BELGRADE (Serbia) – The Serbian national team have officially confirmed their 12-man roster for the upcoming FIBA EuroBasket 2025, headlined by three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic.
Head coach Svetislav Pesic finalized the squad at the end of a perfect 7-0 run in friendly games, positively preparing for the biggest event of the summer.
SERBIA’S ROSTER FOR FIBA EUROBASKET 2025
Aleksa Avramovic, Bogdan Bogdanovic, Ognjen Dobric, Marko Guduric, Nikola Jokic, Nikola Jovic, Stefan Jovic, Vanja Marinkovic, Vasilije Micic, Nikola Milutinov, Filip Petrusev, Tristan Vukcevic
The Eagles have been flying this summer, winning each of the seven friendly contests against Bosnia and Herzegovina, Poland, Greece, Cyprus, Czechia, Germany, and Slovenia. Against Luka Doncic and teammates, they won by 34 points.
Who is playing at FIBA EuroBasket 2025?
Roster tracker: Who is playing at FIBA EuroBasket 2025?
Tracker: Preparation games for FIBA EuroBasket 2025
Competing as Serbia since 2007, they have finished as EuroBasket runners-up in 2009 and 2017 but are missing the jewel in the crown.
They were runner-ups at the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2023 and won bronze at the Olympic Games in Paris 2024, almost upsetting Team USA in the Semi-Finals.
The goal, now, is to come back as European champions to Belgrade – they have plenty of talent and experience on their roster, probably the strongest and most complete among all participating teams.
Svetislav Pesic’s team will play the Group Phase in Riga, hoping to extend their Latvian trip to the final stages, alongside co-hosts Latvia, Estonia, Portugal, Czechia, and Türkiye.
They will begin their campaign against Estonia on August 27 at 20:15 CET.
Cricket South Africa (CSA) has confirmed the venues for the 2027 ODI World Cup, which will be played in South Africa, Namibia, and Zimbabwe. The 50-over tournament will be played across the host cities, including Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town, Durban, Gqeberha, Bloemfontein, East London, and Paarl. South Africa is all set to host 44 matches, while the remaining 10 will be played across Namibia and Zimbabwe.
Cricket South Africa confirm venues for the 50-over World Cup in 2027(AP)
This announcement came along with the formation of the Local Organising Committee Board (LOCA), spearheaded by former South African cabinet minister Trevor Manuel as Independent Chairman.
“CSA’s vision is to stage a global, inspiring event which will reflect the face of South Africa—diverse, inclusive, and united. The tournament will be vibrantly different in its style and atmosphere, and its experiences. It will provide players, fans and partners with the most unique, unforgettable experience,” CSA Board Chairperson, Pearl Maphoshe said in an official statement.
“CSA offers its full support to the appointed LOCB and is confident in their ability to successfully deliver on the mandate set, ensuring a seamless and impactful event,” Maphoshe added.
It must be mentioned that the 2027 ODI World Cup will be the 14th edition of the tournament. It will be played in October and November 2027.
Also Read: Rohit Sharma’s return date fixed, to feature in India A matches before ‘last international series’: Report
This will be the second time that South Africa and Zimbabwe will co-host a tournament after the 2003 edition. Namibia is hosting the competition for the first time.
Format of the 2027 World Cup
The 2027 World Cup will have two groups of seven teams, with the top three from each group progressing to the Super Six stage. This format was also used in the 2003 edition.
South Africa and Zimbabwe have automatically qualified for the tournament since they are the hosts. The top eight teams in the ICC ODI rankings as of 31 March 2027 will also seal their qualification for the tournament.
Despite Namibia hosting the tournament for the first time, they are not guaranteed a spot since they are not a full member nation of the ICC. The side will have to go through the standard qualification pathway.
Australia are the defending champions since they won the 2023 edition after beating India in the final at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad.
A tense tussle for pole position eventually saw Maximo Quiles (CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team) clinch pole position at the Balaton Park circuit in Hungary. Round 14 of 22 and with a title battle tightening into the second half of the season, it was a vital session; making the most of it, Quiles stormed to pole ahead of Valentin Perrone (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) and Angel Piqueras (FRINSA – MT Helmets – MSI).
Moving into Q2 from Q1, Taiyo Furusato (Honda Team Asia) led Joel Kelso (LEVELUP-MTA) and the Australian’s teammate Marcos Uriarte, whilst Scott Ogden (CIP Green Power) also made it through to the pole fight. There were differing strategies in Q2 and the first lap times were slightly off the FP2 reference from the morning but there were red sectors aplenty soon enough. With five minutes to go, Quiles fired in a lap time to go P1 ahead of Valentin Perrone, Alvaro Carpe (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Guido Pini (LIQUI MOLY Dynavolt Intact GP) but it was still very much to play for as everyone entered the track for the final stints. Championship leader Jose Antonio Rueda (Red Bull KTM Ajo) needed a lap, mired down in 11th.
The opposition were being worked hard as Quiles continued to set a relentless pace, the first and only rider into the 1’45s during the session, although the lap was cancelled due to track limits. Nonetheless, he still took pole ahead of Perrone and Red Bull Ring winner Angel Piqueras who snatched third on his final flying lap. Carpe leads the second row away with David Muñoz (LIQUI MOLY Dynavolt Intact GP) and Pini alongside him.
The third row features Jacob Roulstone (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) ahead of Rueda who did eventually improve but has shown similar signs of Austria, where he struggled. Adrian Fernandez (Leopard Racing) had to settle for P9 whilst teammate David Almansa starts from P10. There was a big crash in the session for Furusato who highsided out of Turn 1 and the Japanese rider starts from P12.
Check out the full Moto3 qualifying results here!
Angel Piqueras, FRINSA – MT Helmets – MSI, Michelin® Grand Prix of Hungary
Maximo Quiles, CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team, Michelin® Grand Prix of Hungary
Maximo Quiles, CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team, Michelin® Grand Prix of Hungary
Moto3™, Parc Ferme, QP, Michelin® Grand Prix of Hungary
Maximo Quiles, CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team, Michelin® Grand Prix of Hungary
Tennis icon Roger Federer has become the seventh billionaire athlete in history, according to estimates published by Forbes on Friday.
The Swiss star, who retired from the sport in 2022, is now believed to have a net worth of $1.1 billion, boosted by his minority stake in Swiss shoe and apparel brand On.
Having collected around $1 billion in off-court endeavors during his playing career, Federer was tennis’ highest-paid player for 16 straight years despite earning less in prize money than rivals Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal.
In 2020, he earned $106.3 million before tax, more than any other athlete in the world.
Federer becomes tennis’ second billionaire, following Romanian player Ion Țiriac, who won the 1970 French Open men’s doubles championship and began investing after the fall of communism.
Also on the list are basketball stars Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and LeBron James, as well as Milwaukee Bucks sixth man Junior Bridgeman. Tiger Woods rounds out the list and joins James as the only players to have become billionaires while still competing in their sports.
Carlos Alcaraz was named by Forbes on Friday as the highest-paid active tennis player over the last 12 months for the second year in a row, having earned $48.3 million. Only Federer, Djokovic and Naomi Osaka have ever earned more in a single year.
Jannik Sinner, who is the men’s world No. 1 and whose burgeoning rivalry with Alcaraz is increasingly shaping the sport, is second on the list. He made $47.3 million, almost double the $26.6 million he earned in the 12 months prior.
The Italian earned $20.3 million directly from tennis this year, the third highest total since Forbes’ records began, and significantly more than Alcaraz. Only Djokovic, in Forbes’ 2016 and 2019 lists, has ever earned more directly from the sport in a single year.
Coco Gauff placed third on this year’s list, having earned $37.2 million – more than any other female athlete over the last 12 months.
Her placement means that – for the first time since Federer, Maria Sharapova and Nadal in 2010 – each of the top three are under 30.
In total, the top 10 highest earners made a combined $285 million, up 16% from last year but still significantly less than the record of $343 million in 2020.
Graham Potter accepted that he has to improve after West Ham’s dismal start to the season continued with a humiliating 5-1 defeat by Chelsea at the London Stadium.
Potter, who is desperately looking to strengthen his struggling squad before the transfer window shuts, did not hide from the situation after his side followed up their 3-0 defeat by Sunderland in their opening game with another atrocious performance. The former Chelsea manager has made little impact since taking charge at West Ham in January and there is growing unhappiness behind the scenes.
“You are under pressure all the time in these jobs,” Potter said. “In this situation, that is how it is. I know the territory, I know what comes with poor results and I accept that responsibility. It was too easy to score against us so I take my responsibility and I have to do better. That is the case with all the players. They are honest and want to do more than they are at the moment.”
West Ham have conceded eight goals in their first two matches. Potter has criticised his players for failing to carry out the basics but he insisted that he has not detected a lack of effort.
“I don’t want to say it’s a lack of fight, I know the players care and are desperate to do well,” he said. “I know they want to do better than we are. Sometimes in football and life you hit a patch and no doubt about it, it has been a tough week. We have had a smash on the nose.”
Potter, who has picked up fewer points (nine) from his first 10 home games in the Premier League than any manager in West Ham’s history, did not want to say whether a relegation battle beckons. The club are hopeful of strengthening in midfield by signing Monaco’s Soungoutou Magassa.
Chelsea, meanwhile, delighted in how they dealt with losing Cole Palmer to a groin injury in the warm-up. They fell behind early but were inspired by a scintillating full debut from Estêvão Willian.
“We conceded because of him, he lost the ball in the build-up, so he needs to make mistakes to learn,” Enzo Maresca said. “The performance was very good. That showed how good he is and the reason why he’s here with us.” Maresca added that Palmer has been dealing with a groin problem since last week. – Guardian
The Top End T20 Series is reaching its business end, and the semi-final lineup has now been confirmed, with the Adelaide Strikers Academy streaking into the final four on the last day of the group stage.
Pakistan Shaheens, who had already qualified, are now just one step away from the final after learning their opponents as well. However, their semi‑final is against one of only two teams to have beaten them in this year’s competition: the Perth Scorchers Academy.
The Shaheens have been among the standout sides so far, blending aggressive batting with disciplined bowling for four wins from six matches. The Scorchers were the first side to beat Imran Khan’s men, earning a narrow two‑wicket win in the Shaheens’ second game of the tournament; the table‑topping Chicago Kingsmen are the other team to have defeated them.
The Shaheens, however, are buoyed by recent results and will fancy their chances of squaring the ledger tomorrow.
The Adelaide Strikers Academy will meet the Kingsmen in the other semi‑final, with the final scheduled for the same day.
For Pakistan cricket, the semi-final of the Top End T20 Series offers another platform for emerging players to showcase their talent in Australian conditions, underlining the depth of the nation’s pipeline. For the Shaheens, victory here would not only secure a shot at the trophy but also add another chapter to their growing reputation as one of Pakistan’s brightest units abroad.
The stage is set—and all eyes are on whether the Shaheens can continue their strong run or if the Scorchers will prove too tough to crack once more.
The rugby club’s president says its committee has not been able to appeal for financial support for five years because the case was ongoing
A rugby club president has said a drug-addicted couple who admitted defrauding the Cornish club out of £28,000 have “got away with it scot-free” after they were told to pay back £1 each.
Truro Crown Court heard on Tuesday that Katie Curgenven, who was treasurer of the Redruth Albany Rugby Football Club, used its bank account to pay for a cocaine habit she shared with partner Darren Curgenven.
The 36-year-old, of Bellevue, Redruth, admitted fraud and was jailed for two years, suspended for two years. Her partner, 44, of Chapel Terrace, Illogan, also admitted fraud and was jailed for 15 months, suspended for two years.
Club president Simon Ferguson said he was “a little bit disgusted”.
During the proceeds of crime hearing, Judge Simon Carr said the Curgenvens would be known in the local community as the couple who had defrauded the rugby club and told them, “that will follow you to your graves”.
Simon Ferguson
Rugby club president Simon Ferguson says the fraud has been “a kick in the teeth”
Mr Ferguson told the BBC the club had struggled with player recruitment and funds in 2018, but the team had worked hard to recover from that before Katie Curgenven, also known as Katie Stevens, joined in 2019 and stole the funds.
“We put a lot of miles in, a lot of effort to overcome that and then suddenly you get kicked in the teeth once more by having all of your financial security taken out from under you,” he added.
He said the treasurer had started at the club in 2019 because she had some financial experience and her father had previously been a club president.
Mr Ferguson said she had changed bank accounts, used the club’s funds, had run up bills and stolen bar stock during the Covid-19 lockdowns.
“£20,000 pounds was those long-term profits from over the bar, from having those social activities, from hiring out the rooms in the club and there was £8,000 worth of stock.
“It was a lot of years of graft and careful stewardship, which created quite a healthy bank balance and that’s something that isn’t going to come back overnight,” he said.
Of the fact the couple only had to pay back £1 each, he said he was “very disappointed and a little bit disgusted to be honest”.
Redruth Albany RFC
Players had to have cold showers as the boiler was broken and there were no funds, the president says
Judge Carr said it had taken five years to get the case to court “for some inexplicable reason”, which had not been the fault of the club.
Mr Ferguson said: “We couldn’t share what had happened so we couldn’t appeal for support because it was an ongoing police matter and it was absolutely wearing on everyone involved.”
He said the 90-year-old club nearly had to close while the case was ongoing.
The boiler was broken for two years so players had to have cold showers in the winter, which meant the club could not ask for player subscriptions, he said.
“Sometimes it would cost £500 a week to put the coolers on to keep the beer chilled and it was very basic choices as to, ‘are we going to get enough beer bought to keep the lights on to be able to pay for the electric for the day?’.
“Morale had plummeted,” he added.
Mr Ferguson explained the club had “started to turn the corner” after the court case, with new players and volunteers joining and a new director of rugby, Peter Joyce.
Reflecting on the fraud, the club president offered some advice to other groups who relied on volunteers: “Keep on top of all the basics, which perhaps are easy to overlook when there’s been things done a certain way for X amount of years and you have people that you know and trust in position.
“Make sure you have those regular committee meetings, that there is feedback from the treasurers of the current state of finances, that you see the statements and there’s more than one signatory on the account.
“You have to trust, but you need to have the oversight with it.”
Colombia’s Natalia Linares, Cayman Islands’ Davonte Howell, Brazil’s Matheus Lima and Puerto Rico’s Jose Figueroa highlighted the athletics competition of the 2nd Pan American Junior (U23) Games in Asuncion, Paraguay, where records were set in 30 of the 47 events contested over five days (18-22 August).
A triple medallist four years ago when the inaugural Games were held in her native Colombia, Linares landed at 6.92m on her last attempt in the long jump, just a single centimetre shy of Caterine Ibarguen’s national record. She also anchored her team to bronze in the 4x100m relay.
In the sprints, Howell broke the 10-second barrier legally for the first time with 9.98 in the final, a national record for the Cayman Islands. With 10.10 in the semifinals, he led six other men who ran faster than the previous Games record. Colombia’s Ronald Longa (10.07) and Jaleel Croal (10.16) of the British Virgin Islands joined him on the podium.
In the 200m, 20-year-old Figueroa ran past all opposition down the home straight from lane seven to give Puerto Rico its first track gold of the Games with a national record and World Championships standard of 20.16. Croal (20.39) and Longa (20.51) traded positions from the 100m.
Lima stormed a 48.23 in the 400m hurdles semifinals on the opening day, pushing the next five men to times faster than the previous Games record. His closest rival, Jamaica’s Tyreece Hyman, beat him in the medal race two days later with a personal best of 48.90. In the women’s event, Mexico’s Antonia Sanchez ran a lifetime best and record of 55.91 for gold.
In the women’s 100m, Liranyi Alonso ran a Games record of 11.08, just three days after her silver medal performance at the NACAC Championships in The Bahamas.
Fourth at the 2021 Games as a 15-year-old, Alonso could not match her speed in the final and had to settle for silver (11.40) behind Trinidad and Tobago’s Shaniqua Bascome (11.19). Two days later, the now 19-year-old set a personal best and meeting record of 22.69 to win the 200m and give the Dominican Republic its only athletics gold in Asuncion.
With the second edition held in the peak of the athletics season, performances were of a higher calibre compared to Cali 2021, held in late November and early December.
Mexico’s 2022 world U20 champion Karla Serrano led the way in the first event of the athletics programme with a 1:31:40 victory in the women’s 20,000m race walk.
Her compatriot Dafne Juarez became the only individual double winner in Asuncion with her victories at 1500m and 5000m, the latter with a record of 15:51.27.
Canada’s world U20 silver medallist Dianna Proctor also bagged two golds. She first lowered the Games 400m record to 51.97 and then pipped the Jamaican anchor to clinch 4x400m victory by one hundredth of a second with 3:31.73, another meeting record.
Lars Flaming broke the 80-metre barrier for the first time in the javelin (81.56m) and delighted the home crowd with Paraguay’s only athletics gold of the Games. Ricardo Montes, the youngest individual winner at the age of 18 and Venezuela’s only champion, produced the 30th and final record of the Games with 5.45m in the pole vault.
Two 2024 World U20 Championships finalists, sprint hurdlers Jocelyn Echazabal and Yander Herrera, led the Cuban performance with victories and Games records, both set in the semifinals. Echazabal ran 12.95 in the 100m hurdles and Herrera 13.54 in the 110m hurdles.
A total of 25 countries featured on the medal tally, 15 of them with at least one gold, led by Cuba (8 gold, 3 silver and 2 bronze), followed by Canada (7-7-1) and Colombia (7-4-3).
England produced a classy performance to lay down a marker in the opening game of Rugby World Cup 2025.
USA came into the fixture brimming with confidence and hoping to make a statement of their own, and while they were well in the game for large periods, the Red Roses proved too much in the end and ran out 69-7 winners. There were plenty of dazzling performances on the night, including that of Ellie Kildunne, who brought out her trademark celebration!
Though England’s victory was clinical, there are plenty of other teams in this tournament capable of flexing their muscles too. Who will be next to announce themselves at #RWC2025?
2. ‘There isn’t rugby without a party!’
We needn’t have waited for the players to produce the magic – there were fireworks before a ball had even been kicked!
Ahead of kick-off, the crowd and those watching on were entertained by global pop sensation Anne-Marie, who sang and danced to some of her classics to the delight of the crowd at the Stadium of Light.
Here’s a taste of the action:
3. Lexi Chambers delivers on her promise
There’s an old saying that without a referee you don’t have a game, well without a whistle you don’t have a referee.
Record-breaker Lexi Chambers set out to complete 10 ultramarathons in 10 days from Twickenham to Sunderland in her wheelchair, and duly completed all ten in time to hand the whistle for the opening match to officiator Aimee Barrett-Theron.
An exhausted Chambers helped raise money for the ChildFund Rugby charity, and her achievement over the past week and a half is all the more incredible given she covered all that ground in a non-racing wheelchair.
Congratulations, Lexi!
4. Brazil captain calls on future generations to ‘keep dreaming’
On Sunday, the 23 players selected for Brazil’s opening match against South Africa will make history as the first Brazil team to appear at a Rugby World Cup.
It has been a moment that has been building over the years, and captain Eshyllen Coimbra announced to the world that this is “just the beginning” and asked the young girls of Brazil to “keep dreaming” and keep rugby in the country moving forward.
“We are the first group, we are just the beginning,” she said at her eve-of-match press conference.
“We’re the first group to reach this level so what I can say is that the future generations will only get further. This is only the beginning and what I can tell them is to keep working, keep dreaming, it will be worth it.
“This is part of the dream. What we’re living today is part of a dream that was dreamt back a long time ago, so to the young people, keep dreaming.”
5. Black Ferns to bring down the curtain on the opening weekend
That game between Brazil and South Africa is part of a double header at Franklin’s Gardens. Ireland take on Japan first up in Northampton, with kick-off at 12:00 BST, before Coimbra and her charges take the field at 14:45 BST.
Following that game, we will get our first glimpse of the most successful women’s side in Rugby World Cup history, as New Zealand take on a youthful and determined Spain outfit looking to take the fight to the Black Ferns at the York Community Stadium.
Remember that if you’re anywhere near Northampton or York on Sunday, you can still grab tickets by clicking here.
6. Snowsill picks her Fantasy Team of the Week
Elinor Snowsill is the first out the blocks to pick her Fantasy Team of the Week for us, and unsurprisingly there were a few Welsh faces in her line-up – including scrum-half Keira Bevan.
AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND – OCTOBER 01: Elinor Snowsill poses for a portrait during the Wales for the 2021 Rugby World Cup headshots session at Rydges Hotel on October 01, 2022 in Auckland, New Zealand. (Photo by Phil Walter – World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)
“Keira kicking at posts makes a difference when you’re going for a fantasy team. But she’s got a really good kicking game in open play and that keeps back threes honest and that opens up space in the defensive line,” Snowsill explained.
The Welsh legend also gave her tips on who she thinks will make the final, and who she believes will win it…
The deadline for picking your fantasy team for this round has passed, but don’t let that stop you from getting involved for the rest of the tournament! Learn more about it here.
Former South African captain AB de Villiers expressed surprise at Shreyas Iyer’s exclusion from Team India’s 2025 Asia Cup squad. Chief selector Ajit Agarkar admitted the right-hander was unlucky to miss out on selection, while announcing the 15-member squad for the eight-team continental competition on Tuesday, August 19.
Iyer was in breathtaking form with the bat in the recent 2025 IPL, scoring 604 runs in 17 games at an average of over 50 and a strike rate of 175.07. Furthermore, he led the Punjab Kings (PBKS) to the final in his first season as captain.
The franchise had not qualified for the playoffs since 2015 before their runners-up finish this year.
Talking about Iyer’s exclusion from the Asia Cup squad on his YouTube channel, De Villiers said (11:00):
“Who knows what is going on behind closed doors. Maybe not even Shreyas knows. There might be a few things that have taken place over the years that’s determined why he is not the flavor of the month this tournament. I am not sure what the reason is because he will be in my team more often than not.”
De Villiers added:
“I just read through that squad and I was thinking where Shreyas Iyer can fit in. I’ve seen fans being upset about his exclusion and Shreyas will be the most upset because he’s played some really good cricket over the last few years. He has matured a lot and has shown a lot of leadership qualities.”
Dating back to a year ago, Iyer also captained the Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) to their third IPL title.
“Is he sort of dragging energy from the squad?” – AB de Villiers
AB de Villiers further believes other intangible factors may have played a role in Shreyas Iyer’s exclusion from the Indian Asia Cup squad. The 30-year-old is a regular in the ODI side, but his last T20I appearance came in December 2023.
Iyer has a moderate T20I record with an average of 30.66 and a strike rate of 136.12 in 51 games.
“Thinking about when I was captaining, if there is a 50-50 call between two players, I would always lean towards the guy that offers more from a team perspective off the field. When it’s 50-50 on the field, you have to start looking at other areas like ‘Does he add value in the team room, does he have a smile on his face, does he uplift some of the other players around him?’. Or is he sort of dragging energy from the squad?,” said De Villiers (via the aforementioned source).
He added:
“Maybe it’s got something to do with that. I am just taking a complete guess because it is weird that a quality player like him not making the starting squad for Team India, especially with the leadership qualities he is bringing. Maybe it’ll be too much of a clash with him there and maybe there are too many leaders and too many captains. Maybe the truth will come out one day and we’ll know why Shreyas is struggling to get into Team India.”
The 2025 Asia Cup begins in the UAE on September 9, with Team India playing their first game against the hosts in Dubai on September 10.
Venkatesh has been writing cricket news, listicle and feature articles for Sportskeeda for over a year. He loves cricket because of the diversity of the playing fields and its unparalleled nuances, which no other sport presents. He also enjoys the analytical and quantitative side of the sport, which originates from his MBA degree and 10 years of experience in the IT industry in companies like Infosys, Atos and TCS.
Venkatesh ensures proper research from reliable sources and social media trends to gather information, and adds his own dash of creativity to create insightful content.
He started watching cricket in the late 1990s, having been impressed with South Africa and New Zealand’s gentleman-like attitude. Domestically, he supports the Chennai Super Kings for their ability to bring the best out of their players owing to a friendly and conducive team environment.
He admires three cricketers the most – Brian Lara for his batting style, AB de Villiers for changing the paradigm of batting and MS Dhoni for his unique cerebral approach to field placings and batting. Along with cricket, Venkatesh also enjoys watching and playing tennis and basketball. In his free time, he finds pleasure in singing and watching movies and web series.
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