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Orlando City

Orlando City vs. Chicago Fire: Final Score 4-2 as Facundo Torres Leads Lions to Home Win

The Lions woke up offensively and goalkeeper Mason Stajduhar made up for a leaky defense in a much-needed home win.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Orlando City’s offense exploded for a season-high four goals and Mason Stajduhar made several critical saves as the Lions defeated the Chicago Fire 4-2 in front of an announced crowd of 22,038 at Inter&Co Stadium. Facundo Torres’ brace paced Orlando (5-8-6, 21 points), which also got goals from Luis Muriel and Ivan Angulo to offset scores by Maren Haile-Selassie and Hugo Cuypers for Chicago (4-9-6, 18 points). It was just the second home win for the Lions this season (2-5-3), and a much-needed one.

While a leaky defense was a concern, forcing Stajduhar to make 10 saves — several of the spectacular variety — the Lions will take the home win after struggling at Inter&Co Stadium all season. The 10 saves equals Joe Bendik’s single-game club record set against Sporting Kansas City on May 15, 2016.

“We feel very happy with the result, winning at home in front of our fans,” Orlando City Head Coach Oscar Pareja said after the match. “Despite the difficult moments, they came and supported us and I wanted to spread our message to them. That energy that they brought to us in a game that needed an extra push from us…a difficult week playing on turf three days ago. We knew that today was going to be a big challenge on (us physically) with the humidity and all those things. But we had a lot of positive things. We scored four goals. We started seeing individuals improve their performances. The collective obviously looks much better.”

Pareja started nearly the identical lineup that started Wednesday’s match in Charlotte, with the exception of Cesar Araujo stepping back into the XI in place of Felipe. Stajduhar started in goal behind a back line of Rafael Santos, Robin Jansson, Rodrigo Schlegel, and Dagur Dan Thorhallsson. The midfield consisted of Torres, Araujo, Nico Lodeiro, and Angulo, with Muriel and Duncan McGuire leading the attack up top.

Orlando started quickly in this game and had a shout for an early penalty when Torres was knocked down from behind in the box in just the second minute. Referee Natalie Simon saw nothing wrong with the play and the video assistant referee determined no obvious error had been made without her going to the monitor herself.

It didn’t matter as much two minutes later when Torres opened the scoring. Taking a pass from Thorhallsson, the Uruguayan cut inside and smashed the ball into the far corner to make it 1-0. It was his second goal in the fourth minute against Chicago this season and his fifth strike against the Fire in the last four meetings.

“I think the first (goal) was a play that’s just very typical of me,” Torres said. “When I receive it outside like that on the wing, I like to bring it inside to try to give myself a better chance to finish and to find the goal. So, when I took it inside, I was one-on-one with the defender, and thankfully I was able to cut it just one more time and give myself an even better opportunity, which was just really typical of me and the way I like to play.”

Chicago nearly tied the match in the 11th minute. Stajduhar made a huge stop to deny Cuypers after a turnover by McGuire gifted the ball back to the visitors. After the save, Haile-Selassie put the rebound over the net.

Angulo blazed through the Chicago defense in the 19th minute and was pulled back by Allan Arigoni in the box. This time, Simon immediately pointed to the spot. Muriel took the penalty and sent a shot right with Chris Brady diving the other way in the 20th minute.

The Fire came within inches of pulling the goal right back in the 24th minute. Brian Gutierrez, who was given too much space multiple times in the first half, cut inside from the left and smashed a shot that crashed off the right post and stayed out. Two minutes later, he was left alone about 25 yards out from goal and sent a shot at Stajduhar from distance.

Orlando tripled the lead in the 29th minute. Thorhallsson whipped in a good cross for McGuire that was redirected on goal but saved by Brady. Angulo swooped in and picked up the loose change, putting the ball into the empty net to make it 3-0.

“The play was a situation where Dagur was bringing it in from the right and he was trying to cross it over to get it to Duncan in the center,” Angulo said. “When the deflection happened, it just kind of bounced to me and all I had to do was push it into the goal.”

Haile-Selassie was left alone in the box in the 40th minute and fired a shot that Jansson got a piece of, slowing it enough for Stajduhar to make the save. Two minutes later, the Homegrown goalkeeper made a much more difficult stop when the ball pinged around the box and was headed on frame by Cuypers from point-blank range.

McGuire got in alone on goal late in the half but his shot was saved and he was offside anyway. Arnaud Souquet then was left in too much space and sent a shot just wide of the target deep in stoppage time on the final look for either team.

With some long spells of possession late in the half, the Fire took a halftime edge (55%-45%) into the break in that category, as well as in shots (8-3), shots on target (4-3), and passing accuracy (93%-88.3%). Each team earned one corner.

Stajduhar was once again called upon to stop Gutierrez in the 47th minute and once again the keeper made the save.

A minute later, McGuire was nearly sent in behind by Santos but Brady was quickly off his line and got there just ahead of the Orlando striker.

The shutout was spoiled moments later. Schlegel and Jansson got switched up and each was on the other’s side. Schlegel went to ground to block a cross that hit the arm he was putting down to arrest his fall. Simon ruled that his arm was not yet supporting his body and therefore it was a penalty, and the call on the field was upheld. Haile-Selassie sent Stajduhar the wrong way and put the Fire on the board in the 53rd minute.

McGuire won a free kick near the left corner of the box after the restart and Muriel went for goal on the set piece. Brady got over to make the save in the 55th minute. That was one of the final actions for the Colombian, who was subbed off a few minutes later for Martin Ojeda.

Torres scored a fourth Orlando goal in the 60th minute, cutting across the top of the area and smashing a shot from distance that beat Brady. The four goals represents a season high for the Lions.

“The second one, when I receive it on the outside like that, I do like to hit it when I’ve got the opportunity,” Torres said. “Sometimes it goes in, sometimes it doesn’t.”

His second of the night was a milestone goal for Torres, who scored his 28th league goal in two-and-a-half seasons to tie Nani for second on Orlando’s all-time, goal-scoring list in MLS matches.

Orlando’s defense was visibly tired in the final half hour. Just after the second Torres goal, a series of defensive turnovers kept Chicago on the attack for about a minute but it broke down on an offside.

The Lions gifted Chicago a second goal in the 69th minute. A routine cross into the box should have been dealt with by Jansson. The Swede swung and missed at the ball, which hit the back of Santos’ leg and bounced toward goal, where only Cuypers was waiting. He swept it past Stajduhar to make it 4-2.

From that point, it was a matter of Orlando managing the game, and the Lions did so, but not without a few more nervy moments in the defensive end.

Substitute Kyle Smith turned the ball over in his defensive third in the 79th minute, leading to another Gutierrez effort from long range. This one had a lot of movement on it and Stajduhar punched it away. A minute later, Gaston Gimenez sent a shot through traffic. Stajduhar didn’t see it until it was almost on top of him and he had to make a sprawling save to knock away what might ordinarily be a routine stop.

Former Lion Chris Mueller sent a long-range effort right at Stajduhar in the 83rd minute as the Chicago pressure continued. One of the goalkeeper’s best saves came in the 86th minute. An aerial ball cleared the defense and found Georgios Koutsias, who tried to head it over Stajduhar, but he was able to get a hand up quickly to reject the shot with an athletic save.

“I think tonight we saw the best of Mason, and I know he has more than that,” Pareja said. “He has been very patient in waiting for his opportunity. And in this moment when we needed that position to step up, he did and provided us a lot of security. We were drained at the end and Chicago was taking shots, but Mason provided us a lot of security and we felt safe. So, congratulations to Mason. We’re very proud of him and his performance. He deserves it because he works tremendously hard.”

Orlando nearly added an insurance strike in the 88th minute. Brady came out of his box to beat Angulo to a ball over the top, but he could not touch it and could only knock it to OJeda, who volleyed it inches over the crossbar from distance.

The game entered nine minutes of stoppage time and Chicago kept coming. Carlos Teran had a free header right in front on a corner kick but sent a powerful shot at Stajduhar’s feet and the keeper was able to trap it. He made a long throw to set up the counterattack, which ended up with Angulo down the left channel. The winger tried to pick out the far post but missed the target in transition in the 95th minute.

Stajduhar did well to punch away a couple of threatening crosses in the final minutes of injury time and the final whistle ended the proceedings without another goal.

Chicago finished with the advantage in possession (59.7%-40.3%), shots (18-8), shots on target (12-6), corners (3-1), and passing accuracy (90.3%-82.2%), but it was Orlando that was more clinical in front of goal and Stajduhar was a difference maker.

“It was a difficult game,” Pareja said. “Chicago pushed a lot and they had a lot of sequences, and we had to defend lower than we wanted, but it’s a good result, especially in front of our fans. And hopefully we can continue adding points because we need to find our way to turn these things around.”

“It’s a great feeling tonight to get the victory,” Angulo said. “That was the form that we had been looking for, and it was nice tonight to finally see it come to fruition on the field and together as a team.”

Torres has come on this week, not only scoring three goals and adding an assist across the two most recent matches, but also putting all six of his shot attempts on frame. If the old adage that your best players have to play well for the team to find success, Torres is doing that now after a difficult first half of the season.

“(The game) gives us and gives myself a lot of confidence, especially for when you’re going through a period where you’re working so hard and things just don’t seem to come off,” Torres said. “It can get really frustrating. It can be really difficult to get through, especially a couple of weeks ago, getting left off the Copa America roster. It hurts, but the only thing you can do is pick your head up and go back to it and just work even harder. So, that way you can find those successes that are yet to come.”


The Lions go back on the road Friday when they’ll play at New York City FC.

Orlando City

Orlando City vs. FC Dallas: Preview, How to Watch, TV Info, Live Stream, Lineups, Match Thread, and More

The Lions look to bounce back from a loss in Columbus when they visit the Lone Star State.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Mark Thor

Welcome to your live match thread for a Saturday night matchup between Orlando City (12-11-7, 43 points) and FC Dallas (10-13-7, 37 points) at Toyota Stadium (8:30 p.m., MLS Season Pass on Apple TV). It’s the only scheduled meeting between the clubs this season, and just the eighth overall.

Here’s what you need to know ahead of the match.

History

Orlando City is 1-4-2 in the all-time series and 0-2-1 on the road against FC Dallas. The teams did not meet in 2023, so the last time these teams have played was at Exploria Stadium in 2022, with FC Dallas erasing a 1-0 halftime deficit and winning 3-1 in Orlando. Ercan Kara put the Lions ahead just before halftime, but Paul Arriola’s second-half brace and Franco Jara’s goal turned the game around.

The teams last met at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, TX on Sept. 27, 2020, when they played to a scoreless draw. Sebas Mendez got sent off in the 69th minute of that match for Orlando, so it was a better result for the Lions than for the hosts.

The Lions got their first (and, so far, only) win in the series in a 2-0 victory at Exploria Stadium, back on Aug. 3, 2019. Former Dallas striker Tesho Akindele and Carlos Ascues provided the offense for Orlando, and those were the first two goals the Lions had ever scored against FC Dallas.

Dallas won 2-0 in Texas on Oct. 6, 2018 on goals by Santiago Mosquera and Victor Ulloa. The teams played to a 0-0 draw in Orlando in 2017. That game was memorable only for the Hoops playing an ineligible player — Michael Barrios, who was scratched from the starting XI after the lineups were turned in and then came off the bench.

Dallas won in 2016 on July 4 at Toyota Stadium by a 4-0 final score and it could have been worse if not for Joe Bendik’s performance in goal for Orlando. Dallas led 2-0 within 20 minutes of the start and cruised to an easy win behind goals by Walker Zimmerman, Barrios, Matt Hedges, and Fabian Castillo. That game turned out to be Adrian Heath’s last as Orlando City’s head coach, as the gaffer was sent packing a couple of days later.

The first meeting ended in a 2-0 Dallas win back in 2015 at the Citrus Bowl. Mauro Diaz (pen.) and David Texeira provided the offense in that one and the Lions failed to even get one shot on target.

Overview

Orlando City is coming off a 4-3 road loss at Columbus, which snapped the Lions’ three-game winning streak. After not conceding in their prior three matches, the Lions were sloppy against a team that punishes mistakes. Despite falling behind 3-0, Orlando made a game of it before giving up one goal too many to overcome. The Lions are 6-6-3 on the road this season but have dropped their last two away from home and conceded seven times in those two games.

FC Dallas enters with some confidence, having dispatched LAFC 3-1 at home one week ago. Tonight’s hosts are also good at home, posting a 9-4-2 home record in 2024, compared to a 1-9-5 mark on the road. Aside from that, FC Dallas is five points adrift of a postseason spot with just a few games remaining, so the Lions will get the hosts’ best shot tonight as they look to close the gap on Minnesota United.

This will be only the third time since his arrival in Orlando that Oscar Pareja will face the club for which he played from 1998-2005, and where he managed from 2014-2018. Papi is still beloved in Dallas after winning consistently during his tenure there, including a Supporters Shield and a U.S. Open Cup — both in 2016.

The key for Orlando will be stopping Petar Musa, who paces FC Dallas with 15 goals, adding two assists. The Croatian is tied for sixth among MLS goal-scoring leaders. It’s difficult to believe Dallas is where it is in the table when you consider that Musa is joined by such accomplished MLS attacking players as Sebastian Lletget, Arriola, Jesus Ferreira, and Alan Velasco, although the team has suffered through some injury issues in 2024. Speaking of attacking players, Orlando City players will see a familiar face on the other side, as former Lion Ruan was dealt to Dallas in the most recent transfer window.

“I think we have had a very good semester, a good second semester,” Pareja said ahead of the match. “The boys ended the game against Columbus with a very good reaction and good form. We ended up almost tying the game and we lost against a good rival. All these things we need to digest and prepare for the next one like we have done when we have played three on the road. So, we’re good. It’s a nice challenge to go to Dallas and it’s important for them as well. At this point, we need to qualify first our objectives and after that we’ll see.”

Orlando will be without Mason Stajduhar (lower leg) and David Brekalo (thigh), while Dagur Dan Thorhallsson (lower leg) is listed as questionable. FC Dallas will be without Asier Illarramendi (suspension), Geovane Jesus (knee), Paxton Pomykal (knee), and Liam Fraser (upper leg).

Match Content


Projected Lineups

Orlando City (4-2-3-1)

Goalkeeper: Pedro Gallese.

Defenders: Rafael Santos, Robin Jansson, Rodrigo Schlegel, Kyle Smith.

Defensive Midfielders: Cesar Araujo, Wilder Cartagena.

Attacking Midfielders: Ivan Angulo, Martin Ojeda, Facundo Torres.

Forward: Ramiro Enrique.

FC Dallas (3-4-3)

Goalkeeper: Maarten Paes.

Defenders: Marco Farfan, Sebastien Ibeagha, Nkosi Tafari.

Wingbacks/Midfielders:  Ruan, Patrickson Delgado, Sebastian Lletget, Paul Arriola.

Forwards: Jesus Ferreira, Petar Musa, Alan Velasco.

Referees

REF: Jair Marrufo.
AR1: Chris Wattam.
AR2: Felisha Mariscal.
4TH: Matthew Corrigan.
VAR: Ismail Elfath.
AVAR: Mike Kampmeinert.


How to Watch

Match Time: 8:30 p.m.

Venue: Toyota Stadium — Frisco, TX.

TV/Stream: MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Radio: Real Radio 104.1 FM (English), Mega 97.1 FM (Spanish).

Twitter: For rapid reaction and live updates, follow along at @TheManeLand, as well as Orlando City’s official Twitter feed (@OrlandoCitySC).


Enjoy the match. Go City!

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Orlando City

Intelligence Report: Orlando City vs. FC Dallas

Find out everything you didn’t know about FC Dallas, courtesy of someone who knows them best.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC / Jeremy Reper

I hope you all made it safely through Hurricane Helene, and that you remain safe if you’re in an area that is still feeling the effects of the storm. Orlando City will return to action Saturday on the road against FC Dallas, as the Lions enter the home stretch of the regular season with just four more games to play.

A trip to Dallas means I spoke to Drew Epperley, the manager of the excellent independent outlet Big D Soccer. Drew was kind enough to bring us up to speed on how FC Dallas’ season has been, and offered up some great information about this week’s opposition.

Talk me through some of the transfer business from FC Dallas this season. Who are some of the new faces, and how have they performed?

Drew Epperley: FC Dallas didn’t make a ton of moves this year in the transfer market as the club had a fairly set roster going into the season. The big splash, however, was signing Petar Musa from Benfica for a record deal. That move has certainly paid off. Musa is near the top of the league in goals scored this season and has become one of the best players to debut for FC Dallas in the club’s history. 

In the U-22 world, FC Dallas went down to South America and signed Patrickson Delgado. Most of us assumed he was going to be a defensive midfielder coming in, but it turns out, he’s more suited as a No. 8 or even a No. 10 at times. 

Aside from the transfers, the club also made a splash in the SuperDraft last December by trading up to snag Oregon State forward Logan Farrington. I keep saying that if the league still handed out a Rookie of the Year award, Farrington would be a shoo-in this season. He currently has four goals and eight assists. 

Elsewhere, the club has brought in some familiar faces like veteran Omar Gonzalez, former Orlando City fullback Ruan (so far we’re loving him here!), and Angolan midfielder Show.

Peter Luccin is the current interim manager after Nico Estevez was sacked back in June. What sort of setup and style does Luccin prefer to use with FC Dallas?

DE: Luccin hasn’t changed a ton of how the team lines up from what Estevez was running. The club switched to a 3-4-3 formation this season that allows the wingers to shift into a 5-3-2 when the club needs to be more defensive or to move up the field into the attack. The club struggled offensively last year, and this was a move to allow more attacking players to get onto the field. 

The downfall was that it didn’t work well under Estevez for a number of reasons, primarily the club’s injury situation kept key players like Alan Velasco, Jesus Ferreira, Geovane Jesus, and Paxton Pomykal away from the field for either the majority of the season (Velasco, Pomykal, and Jesus) or large chunks of games (Ferreira). Secondly, the team never had the right players in the defensive side of the formation to make it work this season. 

Luccin did find a way to unlock some passion and energy out of this group, even sticking with this formation. The team still struggles at times defensively but they tend to play more aggressively than they were earlier in the year, which has led to some more entertaining games out of this group.

Dallas is five points off the final play-in place with four games to go. What needs to happen in order for the club to climb above the line and get into the postseason?

DE: Simple, winning. If they don’t find ways to win at least two of their last four games, they can probably kiss the postseason goodbye. Aside from that, the less simple route is seeing either Portland or Minnesota lose their remaining games. 

Will any players be unavailable due to injury, suspension, etc.? What is your projected starting XI and score prediction?

DE: The big one this weekend for FC Dallas will be Asier Illarramendi being out due to a yellow card suspension. The veteran is a key player that drastically changes how the club plays in the midfield. On the injury front, the team still isn’t fully immune with Pomykal and Liam Fraser on the season-ending injury list. Geo Jesus is also on that list as well. 

As for our starting lineup, it should look similar to last week’s win over LAFC: Maarten Paes, Marco Farfan, Sebastien Ibeagha, Nkosi Tafari; Ruan, Patrickson Delgado, Sebastian Lletget, Paul Arriola; Jesus Ferreira, Alan Velasco, Petar Musa.

Score prediction: FCD 2, OCSC 1.


Thank you to Drew for helping get us up to speed on FC Dallas. Vamos Orlando!

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Lion Links

Lion Links: 9/27/24

Miguel Gallardo recounts Orlando City history, Americans who can impress, Europa League action, and more.

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Image courtesy of Orlando City SC

Happy Friday, Mane Landers! I made it through the hurricane fairly unscathed over here in Tampa but plan on helping some friends closer to the gulf with yard cleanup. Before we dive into today’s links, let’s all wish a happy birthday to Orlando City/OCB goalkeeper Carlos Mercado!

Reliving Orlando City History With Miguel Gallardo

As part of the series highlighting the people who have had a hand in Orlando City’s history over the past 13 years, the spotlight deservedly landed on Miguel Gallardo. The former Lion spoke on his decision to follow the team to Orlando after the final Austin Aztex season in 2010.

“It was a big decision for me because in Austin I had a business and my family there,” he said. “It was not an easy decision for me, but soccer was always attractive to me, and I felt like I could do better than the way I did in the academy when I was starting out playing in Mexico. Eight of the guys were going to be moving with the team, so I felt like there was a little family there, so after a lot of thought, I decided to come, and it was really special right from the get-go.”

Gallardo was a major part of Orlando’s time in the USL Pro as the team’s goalkeeper and detailed his experience in the 2011 USL Pro championship and in a friendly against Newcastle United. He’s been a part of the Orlando soccer community since retiring as well, climbing the ranks of broadcasting and coaching in the area as well.

New Opportunities Arise for Americans Players

A new United States Men’s National Team head coach in Mauricio Pochettino means plenty of new opportunities for Americans on the fringes of the player pool to get a look. Orlando City forward Duncan McGuire was noted as one such player who deserves some consideration from Pochettino. Although he wasn’t able to take the Olympics by storm this past summer, McGuire has done well at the club level and could give the USMNT another option up top. If Pochettino can elevate McGuire’s game, it would be a boon for the Lions as well.

Young attackers like Diego Luna, Luca Koleosha, and Rokas Pukstas could flourish from Pochettino’s coaching as well. Richie Ledezma, who has been playing at right back for PSV Eindhoven, is also a player to keep an eye on while Sergino Dest recovers from injury.

Kei Kamara Speaks On Importance of U.S. Open Cup

LAFC beat Sporting Kansas City in the U.S. Open Cup final Wednesday night, with striker Kei Kamara helping his team lift the trophy. There’s a great deal of uncertainty for the tournament moving forward, as not every MLS team played in it this year. Following the win, Kamara discussed how the league shouldn’t stop participating in the historic tournament and stated that MLS Commissioner Don Garber “better not take this away.” It’s Kamara’s second time winning the U.S. Open Cup, claiming the title with Kansas City in 2012, and he’s second on the league’s all-time scoring list. It’s great to hear a veteran like Kamara speak so openly about wanting the U.S. Open Cup to stay a part of MLS history.

“We go through the systems of everything that’s happened. They told us to go to school, play soccer in school, go to college, play soccer in college, get drafted, go through the system, and that’s what we’ve done. That’s why I give so much credit to Chris Wondolowski because we’ve done the same things. That’s the American dream that we wanted to do and we made it here so you can’t take away from our history. That’s just my opinion. Don’t take away our history.”

Europa League’s Opening Round Wraps Up

The first round of matches in this year’s revamped Europa League is over and done with and multiple clubs got their campaigns started off on the right foot. Tottenham played a majority of its match against Qarabag a man down, but still managed to win 3-0 at home. Ajax cruised to a 4-0 win against Besiktas, Rangers won 2-0 over Malmo in Sweden, and Lyon beat Olympiacos 2-0 at home. AS Roma had to settle for a 1-1 draw with Athletic Bilbao after conceding in the 85th minute. Eintracht Frankfurt also couldn’t hold onto its lead, allowing two late goals to draw 3-3 at home to Viktoria Plzeň.

Free Kicks

  • Former USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter is reportedly a finalist to become the Chicago Fire’s sporting director, but it could be a hybrid role that has him as head coach as well. FC Dallas interim head coach Peter Luccin is reportedly the frontrunner for the permanent gig, and Bruce Arena is in the mix for the San Jose Earthquakes opening.
  • Trinity Rodman will miss the Washington Spirit’s match tonight against Angel City FC due to her back injury. We’ll see if she’s ready to roll when the Spirit visit Orlando to face the Pride on Oct. 6.
  • AC Milan is reportedly interested in signing American midfielder Johnny Cardoso from Real Betis.
  •  Luis Ruiz was suspended for three months for his violent tackle on Christian Bermudez in Mexico’s second division earlier this month. Bermudez suffered a double fracture in his right leg as a result.
  • USL Super League team Fort Lauderdale United FC has rescheduled its upcoming home game due to delays in construction at its stadium.

That’s all I have for you today. I hope you all have a fantastic Friday and rest of your weekend.

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