1994 Stanley
Cup run: Special insert
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Pavel Bure celebrates with Greg Adams
and Dave Babych after eliminating
Calgary in overtime.
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For the fifth time in 13 years, the Canucks
and Flames would face off in the first round.
The series opened on April 18 at the Olympic
Saddledome. After a scoreless first
period, Cliff Ronning opened the scoring in the
second on a persistent effort in front of the
net. The floodgates then opened, and with
10 minutes to play, the Canucks lead 5-0.
Though the scoring was done, the action was not.
The teams roughed it up in the late going,
setting the stage for Game 2, which was probably
the dirtiest game of the series. Gary
Roberts ran Kirk McLean several times and scored
twice. Neither McLean nor Mike Vernon got
a lot of support from their teams in this one,
and the final score was 7-5 for the Flames.
As the series shifted to Vancouver, many
speculated that Flames' Coach Dave King might
start Trevor Kidd in Game 3. Kidd had
played well against Vancouver during the season,
and Vernon had surrendered five goals in
back-to-back games. King went with Vernon,
and he responded by making 36 saves on the
night. The game was still scoreless after
two periods, but the Flames outscored the
Canucks 4-2 in the third period to take a 2-1
series lead. Two nights later, Vernon was
again the story. The Canucks lead 2-1
after two but the Flames struck twice early in
the third to take the lead. Trevor
Linden finally managed to beat Vernon late in
the period but hit the post behind him, and the
expression on his face represented the
frustration that all Canucks fans were feeling
at the moment. Vernon's 42-save
performance gave the Flames a chance to end the
series at home. In Game 5, Linden moved to
center after Craven was injured the previous
game, and he would maintain that position
through the rest of the playoffs. Pavel
Bure (scoring his first of the series) and Wes
Walz traded goals in the first eight minutes,
and then McLean and Vernon slammed the doors
shut. There would not be another goal
until the 7:15 mark of overtime, when Geoff
Courtnall blasted a shot while streaking down
the left wing over Vernon's catching glove,
reminding fans of the goal that Wayne Gretzky
had scored from the very same spot six years
earlier.
• Listen
- Geoff Courtnall scoring the overtime winner in
Game 5.
In Game 6 the Flames twice took the lead, and
Canucks twice tied it back up. D Gerald
Diduck's goal, a slapshot from the point at
19:56 of the second period, was the last of
regulation time. The teams played through
three-quarters of an overtime period without any
terrific scoring chances when a poor change at
the Calgary bench resulted in a too many men on
the ice penalty. The Canucks wasted little
time capitalizing. After Pat Quinn called
a time-out, Linden won the draw and Bure blasted
a shot toward the net that was tipped by Jyrki
Lumme. Vernon saved it, but Linden picked
up the rebound and backhanded it through a
sprawled Vernon and into the net to even the
series at three each.
• Listen
- Trevor Linden scoring the overtime winner in
Game 6.
Five years earlier, these teams had gone back to
Calgary for Game 7. On April 30, they were
doing it again. The Canucks built a 2-1
lead but nearly identical second-period goals by
Theoren Fleury (wrist shots from the right wing)
gave the Flames a 3-2 lead headed to the third.
The Flames went for the kill, but McLean made
several saves (including one from point-blank
range off of German Titov) to keep his team
within a goal. As the minutes wound down,
the Canucks started putting some pressure on
Vernon, but he showed no cracks in his armor.
With less than three minutes to play, Greg Adams
picked up the puck in the corner and worked his
way to the front of the net, and tried a
backhander that hit Vernon's pad and fell to the
ice. Ever so slowly, the puck inched
toward the goal line and, before the goalie
could rescue it, it crossed the line for the
tying goal.
• Listen
- Greg Adams tying Game 7 at 3-3 with 3:37 left.
Just like in 1989, Game 7 was now in overtime.
Both teams get great chances but both
goalies are equal to the tasks. With less
than nine minutes to play, the Canucks apply
pressure and Murzyn pinches, which allows
Roberts to chip the puck past him, creating an
odd-man rush. Fleury is once again in full
flight down the right wing, and McLean plays him
to shoot. But, instead, Fleury passes the
puck past the outstretched Lumme onto the stick
of Robert Reichel, who one-times a shot at the
unguarded side of the net. It looks like
the season is over for sure, but out of nowhere
comes McLean's left pad to kick the puck away. So
sure was he of the goal that the goal judge
turned on the red light, which drew some
negative reaction from Quinn at the bench.
The save quickly became known around BC as the
"Save of the Century".
• Listen
- Kirk McLean making the greatest save of his
career on Robert Reichel in OT of Game 7.
• Listen
- Kirk McLean's reaction to the save of his
career.
• Listen
- Calgary coach Dave King commenting on Kirk
McLean.
The game went to a second overtime period, and
in the third minute, Jeff Brown made a pass from
his blueline up to the far blueline onto the
stick of Bure, who was in full flight. In
all alone, Bure faked to his backhand and pulled
the puck to his forehand, wrapping the puck
around the outstretched pad of Vernon and into
the net for the series-winning goal. In
hot pursuit of Bure was Zarley Zalapski, who
crashed into Vernon and the two of them followed
the puck into the net. Bure threw his
stick and gloves into the air before being
mobbed by his teammates. Not only had the
Canucks erased a 1-3 deficit in games, but had
won all three in overtime! As is so often
the case, though, there was no time to
celebrate. The Canucks would open up the
second round in Dallas two nights later.
• Listen
- Pavel Bure scoring the series winner in
overtime against Mike Vernon.
• Listen
- Pat Quinn's view on Dallas prior to the
series.
As they had in 1982 when Los Angeles beat
Edmonton, the Canucks were once again the
benefactors of a huge first-round upset.
Had heavily favoured Detroit beaten underdog San
Jose in the first round, the Canucks would have
been playing at Joe Louis Arena on May 2.
However, the Sharks won in seven games, pitting
the Canucks against the Dallas Stars.
After such an emotional high less than 48 hours
ago, one would expect an emotional let down when
beginning a new series. But the Canucks,
still in high gear, rushed out to a 4-1 lead on
the Stars, who had swept St. Louis in the first
round and had been sitting around getting cold
for a week. The Stars came back, though,
tying the game early in the third period.
Perhaps the Stars had now found their legs, and
fatigue was setting in on the Canucks. But
with just over six minutes to play, Nathan
LaFayette won a face-off in the Dallas zone and
LW Martin Gelinas rifled a shot
past Darcy Wakaluk to give the lead back to
Vancouver. 5-4 was the final score.
If any had thought the Canucks had been lucky to
win Game 1, they changed their minds after the
second game. According to Captain Trevor
Linden, Pavel Bure had his best game of the
entire playoff run on this night. He
scored twice and sent Stars' tough-guy Shane
Churla tumbling to the ice with a thundering
check. No penalty was given on the hit,
but the NHL fined Bure $500 for raising his
elbow too high.
• Listen
- Pavel Bure knocking out Shane Churla of the
Dallas Stars.
The Canucks won 3-0, and they now had the Stars
on the ropes with the next three games being in
Vancouver. The Canucks lead 3-1 but,
to their credit, the Stars came back again and
didn't let this one get away. 4-3 was the
final score and the Stars were back in the
series. In Game 4 the teams traded goals
through 40 minutes and then the Stars dominated
the third period, determined to even the series.
To lose this game would be to squander the huge
advantage the Canucks had earned by winning the
first two games on the road. Whatever Pat
Quinn said to his troops in the intermission
before overtime, it worked. The Canucks
came out flying, forcing Andy Moog to make
several game-saving stops. Finally, at the
11:00 mark, Sergio Momesso fought through a
check in the slot and raised a shot over Moog's
left shoulder for the winning goal.
• Listen
- Sergio Momesso giving Vancouver a 3-1 series
lead with an overtime goal.
The Canucks smelled victory in Game 5 and
weren't about to let it get away. The
series-clinching goal was scored by Pavel Bure
on yet another keeper for the highlight reels.
The final score was 4-2 and the fans sang away
the last few minutes in traditional fashion and
remained in standing ovation for over twenty
minutes past the final horn.
• Listen
- Quinn on round two and the Western Conference
Final.
It was now the Canucks' turn to wait.
Their opponent in the third round would be the
winner of the Toronto-San Jose series, which
went the distance. In the end, Toronto won
and the Western Conference Finals opened up at
Maple Leaf Gardens on May 16. Hockey Night
In Canada was using a new innovation in this
series, the "NetCam". A
remote-control operated camera attached to the
back post of the net. Unfortunately, this
camera was not available to video replay
officials, who were unable to see a puck cross
the goal line behind Felix Potvin from any of
their angles. The "NetCam"
clearly showed the puck in the net, and this was
key as the Leafs had a 2-1 lead late in the
third period. Kirk McLean was on his way
to the bench to be replaced by a sixth attacker
when he suddenly turned around and poke-checked
the puck away from a Toronto forward, saving
what would have surely been an empty-net goal.
Seconds later, Trevor Linden picked up the puck
and beat two Leaf defenders before beating Felix
Potvin for the tying goal at 19:31.
• Listen
- Trevor Linden forcing overtime in Game 1.
The Canucks were 4-0 in extra time so far in the
playoffs, but in the 18th minute of this period
Kirk McLean came out to play the puck up to the
neutral zone but instead played the puck right
onto the stick of Leafs forward Peter Zezel.
McLean tried in vain to get back as Zezel slid
the puck into the unguarded net for the
game-winner.
• Listen
- Toronto winning Game 1 in overtime.
• Listen
- Kirk McLean reacting to the overtime goal by
Toronto.
• Listen
- Trevor Linden commenting on Game 1.
Game 2 was tied 3-3 in the third period, but the
tie was broken by Jyrki Lumme, who let a hard
shot go from the high slot that eluded Potvin.
Tied 1-1, the series shifted to the West Coast
for the next three games. In Game 3, Pavel
Bure scored twice, including one on a breakaway
and Kirk McLean provided his third shutout of
these playoffs as the Canucks won 4-0.
• Listen
- Bure giving Vancouver a 1-0 lead in Game 2.
With the outcome no longer in doubt, Tim Hunter
smoked Doug Gilmour into the end boards as the
Leafs center came around the Vancouver net.
This touched off a melee that would only
increase the bad blood between the teams. Gilmour
called the hit by his ex-Flames teammate a cheap
shot, claiming, "Hunter always picks his
spots. He's never changed." The
glare that Pat Burns gave referee Andy van
Hellemond earned him the Vancouver Province's
"Scowl of the Day".
• Listen
- Vancouver's Tim Hunter crunching Doug Gilmour
in Game 3.
• Listen
- Toronto defenseman Jamie Macoun whining about
Canucks' tactics
• Listen
- Coach Pat Burns defending Macoun.
• Listen
- Jyrki Lumme with the game winning goal in Game
2.
Game 4 remained scoreless until the final four
minutes, when Sergio Momesso and Cliff Ronning
broke out two-on-one. Momesso fed Ronning,
who one-timed the puck past Potvin and send the
Coliseum into a state of frenzy. An
empty-net goal later, the Canucks had won 2-0
and McLean had his second straight shutout.
• Listen
- Cliff Ronning scoring the winning goal in Game
4.
• Listen
- Dave Babych commenting on Kirk McLean's
performance in Game 4.
The shutout string would not last long into Game
5, however. The Leafs jumped out to a 3-0
first-period lead, and it looked like the series
would be headed back to Toronto. However,
second period goals by Murray Craven, Nathan
LaFayette, and Greg Adams tied the score heading
into the third. Despite the momentum
shift, the Canucks could not beat Potvin in the
third period or in the first overtime period,
and McLean had an answer any time he faced a
shot. Off the start of the second overtime, the
puck was dumped into the Toronto zone.
Linden won a battle along the boards and got the
puck back to the point to Dave Babych. Babych's
shot hit the post and the puck bounced right
onto the stick of Greg Adams, who banked it off
the post and in.
• Listen
- Greg Adams sending Vancouver to the Stanley
Cup Finals.
The Vancouver Canucks were Western Conference
Champions and, for the second time in their
history, would be headed to the Stanley Cup
Final. Linden accepted the Campbell Bowl
from Brian Burke, who was now an NHL
Vice-President, working under Commissioner Gary
Bettman. Linden dropped the lid to the
Bowl. Pat Quinn waved to the crowd. When
Ron MacLean asked him who he was waving to, he
deliriously answered, "I don't know . . .
Everybody!" A sign in the crowd
read "Frank Sr. is Smiling" as Frank's
widow, Emily, and their son Arthur came onto the
ice to celebrate with the players. The
city was now in a state of celebration, and
there would be some time to savor this one, as
the Finals would not start for another week.
• Listen
- Adams talking about the winning goal.
• Listen
- McLean crediting the Vancouver fans for the
Game 5 victory.
• Listen
- Pat Quinn on round three.
With the New York Rangers and New Jersey Devils
taking the Eastern Final to seven games, the
Canucks once again played the waiting game.
In the meantime, Vancouver was a buzz with
Stanley Cup Fever. The Rangers prevailed
in seven games and the Stanley Cup Finals began
on May 31 at Madison Square Garden. The
Canucks were clearly the "other team"
in this series. The Rangers were prepared
to end "The Curse" which had prevented
them from winning the Cup since 1940 and the
Canucks were the sacrificial lamb.
• Listen
- Opening ceremony for Game 1 of the Stanley Cup
Finals in New York.
The Rangers held the margin in play through 40
minutes of Game 1, but stellar netminding by
Kirk McLean kept the score 1-0. Early in
the third, Bret Hedican scored his first goal as
a Canuck to tie the game, but the Rangers
started pressing again immediately after and
regained the lead not long afterward. The
assault on McLean continued as the Rangers went
for the kill, but he was showing no cracks in
the armor. Finally, with a minute to play,
Martin Gelinas took a shot at Mike Richter that
appeared to be a routine glove save, but the
Ranger keeper couldn't find a handle on it and
it got tangled in his pads before falling into
the net.
• Listen
- Canucks tie the game 2-2 with a minute left in
regulation.
Undaunted, the Rangers were determined to win in
overtime, and continued the bombardment on the
Canucks, but by now McLean was having the game
of his career. In the last minute, the
Rangers were putting enormous pressure on and,
sensing the kill, Brian Leetch pinched in from
the point to take a shot on goal. The puck
rang off the crossbar and bounced to Gerald
Diduck, who moved the puck up to Pavel Bure.
With Leetch trapped in the zone, Bure was able
to chip the puck out to the neutral zone,
sending Cliff Ronning and Greg Adams away
two-on-one. At the New York blueline
Ronning passed over to Adams, who one-timed a
shot at the net. The puck sailed by the
outstretched glove of Richter and just inside
the post.
• Listen
- Greg Adams puts it by Mike Richter for an
overtime victory in Game 1.
For the second game in a row, Adams was the hero
in overtime. But the real hero on the
night was McLean, who made 52 saves and clearly
stole Game 1 from the clutches of the Rangers,
giving the Vancouver Canucks their first ever
win in the Stanley Cup Finals. "I've
never seen a goalie put on a display like that
in my life," Trevor Linden would later say.
"Never."
• Listen
- Pat Quinn and Rangers coach Mike Keenan
commenting on Kirk McLean's stellar Game 1
performance.
• Listen
- Trevor Linden on Game 2.
Game 2 was played more conservatively than Game
1, and this time it was Richter's turn to get
the lucky bounces, as the Canucks hit iron
behind him three times. Ex-Canuck Doug Lidster
scored the winning goal in the second period
after McLean received a bump from a New York
forward that was not penalized. The final
score was 3-1 and the series moved west tied.
The jubilant towel-waving fans at the Pacific
Coliseum were ready for Game 3 and were brought
out of their seats when Pavel Bure picked up the
puck off of the opening faceoff and danced
through the entire New York starting lineup
before depositing the puck behind Richter.
The Canucks outshot the Rangers 7-1 in the first
15 minutes, but the one Ranger shot was a goal.
With the score tied 1-1, Pavel Bure was assessed
a major penalty for high-sticking and a Game
Misconduct.
• Listen
- Pavel Bure ejected from Game 3.
Less than a minute later, Glenn Anderson scored
to give the Rangers a 2-1 lead and the route was
on. The final score was 5-1.
• Listen
- Kirk McLean misplays the puck, Quinn reacts on
Game 3.
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Pavel Bure was stoned by New York's
Mike Richter during a penalty shot in
Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Finals.
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In Game 4, Trevor Linden and Cliff Ronning
gave the Canucks a 2-0 first period lead.
With the score 2-1 in the second period, Bure
attempted to restore the two-goal cushion but
was pulled down from behind on a breakaway by
Brian Leetch. On the ensuing Penalty Shot,
Bure attempted the same move he had used to beat
Mike Vernon in the first round, but Richter
managed to jam his pad against the post and Bure
ran out of room.
• Listen
- Pavel Bure stoned by Mike Richter on a penalty
shot.
Sergei Zubov scored on a howitzer from the point
at 19:38 of the middle frame to tie the score.
In the third, Alexei Kovalev scored at 15:05 to
give the Rangers the lead, and then in the dying
minutes Steve Larmer's shot from center-ice hit
Dave Babych and caught McLean going the wrong
way. Leetch had scored the first Ranger
goal and assisted on the other three. The
Canucks had blown a two-goal lead and now
trailed 3-1 heading back to New York.
• Listen
- Clips of Canucks goals from Game 4.
• Listen
- Alexei Kovalev scores the Game 4 winning goal
for New York.
It was coronation night in the Big Apple on June
9. The Rangers were going to win the
Stanley Cup at home, ending "The
Curse". Scalpers were selling rinkside
seats for $5,000 a pop.
• Listen
- Rangers fans ready to celebrate Cup victory
prior to Game 5.
Esa Tikkanen appeared to give the Rangers an
early lead, but a controversial offside call by
linesman Kevin Collins negated it. Jeff
Brown gave the Canucks a 1-0 lead in the second
period, and the lead was preserved after the
team was able to kill of a five minute major to
Geoff Courtnall for viciously elbowing Sergei
Zubov in the head. Courtnall remained in
the game, however, and the stage was set for a
wild and crazy third period. Courtnall got
things started at the 16 second mark and then
Pavel Bure had his rebound knocked by Leetch
into his own net at 2:45 to make it 3-0.
The series appeared headed back to Vancouver for
sure, but the Rangers weren't finished.
Lidster made it 3-1, Larmer made it 3-2, and
Mark Messier on his patented off-wing, off-leg
wrist shot made it 3-3 at 9:04.
• Listen
- Canucks establishing a commanding 3-0 lead in
Game 5.
• Listen
- Rangers storming back to tie the game at 3-3
in just six minutes.
Suddenly, the game had been turned around and
the Rangers appeared ready to hoist the Cup that
night. The Garden was rocking and the fans
were chanting, "We Want the Cup."
But while they were celebrating, the Canucks
broke in three-on-two and Bure fed Babych, who
beat Richter between the wickets to restore the
lead.
• Listen
- Dave Babych regaining the Vancouver lead just
29 seconds after the 3-3 Rangers goal.
As former Canucks coach and GM and current
Hockey Night In Canada analyst Harry Neale
described it, "This has become an East-West
game and the defense for both teams think
they're playing for the North and the
South." D Alexei Karpovtsev got a
breakaway and McLean made a great save to keep
the Canucks ahead. Then Courtnall and Bure
each scored their second goals of the night to
round out the scoring. Bure's goal made it
eight in 12:48, a Stanley Cup record. The
Canucks had crashed the party in a big way, and
would now go home to try to extend the series to
a seventh game.
• Listen
- Geoff Courtnall and Pavel Bure score for a 6-3
Canuck win over the Rangers.
• Listen
- Mike Keenan on New York's Game 5 effort.
The crowd at Pacific Coliseum was ready for the
game on June 11 and so were the Canucks.
In the first minute, Shawn Antoski plastered
Jeff Beukeboom into the boards and then hustled
to negate an icing call. Brian Leetch, who
had been given too much room earlier in the
series, was getting hammered all through the
first period. When he responded by
tackling Gelinas to the ice, he went to the box.
Linden won the faceoff back to Brown, who rifled
a shot over Richter's right shoulder to give the
Canucks a 1-0 lead. It was the only goal
the Canucks scored on 14 first period shots.
Eight minutes into the second period, a poor
play by Jyrki Lumme resulted in a three-on-one
Ranger break. Glenn Anderson rang one off
the crossbar, but video replay was needed to
confirm that it did not go in. Shortly
afterward, Courtnall finished a pretty passing
play by backhanding one through Richter that
barely dribbled over the line before being
pulled out. Once again replay was used,
and once again the Rangers didn't like the
result. With C John McIntyre in the box
for goaltender interference, Kovalev's pass hit
Murray Craven and deflected by McLean to make it
a 2-1 game after 40 minutes. With little
more than eight minutes to play, Brown scored
another goal on yet another bullet from the
point. The Vancouver fans began chanting,
"We Want the Cup". With the
score 3-1 and under two minutes to play,
Courtnall appeared to give the Canucks a 4-1
lead, but play continued. With the Canuck
players flustered, Anderson found Messier at the
side of the net and he converted to make it 3-2
at 19:01. But the Canucks and 16,150 of
their towel-waving supporters thought Courtnall
had scored, and referee Bill McCreary decided to
check upstairs. Sure enough, Courtnall's
backhander had hit the back crossbar and bounced
out. The goal was counted and the ensuing
34 seconds (which included Messier's goal) was
stricken from the record. The clock ran
down and the Canucks had once again won
back-to-back games on the brink of elimination
to force a seventh game. Arthur
Griffiths called Game 6 "the greatest game
ever played at the Pacific Coliseum."
Nobody who watched the game would disagree.
• Listen
- The last minute of Game 6.
• Listen
- Last 20 seconds of Game 6.
• Listen
- Geoff Courtnall and Trevor Linden on the eve
of Game 7.
Three nights later, on June 14, only the second
Game 7 of a Stanley Cup Final in the past 23
years was played. Murray Craven had been
in this situation before as a member of the
Flyers in 1987, and he was determined to win
this time. But the Canucks came out flat
and fell behind 2-0 after 20 minutes.
• Listen
- Rangers open scoring in Game 7.
Leetch scored with McLean out of position and
Steve Larmer scored his first goal of the series
on the power-play after referee Terry Gregson
made a bewildering holding call against Lumme.
In the second period, with the Canucks
short-handed and a delayed penalty coming up
against the Rangers, Trevor Linden fought
through the entire Ranger team and scored to
bring life back to the Vancouver bench. But
late in the period, on another Ranger
power-play, Messier managed to force the puck
across the goal line in a scramble to restore
his team's two-goal advantage heading into the
final period.
• Listen
- Mark Messier gives the Rangers a 3-1 lead on a
powerplay goal.
The Canucks now had nothing to hold back for and
they came hard at Richter in the third period,
forcing the Rangers into a penalty. On the
power-play, Courtnall made a perfect pass to
Linden at the side of the net, who swept the
puck in to make it a 3-2 game at 4:50.
• Listen
- Trevor Linden cuts down the Ranger lead to 3-2
at the start of the 3rd.
The rest of the game would be a wild scramble
for the tying goal played mostly in the New York
end of the rink. The Canucks had several
glorious chances, but Richter was at the very
top of his game. What he didn't stop hit
iron. Nathan LaFayette hit the goalpost
with under three minutes to play. It came
down to a faceoff to Richter's right with 1.6
seconds to play.
• Listen
- Vancouver pressing hard to tie the game at 3-3
with just five minutes on the clock.
• Listen
- Just seconds remaining in the game, Vancouver
and New York face off.
A shot right of the draw was the Canucks only
hope, but Messier won the draw, the puck went
into the corner, and the Rangers had ended
"the Curse" and won their first
Stanley Cup since 1940. The Canucks had
fallen short by the slightest of margins, and
taken all of their fans with them on an
emotional rollercoaster that had lasted for two
months. It came to an end that night, but
no one who lived though it will ever forget it.
While a riot broke out in the city's downtown
that night, the real Canucks fans (tens of
thousands strong) waited at Vancouver
International Airport until 5:40 the next
morning for their heroes to return and gave them
a thunderous reception. On June 16, 50,000
fans came out to BC Place to honor the Canucks
one more time. Surely next year's
celebration would be even bigger and there would
be an additional piece of hardware present at
the festivities.
• Listen
- Trevor Linden's comments after the Canucks
lose the Cup in Game 7.
• Listen
- Sergio Momesso's post-game comments.
• Listen
- Pat Quinn's final comments as Canucks coach.
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