2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua Sunday tee times, TV info

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s final round in Hawaii.

The PGA Tour is kicking off the 2023 calendar year in paradise.

A 38-player field loaded with winners (and 10 more who made the 2022 FedEx Cup final) will wrap up play Sunday at Kapalua’s Plantation Course for the final round of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions, the first of the Tour’s new schedule of designated events.

Collin Morikawa remains the man to beat after 54 holes, shooting a third-round 8-under 65. He’s yet to make a bogey through three days. Scottie Scheffler, who played in the final group with Morikawa on Saturday, failed to make a short birdie putt at the last and trails by six with 18 to go. Matt Fitzpatrick will play with the leader on Sunday.

Check out the tee times and TV info for the final round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions. All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Tee times

Tee time Players
12:30 p.m. Chad Ramey, Adam Svensson
12:40 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Chez Reavie
12:50 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Sam Burns
1:00 p.m. Adam Scott, Billy Horschel
1:10 p.m. Russell Henley, Sahith Theegala
1:20 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Trey Mullinax
1:30 p.m. Sepp Straka, Cameron Young
1:45 p.m. Seamus Power, Corey Conners
1:55 p.m. Ryan Brehm, Will Zalatoris
2:05 p.m. Justin Thomas, Scott Stallings
2:15 p.m. Aaron Wise, Luke List
2:25 p.m. Tony Finau, Patrick Cantlay
2:35 p.m. Tom Hoge, J.T. Poston
2:50 p.m. Brian Harman, Jordan Spieth
3:00 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, K.H. Lee
3:10 p.m. Max Homa, Sungjae Im
3:20 p.m. Jon Rahm, Tom Kim
3:30 p.m. J.J. Spaun, Scottie Scheffler
3:40 p.m. Collin Morikawa, Matt Fitzpatrick

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Sunday, Jan. 8

TV

NBC: 4-6 p.m.
Golf Channel
: 6-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 12:45-8 p.m.
Peacock: 4-8 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua Saturday tee times, TV info

Everything you need to know for Saturday’s third round in Hawaii.

The PGA Tour is kicking off the 2023 calendar year in paradise.

A 38-player field loaded with winners (and 10 more who made the 2022 FedEx Cup final) continues play Saturday at Kapalua’s Plantation Course for the third round of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions, the first of the Tour’s new schedule of designated events.

After opening the tournament with a 9-under 64, Collin Morikawa fired a Friday 7-under 66 to carry a two-shot lead into the weekend over J.J. Spaun and Scottie Scheffler. Scheffler, who with a win would overtake Rory McIlroy as the No. 1 player in the world, also signed for a 7-under 66 and sits in a tie for second.

Check out the tee times and TV info for the third round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions. All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Tee times

Tee time Players
12:35 p.m. Billy Horschel, Chad Ramey
12:45 p.m. Chez Reavie, Sam Burns
12:55 p.m. Sepp Straka, Adam Svensson
1:05 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Mackenzie Hughes
1:15 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Cameron Young
1:25 p.m. Justin Thomas, Max Homa
1:35 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Scott Stallings
1:50 p.m. Russell Henley, Ryan Brehm
2:00 p.m. Sungjae Im, Trey Mullinax
2:10 p.m. Will Zalatoris, Sahith Theegala
2:20 p.m. Tom Hoge, Adam Scott
2:30 p.m. Seamus Power, Hideki Matsuyama
2:40 p.m. K.H. Lee, J.T. Poston
2:55 p.m. Aaron Wise, Brian Harman
3:05 p.m. Corey Conner, Tony Finau
3:15 p.m. Jon Rahm, Luke List
3:25 p.m. Tom Kim, Matt Fitzpatrick
3:35 p.m. J.J. Spaun, Jordan Spieth
3:45 p.m. Collin Morikawa, Scottie Scheffler

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Saturday, Jan. 7

TV

NBC: 4-6 p.m.
Golf Channel
: 6-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 12:45-8 p.m.
Peacock: 4-8 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 8

TV

NBC: 4-6 p.m.
Golf Channel
: 6-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 12:45-8 p.m.
Peacock: 4-8 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Good news for golf fans: Last hour of final-round coverage of Sentry Tournament of Champions on Golf Channel will be commercial free

This is good news for golf fans grumbling about too many ads on TV.

It’s a common refrain for golf fans watching their favorite sport on TV: too many commercials during critical times of the weekend coverage.

Well, thanks to a deal with Callaway, the final hour of Sunday’s coverage of the Sentry Tournament of Champions on Golf Channel will be commercial free.

Sports Business Journal was the first to report the news; Golfweek has since confirmed the report.

The Sentry Tournament of Champions can be seen on streaming services ESPN+ and Peacock and on TV on Golf Channel all four days and on NBC on Saturday and Sunday.

The typical handoff from cable to network TV is in reverse this week though. Usually it’s Golf Channel with the first chunk of coverage before turning things over to the over-the-air coverage on NBC or CBS.

For the Sentry, NBC has the first two hours of the weekend TV coverage from 4 to 6 p.m. ET while Golf Channel brings it home from 6 to 8 p.m. The final hour will be commercial free on TV and on the Peacock stream.

Sports Business Journal reports there may be more commercial-free coverage of the PGA Tour on Sundays down the line, with lead NBC producer Tommy Roy telling the publication: “Whenever we can have commercial-free golf, we do it. To get it here on the first designated event, to get it on Sunday, we’re really happy.”

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Jordan Spieth politely let a golf fan know his gambling chatter was a little loud after sinking a putt

“I appreciate the exchange of money. I’d be doing the same thing.”

Jordan Spieth is no fool. He knows a good percentage of fans at the golf course have their own stakes on the results of the game he’s playing.

He’d probably just appreciate it if they didn’t talk about their bets so loud that he can hear it while attempting to putt.

In the first round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions on Thursday, he had to give that reminder to a couple fans after sinking a putt for par on the green of hole No. 12. And he was so cool about it, he even gave the two fans a fist bump afterwards.

“I appreciate the exchange of money — I’d be doing the same thing — but I can just hear your gambling right off the back of the green,” Spieth said.

After the fan said sorry, he gave him an “all good.” And that was that. It was handled well by all parties, and I’m guessing the decibels came down on the gambling talk after that.

Spieth finished the round tied for 11th at 6-under. He has +2000 odds to win at Tipico Sportsbook, tied for eighth in the field.

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2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua Friday tee times, TV info

Everything you need to know for Friday’s second round in Hawaii.

The PGA Tour is kicking off the 2023 calendar year in paradise.

A 39-player field loaded with winners (and 10 more who made the 2022 FedEx Cup final) continues play Friday at Kapalua’s Plantation Course for the second round of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions, the first of the Tour’s new schedule of designated events.

Jon Rahm, who shot 33 under last year but finished runner-up, picked up where he left off, shooting a 9-under 64 to tie the lead after 18 holes. Collin Morikawa and J.J. Spaun also shot 9 under on Thursday. Tom Kim shot 8 under, and there’s a huge pack at 7 under, including Scottie Scheffler.

Check out the tee times and TV info for the second round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions. All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Tee times

Tee time Players
2:30 p.m. Billy Horschel
2:35 p.m.
Luke List, Sepp Straka
2:45 p.m.
Chez Reavie, Chad Ramey
2:55 p.m.
Justin Thomas, Adam Svensson
3:05 p.m.
Max Homa, Xander Schauffele
3:15 p.m.
Adam Scott, Keegan Bradley
3:25 p.m.
Cameron Young, Sam Burns
3:35 p.m.
Will Zalatoris, Patrick Cantlay
3:50 p.m.
Trey Mullinax, Russell Henley
4 p.m.
Corey Conners, Brian Harman
4:10 p.m.
K.H. Lee, J.T. Poston
4:20 p.m.
Seamus Power, Ryan Brehm
4:30 p.m.
Viktor Hovland, Jordan Spieth
4:40 p.m.
Hideki Matsuyama, Sahith Theegala
4:55 p.m.
Scott Stallings, Tony Finau
5:05 p.m.
Scottie Scheffler, Matt Fitzpatrick
5:15 p.m.
Aaron Wise, Sungjae Im
5:25 p.m.
Mackenzie Hughes, Tom Hoge
5:35 p.m.
Jon Rahm, Tom Kim
5:45 p.m.
Collin Morikawa, J.J. Spaun

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Friday, Jan. 6

TV

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 4-10 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 2:15-10 p.m.
Peacock: 6-10 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 7

TV

NBC: 4-6 p.m.
Golf Channel
: 6-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 12:45-8 p.m.
Peacock: 4-8 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 8

TV

NBC: 4-6 p.m.
Golf Channel
: 6-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 12:45-8 p.m.
Peacock: 4-8 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Scottie Scheffler saw Bubba Watson on vacation and couldn’t help but make a joke about the Masters Champions Dinner and LIV Golf

The defending Masters champ is also starting to plan out his dinner menu.

After a holiday hiatus, the PGA Tour is back this week in Hawaii and the boys brought some jokes to the island.

On Tuesday ahead of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions, Jon Rahm made a crack about how tense the Masters Champions Dinner will be due to the presence of a handful of players who made the jump from the PGA Tour to LIV Golf. Scottie Scheffler, the defending champion at Augusta National, joined in on the fun during his Wednesday presser at Kapalua with a story about seeing two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson while on vacation in Tennessee last year.

“I haven’t seen many of the LIV guys. I saw (Bubba Watson) on vacation this year and I told him that I was just gonna have a separate table for him in the corner by himself,” Scheffler said with a big laugh.

His menu is still being workshopped for the annual gathering that could include up to six LIV players this spring: Dustin Johnson, Patrick Reed, Sergio Garcia, Bubba Watson, Charl Schwartzel and Phil Mickelson.

Scheffler thinks the players will be able to put their animosity aside for a few weeks out of the year, especially at a place as steeped in history as Augusta National.

“I think that stuff just takes time, things will heal and we’ll see what happens,” Scheffler continued, noting how golf will inevitably move on. “All that stuff is not really for me. I can only show up and just try and play good golf. I’m not going to LIV anytime soon, so it’s not a concern for me at the moment.”

The Texan returns to PGA Tour action this week with his fourth start of the 2022-23 season. Scheffler logged two top-10 finishes in his three fall starts at the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba (T-3) and Cadence Bank Houston Open (T-9). He also earned a runner-up finish at Tiger Woods’ unofficial event in the Bahamas, the Hero World Challenge.

Last year Scheffler earned all four of his PGA Tour titles over six starts from the WM Phoenix Open in February to the Masters in April. He won the Arnold Palmer Invitational and WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play in between and finished inside the top 25 in 16 of 20 starts in 2022, including a trio of runner-up finishes at the Charles Schwab Challenge, U.S. Open and Tour Championship. Scheffler rose to No. 1 in the world and held the title for 30 weeks from March 27-Oct. 22. His $14,046,910 in official prize money set a single season PGA Tour record and he totaled more than $24,796,910 in earnings including bonuses.

Despite his successful season, Scheffler noted how his quick ascension didn’t quite earn him the respect that comes with the title of world’s best compared to other players who reached No. 1. That said, he never felt like he had to live up to it, either.

“Successful weeks for me look a little bit different. If I can show up and I have a great attitude and I’m committed to my shots and playing golf the right way, that’s a good week for me. Getting caught up in the noise of who the best player is isn’t going to help me be successful and approach things the right way.”

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Dawn of the designated-event era begins in Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua

This week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions has attracted 17 of the top 20 in the world.

KAPALUA, Hawaii — On the rolling hills of a former pineapple plantation in West Maui and amid an array of the state’s signature rainbows, 39 PGA Tour pros will begin a chase for a pot of gold at Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course.

With the flip of the calendar, the PGA Tour is set to debut the first of 10 designated tournaments with lucrative purses – $15 million this week or nearly double the prize money of a year ago – aimed at attracting the top players to compete against one another more often. This week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions has attracted 17 of the top 20 in the world, though World No. 1 Rory McIlroy opted to skip it. The WM Phoenix Open and the Genesis Invitational hosted by Tiger Woods in Los Angeles mean three of the first seven tournaments on the West Coast Swing have been elevated in status by the Tour this year.

“I’m excited to see how they are received throughout the year,” said Tour veteran Adam Scott. “Change needs to happen. If you don’t change, you get run over. The world is moving forward. I’m excited for something different.”

If all goes according to plan, the Tour elite will compete against each other at least 17 times per year. The idea of the best players competing against each other more frequently was a player-driven concept aimed to prevent more top talent from jumping ship for the upstart LIV Golf, which will expand to a 14-event circuit next month. Patrick Cantlay, for one, contends that LIV Golf has helped improve the professional golf landscape by forcing the Tour to adapt.

“I think that it’s been interesting how much it’s changed golf, as in, like, everyone’s trying to innovate and make golf better all of a sudden,” he said. “I think that will be a massive benefit for the viewer because I think now more than ever competition is making people evolve and making people grow and think outside the box.

“So I think it’s been really good and will be good for professional golf in the long run. But it’s been such a polarizing issue that it’s made people, you know, feel emotional about something that has been the same for such a long time.”

Some claim the Tour’s designated events aren’t all that different than what the Tour did previously in the 1990s to combat Greg Norman, LIV Golf CEO and Commissioner, and his previous effort for a breakaway circuit. Will Zalatoris, who is a member of the Tour’s Player Advisory Council, noted it won’t change his schedule significantly and termed it “a rebrand or a rename, however you want to look at it.”

Will the Tour’s changes be drastic enough to attract fans and stave off more player defections?

“What I hope is the Tour and its broadcast partners and everyone do a really good job of making a big deal of how strong the fields are these particular weeks and will it resonate with what people want to see,” Scott said. “The fields are going to be phenomenal if everybody shows up as they are meant to. Hopefully the elevated events are like a whole group of World Golf Championship events in today’s world.”

Having the top players committed to show up to the same events is the dream for Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and will make life easier for tournament directors of the designated events, who can promote the appearance of the top stars in advance. But on the flip side, what about the other 30-plus events whose job just got that much tougher to attract any star power?

“When you have 47 events, you want to be careful of maybe watering down the product, and now we’re just making sure that our product is as strong as possible,” Zalatoris said. “And, quite frankly, no, I’m not worried about these other events, worrying about their viability or whatever it is going forward.”

The top players are allowed to skip one of the designated events and still earn their full Player Impact Program bonus. Will McIlroy’s no-show at the inaugural designated event set a trend of players taking turns skipping out of the Tour’s premiere events? Zalatoris doesn’t think so.

“Why would I turn down any of the nine events where we’re playing for $20 million against the best players in the world?” Zalatoris said. “When I’m at home, I would be playing golf anyway, so I might as well play it against some of the best players in the world.”

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Check the yardage book: Kapalua’s Plantation Course for the PGA Tour’s 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps for the Hawaiian host of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Kapalua’s Plantation Course, site of this week’s 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions on the PGA Tour, was built in 1991 – the first course designed by the now-famous architecture duo of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw.

The mountainous layout is ranked by Golfweek’s Best as the No. 2 public-access layout in Hawaii and ties for No. 37 among all modern courses built since 1960 in the United States. The course, which features grand ocean views and the most significant elevation changes of any course on Tour, was extensively restored in 2019.

The Plantation maxes out at 7,596 yards and a par of 73, with only one par 3 on the back nine. With several downhill tee shots and the possibility of drives rolling out past 400 yards, the course usually plays significantly shorter than the yardage might indicate.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Jon Rahm addresses players going to LIV Golf and his goals for 2023

“I think the Masters Champions Dinner’s going to be a little tense compared to how it’s been in the past.”

Each year Jon Rahm sets some ambitious goals for the upcoming season, and a second major championship is at the top of his lofty list of things to accomplish in 2023.

One of Rahm’s best chances may come at the Masters, where he’s finished inside the top 10 in four of his six appearances, and the 2021 U.S Open champion can’t help but think of Augusta National as he looks to the year ahead.

“One thing I keep going back to, and it’s probably only funny to me, but I think the Masters Champions Dinner’s going to be a little tense compared to how it’s been in the past,” said Rahm with a laugh during his press conference ahead of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions. “So I keep thinking about it because I wish I could be there and just be able to see how things work out. Too bad the U.S. Open doesn’t have one of those.”

Rahm and the rest of the players are curious how the year will play out after LIV Golf stormed onto the scene in 2022. The upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund took some of the Tour’s best players and characters in its debut season, and Rahm thinks there’s more to come.

“Yeah, I mean, I think we all know where we stand. There’s still going to be players that choose to transition to LIV is my guess,” said Rahm. “But for a lot of us, I think we see the direction the PGA Tour is going towards, right? I mean, they’re making the necessary changes to adapt to the new age and I think it’s better for everybody.”

One of those adaptations is this week’s event in Hawaii. The Sentry Tournament of Champions is the first of the Tour’s newly-announced “elevated events” that feature smaller fields and larger payouts. This week’s field at Kapalua features 39 players playing for $15 million. Normally a tournament reserved for winners from the previous year, starting this year the TOC field also includes those who qualified for the previous season’s Tour Championship.

“I mean, it’s a very, very, very extensive bonus to be able to – exactly, only have to beat 38 players compared to any other event, right? And it’s earned by having an amazing year,” said Rahm. “I think it’s great that they’re allowing the people that make it to the Tour Championship to be here as well. Maybe change the name of the tournament since they haven’t won a tournament. But I don’t think the name matters too much. I think it’s right to have the best players of the year here, and making it to East Lake should be an accomplishment.”

Defending champion Cameron Smith won’t be back to defend his title after he took his talents to LIV Golf following a breakout 2022 season that included wins at the Players and Open Championship. The majors will be the only times that LIV players will cross paths with those still on the Tour, and despite his joke about the Champions Dinner, Rahm doesn’t think it will be that much different going forward.

“I think it’s going to be the same. I mean, I didn’t feel a difference in any of the majors last year. If somebody has a problem with LIV players, they’re just not going to deal with them and that’s about it,” Rahm explained. “In my mind, like I’ve said it before, I respect their choice and the ones I was friends with before I’m still going to be friends with, right? It doesn’t change the way I’m going to operate with them.

“So I think a lot of, let’s say, animosity, if there’s any, might be created more by (the media) than anything else. I don’t think there’s that much of a problem between players, at least in person, because if there is, they can avoid each other.”

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Tom Kim opens up on his first encounter with Tiger Woods — and his growing notoriety

Kim is becoming a fan favorite who is drawing the attention of an adoring public.

KAPALUA, Hawaii – When Tom Kim was five or six years old, he remembers being at a golf tournament in Australia and traipsing after Tiger Woods – stopping just short of following him to the bathroom.

“I had my TW cap on and it was so big because I had a small head at that time and it didn’t fit. But he was walking literally three feet in front of me and I shouted, ‘Go, Tiger’ and (he) tipped the cap and went in the bathroom,’ ” Kim recalled, “and literally thousands of people started running to the bathroom waiting for him to come out. But that was my first interaction with him.”

Did Kim join the masses of spectators following Tiger as he sought relief?

“I did not,” Kim said with a smile. “I wanted to give him his privacy.”

Kim, 20, is one of golf’s rising stars, having notched two wins on the PGA Tour since August and climbing to No. 15 in the Official World Golf Ranking. As the breakout star of the Presidents Cup in October, Kim is becoming a fan favorite who is drawing the attention of an adoring public. While not on the level of Tiger just yet, Kim has noticed that his star power is on the rise after a recent visit home to South Korea.

Tom Kim celebrates a putt made by teammate Si Woo Kim of South Korea and the International Team on the 13th green during Saturday afternoon four-ball matches on day three of the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Country Club on September 24, 2022, in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

“I was out with my friends and before if I would go to the golf course and wear my golf clothes people would recognize me. But if I would be just in average just normal attire not a lot of people recognize me,” he said. “But I felt like every night I went out I at least had a few people kind of come up to me and ask for a picture. So just things like that where I’m with my friends and we’re having a chat and someone comes up to me, you know, they’re like, ‘Well, OK. Like I guess you’ve changed, Tom.’ But I tell them, nothing has changed in my life, really.”

Nothing other than perhaps getting to spend time with his childhood idol, Tiger, at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas in December. Kim may be older but he’s still a Tiger fan at heart.

“It was like, man, Tiger’s, like, man, he’s pretty cool,” he said with a laugh. “I’ve seen him a few times, but to be able to kind of just have a conversation with him was pretty amazing. You look at him, and just the amount of things he has accomplished in his career was really cool to see.”

Kim said he’s feeling more comfortable on the Tour than when he played his first official Tour event and first major at the 2020 PGA Championship. That week he asked Tiger to pose for a photo in the locker room. Kim, who will make his Masters debut this spring, noted he grew up watching DVDs of Tiger’s wins at Augusta National.

“That’s how I know a lot of the holes because of watching those,” he said.

He’s dedicated to chasing Tiger’s other-worldly record on the Tour, the place he dreamed of playing as a kid.

“I want to play against where all the best players want to be,” he said. “If you see Tiger’s career, Jack Nicklaus’s career, all these guys, they have come from the PGA Tour and it has a legacy. So hoping to do the same and kind of stay here for as long as I can.”

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