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2018 has been an interesting year for Jake Cave, full of twists and turns, ups and downs. He just might be on the verge of joining the Twins again this week. After spending the majority of his professional career in the New York Yankees system, he was traded to the Twins late in spring training. With two more option years remaining after 2018, the roller coaster ride may just be beginning for the 25-year-old outfielder. Recently, Twins Daily caught up with the outfielder to get to know him.Jake Cave grew up in Virginia where he enjoyed watching AL East baseball. “I was an Orioles fan. I liked the Orioles and the Red Sox actually. And, I was a huge Cal Ripken Jr fan growing up. That was my guy to watch growing up. He was my favorite of all-time.” At the same time, he was working his way up the amateur ranks in Hampton, first at Hampton Christian and then at Kecoughtan. Following his senior season, he was drafted by the New York Yankees in the sixth round. He had a difficult decision to make. Professional baseball or college ball at one of the top baseball programs in the country? “I was committed to LSU, but really, I wanted to play pro ball. I wanted to play baseball. I had to play the cards right, and commit and let teams know that I was OK with going to college. But in reality, I wanted to get my career started.” He signed and went to the Yankees Gulf Coast League affiliate. In his first game, he got into a collision with the catcher at home plate. He fractured his kneecap. He missed the rest of the 2011 season and all of the 2012 season. He returned in 2013 and spent the full season in Low A ball. He split 2014 between High-A and Double-A ball. He spent most of the 2015 season at Double-A Trenton. While he always had a lot of tools, the stats didn’t necessarily show up early in his career. He put up real solid numbers, but there was always a hint that there was more in him, and as he moved up, the stat lines started to catch up to the tools. Following that 2015 season, the Cincinnati Reds made Cave their Rule 5 pick. He stuck with them right until the end of spring training when he was returned to the Yankees. Certainly there was some disappointment in not making the team, but it was something that Cave enjoyed and learned a lot from. “It was a great experience to be in another organization. To get to spend time with Jay Bruce and Joey Votto and guys like that was awesome. Obviously I was a little bummed to be sent back, but I feel like I got better for it. It was a really fun experience.” Upon returning to the Yankees, Cave played with a new confidence. In 2016, he started back in AA, but after about a month, he moved up to AAA. He received an invitation to Yankees big league camp in 2017 and had a terrific season in Scranton/Wilkes Barre. He hit .324/.367/.554 (.921) with 13 doubles and 15 home runs.The stat line had finally caught up to the tools. “I was always thought about as a guy who could run a little bit, and I could hit. The stats just weren’t showing what I knew I could do. When I came back from the Reds, it was one of those thing where, I just played a full big league camp with some really good players and I showed that I deserved to be there. I said, ‘I’m just going to go out and play and try to drive the ball a little more and play with a little more confidence.’ Ever since then, I’ve felt great.” The Yankees added him to their 40-man roster last November. He returned to big league camp, this time on the roster. But that’s when things started getting interesting and wheels started spinning frantically. “It was a crazy camp, for sure. It was one of those things where the Yankees were making a bunch of moves, and I had just been put on the roster. I had a feeling that something might happen. When I got DFAd, I knew there were teams that wanted to trade for me. I had no idea about the Twins. I kind of had to sit around for a full week. Then I got traded over to the Twins at the end of camp, so I really didn’t know too many people. It was a whole process that made this spring a little tough. I got to meet guys with the Twins, and I feel comfortable now.” The Twins sent right-handed pitcher Luis Gil to the Yankees in exchange for the outfielder. Gil, a 20-year-old who spent the last two years in the Dominican Summer League, has made one start for the Pulaski Yankees in the Appalachian League and gave up two runs in four innings. With just a week before Opening Day, Jake Cave arrived at the Twins clubhouse in Ft. Myers. Paul Molitor put him in the lineup that first day. “It was cool. I was glad I could get right into the lineup. I really hadn’t seen live pitching for a week, so I wanted to get out there and play. I’m glad they did that for me.” A couple of days later, he was sent down to minor league camp to really get ready for the start of the season. “Then when I got sent back to minor league camp, I got a lot of at bats, so I felt good. I was getting back into the baseball mentality and getting ready for the season.” In mid-May, Joe Mauer went on the Disabled List with a cervical strain and concussion-like symptoms. Sitting in Rochester, Jake Cave got a late-night call. It was a very exciting moment in the outfielder’s life. “It was awesome. I was freaking out. I got a call from the AAA manager. I made my first phone calls to my mom, my dad, my sister. Of course, it was at midnight. My sister and my mom answered, but my dad was asleep. I ended up calling my dad the next morning at 5:30 when I was at the airport waiting to get on a 6:00 flight. That was cool.” The memories continued as Cave arrived in Minneapolis. “It’s something you dream about forever. To walk into the clubhouse and see my name on the locker was indescribable. Walking around, shaking hands with the guys, Everyone saying Congrats. It’s pretty breathtaking, it’s pretty cool. I will never forget it.” The game started and Cave found himself in the lineup. But was his family able to get to Target Field on time? “They made it. Barely. My mom and sister made it in the first inning, and my dad made it like five minutes before my second at bat when I hit the home run, so it was pretty cool.” Speaking of pretty cool, Twins fans remember Cave’s second at bat which resulted in his first hit and his first big league home run. Cave has seen the video which is pretty much his memory of the moment. Can you imagine the feeling of your first hit? Now imagine it is a home run. What an amazing trip around the bases. “I think I kind of blacked out. Rounding the bases was the coolest feeling I’ve ever had. The guys were excited. I was excited. I saw the video and saw how excited my family was. It’s a moment I will never forget.” Since then, he has been sent back to Rochester. He was called up again and had a four-hit game. Needing pitching, Cave was optioned again. But it is clear that Jake Cave can help the Twins in 2018 and beyond. “I take pride in being able to play all three positions in the outfield. That can be a help for any outfielder. I’m playing mostly in the corner outfield here in AAA. The few starts I’ve had up there have been in centerfield, and I felt really comfortable with that. Everybody says you’re either going to hit or not going to hit, so I’m just going to keep going with that. To be able to come into the game late in left or right or center, or if I start a game in left or right or center, I just want to keep improving on that.” He’s had some solid mentors throughout the minor leagues, especially in the upper levels and Triple-A. “Whenever you have guys like (Gregorio) Petit and CC (Chris Carter), even if they’re not trying to give you a lesson, just being around them and seeing how they go about their business and play the game, it helps. I had some more guys like that with the Yankees. And Bobby Wilson, earlier in the year. These veterans, they just kind of go about their business in a different way. They’ve been around for awhile, and they don’t really let things hang over their head. They understand the ups and downs of the game, so I take that away from these guys.” There is still a little more than half of the season to go. Aside from getting back to the big leagues and potentially staying there, his goals are more process-driven. “I don’t have any big goals. Everybody says their goal is to get back to the big leagues. I just want to be consistent. I want to be consistent with my work, the same routine I use every day. My cage routine. Trying to do my routine in the weight room and in the training room to keep my body healthy. I just want to keep doing that all year because if I do that, then I will have results, and hopefully get back up there and see what happens.” Jake Cave will likely find himself making that Rochester to Minneapolis (or wherever the Twins are at the moment) flight, and probably a couple of Minneapolis to Rochester flights as well. But the 25-year-old clearly has a lot of talent and still has a lot of potential. He can hit. He can hit for some power. He can run. He’s pretty solid at all three outfield positions. Whether it is as a fourth outfielder or as a part-time starter, Jake Cave is a player that can help the Minnesota Twins win baseball games. “When they sent me down, they just told me to keep playing and they’ll be watching.” --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We’ll end with a couple of fun, get to know him a little bit more questions: What is your walk-up song? “I’ve had the same walk up song all year. It’s been Method Man and Redman, the Rock WAter. A little throwback rap music.” What is your favorite baseball movie? “Favorite baseball movie. That’s tough. It’s got to be either The Sandlot or For the Love of the Game. It’s a toss up. There’s Bull Durham and The Natural.” Click here to view the article
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Jake Cave grew up in Virginia where he enjoyed watching AL East baseball. “I was an Orioles fan. I liked the Orioles and the Red Sox actually. And, I was a huge Cal Ripken Jr fan growing up. That was my guy to watch growing up. He was my favorite of all-time.” At the same time, he was working his way up the amateur ranks in Hampton, first at Hampton Christian and then at Kecoughtan. Following his senior season, he was drafted by the New York Yankees in the sixth round. He had a difficult decision to make. Professional baseball or college ball at one of the top baseball programs in the country? “I was committed to LSU, but really, I wanted to play pro ball. I wanted to play baseball. I had to play the cards right, and commit and let teams know that I was OK with going to college. But in reality, I wanted to get my career started.” He signed and went to the Yankees Gulf Coast League affiliate. In his first game, he got into a collision with the catcher at home plate. He fractured his kneecap. He missed the rest of the 2011 season and all of the 2012 season. He returned in 2013 and spent the full season in Low A ball. He split 2014 between High-A and Double-A ball. He spent most of the 2015 season at Double-A Trenton. While he always had a lot of tools, the stats didn’t necessarily show up early in his career. He put up real solid numbers, but there was always a hint that there was more in him, and as he moved up, the stat lines started to catch up to the tools. Following that 2015 season, the Cincinnati Reds made Cave their Rule 5 pick. He stuck with them right until the end of spring training when he was returned to the Yankees. Certainly there was some disappointment in not making the team, but it was something that Cave enjoyed and learned a lot from. “It was a great experience to be in another organization. To get to spend time with Jay Bruce and Joey Votto and guys like that was awesome. Obviously I was a little bummed to be sent back, but I feel like I got better for it. It was a really fun experience.” Upon returning to the Yankees, Cave played with a new confidence. In 2016, he started back in AA, but after about a month, he moved up to AAA. He received an invitation to Yankees big league camp in 2017 and had a terrific season in Scranton/Wilkes Barre. He hit .324/.367/.554 (.921) with 13 doubles and 15 home runs.The stat line had finally caught up to the tools. “I was always thought about as a guy who could run a little bit, and I could hit. The stats just weren’t showing what I knew I could do. When I came back from the Reds, it was one of those thing where, I just played a full big league camp with some really good players and I showed that I deserved to be there. I said, ‘I’m just going to go out and play and try to drive the ball a little more and play with a little more confidence.’ Ever since then, I’ve felt great.” The Yankees added him to their 40-man roster last November. He returned to big league camp, this time on the roster. But that’s when things started getting interesting and wheels started spinning frantically. “It was a crazy camp, for sure. It was one of those things where the Yankees were making a bunch of moves, and I had just been put on the roster. I had a feeling that something might happen. When I got DFAd, I knew there were teams that wanted to trade for me. I had no idea about the Twins. I kind of had to sit around for a full week. Then I got traded over to the Twins at the end of camp, so I really didn’t know too many people. It was a whole process that made this spring a little tough. I got to meet guys with the Twins, and I feel comfortable now.” The Twins sent right-handed pitcher Luis Gil to the Yankees in exchange for the outfielder. Gil, a 20-year-old who spent the last two years in the Dominican Summer League, has made one start for the Pulaski Yankees in the Appalachian League and gave up two runs in four innings. With just a week before Opening Day, Jake Cave arrived at the Twins clubhouse in Ft. Myers. Paul Molitor put him in the lineup that first day. “It was cool. I was glad I could get right into the lineup. I really hadn’t seen live pitching for a week, so I wanted to get out there and play. I’m glad they did that for me.” A couple of days later, he was sent down to minor league camp to really get ready for the start of the season. “Then when I got sent back to minor league camp, I got a lot of at bats, so I felt good. I was getting back into the baseball mentality and getting ready for the season.” In mid-May, Joe Mauer went on the Disabled List with a cervical strain and concussion-like symptoms. Sitting in Rochester, Jake Cave got a late-night call. It was a very exciting moment in the outfielder’s life. “It was awesome. I was freaking out. I got a call from the AAA manager. I made my first phone calls to my mom, my dad, my sister. Of course, it was at midnight. My sister and my mom answered, but my dad was asleep. I ended up calling my dad the next morning at 5:30 when I was at the airport waiting to get on a 6:00 flight. That was cool.” The memories continued as Cave arrived in Minneapolis. “It’s something you dream about forever. To walk into the clubhouse and see my name on the locker was indescribable. Walking around, shaking hands with the guys, Everyone saying Congrats. It’s pretty breathtaking, it’s pretty cool. I will never forget it.” The game started and Cave found himself in the lineup. But was his family able to get to Target Field on time? “They made it. Barely. My mom and sister made it in the first inning, and my dad made it like five minutes before my second at bat when I hit the home run, so it was pretty cool.” Speaking of pretty cool, Twins fans remember Cave’s second at bat which resulted in his first hit and his first big league home run. Cave has seen the video which is pretty much his memory of the moment. Can you imagine the feeling of your first hit? Now imagine it is a home run. What an amazing trip around the bases. “I think I kind of blacked out. Rounding the bases was the coolest feeling I’ve ever had. The guys were excited. I was excited. I saw the video and saw how excited my family was. It’s a moment I will never forget.” Since then, he has been sent back to Rochester. He was called up again and had a four-hit game. Needing pitching, Cave was optioned again. But it is clear that Jake Cave can help the Twins in 2018 and beyond. “I take pride in being able to play all three positions in the outfield. That can be a help for any outfielder. I’m playing mostly in the corner outfield here in AAA. The few starts I’ve had up there have been in centerfield, and I felt really comfortable with that. Everybody says you’re either going to hit or not going to hit, so I’m just going to keep going with that. To be able to come into the game late in left or right or center, or if I start a game in left or right or center, I just want to keep improving on that.” He’s had some solid mentors throughout the minor leagues, especially in the upper levels and Triple-A. “Whenever you have guys like (Gregorio) Petit and CC (Chris Carter), even if they’re not trying to give you a lesson, just being around them and seeing how they go about their business and play the game, it helps. I had some more guys like that with the Yankees. And Bobby Wilson, earlier in the year. These veterans, they just kind of go about their business in a different way. They’ve been around for awhile, and they don’t really let things hang over their head. They understand the ups and downs of the game, so I take that away from these guys.” There is still a little more than half of the season to go. Aside from getting back to the big leagues and potentially staying there, his goals are more process-driven. “I don’t have any big goals. Everybody says their goal is to get back to the big leagues. I just want to be consistent. I want to be consistent with my work, the same routine I use every day. My cage routine. Trying to do my routine in the weight room and in the training room to keep my body healthy. I just want to keep doing that all year because if I do that, then I will have results, and hopefully get back up there and see what happens.” Jake Cave will likely find himself making that Rochester to Minneapolis (or wherever the Twins are at the moment) flight, and probably a couple of Minneapolis to Rochester flights as well. But the 25-year-old clearly has a lot of talent and still has a lot of potential. He can hit. He can hit for some power. He can run. He’s pretty solid at all three outfield positions. Whether it is as a fourth outfielder or as a part-time starter, Jake Cave is a player that can help the Minnesota Twins win baseball games. “When they sent me down, they just told me to keep playing and they’ll be watching.” --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We’ll end with a couple of fun, get to know him a little bit more questions: What is your walk-up song? “I’ve had the same walk up song all year. It’s been Method Man and Redman, the Rock WAter. A little throwback rap music.” What is your favorite baseball movie? “Favorite baseball movie. That’s tough. It’s got to be either The Sandlot or For the Love of the Game. It’s a toss up. There’s Bull Durham and The Natural.”
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In the Charles Dickens classic, A Christmas Carol, Ebenezer Scrooge is visited by three ghosts. The last of these phantoms, the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, is most fearsome of all. Why? Because it represents what the future holds for Scrooge if he does not change his ways. Scrooge awakens from this haunting experience a new man, steered back toward a righteous path by the vision of a dire future. I'm not saying the Twins traded for Chris Carter to make a similar impression on Miguel Sano. I'm only saying it'd make a lot of sense.I feel for Carter. Had he come along 10 years earlier, he might've been viewed much differently as an asset. Not so long ago, the thought of a 29-year-old who led the league in home runs being forced to settle for a one-year, $3.5 million deal (as Carter did with the Yankees last February) would've been inconceivable. Forty-one homers got you paid. Period. But it is the reality of today's MLB, where strikeout-prone sluggers who lack complementary offensive skills, or any kind of defensive value, are not commodities. Carter was toiling away in Triple-A before Minnesota traded cash considerations to the Angels for him on Wednesday. After signing (once again, in late February) a minor-league contract with the Halos, he launched 13 homers with a .600 slugging percentage at Salt Lake, but the big-league club had no use for him. Carter will head to the minors in his new organization, too, but maybe not for long. The Twins evidently see a possible need for him, which might speak to the level of concern around Joe Mauer. Surely it's coincidence that Carter arrives in Rochester just as Sano (likely) departs to meet the Twins in Seattle. Surely it is. But... If you could handpick a "Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come" equivalent for Miguel's Ebenezer – in all of baseball – it would be Chris Carter. That's no disrespect to Carter, whose 158 home runs would tie Brian Dozier for 12th in Twins history. His power is prodigious, and has been since he was a 20-year-old mashing 39 home runs at High-A. But his grievously high strikeout rates have suffocated the impact of his immense pop. To be fair, Carter's still playing ball, and has a chance to return to the majors soon. He's hardly a worst-case scenario in the grand scheme. But he was also never gifted with the innate talent of Sano, whose shine has greatly diminished since an incandescent debut in 2015. Even as one who tries to give Sano every benefit of the doubt, I can't ignore the overwhelming evidence of a player who has strayed badly off course. Underwhelming numbers, tons of missed time, off-the-field allegations, and reports from those around him of an inexplicably lackadaisical attitude. Sano's career strikeout rate (36.1%) is considerably higher than Carter's (33.3%). It was at an outrageous 40% before he went down this year. While Sano still looks reasonably capable at third base, he's undeniably trending the wrong direction. The majestic power won't go away. But neither has that of Carter, who now finds himself a journeyman at age 31. Perhaps, if they have a passing encounter on Thursday, Sano will make a note of it. I found this quote from Paul Molitor, while an MLB investigation floated over Sano's head at Twins camp, rather interesting: “I think the trend has been he’s figuring some things out; some things have been a little harder to get through to him,” Molitor said. “At times I’ve tried to involve people that might be able to provide a voice that will penetrate. We’re just trying to get him to see the bigger picture. “He loves to play. It’s all in front of him. He, as much as anyone in that clubhouse, wants what’s in front of him, but I’m not sure he understands what is required to reap those rewards — of competing, winning, financial security, taking care of his family. We’re trying.” The decision to bring Carter aboard was obviously not motivated by a desire to send some overly dramatic message to Sano. But the 24-year-old, very much at a career crossroads, would be wise to take it as such. The thought of that future, given his infinitely higher potential, should scare the dickens out of him. Click here to view the article
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Did Minnesota Just Summon the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come?
Nick Nelson posted an article in Twins
I feel for Carter. Had he come along 10 years earlier, he might've been viewed much differently as an asset. Not so long ago, the thought of a 29-year-old who led the league in home runs being forced to settle for a one-year, $3.5 million deal (as Carter did with the Yankees last February) would've been inconceivable. Forty-one homers got you paid. Period. But it is the reality of today's MLB, where strikeout-prone sluggers who lack complementary offensive skills, or any kind of defensive value, are not commodities. Carter was toiling away in Triple-A before Minnesota traded cash considerations to the Angels for him on Wednesday. After signing (once again, in late February) a minor-league contract with the Halos, he launched 13 homers with a .600 slugging percentage at Salt Lake, but the big-league club had no use for him. Carter will head to the minors in his new organization, too, but maybe not for long. The Twins evidently see a possible need for him, which might speak to the level of concern around Joe Mauer. Surely it's coincidence that Carter arrives in Rochester just as Sano (likely) departs to meet the Twins in Seattle. Surely it is. But... If you could handpick a "Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come" equivalent for Miguel's Ebenezer – in all of baseball – it would be Chris Carter. That's no disrespect to Carter, whose 158 home runs would tie Brian Dozier for 12th in Twins history. His power is prodigious, and has been since he was a 20-year-old mashing 39 home runs at High-A. But his grievously high strikeout rates have suffocated the impact of his immense pop. To be fair, Carter's still playing ball, and has a chance to return to the majors soon. He's hardly a worst-case scenario in the grand scheme. But he was also never gifted with the innate talent of Sano, whose shine has greatly diminished since an incandescent debut in 2015. Even as one who tries to give Sano every benefit of the doubt, I can't ignore the overwhelming evidence of a player who has strayed badly off course. Underwhelming numbers, tons of missed time, off-the-field allegations, and reports from those around him of an inexplicably lackadaisical attitude. Sano's career strikeout rate (36.1%) is considerably higher than Carter's (33.3%). It was at an outrageous 40% before he went down this year. While Sano still looks reasonably capable at third base, he's undeniably trending the wrong direction. The majestic power won't go away. But neither has that of Carter, who now finds himself a journeyman at age 31. Perhaps, if they have a passing encounter on Thursday, Sano will make a note of it. I found this quote from Paul Molitor, while an MLB investigation floated over Sano's head at Twins camp, rather interesting: “I think the trend has been he’s figuring some things out; some things have been a little harder to get through to him,” Molitor said. “At times I’ve tried to involve people that might be able to provide a voice that will penetrate. We’re just trying to get him to see the bigger picture. “He loves to play. It’s all in front of him. He, as much as anyone in that clubhouse, wants what’s in front of him, but I’m not sure he understands what is required to reap those rewards — of competing, winning, financial security, taking care of his family. We’re trying.” The decision to bring Carter aboard was obviously not motivated by a desire to send some overly dramatic message to Sano. But the 24-year-old, very much at a career crossroads, would be wise to take it as such. The thought of that future, given his infinitely higher potential, should scare the dickens out of him. -
What can Miguel Sano do in 2017? Can he take the next step and put it all together offensively and defensively? Can he come close to the .916 OPS he put up in 80 games as a rookie, or will his OPS be closer to the .781 mark he hit in 2016? Below you will find my predictions (or guesses, if you prefer) for Miguel Sano’s 2017 season. Consider posting your thoughts and your predictions into the comments below. It’s always fun to take a look at the end of the season and see how our predictions look. KEY NUMBERS 35.5% and 36.0% - These are Miguel Sano’s strikeout rates in his first two MLB seasons. Frankly, these are numbers that really need to drop. It isn’t going to happen over night, and his 43% K-Rate in spring training doesn’t exactly lend itself to much confidence. As disappointing, his walk rate dropped from 15.8% in his freshman season to 10.9% in his second season. 10.9% is still solid, no question about that, but these two numbers are patterns to watch. Consider slugger Chris Carter. He led the the National League with 41 home runs in 2016, yet he had to wait most of the offseason to sign (for just $3 million) in large part because he’s one-dimensional and strikes out a ton. Just once in the last five years has he had a K-rate as high as Sano’s these first two years. He’s been in the 31-32% range except one year he had a 36.2% K-rate. It’s just indicative of why it’s important for Sano to do more than DH and reduce his strikeout rate. 0.896 - That is the fielding percentage Sano had in 42 games in 2017. Not to beat a dead horse, but Sano will have to prove he can handle the position. Personally, I think he’ll be fine, bumping that number closer to 0.940. With the Twins in a transition season, hopefully between a 59-win season and a possible playoff berth, it’s worth giving Sano the full year, but his value is much higher if he can stay at third base. PREDICTIONS Miguel Sano: 553 at-bats, .253/.346/.506 (.852), 32 doubles, 3 triples, 34 home runs. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Part of these numbers is Sano finding a way to stay on the field. I have him playing in 148 games. If he is able to stay at third base and stay healthy, I think he’ll put up some monster numbers, probably even higher than what I have shown here. The key, of course, will be finding a way to put the ball in play more often. Striking out 36% of the time just isn’t a good way to find success. If he is able to play this much I have little doubt that he will be able to put up his first 30-homer season. It will be an interesting season for Miguel Sano, filled with lots of questions. Can he reduce his strikeout rate? How many runs can he drive in? Will he be able to play adequately at third base, or will he be limited to just DHing for the rest of his career? YOUR TURN Your turn. Share your thoughts on and predictions on Miguel Sano in 2017. We can take a look back at the end of the season and see how we did. PREVIOUS PREDICTIONS Jason Castro Joe Mauer Brian Dozier Miguel Sano
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