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Posts Tagged ‘McLaren’

Motorsports Mondial - May 12, 2012

Lewis Hamilton takes his first Spanish pole position number 150 for McLaren.

Pastor Maldonado puts his Williams on the front row.

Lewis Hamilton: “It was a fantastic qualifying session for me, very very happy with it – one of the best I ever had,” said Hamilton. “Amazing job by the guys in the garage and thanks to guys in factory who have brought upgrades.

The car feels great. It is a great day for the team I think. I really feel fantastic. I feel very, very happy.

You can normally be happy with a position but for some reason this feels better than other pole positions because you are looking for a perfect position. It is an incredible feeling you have.

I am very much aware that I have incredibly tough race tomorrow with these guys who are massively quick and how tricky it is in general,” he said. “It will mean a lot to me to win in Spain.

It has always been a good place for me, beautiful weather and people are incredible and the support I have continues to grow year by year and it has become such a pleasure. To win where you have such a big fan base will be fantastic.”

Pastor Maldonado: We have been working so hard all year to understand these tyres and with the updates we have brought to this race we have made a very good step forward.

The car is very consistent and its race pace is good so I am really looking forward to the race tomorrow. There has been a really positive atmosphere in the team all season and this is a great result for them and Venezuela.

Frank Williams: On the face of it, the regulations aren’t a myriad of high class mathematical problems; they are quite straightforward engineering problems. We’ve done it before and we just have to be more clever and more organised, maybe get one or two people in. We can make better cars than we have done. My job is to find the money; the engineers’ job is to make racing cars.”

“Do we have the right people? Well, the proof of the pudding is the proof of the pudding. I don’t think we lack very much. We have people with strong ambitions and good, strong optimism too. We’re proud of what we do.

“We make good racing cars, coupled with a good engine. We have the same engine as three or four other teams. We have the same tyres as all the other teams. It’s a bunch of human beings. The trick is to get the best group.”

Pos Driver Team Time Gap

 1.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes     1m21.707s
 2.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Renault     1m22.285s   + 0.578
 3.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari              1m22.302s   + 0.595
 4.  Romain Grosjean       Lotus-Renault        1m22.424s   + 0.717
 5.  Kimi Raikkonen        Lotus-Renault        1m22.487s   + 0.780
 6.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari       1m22.533s   + 0.826
 7.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes             1m23.005s   + 1.298
 8.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault     No time
 9.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes             No time
10.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       No time

Q2 cut-off time: 1m22.904s Gap **
11.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes     1m22.944s   +  0.839
12.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault     1m22.977s   +  0.872
13.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes 1m23.125s   +  1.020
14.  Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes 1m23.177s   +  1.072
15.  Jean-Eric Vergne      Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m23.265s   +  1.160
16.  Daniel Ricciardo      Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m23.442s   +  1.337
17.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari              1m23.444s   +  1.339
Q1 cut-off time: 1m24.362s Gap *
18.  Bruno Senna           Williams-Renault     1m24.981s   + 2.398
19.  Vitaly Petrov         Caterham-Renault     1m25.277s   + 2.694
20.  Heikki Kovalainen     Caterham-Renault     1m25.507s   + 2.924
21.  Charles Pic           Marussia-Cosworth    1m26.582s   + 3.999
22.  Timo Glock            Marussia-Cosworth    1m27.032s   + 4.449
23.  Pedro de la Rosa      HRT-Cosworth         1m27.555s   + 4.972
24.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth         1m31.122s   + 8.539

Pau novice Raffaele Marciello claims Pole-Position

Italian Raffaele Marciello (Prema Powerteam, 1:11.600 minutes) was fastest in qualifying for the Grand Prix de Pau, which was split up into two groups. At the 2.76 kilometres long street circuit at the foot of the Pyrenees, another driver from the Formula 3 Euro Series, Carlos Sainz (Carlin, 1:10.802 minutes) topped the time sheets in the other group. Accordingly, Marciello and Sainz will be on the front row for Sunday’s 71st Grand Prix de Pau, which counts towards the FIA European Formula 3 Championship.

In the first group, Carlos Sainz, Daniel Juncadella (Prema Powerteam, 1:10.826 minutes), Pascal Wehrlein (Mücke Motorsport, 1:10.853 minutes) and Jack Harvey (Carlin, 1:10.987 minutes) staged a thrilling battle for first place, which Sainz eventually secured with a tiny margin: his advantage on Juncadella was 0.024 seconds while third-placed rookie driver Pascal Wehrlein was only 0.051 seconds down on the fastest time. In the second group, fastest driver Raffaele Marciello had a bigger margin: he outpaced Jazeman Jaafar (Carlin, 1:10.864 minutes) by 0.254 seconds.

The starting grid positions for this afternoon’s first race are based on the second-fastest lap time by every driver. Here, Marciello also came out on top and as a result, he will be starting from the best grid position for race one as well. Danuel Juncadella and Pascal Wehrlein were first and second in their qualifying group. Thus, Formula 3 Euro Series drivers also locked out the front row of the starting grid for the first race.

Raffaele Marciello (Prema Powerteam): “I am really delighted by being on pole position for the Grand Prix de Pau and in fact, I am slightly surprised myself. After all, things didn’t go too well for me yesterday and moreover, this is my first time at Pau. In qualifying, I made a mistake on turn 1, but fortunately, the run-off area there is big enough.”

Carlos Sainz (Carlin): “I am absolutely delighted by being fastest of my group. As a novice at Pau, I hadn’t expected that. Only the fact that traffic on the track prevented me from driving a fast second lap is a pity.”


Motorsports Mondial - April 17, 2012

 

2012 Bahrain GP Preview

Kimi Räikkönen: “A podium should be possible”

Having come agonisingly close to a great result in China, Kimi puts the past behind him and focuses on his next chance for glory in Bahrain

The Chinese Grand Prix was full of action; how was it from your position?

It was good racing but we ran out of tyre performance during the final stint. I felt comfortable in the car and I could push well, but we lost out in the end. I was not able to get past Felipe (Massa) in the middle part of the race, and I wasn’t able to keep Sebastian (Vettel) behind me, but there is still good speed in the car.

What happened when Sebastian got past you?

I had been keeping him behind me, but finally my tyres were too far gone for me to keep him there. I went wide and then I was on the marbles. I had very little traction on the loose stuff and because it was so close a lot of cars went past me. It was then too late to make another stop so it was frustrating. It was the strategy we chose, and I wouldn’t have been fighting for second if we’d gone for a three stop. Maybe we should have run a longer second stint, as that worked for Romain. We learnt a lot about the tyres.

Are you frustrated the strategy chosen didn’t work?

It looked the best one for us and it worked for Romain. If we had the same information again, we’d probably try the same approach.

It didn’t work, but you don’t know these things unless you try them.

We will now know better for next time. We were pretty close to finishing on the podium. We didn’t. That’s racing.

You were racing wheel-to-wheel at times during the race. How was that?

It is what I missed when I was rallying, and it’s good to be racing against other cars like that. It was very close at times, but it’s called racing so that’s what you do.

I thought it must have looked good on television for anyone watching.

I look forward to racing more like that this season.

The team wasn’t able to maximise the latest upgrade package at Shanghai – how frustrating was that for you as a driver?

We had a lot of parts but it was wet on Friday morning and very cold in the afternoon. We went back to most of the old spec for Saturday as we knew how it worked. Qualifying was okay, but there was a bigger gap to pole which wasn’t what we wanted. We didn’t make the car faster which some others did with theirs. The E20 still feels good to drive, but we just need to get a little bit more speed. Hopefully we will find it in Bahrain.

What are your thoughts of the Bahrain International Circuit?

I don’t think it will present any particular problems for us. It’s likely to be quite hot and our car didn’t like the cold so much when we were in China so maybe the heat will suit us better. The track has a mixture of corners and it’s quite fun to race on. There are some opportunities to overtake so let’s see what happens.

It’s another circuit where you have finished on the podium…

I have had a second and three third places in Bahrain which is okay. It is good to race there. We won’t know how strong the car will be until we get there. Maybe we will get the upgrades on the car to work properly and we will be able to go faster than in China. Let’s see.

How have you enjoyed the first three races?

It’s not that different to what it was like before. I don’t like the travel so much as the first races are so far away from home, but soon we will be racing in Europe. When you’re at the track and in the car you know what you have to do, so it doesn’t matter so much about the other stuff. When I’m in the car it feels good, and we’re all working to get faster.

Do you think the team is capable of a strong result in Bahrain?

A podium should be possible and I think it has been at all the races we’ve been at so far. We don’t know exactly how good the car will be until we get there, but we don’t expect any problems.

Romain Grosjean: “Next time is going to be even better”

Romain achieved the best result of his Formula 1 career in China; just the tonic after a difficult start to the season. Now, the Frenchman is looking to carry that momentum to Bahrain

How did it feel to score your first points in Formula 1 last weekend?

I’m very pleased for myself, for the team, for all the hard work we’ve done. We deserved finally a good result. We did an amazing job to recover from our free practice pace, which was not that good, but at the end of the story we got back where we should be.

As Kimi showed, it was a strategy which was very marginal on tyres, how was that from behind the wheel?

I knew it was going to be tight for tyres and did my best to save them. It’s always difficult when you are on a risky strategy to the cars coming from behind you. The McLarens and Red Bulls were attacking with new tyres so I wasn’t sure what to expect.

How nervous were you at the start of the race?

My start was very good, but then Fernando (Alonso) went on the right side and I was blocked behind him. I couldn’t do much. Then unfortunately Felipe (Massa) came from the outside, a good move from him, and got in front of me. He held me off for all the first stint, which was not very good for me or my race, but then the second stint was amazing.

What about the rest of the race?

The pace was really good. I started the third stint the same and then we caught back to Felipe (Massa) again. Kimi was behind Sebastian (Vettel) and myself and then Jenson (Button) joined. It was very tight between us and difficult to overtake. And then the guys with new tyres came in the middle. You can always say that without Felipe (Massa) holding us maybe it would have been a different story, but anyway we knew we had to take care of the tyres. The car felt very good today and it gives me a lot of confidence for Bahrain.

You seemed to be in traffic a lot of the time in Shanghai?

It’s really frustrating not to be able to overtake! I think overtaking was quite tough on Sunday, even with the very long straight. It was really difficult for everybody. I was blocked behind Kamui (Kobayashi) and I think my pace was much better than what I was doing, but this is part of the race. You know sometimes you will have some traffic and sometimes be in free air. The strategy guys do their best to give you some free air and some laps to do by your own.

Overall, how do you assess your first points finishing performance in Formula 1?

I think we had more or less everything right with just some small mistakes. Next time is going to be even better.

You’ve experienced Bahrain before in the 2008 GP2 Asia series; does it bring back good memories?

Definitely. I raced there with the ART Grand Prix team and we took pole position, fastest lap and the win – it’s always nice to get a full house! I’ve also got quite a lot of experience there from 2010 when I was a test driver for Pirelli, so hopefully this will help me get up to speed quickly in the E20.

The layout of the circuit has been altered since you last drove there, so there will surely be some learning still to do…

It’s true that the configuration has changed, but the 2010 layout was only used for that season, and will return to its previous format for this year. I guess I’m quite lucky really, as I’ve driven the track in both forms so there will be no problem at all there.

Do you think you will enjoy racing a Formula 1 car at the Bahrain International Circuit?

Whether you enjoy driving at a track depends on the car. With a good car you enjoy the track, with a bad car you don’t! Bahrain is a good track. It has some big braking which I quite like, some interesting changes of direction like the double-left in the middle of the racetrack… I think the E20 will be nice there. The balance we have is pretty good and I’m sure we can achieve something strong.

What are you hoping for at the next race?

I want to be able to put a proper qualifying and proper race all together. I think the car will be good there. The weather should stay the same throughout the weekend – hopefully! Let’s see what we can do. 


Motorsports Mondial - March 26, 2012

 “Sun came up for extraordinary driver”

Photo. BBC

Alonso all the way. The Spaniard delivers a Senna/Schumacher style victory. No más palabras.

Magnificent Malaysia win puts Alonso in elite company and top of the Championship. Sergio shines at Sepang.

Fernando Alonso did it in the 2007 European Grand Prix at the Nürburgring and the 2008 Japanese Grand Prix at Fuji Speedway. Now he has done it again, this time in Sepang at the 2012 Malaysian Grand Prix.

The Spanish double world champion won a race he had no business winning.

Rain arrived shortly before the start and the two McLarens led the field after the safety car pulled in. Lewis Hamilton started from pole for the second race in a row. A slow pit stop, problem with rear jack, would allow Alonso to slip into the lead.

Jenson Button, the McLaren winner in the season opener in Melbourne, lost his chance of a second successive win after making contact with the HRT of Narain Karthikeyan and requiring a new front wing.

The track was drying but in the late stages threat of more rain returned. With most cars now running on intermediates teams pleaded with their drivers to stay on the track as long as possible.

While the red Ferrari of Alonso kept blazing away in the lead, the Ferrari-powered Sauber of Sergio Perez was running a strong second and then came the “The thriller in Malaysia.”


Photo. BBC

“I’m on a Mexican radio.” Sergio Perez was second and almost became his nation’s first F1 winner since Spa 1970 and Pedro Rodriguez.

The Mexican driver from Guadalajara started to gain on the Oviedo Oracle, and was looking a real threat to become his nation’s first F1 winner since Pedro Rodriguez at Spa-Francorchamps in the 1970 Belgian Grand Prix.

Perez came within striking and DRS zone and a change at the front was widely expected, but the dream was too much to be true. A slight error, after being told by team, “we need the position,” saw the Sauber driver run wide, giving Alonso much needed breathing room and allowing him to grab an improbable win, his first since last year’s British Grand Prix.

Photo. BBC

Hamilton in a hurry. Two races, two poles and two podiums. The 2008 World Champion trails ex-teammate by five points in the standings.

Hamilton, battling worn-out tires and another slow pit stop, made it to the podium for the second time in two weeks. He is now second in the championship behind his ex-McLaren teammate.

For the Ferrari team, with their ugly Prancing Pig, this was just what the Doctor and Luca di Montezemolo ordered.

The New York-educated lawyer was elated and quoted on www.ferrarif1.com saying, “I am very happy about this victory; today it rained in Sepang, but in the end the sun came out for us!

“Once again, Fernando drove an exceptional race, confirming his status as an extraordinary driver, from every point of view.”

Mark Webber was the only Red Bull driver in the points, finishing fourth over 17s behind Alonso.

Photo. Saeed Khan/AFP/Getty Images

The Ice Cream Man took his first F1 victory in Malaysia, 2003, and Sunday recorded the fastest lap of the race.

Kimi Raikkonen was fifth for Lotus and also set the fastest lap of the race.

Career high sixth place finish was recorded by Bruno Senna in his Williams.

The two Force India drivers, Paul di Resta and Nico Hulkenberg, were seventh and ninth respectively; split by Jean-Eric Vergne, the Frenchman scoring his first championship points with Toro Rosso.

Michael Schumacher, who started from the second row, claimed the final championship point from his tenth place finish; ahead of fellow German and defending race winner, Sebastian Vettel.

Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber) and Romain Grosjean (Lotus) were the only two retirements from the 56-lap race.

Victory also takes Alonso past 27 Grand Prix wins for Jackie Stewart. Schumacher, Prost, Senna and Mansell are now the only drivers ahead of Alonso, an incredible achievement for a driver who only started his F1 career in the early part of this century.

Sunday’s win has also placed Alonso at the top of the championship table with 35 points. Five points behind in second is Hamilton, he is five points ahead of teammate Button.

Webber 24 points; Perez 22 points and Vettel on 18 points complete the top six.

Round three is in Shanghai, the Chinese Grand Prix on April 15th.

– Nasir Hameed

   Greetings and sensational Sepang regards.


Motorsports Mondial - March 25, 2012

Fernando Alonso wins a chaotic wet GP in Sepang

Perez with a glorious second place for Sauber.

Hamilton happy to take third under the circumstances.

Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso scored a dramatic victory in the Malaysian Grand Prix on Sunday when the Spaniard denied Sauber’s Sergio Perez a first Formula One triumph in a race turned on its head by the weather.

The race started in torrential rain and was stopped for 51 minutes after eight laps but Alonso took charge on its resumption to register a shock 28th career victory in a car that had been outpaced in qualifying in the opening two rounds.

“A big surprise today the win,” championship leader Alonso told reporters. “Our goal was to score as many points as possible. An unbelievable result, a great job from the team.”

Pole sitter Lewis Hamilton repeated his third place finish from the opening race of the season in Melbourne last weekend, with Red Bull’s Mark Webber in fourth and 2007 world champion Kimi Raikkonen fifth in his Lotus.

Australia race winner Jenson Button and world champion Sebastian Vettel both suffered mid-race collisions with the HRT of Narain Karthikeyan and finished outside the points.

Fernando Alonso: Yeah definitely, a big surprise today with the win. We were not competitive in Australia, we were not competitive here and our goal for this first race is to score as many points as possible. But today we did 25 so it’s an unbelievable result, so great job from the team and trackside I think we maximised the potential we have in our hands at the moment. Good qualifying yesterday going into Q3 and then today keeping calm in some extreme conditions I think, at the beginning with the Inters with a lot of water and then switching to the Inters and then switching to the dry tyres in the perfect moment with perfect pitstops. Congratulations to the team because I think they deserve this victory. It’s a tough time for us at the moment but this Sunday we will remember.

Sergio Pérez: I think so, I definitely think so. I mean, I was catching Fernando toward the end of the race, I knew I had to get him soon because all the sectors with the high speed I was losing already my front tyres with a lot of degradation going behind Fernando, so it wasn’t easy. Then I ran wide in the quick corner, I touched a kerb and I went to the dirty side. It was completely wet and that was the end of the win, probably. It was very difficult obviously to get Fernando but I think today the win was possible. I have to say the team has done an incredible job. They called me always on the right time, especially the first pitstop we did, it was really at the right moment. Unfortunately Fernando pitted one lap earlier than us, towards the end of the race when the track was already dry and he opened some gap there, and even then we managed to get him, the pace was fantastic, I was really quick. I have to say many thanks to the team, they have done a great job and I’m very happy for them.

Lewis Hamilton: I think we can be satisfied, definitely. First of all congratulations to Fernando and also to Sergio who both drove fantastically well. It was very tough to catch them. Yeah, of course we would have liked to have more points this weekend but yeah, I guess I can’t really complain. I’m on the podium for second week in a row so I’m pretty happy. I feel pretty fortunate that I was able to stay out of trouble with the conditions changing constantly. I think we did a great job.

Kimi Räikkönen: “It was a bit difficult today. It was my first time on the wet weather Pirellis and I didn’t know how the intermediate or wet tyres would react – I had only completed one installation lap on them before. I just tried to stay on the road and push as much as I felt comfortable with. When I changed to the dry tyres it took a couple of laps to get heat into them, and my visor was pretty dirty so seeing the dry line was difficult. Once I found my way I could push much harder. It was difficult to have another mixed weather weekend. The conditions changed a lot today so it was always a case of adapting and looking for grip. Overall, we seemed to have a pretty strong package again this weekend, so I’m relatively happy. A fifth today was okay, but we’re always looking for better results.”

Bruno Senna: I am really excited about the result today. I’m so happy that I have scored points for the team after a very tough race. It’s on days like to today that you can show what you can do in difficult conditions. I knew we had to attack after the restart, so it was very satisfying to push hard, not make any mistakes and to make my way up through the field. I’m so happy for everyone in the team.

Pastor Maldonado: It was very difficult today with conditions changing so quickly at the start. I had poor visibility in the pitlane so missed the pit box entry after the restart which dropped me down the order. I was then just pushing every lap and our pace was very consistent. I had a good race to come through from 20th to tenth with just two laps remaining. Bruno had a great race and we have both been able to show that the car is competitive.

Paul Di Resta: “The start of the race was a bit of a mess and it was all about trying to stay on the track and stay out of trouble. I did pretty well until Maldonado hit me just before the red flag, which spun me around and cost me about three places. At the restart our pace was very good on the intermediate tyres and we were able to get well up the order and stay with the leading group. As it dried out we switched to dry tyres at the same time everyone else did, which was the safe way to play it, and just tried to hold position in the points. We were a bit lucky with some of the issues for cars ahead, but in races like this you need a bit of luck and given where we started I think we can come away from here very happy with this result.”

Nico Hulkenberg: “I think today’s performance with two cars in the points is a great team result and I’m very happy to pick up my first points of the season. It was quite a complicated race and the rain certainly helped mix things up, but we made the most of our chances and made good calls on the strategy. I have to say that the wet conditions today were some of the worst I’ve raced in and the visibility was almost zero before the race was stopped. It was much better when the race restarted, but I struggled with the balance of the car on the intermediates, so it was just a case of trying to stay in the points and catch Vergne ahead.”

Photo: saubermotorsportsAG


Motorsports Mondial - March 24, 2012

Photo: caterhamf1

McLaren dominate in Sepang.

Lewis Hamilton: Yeah, it’s been a good weekend so far. I think it’s been a tough day to be honest with the changeable weather conditions and the temperatures climbing. Made some set up changes to the car, nonetheless we still managed to do some good times but obviously got these guys pushing very hard behind but the guys in the factory are doing a fantastic job.

I think everyone’s under the same amount of pressure. We all put a huge amount of pressure on ourselves and obviously a lot of partners and sponsors are relying on us as well, so it’s very intense and probably the most exciting part of the weekend but it’s something, at least speaking for myself, that I really enjoy.

Jenson Button: Yeah, I think it was a little bit more than that but qualifying has been pretty good to me the last two races so I can’t complain too much. I think it’s good for us as a team to be on the front row again. It’s always nice when your engineer keys-up and you can here all the mechanics in the background cheering because of a one-two. You obviously want it the other way around though but Lewis did a great lap at the start of Q3 and we edged closer but couldn’t quite get there. And you didn’t do too badly from second last week. There’s a long run down to Turn One, it could be quite an explosive start.

I think it’ll be an exciting start and not just for us two on the front row but the Mercedes is renowned, especially Michael, for getting good starts so it’s going to be a fun Turn One I think.

Michael Schumacher: No, I mean this was the maximum that was available. We managed to work the car very well over the whole weekend, we obviously showed potential in Australia, not so much in the race, so focus was obviously to try to find the best compromise and I guess we have achieved this. We’re third here, a very tight business if you look who is behind us, and how close everything is going, we can be more than happy about what we have achieved and look forward now for tomorrow. Is there a concern about the race given what happened in Australia last week?

I guess all of us have concerns because those temperatures are pretty new to us. We have had some preparation yesterday but I guess we have done a decent job. We have learned quite a lesson in Australia, we have reacted, the boys in the factory, and all the team have done a really superb job. I’m more than happy about the progress and how we understand the car and I look forward for tomorrow.

Lotus F1 believe pole was within their grasp.

Kimi Räikkönen set the fifth fastest time whilst Romain Grosjean was seventh quickest in qualifying for tomorrow’s Malaysian Grand Prix at Sepang International Circuit. Kimi will start from tenth position on the grid for the race after a penalty for a gearbox change on his car. This moves Romain up to sixth place.

Kimi Räikkönen: “The car was working well today. Unfortunately, I made a couple of mistakes on my fastest lap which probably cost a couple of tenths. Without that, we were in with a shout for pole today. I got a little bit sideways at the exit of turn nine and we lost some time, but that’s how it goes sometimes. We had some issues with KERS yesterday, but there was no repeat today; the car worked exactly as it should and it felt good. It’s a shame we have a penalty on the grid but the car works well. Today was definitely a positive day. Tomorrow we start from tenth and will try to improve from there.”

Romain Grosjean: “It’s great to have both cars in Q3, and I’m really pleased to have been part of the top ten in both of my first two races. The team has done a great job to get the most out of the car, and we can be really pleased that we’re fighting for the top positions. It’s going to be an interesting race tomorrow, and hopefully we can move up even further. You never know what will happen with the weather here, our pace is not too far off the leaders and it will be a long race, so anything is possible. In these conditions managing the tyres is crucial. Qualifying is one thing, but the race will be a whole other matter. I’m looking forward to the race, if we can finish in the top five that would be great, but the most important thing is to get my first points of the season.”



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