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Reflections of Kansas: Gameday experience and more

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Let me preface this by saying Kansas knows their stadium is subpar. It was originally built in 1921 and didn't get permanent lights until 1997. This is the final year of this version of the stadium - it will be undergo a complete two-year $300M overhaul beginning this offseason.

You can learn more about the plans here at KUGatewayDistrict.com.

That being said, it was pretty bad, probably the worst I've seen at the Power Five level. But it wasn't just the stadium structure itself.

It has an outdated, small video board with poor resolution - everywhere I've looked said it was installed in 1999. I can believe it. But the placement is terrible as it is low to the ground. KU has limited premium seating and installed a temporary setup in that end zone, which obscures the view, the severity depending on where you are.

But the stuff they can control was also fairly lackluster.

The atmosphere outside the stadium was pretty light, which could be more symptomatic of the stadium placement. It's adjacent to campus on one side and a residential neighborhood on the other. Most of the tailgating was taking place in front of nearby homes. I walked the circumference of the stadium and "The Hill" but didn't venture deeper into campus on gameday. So maybe some of the activity was further out.

There is a "Hawk Walk" prior to the game - the team is dropped off by the tower and they walk down the hill to the stadium. It's a much longer distance compared to Knight Walk, so it spreads out the crowd pretty significantly. UCF has the benefit of stadium speakers which amplifies the fight song. KU doesn't have a similar capability, so the walk itself is fairly quiet.

The pregame, team intro and in-game production was lacking, at least in terms of entertainment and encouraging enthusiasm. The sound system is also pretty bad. Most of the timeouts were basically sponsorship commercials. The stadium announcer left a lot to be desired - just sort of lethargic (keep in mind I'm probably partial to the EK types).

For all the bitching people do about Frankie Valli, it was way better than anything KU had going song-wise which was mostly a loop of Zombie Nation (including an instrumental version) and Jump Around. Students barely reacted to the music, except for a handful of those maybe in the first few rows.

It doesn't help that KU has some odd traditions which to an outsider appears to deflate noise/excitement. When KU scores, instead of cheering and screaming, they all go quiet and wave their arms in the air. It's all in the Sights & Sounds video.

The atmosphere left a lot to be desired. Maybe it was like UCF fans vs. Baylor, the KU lead just sort of discouraged people from getting too excited and amped up to be loud. It might also be because KU doesn't have much of a successful football tradition.

The first few rows of the stadium are basically ground level, so visibility is poor. But it also allows one to be fairly close to the team benches. The most original heckling came from a few shirtless students who were yelling to UCF players, "Go back to the American, you are G5!," and "Group of Five! Group of Five!"

The UCF crowd was pretty small, mostly limited to player families. I give props to the "Go Knights, Charge On!" guy who was present when the team arrived - he and Terry Mohajir might have been the only people who seemed to have energy at the game.

The game obviously meant a lot to Mohajir - he got a graduate degree from KU, was on the football coaching staff as a GA in the mid 1990s and later returned as an Assoc. AD (prior to becoming Arkansas State AD). He met his wife at KU and his daughter is currently a dancer there.

The energy has seemed a bit off/weird since Baylor. I know that's a vague thing to say, but it's been repeated to me by others who felt the same. Just a going through the motions type of deal. Obviously, we're not seeing what's happening behind closed doors in the locker room, but you'd think there would have been more of a reaction when UCF got punched in the mouth.

Someone who watched the game directly behind the team bench said he noticed only one player trying to rally the troops - which was safety Jireh Wilson (ECU transfer).

I don't know if it was a hangover from Baylor or offensively the decision to go with JRP only to see him exit a couple plays in (and then return later) - I'd have to think that was probably a bit jarring in regards to the offense - but everything seemed off.

One narrative I don't really agree with - and I'm sure the coaching staff would agree - is lowering expectations in attempt to make excuses for poor play.

UCF thought they had a team capable of competing in the Big 12 - this year. That doesn't necessarily mean winning the championship, but they felt they had the talent and depth to make a run. The margin for error is slim in this league, one reason why Gus harped on practicing "end of game scenarios" so much in the preseason.

While 8-4 to 10-2 may have been overly optimistic given the uncertainties in moving up a level especially considering JRP hasn't been healthy, I'm sort of bewildered by those excusing the ability to compete with Kansas because "they've been P5 and have been recruiting at a P5 level for years."

If UCF gets run off the field by Oklahoma, that's totally understandable if not expected. But Kansas? Who didn't even have their star quarterback?

This is a program that went 9-51 in the six years (2015-2020) prior to Lance Leipold's arrival - I could have gone back further and it would have been just as bad. They were 0-9 in 2020.

Leipold was hired on April 30, 2021 and didn't even have a spring practice to get acclimated. They went 2-10 in 2021, had a big 6-7 turnaround in 2022 and obviously off to a great start this year (5-1 and ranked No. 23 in AP Poll).

Give Leipold and KU credit for what they've done, but "on paper" UCF has been out-recruiting Kansas (or K-State or Baylor) whether it was HS or transfer recruiting. UCF has also known for two-plus years they were Big 12-bound. We don't have publicly-available numbers to prove/disprove, but I'd think UCF's NIL structure is either on par or surpasses KU (in football).

Interestingly, I always felt Leipold could have been UCF bound at one point. Danny White hired him at Buffalo from Wisconsin-Whitewater. If Danny White stayed and Heupel had been hired away by another school, I always felt DW's first call would have been to Leipold.

Anyway, it's okay to call something a turd sandwich - and that game against KU definitely was. In all facets.

As for the issues, there are many. After the beatdown at KU, this bye week comes at a great time in terms of self-scouting. As we all know, the run defense has been horrid, giving up record-breaking type yardage to K-State and KU. K-State RB DJ Giddens was the National RB of the Week with 207 yards and four touchdowns vs. UCF. Kansas collectively ran for 399 total yards, numbers they haven't produced in 30 years.

Even Nevada, widely regarded as the worst team in FBS with a 15-game losing streak, did a much better job stopping the run vs. KU (40 carries, 143 yards, 3.6 avg.). Kansas also barely beat those guys.

Coaching/scheme plays into it, obviously. Maybe the talent/depth didn't pan out to expectations. Some recruiting whiffs, particularly in the transfer portal. Linebacker being the big one.

The feedback from KU media (who spoke to those close to their program) is they were surprised at how "soft" UCF was. Is it just a short-term funk these guys are in? Is it leadership/culture/offseason structure? And does that tie into NIL and the transfer portal?

Look, every program is dealing with the exact same thing. It's not unique to UCF. But how has that dynamic changed things? Is there locker room disdain between guys getting "paid" or those who are not? Are seniors jealous that younger players or a hot shot recruit might "make more" than they do? Have coaches made the conscious decision to be more "player friendly" in terms of being hesitant to push players during the offseason because they don't want to drive players into the portal? The portal has coaches everywhere walking on eggshells, second-guessing how they've always done things.

I'm just throwing all this out there, wondering out loud - I don't know if it's part of the equation or not. Transfer Portal is great to plug holes, but it's not always great for developing leadership. That usually comes from guys who began as freshmen, want to be here and have put in the work.

The good news - the back half of the season beyond Oklahoma is a bit more manageable but only if UCF can find some answers defensively. Offensively, whether it's a healed JRP or Timmy, I think they've shown they can hang in this league. But it doesn't matter if the defense can't stop anyone.

There are no gimmes though.

UCF needs three wins between Oklahoma, WVU, Cincinnati, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech and Houston to reach six wins and bowl eligibility, which should still be the goal. If OU is another L, that WVU game is glaring as a must-win to take a little bit of pressure off heading into November. But WVU is looking a heckuva lot better than preseason predictions indicated.

Overall, the trajectory is still good. UCF currently has a top two recruiting class in the Big 12, hovering around the top 25. The on-field woes of late has not impacted recruiting. If anything, you can promote early playing time to these players, sell them on the idea of being the class that turns UCF into a Big 12 contender.

But it's also fair to recognize Kansas was not an acceptable performance. Whether it was the Baylor hangover or not, UCF has to snap out of it and find some answers, particularly on defense. I really hate that Oklahoma looms after the bye week - it would be great to have a Houston or Cincinnati instead, but it is what it is.

UCF's backs are against the wall. How will this team respond?

Grateful UCF is in the Big 12

Looking forward to 2024, I'm so glad that UCF is now part of the Big 12 (Big 16?). Look at the conference teams for 2024. The G5s all look the same. And few outside of those teams' fans will care about them at all. Previously, media would talk about certain G5 teams. That'll rarely happen now.

Yes, it'll still be an upward battle for UCF to improve, but the G5 is even further from the P4/P5 than it was before. If UCF didn't get the Big 12 invite, we'd slide into a sorta-FCS oblivion.

And imagine being Oregon State and Washington State. Damn. Weirdly left behind for now. Maybe they'll join the Mountain West and improve it.

https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nca...4-conferences-school/gcxqsjmp7rxxhyxz6yhlyysi

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OT: End of an era. Today is the last game for the SEC on CBS

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When it was signed, the TV deal between CBS and the SEC for the Tier 1 game of the week and the SEC CCG for $55M/yr was the biggest TV deal in college sports. It didn’t take very long for it to get eclipsed, and massively, but CBS was able to keep it for the entire run through this year, despite ESPN massively overpaying for the next Tier 1 deal and the Tier 2 deals it has had for the past decade. Today marks the end of CBS broadcasting the SEC. Love ‘em or hate ‘em, they have had some of the most interesting games in college football over the past three decades.

***UCF vs. Boise State Football Preview with B.J. Rains of Bronco Nation News ⚔️🐴🏈

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It's a big game in the Pacific Northwest this weekend.

UCF is making the 2,000+ mile trek to Idaho to take on the Boise State Broncos, the return trip of a series that began with the 2021 season opener in Orlando. That was the head coaching debut for Boise State's Andy Avalos and the first game at UCF for Gus Malzahn. Boise State raced off to a 21-0 lead, but UCF battled back to come out victorious, 36-31.

To get ready for the matchup, which will kick off at 7 p.m. EST on FS1, I spoke with B.J. Rains of Bronco Nation News . He says this could be one of the biggest games in a decade as Boise looks to rebound from a 56-19 loss at Washington in the opener.

UCF is making their debut as a member of the Power Five this season, something that won't be lost on the Boise State fanbase.

The Knights were among four Group of Five schools that got the call-up to the Big 12, yet Boise State - arguably the most successful G5 program over the past 20-plus years - did not.

"Especially playing UCF this week, Boise State fans are probably a little bit jealous," Rains said. "They feel like, on the field for a longer period of time, they've had more success than UCF. I know UCF fans would argue that with the National Championship that they claim. Boise State fans frankly see that as a joke. They obviously had their own undefeated seasons and didn't come forward with that.

"They feel they set the path. They've got the three New Year's Six/BCS wins themselves. They started obviously earlier if you go back to the 2000s. Boise State fans will look at the 20 years and feel they're the stronger program over time. To see UCF get the Big 12 invite and not them, I think a lot of them were disappointed and like I said, probably a little bit jealous. They wish that was them. I think that's a side story for the fans to prove we're just as good as UCF."

There were rumors at one point Boise State and Memphis could be considered in a later wave of Big 12 expansion, though that's unlikely now with the league offering refuge to PAC-12 members Colorado, Arizona, Arizona State and Utah.

Boise State was then hopeful they could perhaps align with a reconfigured PAC-12, but that's now unlikely with California and Stanford joining the ACC. It is now more likely the remaining PAC schools, Oregon State and Washington State, join with Boise State in the Mountain West.

That being said, Rains believes reaching the College Football Playoff will be much more attainable for Boise State moving forward.

"They want to get in the playoff obviously and the way the new format is, even if they switch it to 5+7 (five best conference champions plus seven at-large bids), one of these non-Power Four conference teams will get a guaranteed spot," Rains said. "You could argue Boise State has a better chance than UCF to get in the Playoff moving forward because they're going to have an easier schedule. They just need to win their schedule. It's probably more attainable in the Mountain West than to do it in the Big 12."

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UCF opened their season with a 56-6 thrashing of Kent State. Meanwhile Boise State had to go to Seattle and face No. 10 Washington which features one of the nation's best offenses led by quarterback Michael Penix. The Broncos lost, 56-19.

"It was one of the largest margin of defeats they've had in 25 years," Rains said. "Not a pretty game. If you watched, I think in the second half the score got away from them a little bit. I wouldn't say it was a true 37-point margin. A fairer representation of the score was probably 42-19 or something. They certainly lost bad, but there were a couple late touchdowns that made it look worse.

"They were 15-point underdogs. Boise State was not supposed to win that game. They were supposed to lose by double digits, which they did. The final score wasn't what a lot of people expected, but I don't think a lot of honest Boise State fans expected to win the game."

Rains expects to see a much better performance against UCF.

"There were a lot of small things that were issues that I don't see being issues moving forward," Rains said. "They dropped six passes. Drops were not a problem last year and it's the same receivers. On key third downs, they had bad drops. They had a penalty that took away a first down that would have kept a drive going. They had a cleat issue with a lot of slipping on the turf. I'm not making excuses and saying Boise State would have won the game, but I think there were some easily correctable things that would have made the score much more respectable. They're confident they'll look much better against UCF on Saturday."

One of the more glaring stats from the loss at Washington was giving up 490 yards passing. Boise State was breaking in some new secondary starters having lost two safeties to the NFL.

"You had a lot of guys getting their first starts in the secondary that I think had some easy mistakes that can be corrected," Rains said. "I mentioned the slipping, not an excuse, but there was an issue with Boise State's cleats. On a couple (Washington) touchdowns, guys fell down or slipped and there were wide-open guys running down the field. Not to say they would have won the game, but at least two of those long 50-yard touchdowns, guys literally fell down coming off the line of scrimmage. They feel like there's some correctable things there."

Rains is not worried at all about Boise State's offense.

"I think the offense looked pretty good," Rains said. "The main issue is everybody thought going into the season they'd run the ball more. They have two of the best running backs (George Holani, Ashton Jeanty) in the Mountain West and a quarterback (Taylen Green) that rushed for 600 yards last year. A lot of people expected them to run the ball 65, 70 percent of the time.

"For whatever reason, they came out slinging the ball. They thought they had things to attack in the passing game against Washington and it didn't really work. I think they'll run the ball a lot more against UCF. I think you'll see more designed QB runs. I think they'll go back to their bread and butter, which is the running game."

Like UCF, Boise State sees this game as a measuring stick.

"UCF is saying they're going to measure themselves, see where they're at on Saturday," Rains said. "Boise State feels the same way. No disrespect to UCF, but they know they're not Washington. They feel like they're going to get a chance to show more of who they are on Saturday as well."

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Boise State has a new offensive coordinator this season: Bush Hamdan, who was a former quarterback at Boise State in the mid-2000s. He worked with Chris Petersen at Washington and also spent some time in the NFL. He spent the past couple years working with Missiour head coach Eli Drinkwitz, who had traditionally still called the offense.

"The last three games of (Missouri's) season last year, they handed the play-calling duties over to him," Rains said. "By all accounts from Missouri fans and reporters, that was the best Missouri looked all season."

Hamdan actually took a pay cut to leave Missouri so he could return to his alma mater.

"A lot of people think that's he's going to mesh well with Taylen Green, the young quarterback here," Rains said. "Coming into the season, people in Boise thought this offense was going to be one of the best offenses in the country. They have a dynamic quarterback that can run and can pass. They have two 1,000-yard running backs, talented receivers.

"19 points against Washington is not what people expected, but there's not a lot of concern with Bush Hamdan and the offense. I think it was one of those games where it just didn't work. I think the fans expect this offense to be a lot better beginning Saturday."

Boise State quarterback Taylen Green became the full-time starter last season in week five.

"Boise State started 2-2," Rains said. "They had an embarrassing loss to UTEP, which was one of the worst losses in program history. After that game, starting quarterback Hank Bachmeier entered the transfer portal. It was only four games, so he could save a year of eligibility and redshirt. That shocked some people. They also fired the offensive coordinator at the same time, so they went with a new offensive coordinator and new quarterback starting with game five.

"(Green) went 8-2 as the starter down the stretch. Won the bowl game with a big performance. I think he had two 70-plus touchdown runs. He is literally by the metrics the fastest player on Boise State's team and he's the quarterback. You're talking about a 6-6 quarterback. The comparisons to Vince Young are out there. He wears the same number. He's from Texas. He looks just like him. He towers over the line of scrimmage.

"Last year he ran a lot. The whole offseason the thought was you've got to keep him healthy, got to protect him. Make him more of a pocket passer and not take off and run every play. I think some of that backfired a little bit in the Washington game where he was trying too much to force balls instead of taking off when he was open... I think there's going to be more designed quarterback runs in this game.

"He's a guy that people think could have an NFL future. He's a young quarterback, but if he has a strong year this year which people expect, they think going into next year he could be one of the higher-ranked quarterbacks on the board."

Defensively, Rains is also concerned about the lack of a pass rush against Washington. He felt they did okay managing the run, but were torched in the passing game.

Rains feels the best player on defense could be linebacker DJ Schramm, a sixth-year player who had over 100 tackles last year. Other notable players to watch include safety Rodney Robinson, cornerback Markel Reed and edge Demetri Washington.

"This team lost a lot of star power on defense," Rains said. "They lost five guys that were in the NFL training camps. They feel good about the guys behind them. Andy Avalos being a defensive head coach. They feel these guys are ready for the opportunity, but didn't see a lot of that in week one."

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For a program trying to regain its footing as a top 25 program, Rains sees this UCF game as one of the biggest in quite some time.

"It sounds crazy to say, but for Boise State it's one of the bigger games in the last decade," Rains said. "It really is. This is a program where there's a little bit of angst among the fans right now. Andy Avalos has come in and not exactly has had a great start. He went 7-5 in his first season. Starts out 2-2 last year. Loses the embarrassing game to UTEP on the road as a 20-point favorite. They make the changes. They kind of catch lightning in a bottle late in the season, finish 10-4 with the bowl win.

"With the Washington loss, again, nobody expect them to win, but Avalos is 17-10 as Boise State's head coach. You talk about Chris Petersen going 92-9. It just hasn't been the same here.

"They also uncharacteristically lost some home games the last couple years. They had a stretch there, I think from 1999 to 2014, they went 100-4 at home over a 15-year period. They're 8-5 I think on the blue the last two years. 10-6 at home the last three years. They've had some struggles. They've had some talented teams come in. Oklahoma State came in. A ranked BYU team came in. Fresno State has been pretty good. They've lost to some good teams, but that didn't matter in the past. They would win at home no matter who they played."

Even if Boise State loses to UCF, Rains still believes the Mountain West Championship is a very attainable goal and thinks they could potentially run the table in the conference.

A win though would go a long way to reviving fan interest in the program to go along with ticket sales and donations. Following the season, Boise State will break ground on an end zone project that will add seating and updated locker rooms.

"For the national brand of Boise State, starting out 0-2 isn't something a lot of people would be very happy with," Rains said. "You throw in the fact it's a Big 12 team coming in. A lot of Boise State fans feel they should have gotten this opportunity, not UCF. I know there's a lot more to it than football success. It's market size and that kind of stuff. It's hard to argue against UCF. But from a straight football perspective, a lot of fans in Boise feel this should be them in the Big 12. I think that adds a little juice to it as well."

Albertsons Stadium will be showing off a couple upgrades for Boise State's home opener, including a new scoreboard and LED lighting (though most of this game should be played in daylight).

Dungeon polling had this game as the second-most popular UCF road trip this season, trailing only Oklahoma. Rains is actually a Kansas alum and recommended that trip.

"I say go to Lawrence for the Kansas game," Rains said. "That's a sneaky awesome town. You've got Kansas City right there. Great restaurants. Massachusetts Street. It's a sleeper road trip. The Kansas game you'd really enjoy.

"About Boise, it's an awesome town. A lot of great restaurants. 8th Street is the area with outdoor patios, a lot of great restaurants, microbreweries. 6th Street is more of the college bar scene.

"There are beautiful hikes you can do. The official rafting thing isn't open, but if you buy a $30 raft at Wal-Mart you can still float down the Boise River right through downtown by the football stadium. A lot of hiking and cool things to do. It's a beautiful time of year too. It's going to be nice weather on Saturday."

As for restaurants, Rains recommends "The James" which overlooks the football stadium.

"Boise is an awesome town," Rains said.

For more Boise State coverage, follow Bronco Nation News on their website and Youtube channel.

***Official Visit List & Breakdown - Final December Weekend***

This is the final weekend of official visits prior to the NCAA Dead Period and next Wednesday's Early Signing Day.

UCF is hosting a total of seven players, three of whom are from high school (and previously committed) as well as four transfer targets.

QB Michael Penix Jr. (Indiana) - With Dillon Gabriel on the move and inexperience in the QB room, UCF has been looking for an experienced addition and Penix fits the bill. He's had an outstanding career at Indiana, including playing a large role in IU's resurgent 6-2 season in 2020. However, he's suffered a rash of injury issues his entire career including two ACLs in the same knee and this past season a separated shoulder.

OL Paul Tchio (Clemson) - One of UCF's initial OL transfer targets (Tchio hit the portal in early November). He's originally from Georgia having played at Milton HS (same school as Jordan McDonald). As a freshman in 2020, he played in 80 snaps over nine games as a reserve. This past season in 2021, he played in five games before hitting the portal and starting one (NC State). Clemson played him mostly at left guard.

LB K.D. McDaniel (Kentucky) - A Georgia native, originally from Tifton. Has played as a reserve in his three years at UK and recorded 11 total tackles this past season. UCF offered coming out of high school.

DB Ladarius Tennison (Auburn) - A promising young player at Auburn, who was moved between safety and corner early in his career. He's among the more highly-coveted of the departing Auburn players, having visited Missouri (last weekend) and Ole Miss (midweek). Obviously recruited out of HS by Gus Malzahn and familiar with Travis Williams. UCF is recruiting him as a safety.

LB Kam Moore (Sanford Seminole) - One part of the "Seminole Trio," comprised of he and the Henderson twins. Kam committed in August. Younger brother of former UCF player Brandon Moore. One of the best players in the local area, the Orlando Sentinel ranks Moore No. 4 locally.

DB Demari Henderson (Sanford Seminole) - The twins are widely considered the two best players in Central Florida, evident by their No. 1 and 2 rating in the Orlando's Sentinel's Super 60. Both players are playmakers and also threats in the return game. Demari's future could be at safety.

DB Ja'Cari Henderson (Sanford Seminole) - Ditto as above. Ja'Cari and Demari are widely considered the best players in Central Florida. Though nothing is set in stone, Ja'Cari could have a future at cornerback while his brother plays safety.

***SCOOP: UCF to hire Scott Frost as head coach***

As I said, things change in a hurry.

As I think I hinted last night, the ship may be sailing on Greg Schiano. From what I understand, he could have accepted the UCF job but dragged his feet listening to other suitors (namely, Miami).

If I'm what I'm hearing is true, UCF has moved on. Oregon offensive coordinator Scott Frost is the name I'm hearing. Announcement could happen soon.

@adam5573 had it first, posting in the other thread.

Trying to confirm it's a done deal.

http://www.goducks.com/ViewArticle.dbml?ATCLID=3661251
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Should conference title games continue in playoff expansion era? Commissioners mulling future of college football

Yahoo/Dellenger:

This weekend is one of college football’s crown jewels.

A buffet of conference championship games unfold over a 28-hour period starting Friday night and ending in the wee hours of Sunday morning. The 10-game lineup features five top-20 matchups, two top-eight clashes, a few Heisman Trophy candidates and the sport’s blue-blood powers like Texas, Georgia, Michigan, Florida State and Alabama.

Television ratings will be superb, attendance incredible and competition intense.

But, in an expanded playoff era, a question looms for some of the sport’s most influential leaders: Are conference championship games necessary?

“I do think that people are going to have to look at that,” said Mike Aresco, commissioner of the American Athletic Conference.

“We are in a period of change and assessment,” ACC commissioner Jim Phillips said. “Conference championships should be assessed. Is it necessary to play a 13th game?”


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