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Posted
Image courtesy of Petre Thomas, Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

For years under the Derek Falvey regime, the Twins built their organization around pitching depth. While the farm system has consistently produced quality arms, impact position players have been much harder to come by. There have certainly been individual prospects to get excited about, but it has been a long time since Minnesota could point to an entire wave of elite offensive talent that looked capable of growing into the core of a contender.

That is why the selection of Vahn Lackey feels so significant.

The Twins entered this year's draft with the third overall pick in what many viewed as a three-player draft. Minnesota was fortunate enough to see Lackey still available, and they didn't hesitate. At just 21 years old, Lackey immediately becomes one of the organization's premier prospects and the latest piece of what is shaping up to be an incredibly exciting young offensive core.

Lackey entered the spring as one of the best defensive catchers in the country, but he elevated himself into the conversation for a top-three selection because of what he did with the bat. During his junior season with Georgia Tech in the ACC, he hit nearly .400 while posting a ridiculous 1.291 OPS with 20 home runs in just 61 games. Those numbers would stand out anywhere, but doing it against some of the toughest competition in college baseball made them even more impressive. There is still plenty of development ahead before anyone should pencil him into the Twins' lineup, but the possibility of pairing that kind of offensive upside with a long-term catcher is incredibly enticing. Teams spend years trying to find impact offensive catchers, and the Twins may have just landed one.

More importantly, Lackey is joining an organization that suddenly has elite offensive prospects all over the diamond, particularly at premium defensive positions.

The biggest name remains Walker Jenkins. The fifth overall selection in the 2023 draft would have been the first overall pick in many other draft classes, and despite battling injuries throughout his professional career, he has done nothing but reaffirm that belief whenever he has been healthy. Across four seasons and four levels of the minor leagues, Jenkins owns an .870 OPS while continuing to flash the combination of power, athleticism and bat control that made him one of the most coveted high school hitters in years. Already in Triple-A at just 21 years old, Jenkins appears poised to make his major league debut during the second half of this season. Whether he ends up in center field or either corner, he has all the tools to become the middle-of-the-order bat for the Twins for years to come.

The Twins have another first-round pick knocking on the door in Kaelen Culpepper. Selected 21st overall in 2024, Culpepper has impressed at every stop since entering the Twins' system, posting an .837 OPS across three seasons in the Twins' system. Like Jenkins, he looks ready to make his major-league debut later this season, if only he can get and stay healthy.

Culpepper should get the opportunity to play shortstop initially, but his long-term value goes beyond one position. If Marek Houston develops into the defensive shortstop many believe he can become, Culpepper has the athleticism and versatility to slide to either second or third base without sacrificing his offensive impact. At just 23 years old, Culpepper looks like another player capable of anchoring Minnesota's lineup for years.

Houston, meanwhile, has exceeded expectations almost immediately. Drafted 16th overall in 2025, he entered the draft as arguably the best defensive player in the entire class. The question was always whether the bat would allow him to become an everyday player. So far, the answer has been encouraging. Houston has climbed to Double-A at only 22 years old while posting an .861 OPS this season with seven home runs and 17 doubles in 73 games. His glove was never in doubt, but if the offense continues to develop, the Twins could have their long-term shortstop already in the organization.

What makes this collection of talent so exciting is where these players play. Premium offensive players at catcher, shortstop and center field are among the hardest assets to acquire in baseball. The Twins now have legitimate long-term upside at each of those positions, and they are not done there.

Luke Keaschall remains one of the organization's most promising young hitters. Still only 23 years old, he has already flashed his offensive upside in the majors and reminded everyone why the Twins were so high on him as a prospect. After hitting some bumps in his sophomore season, he has started to look much more comfortable at the plate lately and continues to project as an impact offensive player..

Brooks Lee is another player who is easy to overlook simply because he has already reached the majors and hasn't consistently popped yet. Still just 25 years old, Lee has experienced the expected ups and downs of a young hitter, but there are reasons for optimism. Since moving to third base, he has developed into a quality defender while continuing to deliver timely hits. There is still another level he can reach offensively, and the Twins believe that ceiling remains within reach.

Eduardo Tait continues to rank among baseball's top prospects despite being only 19 years old. Before the draft, he looked like the organization's catcher of the future. Now, with Lackey in the fold, the Twins have options. Tait's bat has always been the carrying tool, and the organization could eventually choose to move him to first base or another position that allows him to focus on maximizing his offensive potential. Having two young catchers with that kind of upside is a luxury few organizations can claim.

The depth extends even beyond those names. Emmanuel Rodriguez remains a top-tier all-around prospect, Gabriel Gonzalez continues to show intriguing offensive tools, while Alan Roden has done nothing but hit (in the minors) since joining the Twins. Not every prospect becomes a star, but having this many legitimate options dramatically improves the odds that several will develop into impact major leaguers.

That is what separates this farm system from many Twins organizations of the past. This is not simply a collection of interesting prospects. It is a wave of former first-round picks and highly regarded young hitters playing premium positions throughout the diamond. Lackey at catcher. Jenkins and Rodriguez in the outfield. Houston at shortstop. Culpepper capable of sliding wherever needed across the infield. Keaschall and Lee already contributing in the majors. Tait waiting behind them with big offensive upside.

Of course, prospect development is never linear. Some of these players will fall short of expectations. Others may need more time than anticipated. Injuries will always play a factor. But the sheer volume of talent, combined with the pedigree attached to so many of these players, gives the Twins something they have not possessed in a very long time.

Even better, many of these players are already knocking on the door of the major leagues. Jenkins, Culpepper and Rodriguez could arrive before the end of this season. Houston is moving quickly. Additionally, with all of these players coming up together, they will be making league-minimum salaries, giving the Twins financial flexibility to strengthen the roster around them.

There is still a long way to go before this group proves anything at the major league level. But for the first time in years, the Twins appear to be building something special offensively and defensively at premiere positions. Lackey is the newest piece of that foundation, and he may someday be remembered as the pick that completed one of the most exciting young offensive cores the Twins have assembled in decades.

What do you think? Is this the most exciting offensive core the Twins have had in years? Which prospect are you most excited to watch develop? Leave a comment below and start the conversation!


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Posted

As a new (first year) Twins fan living abroad, it seems promising! If some of these prospects live up to the expectations, it'll be exciting to watch. I hope Fedko, who is a solid hitter in the minors but can't get a hit in the majors, can find his feet and live up to the hype to, for his sake and the team's!

Posted

Yes it could be interesting.  Then again theses prospects are still suspects while being hyped, maybe over-hyped, by the baseball experts.  If they are that good, then get them here or use a few of them as trade bait to improve the Twins roster.  Although im hopeful of this group of prospects we have seen this song and dance routine by the Twins for decades.  Let's hope it works this time.

Posted

This is why I still find myself hoping they don’t put too many chips into the pot for this year, and that they sell on a few players rather than losing them for nothing.  

As Matthew notes, not all will pan out: but the sheer volume of outfield prospects they have at AAA, many of whom appear to be very good defensively as well, gives them an extremely good chance of having a very good outfield defense and offensive production from those players. 

The infield is close to the same story - it’s plausible to see an excellent infield defense of Culpepper, Houston, Lee, Lewis, and Lackey, with Tait as a perfect platoon-side backup / DH, for many seasons, with above average offense from four of the five. 

They’ve got a solid core of starting pitchers with Ryan, Bradley, Prielipp, Matthews, Ober, Lopez, and Abel. but that area’s looking a little thinner in the minors now. Beyond Quick, I’m not sure who else projects to have a good chance to be a quality ML starter in the next two years. 

Some people will say that the return for trading somebody like Josh Bell is a low level prospect and seemingly dismiss the chances of that player being an eventual contributor, but I see two problems with that.

One is that a small number of them will, so I’d like to have as many of them in the system when the team gets good as possible. I remember Dave Hollins being traded for David Ortiz before he was David Ortiz (literally and figuratively, I think his last name was Arias when traded). Or trading a low level prospect of Luis Gil for Jake Cave. It might be infrequent, but it happens. 

The other is that I’d rather have a deeper farm system when the team is a contender expected to do something in the playoffs, not just a contender to make them, so there’s more depth and better prospects to trade from to improve those teams. 

Trading Jeffers could easily land a top 100 prospect pitcher and more. Trading Bell and Larnach could land some solid pieces, especially if they target players a bit further from the majors (like primarily A ball). It’ll hurt this year’s chances, but probably not that significantly (especially if they trade for 1-2 more low-cost relievers to bolster their biggest weakness). 

And I’d even add Ryan to the list to strongly consider the offers for trading him at the deadline. Unless they extend him first, if they get an offer headlined by a couple top 100 prospects plus more, I hope they take it. 

To the extent they’re worried about the blowback about being cheap, start signing guys to extensions now. Bradley, Jenkins, and more. Sign a high quality FA pitcher in the offseason to replace Ryan if need be. 

This year is providing good reason for optimism, and I am not advocating for trading like last year. But switching from Larnach to Roden, Bell to a DH by committee (probably including more Buxton in the second half) are probably at most negligible changes to the postseason chances. Even trading Jeffers is probably not much more. But those moves could bolster their chances for the next five years, when the team is likely expected to be competitive for the whole time. . 

Verified Member
Posted

We all hope for success and let's assume it happens.  If the Pohlad's remain as Owners, they will hope there is a salary cap, otherwise we will hear more ways than we can count on how they can't afford the players 

Posted

I have no idea what's going on with the major league team, but I doubt the minor league development has changed, and I see no real evidence of identifying hitters who weren't completely obvious.  Hitters in the system:

Jenkins -- natural born hitter

Lackey -- questionable because amateur, but very much the consensus pick.

Culpepper -- really questionable as to how good he might be, but the ceiling isn't that high.  His stats for St. Paul, and especially relative to the HRs of minor leagues/AAA this year are decent but not special.

Nobody else has my attention yet, really.  I wanted to love Jhomnardo Reyes, but his K rate is trending high, and that's going to be problematic.  Marek Houston's real value is difficult but not impossible to determine at Wichita and St. Paul.  I currently think he won't be a hitter, but once we finally get Statcast data from AAA, it will be easier to know exactly what he is.

 

Posted

Earning a roster spot on an MLB club is outrageously difficult. The factor that separates out most players is hitting. The pitchers are so good at exploiting any weakness that becoming a regular position player depends on athletic talent, opportunity, and the ability to make frequent adjustments. Teams need to find those who can potentially hit and then also hope they can become average defensive players. The best defenders have a long road to reach the highest levels because they must hit enough to justify their existence on a roster. The Twins are not alone in that quest and in general the lists that rate farm systems are folly. A ton of work goes into developing players.

The Twins have to be pretty pleased to have drafted Vahn Lackey due to his all around profile as a baseball player. Walker Jenkins, Emmanuel Rodriguez, Kaelen Culpepper, and Marek Houston are all talented individuals who have shown an ability to be average or slightly better gloves while also displaying decent hitting ability. The Twins don't really have any fielding savants but that is fine. Injuries have hindered a few  guys. There are a few tooled up players in the system who have a long road to developing their skills at the plate. Khadim Diaw, Brandon Winokur, and Yasser Mercedes are three to watch for the future (2-3 years out). Many of the other prospects possess tools worth noting and many of the best bat prospects face long odds because of weak gloves. All things considered it is really a difficult task to rise through a minor league system and maintain focus in a profession that has such a high degree of failure. This requires a resolute belief in self as well as outstanding work habits. I'm feeling pretty good about a few Twins prospects but remain cognizant of the extreme challenges and odds facing those who seek that precious MLB roster spot. I have a deep appreciation for how hard players work and how long they stick to their belief in themsleves. They come from all types of backgrounds too. Four to admire for their commitments on the Twins current roster are Alex Jackson, Kody Clemens, Ryan Kreidler, and Tristan Gray. 

Posted

This definitely reminds me of the waves of talent in the mid 80s. The past 4-5 drafts have gotten top tier talent into the pipeline.  IF most of these guys stick in MLB, we will compete in a money ball scenario. Like LK, we can root for Lackey to be on the fast track to MLB. The depth in MiLB has its own depth n Mendez, Winokur,  Tinney, Diaw and others. 
 

What we need is for ownership to not mess up the future! 

Verified Member
Posted
1 hour ago, um_stevenel said:

Trading Jeffers could easily land a top 100 prospect pitcher and more. Trading Bell and Larnach could land some solid pieces, especially if they target players a bit further from the majors (like primarily A ball). It’ll hurt this year’s chances, but probably not that significantly (especially if they trade for 1-2 more low-cost relievers to bolster their biggest weakness). 

I hear you, but man it would be tough to trade even two of these guys right now. Very unpredictable what impact that could have this year. Hopefully they can get Culpepper and Jenkins up for a run to the playoffs this year (along with the young core of Keaschall, Lee, Taj, Zebby, Preillip, Abel, if healthy) that sets them up for true contention over the next 5-6 as the other prospects start to join. And it sure would be nice to take advantage of all these minimum contracts and sign Ryan to an extension…. But most likely he gets traded in the offseason for a haul.

Posted
1 hour ago, um_stevenel said:

But switching from Larnach to Roden

What has Roden done that says he should replace someone hitting .289 with a .830 OPS.  I get everyone wants Larnach traded but Roden has done nothing in nearly 200 AB's in the major leagues.  Why is he being treated like a can't miss prospect.  The eye test says he is a fourth outfielder at best. Fedko's numbers in the minors are similar to Roden's and he is the same age.  Everyone says Fedko is a bust after 16 AB's but Roden needs to be in the starting lineup.  I really don't see much difference between the two.   If you are going to replace Larnach, it should be with Jenkins, who has more upside than either Larnach or Roden.  Let's stop rearranging the chairs on the Titantic.

And as an FYI, I am not advocating for Fedko to be up here, I am pointing out what I think is flawed logic from comments I am seeing on here in the various threads.

Posted
32 minutes ago, Fatbat said:

What we need is for ownership to not mess up the future! 

In a post about younger players and not free agency we are still going to take shots at ownership.  What do they have to do with player development or timelines when they come up.  That is on Zoll to set up a structure to make sure these guys develop and have a shot at being productive major leaguers.  If he is not up to the task, then ownership needs to replace him.  But I don't think Tom P. is sitting down in Cedar Rapids telling Tait what to work on with his swing.

Posted

Keashall is finding himself and allowing his natural athleticism to be aggressive I. The outfield. Suddenly the confidence allows his bat to take again. 
 

You have 5 high fielding players Lackey, Jenkins Rodriguez, Culpepper and Houston. All of those at their development or skill level are fairly projectable. 
 

After that you have guys with one or more question marks- Mendez good bat what’s his defensive position- Tait, Winokur, Young and Tinney- can the hit tools be good enough. There is also defensive questions on these 4 as well and what their ultimate position is. 
 

in either case we appear to have a core to build around offensively. Continuing to find elite to good starters will continue to be the question mark. We can supplement this team with minimal investment. Tait and Rodriguez have enough questions I would be fine flipping for more long term help to the team. Beyond that- it’s trying to get pitching healthy- and get the pitchers at the correct levels to continue to develop. We have minimal hits for pitching in the 23/24 classes so 25 and 26 will have to hit on some. 

Posted

First off, saying that Falvey consistently produced quality arms in the early years is revisionist history. They are actually doing better in that area now. The emergence of Prielipp and Matthews along with some of the young bullpen arms that are breaking in is indicative of that.

There seems to be an organizational shift the last few years. They have moved away from slow footed college power bats (Rooker, Larnach, Wallner, Sabato) and shifted to highly athletic 5 tool players (Jenkins, Culpepper, Houston, Lackey). At the same time, they seem to be addressing the concept of being strong up the middle. The most recent drafts went CF, SS, SS, C. After some hit and miss years, I think they have finally gotten the hang of this scouting and drafting thing.

Verified Member
Posted
6 minutes ago, TJSweens said:

First off, saying that Falvey consistently produced quality arms in the early years is revisionist history. They are actually doing better in that area now. The emergence of Prielipp and Matthews along with some of the young bullpen arms that are breaking in is indicative of that.

There seems to be an organizational shift the last few years. They have moved away from slow footed college power bats (Rooker, Larnach, Wallner, Sabato) and shifted to highly athletic 5 tool players (Jenkins, Culpepper, Houston, Lackey). At the same time, they seem to be addressing the concept of being strong up the middle. The most recent drafts went CF, SS, SS, C. After some hit and miss years, I think they have finally gotten the hang of this scouting and drafting thing.

I’ve given up objecting to throw away statements used in these pieces that are plainly inaccurate. Degrades the credibility of the writing but oh well. I think your assessment is spot on. 

Posted

Very excited for this core of prospects. Pitching will always be the determining factor for playoff success. We have to keep Ryan. He’s really taken it up another notch this year. That said I’d be willing to flip Jeffers. But it has to be for major league ready arms. 

Posted
2 minutes ago, Linus said:

I’ve given up objecting to throw away statements used in these pieces that are plainly inaccurate. Degrades the credibility of the writing but oh well. I think your assessment is spot on. 

Ditto.  There's so much to unpack in that introductory paragraph and life is short.

Posted
13 minutes ago, TJSweens said:

First off, saying that Falvey consistently produced quality arms in the early years is revisionist history. They are actually doing better in that area now. The emergence of Prielipp and Matthews along with some of the young bullpen arms that are breaking in is indicative of that.

There seems to be an organizational shift the last few years. They have moved away from slow footed college power bats (Rooker, Larnach, Wallner, Sabato) and shifted to highly athletic 5 tool players (Jenkins, Culpepper, Houston, Lackey). At the same time, they seem to be addressing the concept of being strong up the middle. The most recent drafts went CF, SS, SS, C. After some hit and miss years, I think they have finally gotten the hang of this scouting and drafting thing.

Small counter point: if early second rounder Tinney doesn't stick behind the plate, he could be the next Rooker, for good or for ill.

Posted

Let's just dream about the 2028 Roster with every falling right.

C: Lackey
1B: Lewis
2B: Culpeper
3B: Lee
SS: Houston
LF: Rodriguez
CF: Buxton
RF: Jenkins
DH: Kaeschall

Bench:
Veteran Catcher
Clemens
Kriedler
Roden

This lineup is young and crazy cheap.  Probably less than $50M. 

Re-sign Ryan (6/210) and Lopez (2/35)

Rotation

Ryan
Bradley
Prielipp
Lopez
Abel

That's about $60M for the rotation.

Bullpen (Dream that Morris and Gomez are for real and they piece together a bunch of young arms)

Gomez
Morris
Quick
Raya
Culpepper
Renfrow
Burns
W.S. Go (now jersey #2 for the defending World Series Champions)

$10M Bullpen

$20M to fill out forty man roster

Total Salary $140M (hopefully below salary floor so they have to go spend more)

 

 



 

Posted
3 minutes ago, clone52 said:

Let's just dream about the 2028 Roster with every falling right.

C: Lackey
1B: Lewis
2B: Culpeper
3B: Lee
SS: Houston
LF: Rodriguez
CF: Buxton
RF: Jenkins
DH: Kaeschall

Bench:
Veteran Catcher
Clemens
Kriedler
Roden

This lineup is young and crazy cheap.  Probably less than $50M. 

Re-sign Ryan (6/210) and Lopez (2/35)

Rotation

Ryan
Bradley
Prielipp
Lopez
Abel

That's about $60M for the rotation.

Bullpen (Dream that Morris and Gomez are for real and they piece together a bunch of young arms)

Gomez
Morris
Quick
Raya
Culpepper
Renfrow
Burns
W.S. Go (now jersey #2 for the defending World Series Champions)

$10M Bullpen

$20M to fill out forty man roster

Total Salary $140M (hopefully below salary floor so they have to go spend more)

 

 



 

That's quite the logjam.  Better work on some trades this week or next.  😀

Posted
1 hour ago, tony&rodney said:

Earning a roster spot on an MLB club is outrageously difficult. The factor that separates out most players is hitting. The pitchers are so good at exploiting any weakness that becoming a regular position player depends on athletic talent, opportunity, and the ability to make frequent adjustments. Teams need to find those who can potentially hit and then also hope they can become average defensive players. The best defenders have a long road to reach the highest levels because they must hit enough to justify their existence on a roster. The Twins are not alone in that quest and in general the lists that rate farm systems are folly. A ton of work goes into developing players.

The Twins have to be pretty pleased to have drafted Vahn Lackey due to his all around profile as a baseball player. Walker Jenkins, Emmanuel Rodriguez, Kaelen Culpepper, and Marek Houston are all talented individuals who have shown an ability to be average or slightly better gloves while also displaying decent hitting ability. The Twins don't really have any fielding savants but that is fine. Injuries have hindered a few  guys. There are a few tooled up players in the system who have a long road to developing their skills at the plate. Khadim Diaw, Brandon Winokur, and Yasser Mercedes are three to watch for the future (2-3 years out). Many of the other prospects possess tools worth noting and many of the best bat prospects face long odds because of weak gloves. All things considered it is really a difficult task to rise through a minor league system and maintain focus in a profession that has such a high degree of failure. This requires a resolute belief in self as well as outstanding work habits. I'm feeling pretty good about a few Twins prospects but remain cognizant of the extreme challenges and odds facing those who seek that precious MLB roster spot. I have a deep appreciation for how hard players work and how long they stick to their belief in themsleves. They come from all types of backgrounds too. Four to admire for their commitments on the Twins current roster are Alex Jackson, Kody Clemens, Ryan Kreidler, and Tristan Gray. 

This was a fantastic post!

Posted
24 minutes ago, clone52 said:

Bench:
Veteran Catcher
Clemens
Kriedler
Roden

Let's shoot for more quality than Roden and Kreidler for the bench spots.

Posted
46 minutes ago, HarmonK03 said:

What has Roden done that says he should replace someone hitting .289 with a .830 OPS?

Caught fly balls more than 5 feet away from where he was standing when they got launched?

Roden's far from a can't miss prospect, but he's not a Fedko, either. Viewing Roden, he's never had a hiccup, never performed under a wRC+ 133 at any level of the minors.

image.png.5d8827ccffa0c19cf2894ac9cfe3dfff.png

The Blue Jays treated him mostly like a toss in for Varland. I think his performance at the plate probably has Larnach's current production as an absolute ceiling, but Roden may be able to cover CF.

Honestly, the question here isn't Roden replacing Larnach. It's a question of can Roden play LF and hit well enough to be an every day 2.0 WAR kind of player?

Fedko needed to rake out of the gate. Not struggle to make contact with every pitch you see. Fedko's swinging strike rate was 20.5%. His swing rate outside the zone was 40.5%. That's... Listen. Miguel Sano's swinging strike rate was 16.0% over his career and never topped 19.1% in any full season. Swinging strike rate over 15.0% is practically unplayable, Combine that with his O-swing rate of 40% (MLB average is like 28%) and that is really, really, really bad.

image.png.ce0f8d78858bf1e43a661a12c095e6f4.png

Posted
3 minutes ago, bean5302 said:

Caught fly balls more than 5 feet away from where he was standing when they got launched?

Roden's far from a can't miss prospect, but he's not a Fedko, either. Viewing Roden, he's never had a hiccup, never performed under a wRC+ 133 at any level of the minors.

image.png.5d8827ccffa0c19cf2894ac9cfe3dfff.png

The Blue Jays treated him mostly like a toss in for Varland. I think his performance at the plate probably has Larnach's current production as an absolute ceiling, but Roden may be able to cover CF.

Honestly, the question here isn't Roden replacing Larnach. It's a question of can Roden play LF and hit well enough to be an every day 2.0 WAR kind of player?

Fedko needed to rake out of the gate. Not struggle to make contact with every pitch you see. Fedko's swinging strike rate was 20.5%. His swing rate outside the zone was 40.5%. That's... Listen. Miguel Sano's swinging strike rate was 16.0% over his career and never topped 19.1% in any full season. Swinging strike rate over 15.0% is practically unplayable, Combine that with his O-swing rate of 40% (MLB average is like 28%) and that is really, really, really bad.

image.png.ce0f8d78858bf1e43a661a12c095e6f4.png

You take Roden in LF, I will gladly take Jenkins.  Roden is profiling to be a fourth outfielder at best, but because we traded for him, the narrative is he is a can't miss prospect and we need to find a spot for him.

Posted
1 minute ago, HarmonK03 said:

You take Roden in LF, I will gladly take Jenkins.  Roden is profiling to be a fourth outfielder at best, but because we traded for him, the narrative is he is a can't miss prospect and we need to find a spot for him.

Okay... didn't know we were changing the subject.

Verified Member
Posted

Not to be jaded or anything, but there are plenty of can't miss super phenoms such as Miguel Sano who fizzled.  Lewis, Buxton, others all have had immense struggles at one time or another.  They really don't know who any of these guys are until the rubber meets the ML road.

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