Anatomy of a Turnaround: the 1989-90 Maple Leafs

by on April 26, 2009 in Leafs History - 515 Comments

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Excitement abounds these days in the streets of Toronto, as a long-overdue rebuilding effort for the Toronto Maple Leafs, and the prospect of a revitalized franchise, moves into high gear.

Arguably the last successful revitalization of the Maple Leafs franchise occurred in the early 1990s, when in the span of three seasons the Leafs went from basement-dwellers to Stanley Cup contenders.  Although many are quick to credit then-GM Cliff Fletcher’s 1992 mega-deal with the Calgary Flames as the key turning point for the franchise, the groundwork for the franchise’s rapid acceleration from pretender to contender actually began much earlier … in the 1989-90 season, to be exact.

In 1989, Floyd Smith became the General Manager of a miserable Maple Leafs squad, one which had considerable offensive talent but couldn’t keep the puck out of their own net.  Although Smith will forever be remembered for the ill-fated decision to acquire Tom Kurvers for the first-round pick that turned out to be Scott Neidermeyer, he did in fact lay the groundwork for the massive success the team would experience just three years down the road.

During the previous season (1988-89) under Gord Stellick’s short-lived tenure as GM, the Maple Leafs finished 28-46-6, good enough for 62 points and the division-bottom finish Maple Leafs fans had become oh-so-accustomed to throughout the 1980s.  But with Stellick leaving for the New York Rangers and Smith assuming his post, change was in the air.

As the 1989-90 season progressed, the light went on for several of the Leafs’ players.  Gary Leeman scored 51 goals.  Daniel Marois added 39, and Vincent Damphousse and Ed Olczyk knocked in 33 and 32 respectively.  Al Iafrate scored 21 from the blueline, and Tom Kurvers (yes, that Tom Kurvers) added 15 in the only season in which he looked to be worth the first-round pick that was exchanged for him.   The Leafs finished 38-38-4 and made the playoffs, a remarkable turnaround from the previous season.  The  accomplishment was all the more astounding given that Wendel Clark played in only 38 games due to injury.

Early into the 1990-91 season, the newly-raised hopes of Leafs fans were rapidly deflating as nearly every player struggled to match his previous season, some to a greater degree than others.   As rumours of serious locker-room discord began to circulate, Smith set in motion a course of action to inject more grit and leadership in his lineup in the hopes of righting a sinking ship.

Under Smith’s guidance, 1990-91 was a season of trades for the Maple Leafs which would ultimately lay the foundation for the team’s great success in the near future.  Among his many wheelings and dealings, the following moves would pay huge dividends for the Maple Leafs’ rise to playoff contender:

  • Drafted goaltender Felix Potvin in the second round of the 1990 entry draft.
  • A 3rd round draft pick was sent to Philadelphia to re-acquire tough guy Kevin McGuire, along with an 8th round pick that would later be used to draft offensive defenceman Dmitri Mironov.
  • Utility forward John McIntyre was sent to Los Angeles for hard-hitting veteran Mike Krushelnyski.
  • Checking forward Lou Franceschetti and defender Brian Curran were sent to Buffalo for Mike Foligno and an 8th round pick.
  • In a move to add skill on the blueline and grit up front, high-scoring Ed Olczyk and dependable forward Mark Osborne were traded for under-rated defenseman Dave Ellett and veteran checker Paul Fenton.
  • Talented-but-inconsistent Al Iafrate was traded to Washington for defensive stalwart Bob Rouse, and faceoff specialist Peter Zezel.
  • 1st-round bust Scott Pearson and a second round pick were dealt to Quebec for forwards Lucien DeBlois and Aaron Broten, as well as defenseman Michel Petit.

Although Smith’s deals did nothing to increase the star power of the Maple Leafs, what they did do was set the foundation of leadership, grit, and solid defensive play (Foligno, Krushelnyski, Zezel, Ellett, Rouse, Mironov) that was to become the backbone of the team’s success in the near future.

Unfortunately, the slumps incurred by young guns Leeman, Marois and Damphousse, as well as the absence of goaltending depth (Stellick amazingly traded Ken Wregget for two first round picks … which unfortunately turned into Rob Pearson and Steve Bancroft), took its toll and the Leafs would finish in the basement once more.

Exit Floyd Smith, enter Cliff Fletcher.

With a solid core of veteran leadership now in place, The Silver Fox could focus solely on improving the skill level of his club.  As the Maple Leafs teetered toward yet another last-in-the-division finish, rife with lacklustre performances from the youthful players that had served them so well only two seasons before, Fletcher began to take action.

From 1991 to 1992, Fletcher would make the following key moves:

  • Drafted Dmitri Mironov in the 8th round of the 1991 entry draft.
  • Before the ’91-’92 season even began, made his mark by sending fan favorite Vincent Damphousse, along with young goaltender Peter Ing, first-round bust Scott Thornton, and struggling defenseman Luke Richardson to the Edmonton Oilers for tough guy Craig Berube, and two legends you may have heard of:  Glenn Anderson and Grant Fuhr.
  • Midway through the season, Fletcher constructed what would turn out to be the hallmark trade of his career.  Somehow, Fletcher convinced Calgary GM Doug Risebrough that Gary Leeman’s 51-goal season two years’ prior was no fluke.  Convinced that he was trading a second-line centre for a first-line winger, Risebrough sent Doug Gilmour, Kent Manderville, Jamie Macoun, Ric Nattress, and goaltender Rick Wamsley to Toronto for Gary Leeman, Craig Berube, Alexander Godynuk, Michel Petit, and goaltender Jeff Reese.  I think we all know how well that deal worked out … for both sides.
  • Two months later, Fletcher gave up on the rapidly-declining Daniel Marois, sending he and Claude Loiselle to the New York Islanders in exchange for two forwards: defensive-specialist Dave McLlwain and tough guy Ken Baumgartner (who came with the added advantage of being able to play on the blueline when necessary).
  • The same day, Fletcher sent Lucien DeBlois to the Winnipeg Jets to re-acquire speedy winger Mark Osborne.

Unfortunately, turnarounds do not happen overnight, and the amount of roster turnover combined with an overall lack of scoring punch resulted in the Leafs once again claiming their usual place among the bottom-dwellers of the league.  But hope was just around the corner in the form of Doug Gilmour’s inspired play, new head coach Pat Burns, and one more major move up The Silver Fox’s sleeve.

In 1992-93, just three short years after Floyd Smith began to overhaul the core of those terrible teams of the 1980s, the fruits of the Smith/Fletcher labour began to pay off.   Fletcher continued to tweak the roster, drafting Russian sniper Nikolai Borschevsky in the 4th round, sending a third round pick to Montreal for blueline stalwart Sylvain Lefebvre, establishing a scoring presence on the second line by getting John Cullen from Hartford for a song (future 2nd round pick that didn’t pan out), and claiming dependable grinder Bill Berg off waivers from the New York Islanders.

Midway through the season, with Gilmour on a tear and up-and-coming goaltender Felix Potvin making a bid for full-time NHL duty, Fletcher made a bold move on par with the lopsided Calgary deal of the previous year. Trusting young Potvin to take command of the job in net,  Fletcher fleeced the Buffalo Sabres by sending the legendary Grant Fuhr (along with a 6th round pick) for high-scoring winger Dave Andreychuk, backup goaltender Daren Puppa, and a first round pick that would eventually become future Leafs’ defenseman Kenny Jonsson.

These would prove to be all the moves Toronto would need to make, as they would make the playoffs with ease and eventually come within one game of the Stanley Cup Final.

The following season, in 1993-94, Fletcher took a relative break from trade activity, with the only major roster move being the trade of Glenn Anderson for the equally-talented Mike Gartner.  Unfortunately, the Leafs would bow out once more in the third round of the playoffs.

Although questionable managerial decisions would ultimately dismantle the core of those 1992 – 94 teams, there was little doubt that the days of the Toronto Maple Laughs were no more, and that the passion for a championship had been re-invigorated in a city that had nearly lost the faith.

The Maple Leafs would remain a playoff contender throughout most of the 1990s and into the early 2000s by holding true to the Smith/Fletcher early-90s philosophy of establishing a foundation of grit, leadership, and solid defensive play.   In the following decade, from 1994-95 until the 2004 NHL lockout, the Maple Leafs would only miss the playoffs twice, and would twice more reach the Conference Finals (1999, 2002).

Maple Leafs fans today have reason to be excited.   Although the team has missed the playoffs in each season following the lockout, new hope is on the horizon with a management group that is committed to building through the draft, and a General Manager in Brian Burke who firmly believes in the philosophy of putting in place a foundation of grit, leadership and defensive acumen to support his skill players.   Once again, the future looks bright in Leaf Nation.

So why was 1989-90 the key season to the Leafs’ early-90s success?

The deals with Winnipeg, Calgary, and Edmonton simply would not have happened without the types of seasons Olcyck, Leeman, and Damphousse enjoyed during the 1989-90 campaign.  Each played a key role in carrying what looked like a lousy team on paper to a surprising .500 record and into the playoffs, success which caused rival GMs to take notice of the Leafs’ young talent.  Smith was able to parlay Olcyck’s solid 32-goal year into a much-needed top-pairing defenseman in Ellett, and Fletcher was able to turn Leeman’s sole 51-goal campaign into the steal of the century in Gilmour … a year and a half after the fact.  As for Damphousse, his great play, and the leadership he demonstrated in the absence of Wendel Clark, had Edmonton willing to offer up Grant Fuhr as part of the Anderson deal. Which, of course, ultimately led to Dave Andreychuk donning the blue and white.

Top ten scorers from 1989-90 season, and players from the 1992 – 94 teams for which they were exchanged:

1. Gary Leeman (Gilmour, Manderville, Macoun, Nattress)
2. Vincent Damphouse (Fuhr –> Andreychuk, Anderson –> Gartner)
3. Ed Olczyk (Dave Ellett)
4. Daniel Marois (Ken Baumgartner, Dave McLlwain)
5. Mark Osborne (part of the Dave Ellett deal, later re-acquired)
6. Al Iafrate (Peter Zezel, Bob Rouse)
7. Tom Kurvers (Brian Bradley –> lost in expansion draft, 1992)
8. Rob Ramage (lost in expansion draft, 1991)
9. Tom Fergus (traded for cash)
10. Lou Franceschetti (Mike Foligno)

Seven out of the top ten scorers on that surprising 1989-90 Maple Leafs squad were traded for players who ultimately played key roles in one or both of the Leafs’ 1992-93 and 1993-94 near-championships.  Further, three key players on those teams were drafted between 1990 and 1992: Felix Potvin (1990), Dmitri Mironov (1991), and Nikolai Borschevsky (1992).

(Slick Nik’s Game 7 OT tip-in against Detroit in ’93 remains to this day one of the most memorable Leaf playoff goals ever. For those who don’t remember the goal, and those who want to relive it, here it is.)

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  • the Surreal McCoy

    great blog Garrett. i have no doubt that BB and RW will have the Buds back in contention in a few short years as well. this is going to be a very exciting summer!

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  • John Lake

    thought it was Stellick who got the 2 firsts from Philly for Wregett

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  • daniel marois

    “Two months later, Fletcher gave up on the rapidly-declining Daniel Marois,”
    Wow, I guess it would be appropriate for me to comment on this particular Leafs team ;)

    @ Garrett Bauman

    First off, yes it was Gord Stellick did make the Wregget deal. In fact, because of that trade, the Leafs has a unheard of THREE picks in the first round of the 1989 draft. Don’t need to re-hash how badly they chose in that draft, but give Stellick credit for that deal as he had to wipe the stench away from the Courtnall-Kordic deal.

    Daniel Marois, Damphouuse and Gilles Thibadeau formed a great ‘French Connection’ line for Toronto during that season. I loved watching the the Leafs that year as they could outscore their opponents and were tough and could fight with the best of them with guys like Wendel Clark, Brian Curran, Scott Pearson, etc.

    Give him credit, Fletcher did a fantastic job moving out the dead weight and making small moves in his second season like signing Sylvain Lefebre as a free agent, picking up Bill Berg offf waivers and trading for John Cullen for a second round pick.
    But it can be said that the last player the Leafs drafted who turned into an effective NHL scorer was Damphousse. That was in 1986. That is A LONG TIME. Yes, they did draft Brad Boyes but he never played in a Leafs uniform. At least Damphousse played a few seasons in the blue and white before becoming the key piece in the Leafs being able to acquire Grant Fuhr.

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  • Lee

    Garrett,

    I love this blog post. It’s a great way to gain perspective as to where we were, and where we are headed once again.

    Should be fun.

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  • Garrett Bauman

    Thanks for the correction, guys. You’re right, that was Stellick’s move. For some reason I had in mind it was 1990 that Wregget got traded, but it was in fact 1989. Will correct the post shortly.

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  • Garrett Bauman
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  • daniel marois

    @ Garrett

    It can be argued that it is all the more reason for the Leafs this year to draft the top (best) forward they can in the first round of the 2990 Draft. You can’t count on being able to draft in the top 5 for 2-3 years in a row.

    Leafs back then were fortunate enough to draft Wendel Clark in the ’85 draft and Damphousse in ’86. That is two pretty good forwards to build your team around. Keep in mind, Damphousse was a pretty damn good skilled forward to boot.

    After drafting a defensive-defenceman in Schenn, Burke must try and get one of Duchene, Kane and MSP as they are the highest-rated skilled forwards in the draft. Brayden Schenn is good, but maybe not as highlt skilled as those other forwards.

    Remember when Floyd Smith traded away that first rounder (Scott Neidermyer) to the Devils in 1991? Leafs didn’t draft till the 3rd round that year when they got Yanic Perrault. Arguably a skilled-forward, he was just not consistent enough to be an elite forward in the NHL. Then in 1992 they drafted a bust of a first rounder in Brandon Convery. One of Fletcher’s few bad moves in the early 1990s.

    No doubt that ’89-90 team did help in providing Fletcher some pieces to build around Gilmour, but you are right, that 89-90 team had horrible goaltending. It was only because of the offence that year that saved the netminding on many nights. I was always a fan of Bester. Who could forget when he single-handedly got the Leafs in the playoffs on the final night of the regular season in 1987-88. Leafs were down 3-0 in the first period to Detroit and Brophy pulled Wregget in favour of Bester and Leafs stormed back to win 5-3 and move past the Minnesota North Stars for the final playoff spot in the Norris Division.

    But Bester, along with La Forest and Ing, were a sore note for the Leafs in 89-90, as they could have moved past St.Louis in the first round that year in the playoffs, had they provided adeqaute goaltending. But that team really lacked the gritty players that were so integral to the Leafs playoff run in 1993.

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  • Roacho

    The JFJ era was terribly frustrating. I look forward to seeing BB make some positive moves to make us forget about that dreadful era in Maple Leafs history. I hope the days of MLSE meddling in the roster moves are over. Fletcher tore the team down as best as he could, now this is Burke’s team to build.

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  • Garrett Bauman

    @Marois:
    Absolutely. It’s time for the Maple Leafs to inject some skill up front. For all the talk about Burke liking larger, more physical players, people tend to forget that his comments in that regard have always been pointed toward the checking units of his teams. In Vancouver, he drafted skill players in the Sedins, and in Anaheim, he signed (and kept an open spot for) Teemu Selanne. So there is definitely room, in his vision of a successful Leaf franchise, for a few skill players who may not happen to be power forwards (e.g. Duchene, Schroeder, etc).
    .
    As for Perreault, consistency wasn’t the issue so much as his skating was. Had he been more fleet of foot, who knows what numbers he could have put up? That said, he did have a lengthy NHL career once he adapted his game into that of a defensively-responsible faceoff specialist.
    .
    @Roacho:
    Simply put, JFJ moved away from the proven philosophy of maintaining a core of grit, leadership and defensive responsibility. He tried to build a team comprised mainly of offensively-minded skill players (not unlike the ’80s teams I might add), and it simply did not work. Some guys got old, but for the most part the defensive effort was simply not there. As Kyle Wellwood recently pointed out, many of the players were more interested in padding their own stats than doing what was necessary for the team to be successful. Say what you will about some of Wellwood’s recent remarks about his time in Toronto (the “not getting a fair shake” bit was crap), but he was bang on the money with the reference to the selfishness and lack of heart that persisted on those teams.
    .
    Remember Cliff Fletcher’s comments last offseason, when he suggested the first priority was to get rid of the country club atmosphere? He was referring to exactly what Wellwood was talking about.
    .
    Not that Wellwood was any saint in that regard, mind you … his commentary was kind of like the pot calling the kettle black. But, at least SOMEONE had the nerve to finally say it.

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  • Garrett Bauman

    @Marois:
    That influx of grit which was so essential to the Leafs’ playoff runs in 1993 and 1994 should ideally be the lasting legacy of Floyd Smith. Sure, he had a lousy win % as GM, but look at the team he inherited. The truth is, he is simply not given enough credit for laying the foundation upon which Fletcher was able to build his teams. However, that trade for Tom Kurvers understandably overshadows everything else.
    .
    What I’m saying is, if Stellick’s trade of Wregget can earn him somewhat of a reprieve for the Courtnall-Kordic swap (which is actually a great example of how Harold Ballard liked to run the show – the deal was made at his insistence), then surely Smith instilling the philosophy of building a team around grit and sound defensive play can catch him a bit of a break, also. Yeah, it was a bad trade. But when you look at the influence carried forward by the players he did acquire, and the team-building philosophy he instilled (one shared by Fletcher) … the guy wasn’t as awful a GM as many would have you believe.

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  • JMAC

    @ Garrett Bauman

    Dont forget that Antropov came out and commented on the lack of comraderey (spelling?) in Toronto. He said he could believe how tight the Rangers were when he got there.

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  • http://mapleleafhotstove trevor price

    with those 3 first , who couls they have picked up that went on to star in the nhl?

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  • http://mapleleafhotstove trevor price

    could

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  • CarltontheBear

    @trevor price

    The first round of that draft was a dud after the first overall which was Mats Sundin. The next best player was 5th overall, Bill Guerin, then 19th overall Olaf Kolzig,

    In the second round Adam Foote went 22nd overall. Niklas Lidstrom went 53rd overall in the 3rd round, along with Kris Draper at 62nd. Sergei Fedorov 74th in the 4th round, Pavel Bure 113th in the 6th round, Vladimir Konstantinov 221st in the 11th round.

    So you can see that the first round didn’t exactly produce much whereas the later rounds produced some gems, particularly for the Red Wings.

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  • http://mapleleafhotstove trevor price

    so then would you say that stelick probably picked the right guys even though they didn’t pan out. my whole point is that it seems the leafs always get lambasted for their draft picks, even though most of the league would have picked the same players.

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  • Blue Max

    On an unrelated note, White is moving to playing forward for one game at the Worlds. I think Ruff has a very good idea about White’s versatility as a player, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Buffalo was one of the teams offering up a second for him, before they turned it over for Moore anyway.

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  • hockey_guru

    People say detroit gets all their gems from drafting, which is true to an extent. Where Detroit is really good is developing their young prospects… I guarantee Zetterberg and Datsyuk wouldn’t be as good as they are today if they were drafted elsewhere.

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  • Roacho

    @hockey_guru
    I don’t agree with you. Why wouldn’t Zetterberg and Datsyuk be stars on other teams. Not because Detroit’s a managerial juggernaut that other teams wouldn’t have brought these guys along the same way. I give that franchise full credit for the success that they have, but I find many have the halo effect on them when making general comments such as this one. In fairness to these two players I think their abilities as athletes would have brought them the personal success they currently enjoy regardless of where they would’ve started their careers.

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  • JMAC

    @ Raocho

    I agree with you..somewhat.

    I think you have to assume that being surrounded by the “Detroit” culture has an impact on their development. Winning is learned…and these guys learned from the best…Yzerman….Lidstrom…Shannahan…ect….

    I have to think that the consistancey and level of professionalism Detroit players show is a learned trait…and would agree to a point that they would not be the some players they are today if they were rookies on a team like Toronto.

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  • JMAC

    forgot to mention the best of all…Scott Bowman

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  • taterchips

    Great blog! It brings up a lot of fun memories. Detroit was such a bruising team, and watching the tiny Borschevsky put the winner in in front of the net was such a brilliant moment as a Leaf fan…and of course his interview afterwards.
    .
    I still remember the Foligno broken leg incident as well.
    .
    Such great years as a Leaf’s fan, especially after living through the Ballard years and all the terrible teams of the 80s. Thank God we’re going in the right direction again.

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  • http://TheScore.ca Darrell Tobin

    How about Dougie coming out from behind the net and jamming it past Cujo in O.T. I still get goosebumps thinking about it.

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  • hockey_guru

    @ roacho

    I know they would be good players, but I don’t think they would be winners like they are in Detroit. A winning atmosphere and a proper development go a long way. Look at Tlusty, he was a mess last year at points trying to stay up in the league, but he has found his way in the AHL. Detroit doesn’t hurry prospects and patiently develops them.

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  • the Surreal McCoy

    one game i’ll never forget is from the Hound Line/French Connection era, and it took place in Detroit. it was the second game of a home-and-home. after a rough first game, Detroit, besides having (the Booze Brothers) Probert and Kocur, called up another tough kid from the minors. (?)Toronto followed suit, backing up Kordic and Clark with their own young gun – a kid by the name of Tie Domi. by the end of the third period, there were something like 7 or 8 Leaf players left on the bench. even Gilles Thibadeau and Daniel Marois got ejected for fighting. don’t know if anyone else would remember that one, but it was a classic..

    oh, and the “Gartner stick incident”. that was awesome..

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  • Roacho

    @hockey_guru
    I see what you mean, yeah Detroit really does have the luxury of having a deep lineup. Hopefully Toronto will continue drafting well and often, cause it’s so important to have a solid farm system. The goal shouldn’t only be to make the NHL playoffs, but to succeed at the AHL rank as well. I think Burke gets this and shows the desire to build this team the right way.
    ~
    I think it was JMAC that said it, but Bowman did have a major impact as well on that franchise. Detroit’s the envy of the league and it’s reasonable to want to emulate their managerial team, it’s comforting to know that in Toronto that type of system is finally in place, hopefully Nonis wants to stay in the fold, cause I think he’s equally a part of this as Burke is. I’m just happy to stop hearing that idiot Richard Peddie talk. When it comes to hockey, he really needs to butt out.
    ~
    As for Tlusty, I think he was handled well this year. Although it’s hard to tell what kind of player he can become, I think he was given a fighting chance has shown brilliance at the AHL level this season which is a great sign.

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