Iga Swiatek swats Emiliana Arango to reach US Open second round

World number two Iga Swiatek powered into the second round of the US Open on Tuesday, swatting aside Colombia’s Emiliana Arango with a brisk straight-sets victory.

Swiatek arrived in New York as the bookmakers’ favourite to win her second US Open after a blistering run of recent form, which included a breakthrough Wimbledon title and a win at the Cincinnati Open.

The 24-year-old Polish star indicated she is ready to live up to that status with a quickfire 6-1, 6-2 demolition of world No.84 Arango on the main Arthur Ashe Stadium court at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.

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Iga Swiatek seized control of Tuesday’s opener with a break of serve in the fourth game, blasting a booming forehand down the line that Arango could only return into the net.

She broke again for a 5-1 lead soon afterwards, her delicate drop volley forcing a scrambled return from Arango that drifted out.

After holding easily to clinch the first set, Swiatek was soon back on the offensive in the second.

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Arango was broken in the first game, and a further break in the seventh game left Swiatek 5-2 ahead and serving for the match.

A superb volley brought up three match points, and she converted the second of those to clinch victory.

Swiatek will face either Valerie Glozman of the United States or the Netherlands’ Suzan Lamens in the second round.

READ: ‘I am working on my fitness’: Azam Khan unveils comeback plans

Iga Swiatek routs Belinda Bencic to reach first Wimbledon final

Iga Swiatek routed former Olympic champion Belinda Bencic 6-2, 6-0 on Thursday to reach her first Wimbledon final, where she will face Amanda Anisimova.

The five-time Grand Slam champion, seeded eighth at the All England Club, dominated her Swiss opponent from the start, wrapping up victory in 71 minutes on Centre Court.

“Honestly, I never even dreamed that it’s going to be possible for me to play in the final. So I’m just super-excited and proud of myself, and I don’t know, tennis keeps surprising me,” said Swiatek.

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“I thought I had lived through everything, even though I’m young, I thought I experienced everything on the court, but I didn’t experience playing well on grass, so that’s the first time, and I’m super, super excited and just enjoying it.”

On a baking Centre Court, the 24-year-old caught Bencic cold, racing into a 3-0 lead.

Bencic, ranked 35th in the world, found her footing, holding serve twice but Polish star Swiatek broke to love in the eighth game to take the match by the scruff of the neck.

Bencic, who returned to action in October, six months after giving birth to her daughter, Bella, was immediately under pressure in the second set as Swiatek broke for a 2-0 lead.

The rampant Swiatek did not allow Bencic a single game in a remarkably one-sided second set.

Despite her impressive form, Swiatek has largely gone under the radar at this year’s Wimbledon, dropping just one set so far while the top seven women’s seeds were all eliminated.

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After slipping down the rankings, she is now back in the world’s top four, having reached her first-ever grass-court final at Bad Homburg last month.

Swiatek has won four French Open titles on clay, as well as the 2022 US Open on hard courts, but until this year, she had never been beyond the quarter-finals at Wimbledon.

She will face Anisimova for the first time in her career on Saturday after the American 13th seed beat world number one Aryna Sabalenka 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 to reach her first Wimbledon final.

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Sinner eyes US Open semi-final as Swiatek looks to halt US surge

Jannik Sinner attempts to reach a maiden US Open semi-final on Wednesday as fellow world number one Iga Swiatek hopes to stem an American championship surge.

Jannik Sinner is the only top-four player left in the men’s draw following the exits of Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz and Alexander Zverev.

However, he is yet to reach the last-four in New York and faces a test of his credentials against fifth-ranked Daniil Medvedev, the 2021 US Open champion.

Jannik Sinner defeated Medvedev from two sets down to win his first major at the Australian Open in January before the mercurial Russian avenged that loss at Wimbledon.

“I will try to think more about Wimbledon than the Australian Open,” said Medvedev, also the 2019 and 2023 runner-up at the US Open.

“Against Jannik, I feel like in a way we know our game, what we will try to bring to the table, and then it comes to always a moment’s deuce, breakpoint, maybe try to surprise him or not, what he will do, what I will do.”

Victory would give Medvedev a place in a 10th Grand Slam semi-final.

The winner of that quarter-final will face either Australia’s 10th-ranked Alex de Minaur or Britain’s Jack Draper, the world number 25.

Left-handed Draper is into his first Grand Slam quarter-final and is the first British man to make the last eight in New York since Andy Murray in 2016.

Draper has not dropped a set over four rounds, winning 47 of 48 service games and saving 20 of 21 break points.

“I just need to keep going,” Draper said. “I have great people around me and I love playing here in New York… I love playing on the big stage.”

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De Minaur is also looking to reach his first Grand Slam semi-final and is playing in his first tournament since a hip injury forced him to hand Djokovic a walkover in the Wimbledon quarter-finals.

If the Australian achieves his 50th Grand Slam match win, he would become the first from his country to reach the US Open semi-finals since Lleyton Hewitt in 2005.

With Frances Tiafoe and Taylor Fritz already lined up for an all-American men’s semi-final on Friday, and Emma Navarro safely into the women’s last four, home fans are dreaming of a title sweep this weekend.

Andy Roddick was the last US man to lift a Grand Slam singles trophy in New York in 2003 while Serena Williams, Sloane Stephens and Coco Gauff have triumphed in the women’s tournament in the last decade.

Jessica Pegula will attempt to become the fourth American player in the semi-finals.

However, she has the tricky task of taking on world number one and 2022 champion Swiatek, the four-time French Open winner who is seeking a sixth Grand Slam title.

Iga Swiatek boasts a 6-3 career edge over the sixth-ranked Pegula who has fallen short in six Grand Slam quarter-finals.

Poland’s Iga Swiatek defeated Pegula in the quarter-finals in 2022 on her way to the US Open title.

The winner of that quarter-final will face unseeded Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic who made the semi-finals for a second successive year with a 6-1, 6-4 win over Beatriz Haddad Maia.

After losing to eventual champion Coco Gauff in the 2023 semi-finals, Muchova then suffered a serious wrist injury which sidelined her until June this year.

A former world number eight, now ranked at 52, Muchova has yet to drop a set, knocking out two-time champion Naomi Osaka and this year’s French Open and Wimbledon runner-up Jasmine Paolini.

READ: Emma Navarro into US Open semi-final after Badosa collapse

Top-ranked Swiatek outlasts Rakhimova in US Open first round

World number one Iga Swiatek launched her bid for a second Grand Slam title of 2024 with a 6-4, 7-6 (8/6) victory over determined lucky loser Kamilla Rakhimova at the US Open on Tuesday.

Broken as she served for the match, Swiatek trailed 6-3 in the second-set tiebreaker, saving three set points as she won the last five to close out the match against her 104th-ranked opponent.

Swiatek, the 2022 US Open champion, candidly revealed she carried “too much baggage” in her New York title defence last year.

She looked anything but weighed down, however, as she raced to a 4-0 lead.

Kamilla Rakhimova, one day shy of her 23rd birthday, then won three straight games, but her spirited fightback was hindered by some untimely double faults and Iga Swiatek responded.

Unable to convert a set point against the hard-hitting Russian’s serve in the ninth game Swiatek served out the first set with authority, delivering two aces for triple-set point and sealing it with a backhand winner.

After saving a break point in the second game of the second set, Swiatek broke Rakhimova in the third game. But her troubles weren’t over. Serving for the match she was broken as Rakhimova levelled the second set at 5-5, then piled on the pressure in the tiebreaker.

“At the beginning (I felt) good, but then I got a little bit tight and my opponent used that,” Swiatek said. “I tried to get back to my game.

“I’ve just been trying to adjust to the courts,” Swiatek added. “I just wanted to feel how it is on Arthur Ashe and I’m sure that day by day I’m going to get more rhythm.”

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Four of Iga Swiatek’s five Grand Slam titles have come on the red clay of Roland Garros, including her third straight French Open title this year.

Swiatek has also won titles this year at Doha, Indian Wells, Rome and Madrid — where she saved three championship points to beat Aryna Sabalenka and retain her title.

But the 23-year-old from Warsaw may have been feeling the effects of so many matches when she fell to eventually gold medallist Zheng Qinwen in the semi-finals of the Paris Olympics, eventually settling for bronze.

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China’s Zheng Qinwen stuns top seed Swiatek in Paris Olympics

Zheng Qinwen stunned women’s world number one Iga Swiatek 6-2, 7-5 in the singles semi-final to make the gold medal match at the Paris Olympics.

It was the 21-year-old’s first win over the four-time French Open champion at the seventh attempt and ended Swiatek’s 25-match winning run on the clay courts of Paris.

“I’m so happy that I could make this history for China tennis because I always wanted to be one of the athletes who got a medal for China and now I’m one of them,” said seventh-ranked Zheng who is guaranteed at least a silver medal by reaching the final.

“But I know the fight is not over. It’s not the end. The tournament is very long. So I’m really happy but at the same time I’m waiting for more.

“Of course, I have made history already but I don’t want to stop here.”

By making the final, Zheng is the first Chinese man or woman to reach an Olympic singles gold medal match, bettering the run of iconic trailblazer Li Na who finished fourth in the women’s event at Beijing in 2008.

China has previously won medals in women’s doubles in Paris Olympics.

In 2004, at Athens, Li Ting and Sun Tiantian captured gold while four years later in Beijing, Yan Zi and Zheng Jie claimed bronze.

Zheng Qinwen said she always believed she could defeat Iga Swiatek despite her poor record against the Pole and having had to play gruelling back-to-back three-hour matches in Paris to make the semi-finals.

“I finally showed I could beat the world number one on her best surface,” added Zheng.

“I always knew I can do it, but you have to show it. I’m so proud of myself and so proud for my country.”

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Zheng will face either Croatia’s Donna Vekic or Anna Karolina Schmiedlova of Slovakia in the gold medal match.

Swiatek, meanwhile, was left to rue 36 unforced errors in a tie where she also dropped serve six times. She will have to content herself now by playing for the Paris Olympics bronze.

“Sorry guys, next time,” she told reporters, refusing to discuss her shock defeat.

Swiatek was hit off the court by the powerful 21-year-old Australian Open finalist who broke the Pole three times in the opening set.

Iga Swiatek appeared restored by a 10-minute break and quickly stretched out to 4-0 lead in the second set before Zheng Qinwen battled back, retrieving both breaks for 4-4.

The Chinese star broke again for a 6-5 lead against the error-plagued Swiatek and claimed victory in the next game.

“Before, when I was not at this stage, I let matches go. I say, okay, let’s fight for the third set. But today, no, I don’t use this mentality. I say, I am just going to fight every single point,” explained Zheng.

She said that she is a different player now to the one who lost to Aryna Sabalenka in January’s Australian Open final where she managed just five games in a straight-sets loss.

“In Australia, my energy was really low. But if you ask me to fight for my country for another three hours today, I could do it.”

READ: Pakistan street child football team qualify for Norway Cup quarter-finals

Iga Swiatek crushes Jasmine Paolini to win third French Open title in row

Poland’s Iga Swiatek extended her French Open reign on Saturday as she thrashed Jasmine Paolini 6-2, 6-1 in the final to win a third successive Roland Garros title.

World number one Swiatek dominated Italian 12th seed Paolini, a first-time Grand Slam finalist, needing just 68 minutes to capture a fourth crown in five years in Paris.

Swiatek has now won all five Grand Slam finals she has contested. Her other victory came at the 2022 US Open.

She is the fourth woman in the Open era to lift the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen four times — after Justine Henin, Chris Evert and Steffi Graf.

“It’s amazing to be here. I love this place. I wait every year to come back,” said Swiatek, who clicked into gear after saving a match point against Naomi Osaka in the second round.

“I was almost out of the tournament,” she said. “I also needed to believe this one is going to be possible, it’s been a really emotional tournament.”

Iga Swiatek becomes only the third woman to win the tournament three years running. Henin, in 2005-07, was the last to do so. Monica Seles also achieved the feat as a teenager at the start of the 1990s.

At 23, her four French Open titles is the same number Rafael Nadal, the record 14-time men’s champion, had at the same age.

For the 28-year-old Paolini it was a sorry conclusion, at least in singles, to an otherwise brilliant fortnight in the French capital.

The world number 15 had won a total of four matches in 16 Grand Slam appearances before advancing to the fourth round of the Australian Open in January.

While she fell short of emulating compatriot Francesca Schiavone, who won the 2010 French Open, Paolini could yet finish on a winning note with her and doubles partner Sara Errani through to Sunday’s final.

“I have to say congratulations to you, Iga,” said Paolini. “I think to play you here is the toughest challenge in this sport.”

“It was tough, but it was lots of fun,” she added.

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Paolini’s transformation this season into a player capable of challenging for the biggest prizes stemmed in part from quashing the mindset she needed “a miracle” to beat the best in the sport.

Yet the odds were heavily stacked against her going into the final, with Iga Swiatek unbeaten at French Open since a 2021 quarter-final loss to Maria Sakkari.

Riding a 20-match winning streak in Paris, and a winner of 18 straight matches this year after titles in Madrid and Rome, Swiatek quickly set about her business.

She powered an ace to hold in the opening game and had Paolini backpedalling down break point, but the Italian ground out a gutsy hold and then broke Swiatek when the Pole flayed a forehand long.

That triggered a searing riposte from Iga Swiatek, who broke to love to get back on serve and then surged 4-2 in front after Jasmine Paolini coughed up a costly double-fault.

“I got broken at the beginning, so it wasn’t maybe perfect, but I think the level was pretty high,” said Swiatek.

She had her opponent constantly scurrying around the court and the errors began to stack up for Paolini, who conceded the first set with a weak groundstroke into the net.

With Swiatek firmly in the ascendancy, Paolini looked lost for answers as the top seed oozed confidence and repeatedly took control of the rallies.

Had it not been for an astonishing recovery against Osaka in the second round, Iga Swiatek would have suffered her earliest exit at the French Open.

Instead, that fright served to ignite her title aspirations, reigning Wimbledon and US Open champions — Marketa Vondrousova and Coco Gauff — in particular powerless to stop the Swiatek offensive.

Iga Swiatek had difficulty putting away Karolina Muchova last year when heavily fancied, but there was no such trouble 12 months on as the Pole dismantled Jasmine Paolini to underline her burgeoning status as the ‘Queen of Clay’.

The three games won by Paolini were the fewest in the final here since Henin obliterated Ana Ivanovic 6-1, 6-2 in 2007, which also coincided with the Belgian’s fourth Roland Garros title in five years.

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Iga Swiatek sinks Coco Gauff to storm into Rome Open final

Iga Swiatek won her 11th straight clay-court match on Thursday as the top seed moved closer to another record with a 6-4, 6-3 semi-final defeat of Coco Gauff at the Rome Open.

World number one Swiatek now stands one victory away from duplicating the Madrid-Rome clay trophy double achieved by Serena Williams 11 years ago.

The 22-year-old Pole defeated third-seed Gauff for the 10th time in their 11 encounters, with her only loss in the series coming last summer in a Cincinnati semi-final.

Iga Swiatek, a four-time Grand Slam winner due to defend her Roland Garros title starting a week from Sunday, will play the Saturday Rome Open final against either second-seed Aryna Sabalenka or American Danielle Collins.

The top seed spent one and three-quarter hours in dispatching Gauff, the reigning US Open champion.

Iga Swiatek ended with 26 winners and broke four times.

“I’m not thinking about statistics or history,” she said after the victory. “I’m just playing day by day.

“It’s easier that way, it lets you play more freely.

“I’ll just try to play as good as possible in the final, no matter who it is.

“I won’t be thinking of any records, there is still work to do.”

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On the men’s side, American Paul reached a clay court semi-final for the first time in his career with a 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 upset of Hurkacz.

The 14th seed is the first American to reach the final four at the Foro Italico since Reilly Opelka in 2021.

The momentum-shifting quarter-final came down to the wire, with a 15-minute final game capping off nearly two and three-quarter hours on court.

Paul finally came through on his fourth match point as Poland’s Hurkacz sent a return long.

The match featured 13 breaks of serve, with Paul advancing with 29 winners and 41 unforced errors; and Hurkacz having 22 and 44 respectively.

“I started well but it got away from me in the second and start of the third,” Paul said. “I had to stick around in the match.

“I found the energy to get it going again. I was hitting my forehand bigger and with more intensity because Hubii can really crush the ball.”

Paul will wait for an opponent from sixth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas and Chile’s Nicolas Jarry.

Hurkacz, who knocked Rafa Nadal out in the Rome second round, was unable to get his massive serve up to speed as he faced Paul, winner over defending champion Daniil Medvedev in the fourth round.

Hurkacz won the clay title in Estoril last month and suffered only his third loss on clay this spring.

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Iga Swiatek sails past Madison Keys to reach Madrid Open final

World number one Iga Swiatek cruised through to a second consecutive Madrid Open final with a straight sets 6-1, 6-3 victory over Madison Keys on Thursday.

Dominant on clay, Swiatek barely put a foot wrong, making just eight unforced errors in the match to leave the 29-year-old American with virtually no chance.

“I’m really happy that I had such a solid game today,” Swiatek said on court after reaching her 11th WTA 1000 final.

“Madison is an amazing player with a really fast game and a big serve, so I wanted to focus on myself and I’m happy I was focussed.”

The top seed, triumphant at Doha and Indian Wells, started in unforgiving form.

Iga Swiatek broke to love in the second game and dropped just three of the first 17 points.

Keys, seeded 18th, battled back to hold from 0-30 down for a 3-1 deficit, fighting to stay in the set.

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However last year’s Madrid runner-up broke again for a 5-1 lead and served it out to wrap up the first set in 31 minutes.

The clinical Iga Swiatek broke for a 2-1 lead in the second set with a superb passing shot and never relinquished her advantage, even though Madison Keys was more competitive.

The 22-year-old four-time Grand Slam winner broke once more to seal her victory when world number 20 Keys went long.

Later reigning champion and second seed Aryna Sabalenka faces Elena Rybakina in the second semi-final, ahead of Saturday’s showdown with Swiatek.

In the men’s quarter-finals of the ongoing Madrid Open, Daniil Medvedev plays Jiri Lehecka, aiming to join Andrey Rublev, Taylor Fritz and Felix Auger-Aliassime in the final four.

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Iga Swiatek through in Madrid Open as Osaka falls

World number one Iga Swiatek beat Wang Xiyu 6-1, 6-4 to reach the third round of the Madrid Open on Thursday as she bids to win the competition for the first time.

Earlier Coco Gauff sailed through to the third round with a 6-0, 6-0 thumping of Arantxa Rus, while Liudmila Samsonova ousted Naomi Osaka in three sets.

Runner-up last year, Swiatek bounced back from her semi-final defeat by Elena Rybakina in Stuttgart with a largely comfortable straight-sets victory.

The Pole, a four-time Grand Slam winner and an expert on clay, wobbled in the second set as Wang won three games in a row but recovered to triumph in one hour 16 minutes.

“I love this place — I got to know the city a little better last year,” Swiatek said. “So this time I feel more comfortable around.”

Madrid is the only major European clay tournament that three-time French Open champion Swiatek has yet to win.

Iga Swiatek coasted through the first set, breaking twice for a 4-0 lead. She wrapped up it up with another break, leaving Wang no chance of reaching her red-hot backhand return.

The Doha and Indian Wells winner took a 4-1 lead in the second set but Wang fought her way back in for 4-4, before the top seed steeled herself to hold.

Wang then handed the second set on a plate to Swiatek with two double faults, and the Pole will face 27th seed Sorana Cirstea in the third round.

Earlier Gauff, 20, earned the first ‘double bagel’ victory of her career in a WTA Tour main draw event in only 51 minutes against her 33-year-old Dutch opponent Rus.

The American saved four break points in the match to become the third player ever to win 6-0, 6-0 in the Madrid Open main draw.

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World number three Gauff will face Ukraine’s Dayana Yastremska next.

Samsonova brought former world number one Naomi Osaka’s return to clay to a halt with a 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 victory.

Four-time Grand Slam champion Osaka twice battled back from a break down in the second set to force a decisive third but world number 17 Samsonova eventually ground out the win.

Japanese star Osaka returned to tennis in January after a long break and earned her first victory on clay for two years on Wednesday against Greet Minnen.

However Russian 15th seed Samsonova, whom Osaka beat at Indian Wells in March, was able to end a four-match losing streak with her victory in two hours 22 minutes in the Spanish capital.

Hard-court expert Osaka, 26, is not overly fond of the red dirt and has not won back-to-back matches on the surface since 2019.

She lost last week at the Rouen Open in France against Martina Trevisan in her first match back on clay but improved this week.

“I felt — I don’t want to say happy — I felt good that I was able to fight back,” said Osaka.

“I think it’s a big difference from my match in France, so I was happy that I learned from that match, but obviously really sad that I lost.”

Samsonova raced into a 4-0 first set lead, breaking in the first and third games as Osaka struggled.

“Honestly, it’s not the sliding part for me, it’s the touch,” said Osaka.

“I feel like I’m getting the balls, I’m just not really placing them well.”

Samsonova will face Madison Keys in the next round.

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World No. 1 Swiatek sweeps past Sakkari for second Indian Wells title

World number one Iga Swiatek powered past Greece’s Maria Sakkari 6-4, 6-0 on Sunday to claim her second Indian Wells WTA title two years after she beat Sakkari for her first.

The rematch of the 2022 championship showdown produced an almost identical outcome, as four-time Grand Slam champion Swiatek dominated the second set to seize her 19th career title and her second of 2024.

Sakkari, ranked ninth in the world, battled gamely through the opening set, erasing a break and saving two break points in the final game before Swiatek delivered a blistering forehand winner to pocket the set after 44 minutes.

It would take just 24 more minutes for the Polish star to wrap things up. She broke Sakkari at love for a 2-0 lead and rolled to the finish.

Iga Swiatek continued her strong comeback from a disappointing third-round exit at the Australian Open in January.

Since then, she has won the title at Doha and reached the semi-finals at Dubai. On Sunday, she became the 10th woman to win the Indian Wells title twice — no one has yet managed to lift the trophy three times.

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“It’s just amazing to be standing here again,” Swiatek told the Stadium Court crowd after winning her eighth WTA 1000 level title.

Swiatek’s run included a grudge match victory over Linda Noskova — the Czech teen who stunned her in the third round at the Australian Open in January.

Swiatek, who lost just 21 games and didn’t drop a set in the course of the tournament, seized the initiative early, breaking Sakkari for a 3-0 lead.

Sakkari, whose two career titles include last September’s 1000-level event in Guadalajara, broke back in the fifth game and leveled the set with a love hold for 4-4.

But serving to stay in the set, she quickly found herself down 0-40 and once Iga Swiatek had the set in hand she was away, winning the last eight games of the match.

“Credit to Iga,” said Sakkari, who came through a testing, rain-disrupted semi-final against US Open champion Coco Gauff to book her rematch with Swiatek.

Although she has won three of six meetings with Swiatek, she hasn’t beaten her since 2021.

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