin.

No team wants to be left without a seat—or rather, an outfielder—so the biggest names should start flying off the board in short order.

From predicting a new home for La Potencia to sending Gordon to one of the Kansas City Royals’ division rivals, here are four deals that will go down before New Year’s.

In addition to the free-agent forecasts, there’s also room on the list for a trade involving a vet who smashed 40 home runs in 2015

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Justin Upton: Latest News, Rumors, Speculation Surrounding Free-Agent OF

Outfielder Justin Upton, now a free agent, may be on his way out of San Diego as interest in him from other teams begins to surface. 

Continue for updates.


Upton On Giants’ Radar

Saturday, Dec. 5

Compared to other outfielders like Yoenis Cespedes, it has been somewhat quiet on the Upton front so far this offseason. But Saturday, USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale tweeted that the San Francisco Giants are still looking for a power bat like Upton or Cespedes in the middle of their lineup. 

While Cespedes brings a bit more pop and flair to the lineup, Upton’s numbers were a bit more pedestrian. Here’s a look at the two players’ numbers last season:

At 28 years old, Upton is two years younger than Cespedes, and teams could be more willing to give him a longer deal. Cespedes told ESPN Deportes back in September that he is looking for a six-year deal. 

Upton, on the other hand, is coming off a six-year deal in which he made $51.5 million, according to Spotrac.com, and could be a much more affordable option for the Giants. Although, San Francisco showed on Saturday with the signing of pitcher Jeff Samardzija that it isn’t afraid to spend some money. 

For a team ranked 27th in the league in home runs, the Giants outfield has been one of their weak spots, with players like Nori Aoki, Angel Pagan and Gregor Blanco not adding much power to the lineup. The three outfielders combined for 13 home runs all of last season.

Upton, who has solid speed, could bring the same kind of play as Pagan but with a much more powerful bat. He’s hit over 25 home runs and stolen over 18 bases in five of the past seven seasons. However, he hasn’t played his best at AT&T Park, according to ESPN.com’s David Schoenfield, batting just .233 lifetime there with three home runs in 210 at-bats. 

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com

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Can Justin Upton Be a True Middle-of-the-Order Force for a Contender?

Prospective MLB suitors, meet Justin Uptonoutfielder, All-Star, enigma. Got your checkbooks out?

Seriously, you should get them out. Because we’re talking about a 28-year-old with wheels, a strong arm and 30-home run power. Those players don’t come around every offseason, not in today’s pitching-dominated climate.

But—could you sense there was a “but” coming?—Upton trails questions, too. Chief among them: Can he be a true middle-of-the-order force for a contender, worthy of the Brink’s-truck payday he’s sure to receive? 

Let’s start by making the case for Upton.

A No. 1 overall pick by the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2005, he’s a prototypical five-tool talent. In 2014, with the Atlanta Braves, he bashed 29 home runs to go along with 102 RBI and an .833 OPS, and he’s hit 190 home runs through his age-27 season.

If you like WAR, Upton has amassed 12.7 since 2012, tied for 19th best among MLB outfielders, per FanGraphs. He swiped 19 bases last year, his highest total since 2011 when he finished fourth in National League MVP voting. And he was just named a Gold Glove finalist, for what that’s worth.

He’s the complete package, in other words, a man who does almost everything well and some things exceptionally well. And he might not have maximized his potential. It’s possible there’s a monster, breakout season lurking in his bat.

That, of course, implies Upton hasn’t broken out yet. And, indeed, as much success as he’s enjoyed, it feels like he’s never fully lived up to the hype that followed him when the D’Backs plucked him out of high school.

For one, Upton strikes out a lotmore than 150 times in each of the last three seasons. And last season, his OPS dropped nearly 40 points.

It’s tempting to attribute that to the December trade that sent him from Atlanta to the San Diego Padres and pitcher-friendly Petco Park. But Upton actually posted better numbers across the board at Petco, including an .866 OPS, compared to a .714 mark on the road.

“Everyone says [Petco is] big, but I don’t think so,” Upton said, per Fox Sports. “I think it plays pretty fair. I’ve enjoyed quite a bit of success here. I enjoy playing here. I think the park is great.”

There’s no debate as to whether Upton is talented, in San Diego or anywhere else. But can he be that guy, the offensive linchpin for a 2016 World Series hopeful?

The projection systems aren’t bullish. Steamer posits a .247/.333/.437 slash line with 25 home runs, per FanGraphs. Add the speed and defense, and that’s valuable—but is it worth the six- or seven-year, nine-figure commitment Upton is sure to command?

No, but that’s an unfair way of posing the question. That projection isn’t crazy, but it is tinged with pessimism. It feels like a floor rather than a ceiling.

Contenders in the market for outfielders will have other top-shelf options to sift through. Chris Davis and Yoenis Cespedes both bested Upton in the power department last year. Assuming he opts of of his contract with the Kansas City Royals, Alex Gordon is a four-time Gold Glove winner with a championship pedigree. And Jason Heyward, also an elite defender, is nearly two years Upton’s junior.

A team will open its wallet for Upton, however, and when it does, it’ll be banking—quite literally—on him making the jump from star to superstar, particularly at the plate.

That wouldn’t be unprecedented. As a case study, let’s examine a toolsy, highly touted player of relatively recent vintage: Carlos Beltran. 

Beltran had already won an American League Rookie of the Year Award and made two All-Star teams by his 28th birthday. But he’d never eclipsed 40 dingers until 2006, his age-29 season, when he set career highs in home runs (41), RBI (116) and OPS (.982).

That doesn’t guarantee Upton will do the same, but it indicates it’s more than a hot-stove fever dream.

Here’s another interesting twist: What if Upton put together that career-making year on Beltran’s current club, the New York Yankees?

The Yanks and Upton have been linked by various sources, including the Sporting News’ Alec Brzezinski, who suggested the right-handed swinger “could hit 30 home runs with Yankee Stadium as his home park.”

In addition, the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Angels seem like decent fits, and the Chicago White Sox could use outfield help, as could the Seattle Mariners. Basically, expect anyone with two nickels to rub together to at least pick up the phone.

“Everyone who has been around Justin knows that that is real power,” interim Padres manager Pat Murphy said in August, per Dennis Lin of the San Diego Union-Tribune. “That’s thoroughbred power.”

Ultimately, one team will climb aboard and ride that horse. And while there are no guarantees in baseball, let alone free-agent contracts, it says here Upton will gallop far and fast—first into an open checkbook, and then toward superstardom.

 

All statistics current as of Nov. 3 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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MLB Rumors: Top Trade Chatter Surrounding Chase Utley, Justin Upton and More

MLB‘s non-waiver trade deadline came and went on July 31 with plenty of action across the league, but teams are far from done when it comes to attempting to improve for the playoff push.

Organizations are still able to strike deals for the remainder of the season, but the deadline for a traded player being able to take part in the playoffs is Aug. 31. Any player traded between now and the remainder of the 2015 campaign must first pass through waivers.

That complicates things to some degree, but veterans with big contracts can often be had under such circumstances since most teams aren’t necessarily willing to commit significant amounts of money.

As teams contemplate making a last-ditch effort in their drive toward the postseason, here is a look at the latest trade rumors surrounding Major League Baseball.

 

Chase Utley

Philadelphia Phillies second baseman Chase Utley is arguably one of the greatest players ever at his position and a borderline Hall of Famer. Although he has certainly declined in recent years, he is a definite candidate to move via a waiver trade.

According to Andy Martino of the New York Daily News, the Chicago Cubs, Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees have all shown some level of interest in acquiring the 36-year-old veteran.

While Utley is a Philly sports icon, he can become a free agent at the end of the 2015 season, which gives the Phils plenty of incentive to make a trade.

Matt Lombardo of NJ.com sees no reason why Philadelphia shouldn’t ship him out of town regardless of what type of return it can get:

Both the Cubs and Dodgers could use a veteran player of Utley’s ilk, but ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick sees the Yanks as the best fit:

Utley would have a chance to start in the Bronx since the combination of Stephen Drew and Brendan Ryan leaves plenty to be desired. Although Utley is having an awful year with a .179 batting average, four home runs and 25 RBI, he has been hampered by an ankle injury that he is just now returning from.

He is a six-time All-Star who enjoyed solid production just one year ago when he hit .270 with 11 homers and 78 RBI. He is also a left-handed hitter with three seasons of 30 home runs to his credit, which makes Yankee Stadium the perfect ballpark for him.

He has played in 46 postseason games, gone to the World Series twice and won a championship. He is the type of competitor every contending team would love to have in some capacity, and he’ll be an asset regardless of where he lands.

 

Justin Upton

Perhaps the biggest surprise of the non-waiver trade deadline related to deals that weren’t made was the San Diego Padres. Despite having several players who would have been attractive to contending teams, San Diego decided to stand pat.

That included outfielder Justin Upton, who can walk this offseason with only a compensatory first-round pick coming back in return. One can only assume the Padres received interest in the 27-year-old All-Star, and according to baseball journalist Peter Gammons, they did.

The New York Mets reportedly offered the Padres pitching prospect Michael Fullmer in exchange for Upton, but they declined, which resulted in Fullmer being sent to the Detroit Tigers for outfielder Yoenis Cespedes instead.

After opting against making any big moves ahead of the deadline, Padres general manager A.J. Preller explained his line of thinking, per Bernie Wilson of the Associated Press (h/t the San Jose Mercury News):

We’ve got a lot of players that are attractive to clubs and we were working through all different scenarios to add to the club and other scenarios. Teams were asking about our guys, but ultimately we didn’t feel like we got to the value that we needed to get to. If we got to those values I think we probably would have made other trades, but I think the fact that the team has played better, that made it a little easier to kind of stay pat and add a guy and go from there.

Upton is hitting just .248 this season, but with 18 home runs and 57 RBI, he is the type of run producer who could make a big difference in the middle of a contender’s lineup.

The Padres still have an opportunity to make a deal involving Upton; however, it could be difficult with the waiver element since multiple teams figure to have interest in him.

San Diego seems at peace with losing Upton for a first-round pick, but his name will continue to be worth watching until Aug. 31 comes and goes.

 

Kyle Lohse

Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Kyle Lohse entered the 2015 season having strung together four solid campaigns in a row, but he has struggled mightily this year.

The 36-year-old veteran is 5-13 with a bloated 6.31 ERA for the Brew Crew, which prompted Milwaukee to move him to the bullpen. He was also placed on waivers in hopes of a team claiming him, according to Bob Nightengale of USA Today.

Assuming nobody does, Lohse seems to believe the Brewers will attempt to trade him, per MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy:

Lohse signed with the Brewers after posting a career-best season with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2012 that saw him go 16-3 with a 2.86 ERA. He followed that up with a 3.35 ERA and 3.54 ERA in 2013 and 2014, respectively, but he has suddenly fallen off the proverbial cliff after proving himself to be a strong, middle-of-the-rotation starter.

It is possible that Lohse has reached the end of the line at 36 years of age, but it is important to remember he had a 6.55 ERA in 2010 before bouncing back to have four excellent seasons in a row.

Since Lohse will be a free agent after this season, a team won’t have to make a sizable or long-term financial commitment to him if it decides to strike a deal.

Even so, considering how poorly Lohse has been pitching this year, it is tough to imagine an organization making a move to acquire him.

 

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Justin Upton Leaps Way Up over the Fence to Rob Andrew McCutchen of Home Run

Andrew McCutchen may be a grounds crew hero, but Justin Upton doesn’t care.

The San Diego Padres outfielder leaped way up over the left field fence to rob McCutchen of a two-run dinger in the bottom of the fifth inning on Tuesday night.

Almost as impressive as the actual snag was Upton’s catlike reflexes to come up firing.

All you can really do on this play is tip your cap.

[MLB]

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10 MLB Players Most Likely to Be Dealt Before 2015’s Trade Deadline

From Johnny Cueto to Ben Zobrist, there are certain big leaguers who have a big chance of getting traded before the 2015 MLB trade deadline passes.

Simply put, the most likely trade chips are good players on bad teams. The righty ace and the Swiss Army Knife of baseball both fit that bill. Cueto and Zobrist aren’t the only players on the Cincinnati Reds and the Oakland Athletics, respectively, who crack a spot on this top 10.

But no team is better represented on the list than the Philadelphia Phillies.

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Why the Atlanta Braves Were Right to Tear Down Once-Promising Roster

This offseason has been surprising—and perhaps somewhat painful—for the Atlanta Braves, who, as part of a somewhat unexpected rebuilding effort spearheaded by a new front office, traded away a trio of their most popular, polarizing players.

Another word that could be used to accurately describe the Braves winter? Justified.

As in, new president of baseball operations John Hart and Co. were justified in the decision to take this route, even considering Atlanta began the offseason with enough talent on the roster to make a rebound campaign a reasonable hope.

After all, this is the Atlanta Braves, a franchise that has been one of the most consistent in baseball, capturing 14 straight NL East titles from 1991 to 2005 and posting five consecutive winning seasons from 2009 to 2013 prior to last year’s second-half collapse (27-40) that led to a 79-83 mark.

After that kind of sustained success, pushing the restart button doesn’t come easy.

But that’s what Hart has done—that’s what he needed to do—after taking over for former general manager Frank Wren. And there are a number of reasons why.

First and foremost, Wren had left the Braves farm system lacking in both quality and quantity after years of mediocre, uninspiring drafts.

“We had a tough year, and I know there was a lot of speculation about us going into this winter,” Hart said, according to Jeff Schultz of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “We had the 29th-ranked farm system in baseball. We had some bad contracts.”

As Keith Law of ESPN writes of Atlanta’s system, now the sixth-best in baseball:

They were a bottom-5 system when the offseason started, but six trades later, they’ve built up a stash of prospects that makes up for five years of execrable drafts and very little production from their Latin American efforts. Ten of their top 12 prospects have appeared on at least one of my past three top-100 rankings, including six this year.

To get there, Hart had to bite the bullet by swapping young outfielders Jason Heyward, Justin Upton and Evan Gattis, each of whom was a homegrown product or a popular player—or both.

But the 25-year-old Heyward, whom the Braves drafted 14th overall in 2007, and the 27-year-old Upton, who hit 56 homers in two seasons in Atlanta after being acquired from the Arizona Diamondbacks, were entering their final year under contract.

With both stars set to become free agents in line for nine-figure paydays, there was no way the Braves could afford to bring back both—let alone even one. Especially not after spending a lot last winter to lock up other young talent, like first baseman Freddie Freeman, closer Craig Kimbrel, shortstop Andrelton Simmons and righty Julio Teheran.

In return for Heyward, who was sent to the St. Louis Cardinals, and Upton, who is now a San Diego Padre, Atlanta landed young, team-controlled, high-upside talent: big league righty Shelby Miller, as well as a slew of prospects—righty Tyrell Jenkins, lefty Max Fried, infielders Jace Peterson and Dustin Peterson and outfielder Mallex Smith.

And in dealing Gattis—the man, the myth, the legend affectionately known as El Oso Blanco—to the Houston Astros, the Braves cashed in at peak value, getting two very good prospects in right-hander Mike Foltynewicz and third baseman Rio Ruiz for a powerful but offensively flawed, defensively limited, injury-prone player who already is 28 years old.

In short, Hart made the Braves younger and cheaper with each of these moves, which also was the right choice given the state of the NL East, a division Atlanta used to dominate but that instead was flag-planted by the Washington Nationals last year and very well could be again.

After winning the East by (count ’em) 17 games over the Braves and New York Mets, the Nationals went out and signed right-hander Max Scherzer for $210 million, one of the game’s very best starting pitchers, making arguably the sport’s best rotation even better.

With the Mets and Miami Marlins also on the upswing, armed with enough young talent to have a chance to make a run at a wild-card spot this year, that would have left little room for the Braves to make any headway in 2015.

“Look, we weren’t going to be favored even if we kept everybody and added two pitchers,” Hart said via Paul Newberry in The Augusta Chronicle. “But I think the future is significantly brighter because of what we were able to do this winter.”

And Atlanta would have been even worse in 2016 without Heyward and Upton. So Atlanta traded them while it still could—while they still had value—and managed to pull in promising returns in the form of youngsters who can develop and grow and blossom between now and, oh, 2017.

That, of course, is when SunTrust Park, the Braves’ new stadium in Cobb County, is slated to open.

So in fact, all of this activity has the team aimed at once again being a contender by the time the address changes. At least, that’s how this could shake out, in theory.

After a busy—and rather unexpected—offseason, the Braves are going to look a lot different in 2015 than they did in 2014.

While that might hurt a bit next year, if they make good on their returns and time everything right, the decision will look smart—and the pain will be gone—by 2017.

 

Statistics are accurate through the 2014 season and courtesy of MLB.com, Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted.

To talk baseball or fantasy baseball, check in with me on Twitter: @JayCat11.

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