From the monthly archives:

August 2009

Rewatching…The Push Off

by Jared Wade on August 25, 2009 at 11:51 pm · 15 comments

As noted earlier, NBATV dedicated its programming to Reggie Miller all day yesterday in honor of his 44th birthday. The day featured so many great memories that it’s hard to pick a favorite, but I’ve always maintained that Reggie’s push off of MJ and game-winning three against the Bulls in the 1998 Playoffs was the most impressive moment of his career.

In 1998, MJ was seemingly invincible. Aside from the time he lost to Orlando after returning out of shape and out of sync from playing baseball, Jordan hadn’t been beaten in nearly a decade. He was infallible. But between Reggie getting the better of him in Game 4 and the Pacers coming the closest of any team in the 90s to beating him when they were ahead of the Bulls in the fourth quarter of Game 7 (the only Game 7 that MJ played in the 90s during his six title seasons aside from in 1992 against the Knicks, by the way), it marked a giant leap forward for a Pacers team that had previously struggled to even get by the Knicks for much of the decade. Without the near-success in 1998, I’m not sure the Pacers develop the savvy necessary to make a Finals run two years later. Players like Jalen Rose got so much experience in 1998 that I think that Reggie’s shot in Game 4 pushed the team to another level — literally.

Someday, I’ll get my hands on Game 7 and do a recap of that one, which somehow represents both one of my proudest and most devastating memories. They were so close to knocking off MJ, which was amazing in and of itself, but they also failed, which was heartbreaking.

But, alas, much like Rick and Llsa will always have Paris, Pacers fan will always have The Push Off. And because it is one of my favorite memories of all time, I decided to do a running recap as I re-watched Game 4 for the first time in a few years yesterday.

Enjoy.

(Note: The times are certainly not precise. NBC showed the time/score very rarely back then, so a lot of these are educated guesses. They’re all close enough in comparison to the surrounding action that it shouldn’t matter though. The last few minutes are pretty exact.)

reggie jordan

The two best SGs in the East go toe-to-toe in this epic contest.

1st Quarter

12:00 – Isiah Thomas is doing the color commentary. Fantastic. At least Bob Costas and Doug Collins are here, too. In other news, this game features my favorite court design that the Pacers ever had. More importantly, this was the playoffs when almost the entire team shaved their heads. And, yes, that includes Rik Smits.

10:30 – Reggie’s hurt his ankle earlier in the series and NBC shows a little montage of how difficult it is for him to even make cuts away from the ball. Meanwhile, Bob Costas talks about Zeke’s epic Finals game with a horribly sprained ankle against the Lakers. His 25 third quarter points that night were one of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen.

8:40 – Mark Jackson makes a great behind-the-back bounce pass to Smits in the post. Few people remember how routinely he would make passes that very few people in the world were capable of.

7:37 – Smits and Luc Longley are battling for position on the post. Not exactly the Battle of the Titans.

7:03 – One of my favorite players and co-St. John’s University grad Chris Mullin drills a straight-away three. With a shaved head, he looks like he recently underwent chemotherapy. Pacers up 14-10.

6:50 – Says Doug Collins: “Reggie Miller is such a factor that he could go stand in the parking lot and someone would have to go with him.”

6:46 – Dennis Rodman checks in. His hair has a bumble bee pattern going tonight with a little Tiger orange blended in on top.

6:03 – Mullin drives by Jordan, misses a layup, gets his own rebound, gets a layup blocked on the other side of the rim, gets the rebound again and then misses a layup from the original side of the hoop. Must have been Charles Smith impression day in Market Square, amirite?

5:20 – Rik blocks that snot out of an MJ layup attempt. We soon find out that Rik also got a bunch of eye and Jordan has to call a timeout on the next possession to tend to his bleeding brow. He ends up heading to the locker room for treatment.

4:04 – Toni Kukoc , aka The Waiter, is trying to punish Reggie in the post. Reggie pokes the ball away but Larry Bird sends in Jalen Rose for Reg anyway. God, I love me some Jalen.

3:20 – Bill Wennington ties the game at 18 with an elbow jumper. He also went to St. John’s. Throw in SJU grad Mark Jackson and this game is 30% Redmen right now. Somewhere, Lou Carnesecca is smiling. And wearing a sweater.

2:20 – Mark Jackson tries to post up Ron Harper. He pump fakes and spins like six times to no avail. Harper blocks his shot pretty easily.

1:48 – Antonio Davis misses a lil turnaround jumper but Dale Davis grabs the board and puts it in. This exact sequence used to happen constantly.

1:10 – MJ’s back from the locker room with a butterfly band-aid on his eyebrow. Says Doug Collins: “He saw the sight of his own blood. That’s not good news for the Pacers.” Doug used to hit on Michael constantly. Now, he flirts with LeBron. He once also showed up at Johnny Moxon’s house in a whip cream bikini.

0:01 – Jordan throws up an airball fadeaway, but Rodman grabs it out the sky and dunks it. Then, while trying to  steal the ensuing inbounds pass, Dennis goes flying over the scorekeeper’s table and lands in Bob Costas’ lap. Zeke makes a bunch of awkward jokes. More comically, Costas (even well into the 2nd quarter) continues to think that MJ made the shot even though it was clearly an airball and Rodman clearly dunked it. The lack of replays even back in 1998 is half the reason that no one used to care about poor officiating. It was just as bad back then, trust me, but you only saw it once and didn’t watch it 38 times in slow-mo on YouTube. Calm down, conspiracy theorists.

waiter

The Waiter serves up plenty of treys in Game 4.

2nd Quarter

9:20 – Mike’s doing work. After scoring a few buckets, he gives Reggie a triple between-the-legs move (much like the one he busted Larry Bird with at 2:21 in this YouTube clip of his 63-point playoff game) before walking right by Miller, who has to foul him to prevent an easy two.

8:13 – After Rik nails a jumper, MJ hits a pull-up fadeaway over Derrick McKey. That’s his third straight hoop. Isiah comments on Jordan’s swagger: “When I see that little bounce, and I see that little hop, I know from experience that he’s about to go off.”

7:48 – With MJ guarding Travis Best for some reason, Reggie loses Ron Harper on a baseline screen and drills a corner, catch-and-shoot three.

7:14 – MJ answers with a three of his own. “He’s in one of those zones that great players get into,” says Doug Collins.

7:01 – Reggie answers with an interior bucket off a nice pass by Travis Best.

6:30 – Reggie goes to the well one time too many in trying to keep up this anything-you-can-do-I-can-do-better SG contest and badly misses a little running half-hook in the lane.

6:15 – Jordan pushes it out in transition and only has Travis Best to beat. But Travis plays great position defense, staying between Mike and the rim, forcing MJ to go straight into him and commit an offensive foul by pushing off. Good call by the refs, who via the infinite wisdom of revisionist history, supposedly never called offensive fouls on Jordan.

4:35 – Jordan backs down Travis Best in the post and hits an easy mini-fadeaway.

4:05 – Jordan goes at Best again and spins baseline by him but Antonio Davis pokes the ball away. out of bounds Costas calls Travis Best 5’11″. Sure, Bob. Whatever you say. The Bulls inbound, Mike posts up Best yet again, but after a double-team, Pippen winds up hitting a three.

3:15 – Jordan, you guessed it, attacks Best on the block again. After a double, Luc Longley hits a mid-range J. Jesus Chirst, Larry Bird, put someone else on this guy already, would ya?

2:07 – Luc Longley hits a skyhook. People forget that Luc Longley was actually a very capable scorer in the post. Bulls up 12.

0:40 – Mike drives right and pulls up to hit another mini-fadeaway over Derrick McKey. He has 13 in the quarter and 15 for the game. If I didn’t already know the outcome of this one, I’d be very concerned.

0:20 – Mark Jackson drills an open three. Phil Jackson’s Mama, you better guard that man.

0:00 – The half ends. What did you think would happen here?

kangaroos_luc_longley

Contrary to popular belief, Luc Longley is actually the official national animal of Australia.

3rd Quarter

11:30 – Rodman grabs his 10th rebound. He was really, really, really good.

11:04 – Luc Longley hits yet another jumper after Rik Smits completely forgets how to play defense against an inbounds play. Get it together, Smits. Pacers back town 8.

10:37 – Smits must have been shamed by my criticism cause he dunks viciously — and completely redeems himself.

9:45 – Rodman absolutely beasts Dale Davis for position and tips in an offensive board. I never saw Bill Russell, but Rodman might be the best we’ve ever had.

8:15 – Dale Davis flushes a wide-open dunk to cap a 6-0 run for the Pacers. Market Square Arena loses its goddamn mind.

7:36 – An absolutely gassed Rik Smits hammers Ron Harper with an elbow to the face that, if it happened today’s environment of watered-down physicality, would cause people to call for a lifetime banishment. Rodman tries to entice Rik to punch him in the face — and I think Rik sort of wanted to, but he is just way too tired. It has taken him a solid 12 seconds to get up and down the court the last three possessions.

5:39 – After a TO, Rik is still in the game for some reason, and he somehow grabs and converts and offensive board. What do I know?

5:15 – Reggie outfoxes Ron Harper again (by fading off a screen this time) and sticks another corner three. Pacers down 4.

4:37 – Pippen and MJ run a two-on-one break against Mark Jackson, who does everything he can to hammer Jordan to prevent the dunk. Mark succeeds, but he is the one who falls awkwardly to the floor while Jordan barely feels the contact and nearly converts the and-1. After a few free throws.

3:36 – Jordan murders Miller in single coverage on the block for two more. Bulls back up 10.

3:11 – Smits hits an elbow jumnper. He has 18.

2:14 – Jalen becomes the first person to deter Jordan in the past 24 minutes of game play, simply playing him straight up on perimeter and by not falling for any of his ball-fake trickery. Jordan forces the action though, eventually throwing the ball away with the shot clock winding down. Nice work, Mr. Rose.

1:15 – Jalen can’t stop MJ’s fadeaway the next time down the court, however, as Mike elevates and sticks one from the baseline.

1:02 – Toni Kukoc tries some Euro-cleverness while attempting to guard Rik on the post by “pulling the chair.” But the refs aren’t buying it and instead call Kukoc for the foul, sending Smits to the line, where he scores his 20th and 21st points of the evening.

0:46 – Jalen is over-matched by Mike and fouls him on the perimeter. Jordan makes both, putting the Bulls back up by 10.

0:27 – Rik, who is now officially a man on a mission, astutely slips the screen on a pick and roll and dives to the hoop, where he once again scores again in the paint.

RIK_SMITS

Today, Rik Smits mostly rides motocross. In 1998, he mostly got buckets.

4th Quarter

11:42 – Antonio Davis leads off the fourth with a well-earned, drop-step lay-in against Dennis Rodman. Pacers down only 6.

11:04 – Steve Kerr, who looks exactly the same as he currently does, steps into the game and drills a three after a wildly rotating Pacers defense can’t close out on him. Good ball movement by the Bulls.

10:46 – Jalen matches with a trey of his own.

10:04 – Jalen hits another trey. Market Square erupts.

9:48 – Toni Kukoc hits a trey. Market Square sits down.

8:58 – MJ checks in for Scott Burrell. Good move by Phil Jackson. Only a coach as good as Phil is good of such thoughtful chess moves.

8:46 – Then again, maybe Phil should of left in Burrell. Jalen draws an offensive foul on Mike on the perimeter.

8:06 – Reggie checks back into the game and he’s clearly limping. He only has 10 points, but I have a feeling he’s due.

7:58 – MJ sticks a fadeaway. “That shot is almost impossible to block,” says Doug Collins. Almost? Mike has 26. Pacers down 8.

7:04 – After a good possession garners nothing but a missed, open three by Travis Best, Rodman holds off Dale Davis — a guy so tough he cleans his balls with steel wool — with one arm and skies up to snatch the board out of the air with his one off-hand. Unreal.

6:20 – NBC shows a great montage of Jalen and MJ elbowing the hell out of each other. Zeke lauds Jalen for not “conceding” anything. I might be the only person who feels this way, but god do I miss gully 90s Playoff basketball.

6:05 – Smits re-renters the game and, of course, immediately scores. Pacers down 5.

5:36 – After a missed MJ shot, Travis Best dribbles down the court, pulls up and drills a trey. Market Square goes insane. Indy down 2.

4:02 – On back-to-back possessions, Jordan commits his sixth turnover of the night and Luc Longley commits his sixth foul. Says Bob Costas: “Nothing to say to Longley now except for ‘G’day, Mate.” Wocka, wocka, wocka. Pacers are in the bonus and Reggie knocks em both down, obviously. Indy once again down 2.

3:58 – After a Bulls miss, the Pacers bring the ball down the court. “Here comes the Pacers. Here comes the crowd,” says Costas. After a little perimeter passing action, McKey finds himself with the ball behind the three-point line. I’ll let Costas tell you what happens: “Mckey for the three. Mckey FOR THE LEAD.” Pacers up 1. (After a commercial, we see an NBC replay that shows McKey taking a giant elbow to the dome from Smits about 10 seconds before he hit that three. Don’t let anyone fool you. Derrick McKey was what’s up.)

3:26 – After a missed Jordan jumper, McKey makes an awkward dribble move but regains his composure to find a cutting Antonio Davis with a phenomenal no-look pass. Davis gets fouled. Then, he misses both free throws. Boo.

3:01 – As MJ is getting fouled on the perimeter, we see Pippen (inadvertently) drill Reggie with an elbow to the head in the post. Seconds later, Kukoc hits a three.

2:26 – Travis Best answers with a three for the Pacers out of a pick-and-roll. It’s Indy’s 10th three of the night. Pacers up 2.

2:05 – Reggie, again draped all over Scottie’s back in the post, pokes the ball away from Pippen for the steal. Huge defensive play for the three-point assassin.

1:40 – Toni The Waiter “serves” up another three. (I know…I know. Sorry. I’m leaving soon anyway. Calm down.) He has 18 points on 8/10 shooting. (Meanwhile, a replay shows that that last Travis Best three was clearly a two. Let’s all give a round of applause for the rudimentary technology of 1998.)

1:15 – Travis Best ruins a possession by over-dribbling and then missing runner. He will go on to do this 349,827 more times during his Pacers career.

0:56 – MJ hits a pull-up jumper. This is his first point in seven minutes. He has 28 total. Pacers down 3.

0:33 – Best again dribbles waaaay too much. But this time when he (eventually) drives to the hoop, he scores … so there’s that. Pacers down 1.

0:22 – Offensive foul on the Bulls as Rodman is called for a moving screen. Wow. Ballsy call, ref. But Dennis definitely plastered Derrick McKey with that pick.

0:18 – Reggie makes a dribble move, but he gets stymied and kicks it over to Best, who swings it over to McKey, who gets his shot blocked out of bounds. The Pacers retain the ball. McKey inbounds the ball poorly, however, and Ron Harper pokes away a pass intended for Miller. Pippen ends up with the ball and gets fouled. Meanwhile, Harper and Miller get in each others’ faces and a mini lil ruckus breaks out. The refs talk about it for a minute but no one actually did anything, so it’s much ado about nothing. Pippen walks down to the other end to shoot free throws. He misses the first. Isiah talks about the pressure of this situation. “It’s not butterflies in your stomach. It’s a giant whale.” Whatever you say, Zeke. Pippen misses again. McKey rapes Jordan during the rebounding chaos, but it’s not called and the ball caroms out of bounds. At first, the refs call a jump ball, but it gets overruled and the Pacers get possession at half court with 2.9 left. Indy down 1.

0:02.9 – Before the inbounds, Reggie loses Ron Harper off a double screen and then blatantly pushes off Michael Jordan while MJ tries to switch. Reggie catches a perfectly led pass from Derrick McKey, turns in perfect rhythm, elevates, shoots and drills nothing but nylon. “One of the greatest clutch playoff performers of his generation has apparently done it again,” says yells Costas. Market Square Arena is panda-effing-monium. Reggie races down the court with his arms in the air and jumps up and down while spinning about six times. Doug Collins asks what happened to Reggie’s limp when he was dancing like a madman. “Too much adrenaline flowing through your body,” say Isiah. “That’s when you say ‘I love this game.’ That’s what it’s all about right there.”

0:00.7 – Most people forget that this happened, but MJ catches the inbounds pass, elevates for three, double-clutches and shoots. The ball hits glass and then rattles around the rim for what, at the time, felt like ten minutes. It misses.

0:00 – Market Square Arena: “REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE. REGGIE.”

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All Reggie, All Day on NBATV

by Jared Wade on August 24, 2009 at 3:33 pm · 1 comment

Time to leave work early. NBATV is celebrating Reggie’s birthday by showing all his classic games all day long. Sorry for getting this to you so late in the day, but I just found out myself. For shame, I know.

We’ll be covering this more later but, for now, here’s the remaining schedule for the day from our pals at Ball Don’t Lie (all times EST):

4 p.m. — Chicago at Indiana, Game 4, May 25, 1998: Reggie does his dance, while coach Larry Bird looks as cold as ice, after Miller “shakes” free from Michael Jordan to hit the game-winner.

6 p.m. — Milwaukee at Indiana, Game 5, May 4, 2000: Reggie drops 41 points in the deciding Game 5 to keep the Pacers road to the Finals alive after an early scare from the Bucks.

8 p.m. — Indiana at New Jersey, Game 5, May 2, 2002: The Pacers wind up losing in double-overtime but Reggie tries to save the day with an out-of-this world 3-pointer in regulation and dunk on the entire Nets squad in the first OT.

Fortunately for those of us with TiVo, however, the network will then just re-loop much of the day’s coverage and run it all again. Set your DVRs for the following.

10:00 pm – Reggie’s appearance on The Marv Albert Show.

10:30 pm – Reggie’s first pro game in Philly on November 6, 1987

12:30 am – Reggie’s 25 point fourth quarter vs. the Knicks in Game 5 of the 1994 Playoffs.

2:30 am – Reggie creates the name of this blog.

Enjoy.

reggie_knicks

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My Second Favorite Team

by Jared Wade on August 20, 2009 at 8:17 pm · 1 comment

ESPN has reached out to the TrueHoop Network to get some perspective on which teams are our favorite teams other than our actual favorite teams. For those scoring at home, that means “Who is your second favorite team?” For me, it’s a tough call between Miami and New Orleans because they employ my two favorite players in the league to watch, Dwyane Wade and Chris Paul. Ultimately, however, considering how much I love the city of New Orleans and the fact that I’ve never been to Miami (in addition to the fact that I’ve watched more Hornets games than Heat games over the past three years), the decision wasn’t all that hard. My second favorite team to watch is definitely NOLA.

TrueHoop will be posting some of our responses in the coming days, but I wanted to share this with you in advance since me and you are tight like that. So even though this isn’t Pacers-related at all, here ya go: The reason I love watching the Hornets.

chris-paul-i-believe

The devastation that Hurricane Katrina caused throughout New Orleans in 2005 represented the most unforgivable breach of fiduciary duty I had ever witnessed. So it was through the lens of recent tragedy that I was delighted to watch, just a few short months later, the all-world ascension of Chris Paul, a player to whom I would donate both my kidneys if necessary. Basketball, of course, is no elixir for recovery, but if there was one place that deserved the unique joys that only a pure point guard can provide, it was NOLA.

I was instantly hooked.

In Paul’s third year, I must have watched 40 Hornets games and, much to my surprise, David West and Tyson Chandler evolved into more than just role players. They were legitimate forces in the NBA. The CP3-to-Chandler alley oop, aka the Crescent City Connection, became my nightly highlight delight as West’s mid-range accuracy and Peja’s Barry-Pepper-in-Saving-Private-Ryansque marksmanship spaced the floor for Paul to dribble wherever he wanted, whenever he wanted.

As we now know, however, the wheels came off the ’07-08 Nawlins’ team in Game 7 against the Spurs. Then, last season marked a downtrodden decline back to mediocrity as injuries decimated the roster and Tyson Chandler became a shell of his former self.

Still, with Paul at the helm, Emeka Okafor bringing new blood to town and the city still enamored with the NBA, there’s no other team I would rather watch win than the Hornets — aside from my beloved Pacers that is.

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Cap & Trade

by Tim Donahue on August 14, 2009 at 5:56 pm · 6 comments

Though basketball is a game, the NBA is a business. As much as we would like all of the decisions of the Indiana Pacers to be dictated by their needs on the basketball court, the reality is that financial concerns and limitations play a very large role.

To help those interested in the Pacers find some clarity between these two inextricable worlds of basketball and finance, Eight Points, Nine Seconds is introducing a new feature called “Cap & Trade.” It’s purpose is to help explain the salary cap and luxury tax implications of any personnel moves made by Pacers, and occasionally explain why certain moves were not made. This will generally appear as a companion piece to the more important (and more entertaining) basketball analysis, but there will also be periodic updates at key points, such as the start of the season, and the beginning of the summer free-agency period.

We will also have a resource page called “Salary Central” (coming soon) that will show player salaries by year, along with information on cap and tax positions, player/team options, trade and other exceptions available to the Pacers.

For our sources, we will use Shamsports, Hoopshype and the ESPN Trade Machine. For CBA questions, we will rely on the fine work of Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ. Other sources, such as the NBA Players’ Association Website, will be noted when used.

Here’s an update on where the Pacers currently stand on a few notable fronts.

Payroll
The Pacers current payroll for the 2010 season is about $65.4 million, including the Jamaal Tinsley payout. They are over the $57.7 million salary cap, but they are still about $4.5 million below the luxury tax.

Exceptions
The Pacers had three types of exceptions available to them to use to sign free agents this summer, and they’ve used up two of them. They used their Mid-Level Exception (MLE) to sign Earl Watson and Dahntay Jones. They used their Bi-Annual Exception (BAE/LLE) to sign Solomon Jones. This leaves only Minimum Player Exceptions (MPE) available to them if they want to sign any free agents.

Roster Spots
The Pacers currently have 13 of their 15 allowable roster spots filled. They are almost certain to add one more player before the season starts, but probably not two. Here is a breakdown:

  • Bigs (6): Troy Murphy, Jeff Foster, Roy Hibbert, Tyler Hansbrough, Solomon Jones, Josh McRoberts
  • Wings (4): Danny Granger, Mike Dunleavy, Brandon Rush, Dahntay Jones
  • Points (3): T.J. Ford, Earl Watson, Travis Diener

Allen Iverson: AYFKM?
Rumors have circulated that the Pacers might be interested in adding The Answer at a one-year deal around the full MLE. Though these have been attributed to his agent, they are wholly unreliable. The Pacers, as noted above, no longer have their MLE. The only two ways they could get Iverson would be through a sign-and-trade with Detroit (very doubtful) or if AI were to accept the veteran minimum (to play in Indy???). This dog don’t hunt.

Marquis Daniels
The Pacers still hold the rights to Marquis Daniels, affording them the option of re-signing him without needing one of the exceptions listed above. This almost certainly will not happen. Instead, the Pacers are hoping to negotiate a sign-and-trade deal with the Celtics that will bring them back some asset, be it a promising young prospect, draft picks, cash or some combination of them. As of 8/8, it appeared that a deal with Boston would be unlikely. The Pacers have no interest in taking back either Brain Scalabrine or Tony Allen, and they have been unable to find a third team to broker the deal.

A.J. Price
The other player in limbo is second round draft pick A.J. Price from Connecticut. The Pacers hold his rights, as well, so they don’t need one of the exceptions to sign him. As the 52nd pick, he has little leverage, so he will probably have to wait for a resolution of the Daniels situation before getting a contract offer. If he signs, it will likely be at or slightly above the rookie minimum of about $450 thousand.

Will It Be 14 or 15?
Both Larry Bird and Jim O’Brien have expressed the desire to enter the season with only 14 players on the roster. This would provide flexibility in terms of adding players later in the year, either through free agency or taking back more players than they send out in a trade. It also makes sense not to spend a million or so dollars to pay someone to wear a suit on the end of the bench.

All in all, unless something can shake loose in the Daniels/Celtics situation, expect a quiet August and September from the Blue and Gold.

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