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Bucks Damian Lillard Tears Achilles Tendon, Will Miss Rest Of Playoffs

Bucks Damian Lillard Tears Achilles Tendon, Will Miss Rest Of Playoffs

Forbes28-04-2025

Damian Lillard's rough 2025 just got rougher. A deep vein thrombosis in his right calf had kept the Milwaukee Bucks guard out of the last 14 games of the regular season as well as the first game of the Bucks' first round playoff series against the Indiana Pacers. But after he had returned for Game 2 of the playoff tilt, there was Lillard—just two games later during the first quarter of Game 4—being in another uh-oh moment and helped off the court. This time something was not right in the left, his left lower leg, that is. He had suffered a season and playoff-ending left Achilles tendon tear, as reported by Madison Williams for Sports Illustration.
This kind of sucks for the Bucks, because Lillard is a key player, having already been named in his career to the All-NBA team seven times, which is seven times more than most players. The injury seemed to occur when no one—at least no one not invisible—was close to him.
Lillard was at the top of the key when he tipped the ball with his left hand towards teammate Gary Trent, Jr. The next thing everyone saw was Lillard down on the court grabbing around his left ankle. When play finally stopped with after someone had committed a foul, his teammate Kyle Kuzma helped Lillard up so that Lillard could try to walk to the sidelines. That didn't last too long as others soon had to help Lillard off the court and into the locker room.
It can be difficult to tell whether you have an Achilles tendon injury and if so the nature of the injury without a physical exam and imaging, most likely an MRI. Therefore, Lillard and the Bucks had to wait until well after the game to get the news of the Achilles tendon tear. And that news was playoff-ending news for Lillard.
That's because you kind of need two fully functioning Achilles tendons to play basketball. A tendon is a band of fibrous tissue that connects a muscle to bone. The Achilles tendon specifically connects your calf muscles—otherwise known as the gastrocnemius and soleus—to your heel bone—otherwise known as the calcaneus if you speak medicalese. It helps to have your calf muscles connected to your heel bone when you want to run or jump, because such activities require your calf muscles to contract and pull up the heel. It can be even tough to walk without an intact and properly functioning Achilles tendon on both sides. An injury to the Achilles tendon can range from inflammation—which would be considered tendonitis—to a partial tear to a complete tear—which would be a rupture of the tendon.
The non-contact nature of the injury may have left fans wondering whether his history of the DVT and being on blood thinners made him more susceptible to some kind of Achilles injury. A DVT is exactly what the three words in the term say. The 'deep vein' means that it involved veins deep in your body, most often in the legs. This is different from the veins that you can readily see in your skin. 'Thrombosis' means clot formation because a thrombus is a fancier way of saying 'clot.'
A DVT is not something that you should simply try to walk off and ignore. The risk is that the clot can break off and then travel to the arteries in your lungs, which is known as a pulmonary embolism. There, the traveling clot can block blood circulation through your lungs and thus prevent the proper exchange of oxygen from your lungs to your bloodstream. And unless you are a ficus plant, you need oxygen throughout your body to live. Therefore, a pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening condition.
That's why Lillard reportedly went on blood thinning medications for a while, to prevent a pulmonary embolism. People with DVTs typically stay on such blood thinners for three to six months, although this could be longer if the risk of more DVTs is higher. Such medications inhibit the enzymes responsible for blood clot formation. This can help prevent the DVT from getting larger and new clots from forming. The hope is that this will allow the DVT to dissolve and not cause any problems.
Now, taking blood thinners is not like eating avocado toast. It's not an all fun and games, do-whatever-you-want situation. Since blood thinners inhibit your body's ability to form clots, you've got to avoid situations where you may start bleeding somewhere. Being on a blood thinner is not the time to begin a head slapping contest, for example. Therefore, a doctor will typically advise you to avoid situations where you may suffer bumps, fall or cuts.
Blood thinners in theory shouldn't weaken your tendons or other similar connective tissues in your body, though. Therefore, Lillard's Achilles tendon tear was probably not a direct result of the blood thinner or the DVT. However, there could be an indirect connection. If Lillard didn't participate in his regular fitness and practice regimens while getting treated for and recovering from the DVT, that could have left him more susceptible to an Achilles injury. Tight calf muscles, for example, can put more stress on the tendon. So can moving awkwardly on the court, which can result from lack of conditioning and practice.
Nonetheless, luck doesn't seem to be on the Bucks side right now. They are now down 1-3 to the Pacers, with the Pacers in a position to close out the series on Tuesday. It certainly won't help to have Lillard out for the rest of the playoffs, no matter how long the Bucks survive.
Depending on the severity of his injury and whether he needs surgery, Lillard may miss part of next season as well. Without surgery, he will likely be in a cast or brace for up to 8 to 10 weeks, followed by four to six months of physical therapy. Should it be necessary to repair the tendon, he will be looking at three to four weeks of his foot being immobilized and remaining non-weightbearing. He will have to go through for physical therapy for around six to nine months before he can get back to his running, jumping and dribbling self—at least to some degree. In other words, it will take a while for his Achilles tendon tear near his heel to heal.

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Report: Rockets open to trading Alperen Sengun in Giannis Antetokounmpo deal with Bucks
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time5 hours ago

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Report: Rockets open to trading Alperen Sengun in Giannis Antetokounmpo deal with Bucks

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Sam Presti built a great Thunder team once. Then he did it again — his way
Sam Presti built a great Thunder team once. Then he did it again — his way

New York Times

time9 hours ago

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Sam Presti built a great Thunder team once. Then he did it again — his way

The bye-bye game was only six years ago. That famous moment in Portland Trail Blazers lore, with Damian Lillard hitting a series-ending bomb over Paul George, also doubled as the nadir for the Oklahoma City Thunder. Eliminated from the 2019 NBA playoffs in five games for a third straight first-round exit, with an aging team and bloated salary cap that also paid a whopping $61.6 million in luxury tax while playing in the nation's 47th-largest TV market, the Thunder appeared to be at an impasse. Advertisement It seemed like Lillard was waving bye-bye to an entire era in Oklahoma City, one that disappointingly ended without a title, and that it would be a long, painful journey to contend again. In a sense, he was: Russell Westbrook and George never played another game for the Thunder. But as it turns out, Lillard was also waving hello to a dramatic rebirth, one that liberated Thunder team president Sam Presti — now in his 19th season at the helm — to paint his Mona Lisa. If the Thunder, as many expect, prevail in the NBA Finals over the Indiana Pacers, this season will serve as both the first-line item on Presti's Hall of Fame resume and the thing that ensures his eventual induction. What happened since April 2019 has been one of the fastest and most complete rebuilds in NBA history. Starting from a spot where they seemed completely screwed, the Thunder took only half a decade to post the Western Conference's best record with the league's youngest team. One year later, they are massive favorites to claim the franchise's first title in Oklahoma and set up to be favorites again and again and again for years into the future. That rebirth is as much philosophical as it is about talent. If you go in the way-back machine, the Thunder's origin story is the greatest three-year draft run in NBA history. Presti's career with the franchise began in Seattle three weeks before the 2007 draft, when he was then a 29-year-old wunderkind blowing people away as he worked his way up the San Antonio Spurs organization. (Even then, it was obvious to anyone who met him that he was destined to run an NBA franchise.) He drafted Kevin Durant and Jeff Green in 2007, Westbrook and Serge Ibaka in 2008 and James Harden in 2009. Green was eventually traded for Kendrick Perkins, but allowing for that swap means that, in three years, Presti drafted the top five players on an NBA Finals team and three future MVPs. Advertisement Those picks, along with Reggie Jackson at No. 24 in 2011 and Steven Adams at No. 12 and Andre Roberson at No. 26 in 2013, were amazing, but in time, they became just as much a philosophical prison. In hindsight, you wonder if those Thunder teams became good too fast. They were caught in win-now mode with great individual players who didn't necessarily fit great together. They ran through two coaches who were fine but also didn't move the needle for them, and they took too long to find the right center. (Flunking Tyson Chandler's physical in 2009 remains an all-time sliding doors moment in NBA history.) And as much as they talked about not skipping steps, the specter of losing Durant or Westbrook meant they started taking shortcuts, too — taking 14 cents on the dollar for Harden rather than trading Westbrook at the peak of his value, most notably, and later with moonshots on Enes Kanter Freedom, Carmelo Anthony and Dion Waiters. Here's the thing: If you talk to people who know and have worked with Presti, (or talk to Presti himself, for that matter), it's clear what gets his blood pumping. It's not the Durants and Westbrooks, but the high-character, cerebral, team-first grinders. This is a guy who cut his teeth in the prime of Spurs culture, one who gave Kenrich Williams a four-year, $27 million extension after a season in which he averaged 7.4 points and 4.5 rebounds for a 24-win team. That's important, because to me it's why this version of the Thunder feels so much more organic than the Durant-Westbrook one. Presti's platonic basketball ideal was nothing like his own team but a lot like his former one, the 2014 'beautiful game' Spurs squad that smoked his Thunder in the conference finals. (We'll get back to that San Antonio squad in a second.) Version 1.0 of Presti's Thunder was an overwhelming talent haul with a basketball team taped together around it; the whole was never greater than the sum of the parts, and at times was substantially less. Westbrook, in particular, was an off-the-charts athlete and a ruthless competitor; he was also stubborn to a fault and difficult for any other on-ball players to thrive alongside. The enduring image of the tail end of that era is a young Domantas Sabonis marooned at the 3-point line watching the Russ Show. This time, it feels completely different: From top to bottom, it's Presti-ball come to life. The core of the team is a dozen different versions of Kenny Hustle, just with some having more talent than others. In one sense, we have an easily available answer for how the Thunder rebuilt so quickly: The Paul George trade. Forget all the other goodies the Thunder still have coming from the LA Clippers; the first two assets in the deal were Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the pick that became Jalen Williams. That and one tank year that produced Chet Holmgren were enough to give the Thunder a championship core. Advertisement That answer is far too reductive, however, for the process that led the Thunder here. The three things that stand out about Presti's Thunder 2.0 rebuild were 1) stacking the draft-pick deck so heavily in the Thunder's favor that they didn't need to be perfect, 2) getting the right coach to share the vision and implement everything and 3) doubling down on the types of people they brought in as much as the talent. It so happens that they hit on the Jalen Williams pick, which was one of the five that had come from the Clippers in the George trade. But Presti also never stopped hustling, making a series of other trades to ensure the Thunder had a massive stockpile of first-round picks, nearly all with at least some potential to hit at the top of the lottery. Notably, even as it became clear that Gilgeous-Alexander would be a much greater star than initially envisioned, Presti stayed patient and kept making deals to enhance his odds of hitting big on talent. The ultimate tell was his willingness to give up an honest-to-goodness first-round pick in Dallas' P.J. Washington trade in exchange for an unprotected swap in 2028. There's a risk Presti might end up trading a late first for bupkus, and in the short term, he might inadvertently have helped the Mavericks upset his top-seeded team in the 2024 postseason. But in his eyes, he hadn't landed the plane yet, so the upside outcomes were worth it. To see this in practice, consider that the Thunder acquired the pick just before Jalen Williams in the 2022 draft and fired three lower-value future firsts into the sun to take Ousmane Dieng … and it doesn't matter. The whole point of accumulating six lottery picks between 2021 and 2024, as the Thunder did, is that perfection is no longer required. Build your chip stack high enough, and you can lose a few hands. They're not done, either. Oklahoma City has a redshirted lottery pick (Nikola Topić) ready to roll come summer. 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Advertisement The second element of all of this was hitting on the right coach, and Presti was deeply fortunate that the best candidate was already in his building in assistant coach Mark Daigneault. (Partly, we should note, because the Thunder gave him an unprecedented five-year run of reps coaching their G League team. The G has quietly been an awesome incubator of coaching talent.) Of course, that fortune wouldn't have mattered if Presti didn't have the stones to promote him after one total season on an NBA bench, and the two have formed a symbiotic partnership ever since. I asked Daigneault about this last weekend and about the challenges of the coach-GM relationship as a team goes from the bottom to the top. His lengthy answer underscored how fully integrated every level of this rebuild feels, and how important it was that, this time, Presti was as comfortable with the people as he was with the talent. 'When I started as the head coach, I already had six years in the organization,' Daigneault said. 'We had seen each other over the course of a long period of time in a lot of different situations, so there wasn't a relational feeling out process there. It was a continuation of an existing relationship that we had. … The communication between those two positions is essential, and I think that comfort helped with that. 'And then … a lot of those challenges come from philosophical differences. And I was raised here in professional basketball. Like, I didn't work anywhere else in pro basketball prior to coming here. I didn't know much about professional basketball before I came here. And so my entire philosophy in professional basketball was underneath the umbrella of the Thunder organization. 'A lot of it is stuff I've learned from Sam and learned from being in this organization in terms of understanding that these organizations are robust, and it's not just you coaching your team. You're part of a large ecosystem of developing players and developing a team, and you're executing a large strategy for an organization. Those are things that have to exist in order to be a sustainably successful team in the NBA.' Daigneault's promotion, however, is also one example of the larger trend line and the third item I mentioned above. Again, the Thunder were deeply fortunate that Gilgeous-Alexander was available in the George trade, but it's no accident that OKC targeted him in the deal. Remember those 2014 Spurs? SGA is the closest thing to Tim Duncan since Tim Duncan, a zero-maintenance superstar who, even coming out of Kentucky in the 2018 draft, had as many superlative exclamation points in his background reports as any draft prospect I can remember. (I was working for the Memphis Grizzlies at the time, and we did extensive research since we had the fourth pick that year.) Advertisement Of course, it goes way beyond Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams and Holmgren. That 2019 reset may have made it easier to win in other aspects of team-building. Remove all the first-rounders and Oklahoma City's player-acquisition resume in the last half decade is still a huge success; luck is always a factor in this, but a lot of it gets back to focusing less on hazy-outline projects and more on targeting Presti's type of guys. The other two players on this roster who were acquired by trade were the aforementioned Kenrich Williams and Alex Caruso — classic grinders in the Presti mold (and, in Caruso's case, a do-over after the Thunder let him slip out the door in the Westbrook era). OKC hit on a late draft pick (Aaron Wiggins at No. 54 in 2021), a waiver claim (Isaiah Joe in 2022), an undrafted development project (Lu Dort in 2019) and a cap-ballast trade throw-in (Kenrich Williams in 2020). None of these guys had 40-inch verticals or set scouts salivating as they went through the layup line. The Thunder used cap space to absorb contracts and get more picks year after year, including using one to move up to select Cason Wallace in 2023, until they finally found the perfect free-agent piece (Isaiah Hartenstein) to round out their team. They somehow traded Josh Giddey for Caruso without surrendering a draft pick. Even their biggest recent misstep came with a giant opportunistic side benefit. The 2024 trade for Gordon Hayward didn't work on the court, but it doubled as one of the great stealth salary-dumps in recent annals, shedding this era's one mistake contract (Vasilije Micić), Dāvis Bertāns and little-used Tre Mann and — at a cost of only two future seconds — giving the Thunder the necessary cap space to sign Hartenstein and extend the deals of Joe and Wiggins. You might wonder, after two decades in the same place, if finally winning a championship might spur Presti to ride off into the sunset, Bob Myers-style. Nobody I talked to can envision this happening. Behind the designer glasses is a ruthless competitor whose reaction to beating you four times in a row is to try to beat you even worse the fifth time. He'll get those chances and then some over the coming years. No team in the last dozen years has been more set up for a Spursian two-decade run of dominance than this one, not even the Golden State Warriors and Boston Celtics. Presti doing it from the ashes of the bye-bye game only makes it all the more impressive. (Top photo of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Sam Presti: Zach Beeker / NBAE via Getty Images)

Tyrese Haliburton uses ‘extra fuel' from doubters when the Pacers need him most
Tyrese Haliburton uses ‘extra fuel' from doubters when the Pacers need him most

New York Times

time9 hours ago

  • New York Times

Tyrese Haliburton uses ‘extra fuel' from doubters when the Pacers need him most

OKLAHOMA CITY — Ask anyone in basketball circles five years ago about the impact Tyrese Haliburton would have on the NBA, and it's likely none would've said he'd lead a team to the NBA Finals. In his 3 1/2 seasons with the Indiana Pacers, Haliburton has emerged as the franchise star, the leader of the team both on the court and in the locker room. The team has been built to enhance and complement his skills. With Haliburton at the helm, the Pacers go as he goes. In April, Haliburton was voted the NBA's most overrated player in The Athletic's annual player poll. While only 90 players replied to that question, compared to 155 who voted on MVP, Haliburton noticed and responded after the Pacers eliminated the Milwaukee Bucks in a wild first-round Game 5. Overrate THAT — Tyrese Haliburton (@TyHaliburton22) April 30, 2025 He used that result as fuel to produce the best results of his career so far: an Eastern Conference championship and the Pacers' first appearance in the NBA Finals since 2000. 'I think that's part of my drive,' Haliburton said Wednesday. 'Obviously, I want to be the best. I want to be great. I want to squeeze every ounce of God-given ability that I have to be the best player I can be. But any doubt is always good for me. I think the greats try to find external motivation as much as they can, and that's something that's always worked for me. 'It doesn't solidify who I am; I know who I am. I don't need anybody to tell me who I am or who I am as a player or a person. I'm grounded in myself, and I think a lot of that is through … the Lord … and knowing who I am. But that extra doubt, that extra fuel, always helps.' Haliburton can take satisfaction in knowing he and the Pacers have proven themselves, if anything, underrated. Before the postseason, few had them making the Eastern Conference finals, let alone the NBA Finals. (Some people noticed early.) Haliburton is averaging 18.8 points, 9.8 assists and 5.7 rebounds during the postseason. His nearly 10 dimes per game leads all players in the 2025 playoffs. But outside of those numbers, his biggest impact has come in some of the most important moments. In one game in each of the Pacers' three Eastern Conference series, Haliburton has either tied or won a game in the last minute of regulation or overtime. Game-winners 🤯 Clutch plays 🙌 Incredible passes 😤 Tyrese Haliburton and the @Pacers have clinched a Finals berth for the first time since 2000! — NBA (@NBA) June 1, 2025 'He's a general out there,' Pacers forward Pascal Siakam said. 'He makes us go, so we're gonna ride with Tyrese until the wheels fall off. I think for me, he's such a special player just because he can impact the game not just by scoring, but being able to open the floor for everybody else, put everybody in the right positions — and, you know, doing it with swag. Advertisement 'At the end of the day, some people are gonna like it, some people are not gonna like it. I think he's an unselfish player out there when he plays. He has one thing in mind, to win, and he's always thinking about how to make us better.' In the fourth quarter of that crazy Game 5 against Milwaukee, with a chance to put the Bucks away for good, Haliburton missed a few key shots, and he thought he'd let Indiana down. But his teammates' belief in him never wavered. 'Go get the ball!' Pacers center Myles Turner yelled at Haliburton. In overtime, Haliburton had a chance to deliver. He'd missed six shots in the extra frame, but on Indiana's final possession, Haliburton blew past Giannis Antetokounmpo for a layup to close an 8-0 run that gave the Pacers the lead with 1.3 seconds left. 'When it comes to belief in himself, Tyrese has an iron will,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said after that win. 'He works extremely hard on what he does. He works extremely hard on his craft, his skill. He's unafraid. 'He reminds me a lot of Reggie (Miller). This game will go down as one of the all-time great Pacer wins because of the circumstances in overtime and what was on the line, and Ty, obviously, authored a big part of this ending. So, congratulations to him.' The comeback win was marred when Haliburton's father, John, went onto the court and taunted Antetokounmpo. The elder Haliburton wouldn't attend another Pacers game, at home or on the road, until Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals. The interaction between the elder Haliburton and Antetokounmpo was among the NBA topics of discussion for days after. But the Pacers guard was unfazed, choosing instead to focus on his team's second-round series against the Cleveland Cavaliers. Even with injuries to key Cavs players, the Pacers weren't favored to win the series. Advertisement Against the Cavs, Haliburton played hero once more. During the first half of Game 2, it was feared Haliburton sustained a wrist injury. But after undergoing an X-ray at halftime, Haliburton returned for a memorable second half. With 1.1 seconds remaining, he hit one of the biggest shots of his career. After grabbing his own rebound off a missed free throw, Haliburton dribbled out the clock until he could get separation, then stepped past the top of the key and let the ball go. 'I mean, it's a special feeling, man,' Haliburton said. 'It's a lot of fun. I mean, like any basketball fan, or anybody who's involved in basketball at all, everybody in their life has imagined being a kid, being in the driveway, being in the living room, lying down in their bed, shooting it, missing, putting more time on the clock. 'You know, all those things like, this is a kid's game, and I get paid a lot of money to play a kid's game. So, I'm just having fun out there, just having fun with what I'm doing. Winning is really fun, you know, but I love being in these situations. Somehow, someway, we find our way in these situations a lot, and, you know, we just got to find ways to win.' Since the Pacers' magical playoff run began, Haliburton has displayed both calm under pressure and a growing confidence not just in his team, but also himself. Before every game, when some players in high-pressure situations might sit stone-faced listening to whatever music motivates them, trying to lock in, Haliburton is the picture of calm. He casually walks through the locker room, often smiling as he interacts with his teammates. You wouldn't know from looking at him that he's minutes away from playing on one of basketball's biggest stages. Haliburton is a living example of the phrase often repeated by his teammates: 'Never get too high, never get too low.' The drama and intensity of the moment is in the background. Advertisement After wins and losses, Haliburton always takes the same approach: There are things in his game he can work to improve. The self-described 'film nerd' has discussed his love — no matter how painful the viewing experience — of watching and breaking down film with Carlisle. Haliburton just loves the game. 'As long as I got my dog, my video game and a court, I'll be fine,' Haliburton said. When it was time to meet the New York Knicks in the Eastern Conference finals, Haliburton solidified his place as an antagonist in Knicks' lore. In Game 1, 25 years after Reggie Miller first did the gesture, Haliburton recreated the choke celebration after hitting an improbable shot to send the game to overtime. The Pacers won the first two games of the series on the road. After winning Games 3 and 5, the Knicks forced a Game 6. Haliburton said he would watch film and have a better Game 6. And just as he'd done in every other series of these playoffs, Haliburton delivered. Though he got off to a relatively quiet start in the first half, Haliburton, with 11 points, four assists and three rebounds in the fourth quarter, put the Knicks away for good. While Siakam was named Eastern Conference finals MVP, Haliburton played a critical role in Indiana's decisive victory and first trip to the NBA Finals in 25 years. After all, that's what he does. 'He's a point guard by nature, a classic point guard by nature, a guy running a team,' Carlisle said. 'But he's developed an ability to score and, you know, striking the balance is always a bit of a challenge. He's done a great job of migrating through it. 'Teams do a lot of things to make it hard on him. He's learned a lot about being in the fight when teams are doing things to disrupt him and try to physically intimidate him and do things like that. And our guys have his back.' In 2024, those 'guys' made a run to the Eastern Conference finals. There, the eventual NBA champion Boston Celtics swept the Pacers. Haliburton only played in the series' first two games because of a hamstring issue. Despite the loss, there was hope in Indianapolis for the future of its young team behind its promising star. Since joining the team, Haliburton has embraced all the city has to offer and is proud to be one with the city. Advertisement 'I just feel like being in Indy, it's a great place for me,' Haliburton said. 'Indy is a much bigger place than I'm even accustomed to. … My whole family lives there now. We love being there. It's a lot of fun for me. 'I don't need the glitz and glamour of large city. I really like the hometown, small-town feel from our fans. Our home-court advantages are different, because people are really passionate about our teams, and their parents were passionate about the team. … That's why I enjoy being a part of it, why I want to be a part of it for the rest of my career.' The Pacers and Haliburton won't have it easy against the Oklahoma City Thunder, the NBA's most dominant team throughout the regular season and playoffs. Again, the Pacers are underdogs. But in these playoffs so far, Haliburton not only has worn Indiana across his chest, he's also put the team on his back. (Illustration: Kelsea Petersen / The Athletic; photo: Brennan Alspen / Getty Images)

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