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Bill Robinson (outfielder)

William Henry Robinson, Jr. (June 26, 1943 – July 29, 2007) was an American professional baseball outfielder, who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1966 to 1983, for several teams. He also played some first and third base. Robinson batted and threw right-handed.

Bill Robinson
Outfielder
Born: (1943-06-26)June 26, 1943
McKeesport, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died: July 29, 2007(2007-07-29) (aged 64)
Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 20, 1966, for the Atlanta Braves
Last MLB appearance
May 23, 1983, for the Philadelphia Phillies
MLB statistics
Batting average.258
Home runs166
Runs batted in641
Teams
Career highlights and awards

After his playing days ended, Robinson moved on to a successful coaching career. He is cited as having been a key mentor in Darryl Strawberry's career,[1] as well as several other young players he coached with the New York Mets.

Robinson collected three World Series rings, with the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates as a player, and as a coach for both the 1986 Mets and 2003 Florida Marlins.

Early years edit

Robinson (Jr.) was born in McKeesport, Pennsylvania to William Sr. and Nellie Mae Robinson. He starred in basketball as well as baseball at Elizabeth Forward High School, and received a basketball scholarship offer from Bradley University. However, Robinson chose baseball over basketball, and signed with the Milwaukee Braves, upon graduation in June, 1961.

Playing career edit

Atlanta Braves edit

After six seasons in the Braves' farm system, in which he batted .298, with 69 home runs, and 339 runs batted in (RBI), Robinson made his MLB debut for the newly-relocated Atlanta Braves on September 20, 1966, pinch running for Hank Aaron, and staying in the game in right field.[2] He got his first hit in his first start, September 25, against the Pirates. With the Braves leading 4-2, Robinson hit an RBI single off Al McBean, driving him out of the game.[3] For the season, he collected three hits, including one triple, in eleven at bats, and drove in three runs. Following his only big-league season in Atlanta, Robinson and pitcher Chi-Chi Olivo were dealt to the New York Yankees for third baseman Clete Boyer.

New York Yankees edit

Robinson impressed upon arrival with his new franchise, receiving the James P. Dawson Memorial Award from Yankees sportswriters for the outstanding rookie in Spring training 1967,[4] and homering in the regular-season opener.[5] Things soon went south for the man who was expected to replace Roger Maris in right field. By the end of the first month of the season, he lost his starting job in right to Steve Whitaker, and was relegated to fourth outfielder duties. Following an 0-for-3 performance against the Kansas City A's on May 31, 1967, Robinson's batting average fell to a season-low .101.[6] By season's end, he did manage to raise his average to .196, with seven home runs, and 29 RBIs.

Robinson remained the Yankees' fourth outfielder throughout 1969, before spending the entire 1970 season with the International League Syracuse Chiefs. He was sent from the Yankees to the Chicago White Sox for Barry Moore on December 3, 1970.[7]

Philadelphia Phillies edit

Robinson spent the 1971 season in the White Sox organization, batting .275, with fourteen home runs, and 81 RBIs for the AAA Tucson Toros. That December 13, he was dealt to the Phillies for minor league catcher Gerardo Rodriguez. Tearing up the Pacific Coast League with a .304 batting average, twenty home runs, and 66 RBIs, Robinson received a call up to Philadelphia in June 1972. Again a fourth outfielder, Robinson made 82 appearances, and displayed decent power, clubbing eight home runs in 188 at bats.

Robinson's breakthrough came in 1973. Platooning with Mike Anderson in right field, while occasionally playing center and left, and making fourteen appearances at third base, he batted .288, with 25 home runs, and 65 RBIs. However, Robinson's numbers dipped drastically in 1974, and just as the 1975 season was set to begin, he was dealt to the Pirates for Wayne Simpson.

Pittsburgh Pirates edit

During the 1975 season, Robinson batted .280, and reached the post season for the first time in his career. He went hitless in two at bats, as the Pirates were swept by Cincinnati's "Big Red Machine" in the 1975 National League Championship Series.[8]

With the superstar outfield of Richie Zisk, Al Oliver, and Dave Parker, Pirates manager Danny Murtaugh experimented with Robinson at third base in 1976 despite his limited experience at the position. On June 5, Robinson hit two home runs against San Diego Padres Cy Young Award-winning pitcher Randy Jones. When the game went into extra innings, Robinson hit a third home run in the fourteenth inning off Dave Freisleben.[9]

Between the four positions, Robinson made 416 plate appearances, and batted over .300 with 21 home runs to win the Roberto Clemente Memorial Award from the Pittsburgh sportswriters.[10]

Starting third baseman Richie Hebner signed as a free agent with the Phillies after the season, and Robinson went into Spring training 1977 preparing to take over the position. However, shortly into Spring training, the Pirates completed an eight-player trade with the Oakland Athletics that brought Phil Garner to Pittsburgh,[11] with the intention to shifting him from second to third base.

Injuries to teammates kept Robinson in the lineup despite his not having a regular position. An injury to Willie Stargell had Robinson playing first base for most of the first half of the season.[12] He responded by batting .305, with ten home runs, and 46 RBIs heading into the All-Star break. Despite these impressive numbers, Robinson's name was kept off the 1977 Major League Baseball All-Star Game ballot, owing largely to his not having a regular position. Feeling snubbed, he vowed not to participate in the mid-summer classic at Yankee Stadium even if National League manager Sparky Anderson selected him as a reserve.[13]

His hot hitting continued after the break. Over the rest of the month of July, Robinson batted .367 with four home runs and seventeen RBIs to pull within a game and a half of the first-place Phillies. For the season, he put up career highs in home runs (26), RBIs (104), batting average (.304) and runs (74).

On December 8, 1977, the Pirates, Mets, Texas Rangers, and Atlanta Braves completed a four-team, eleven-player trade that sent Oliver to the Rangers. This opened up a starting job for Robinson in left field, with John Milner (acquired from the Mets in the same deal) assuming the job of fourth outfielder and backup first baseman. Though his production fell off considerably in 1978, he was third on the Pirates in home runs (14) and RBIs (80) to Parker and Stargell in both cases.

After having finished second to the Phillies in the National League East for the previous three seasons, the "We Are Family" Pirates of 1979 engaged in a season-long battle with the Montreal Expos for the division. The season came down to a four-game set at Three Rivers Stadium, September 24 to 26. The Expos came to Pittsburgh a half game up on the Pirates, and kept that half game lead with the split of a doubleheader on the 24th. Robinson was the hitting star of the game one win, with a home run, triple and three RBIs.[14] For the series, he batted .400 to help his team take three of the four games, and capture first place. The Pirates clinched the division to head to the 1979 National League Championship Series against the Cincinnati Reds on the final day of the season. Robinson, who entered the game as a defensive replacement in the sixth inning, singled with the bases loaded in his only at bat to drive in the two deciding runs in the Pirates' 5-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs.[15]

The Pirates exacted some revenge for the 1975 NLCS, this time sweeping the Reds in three games[16] to head to the World Series against the Baltimore Orioles. Robinson went five for nineteen, with two RBIs and two runs scores in the Pirates' stunning come from behind World Series victory.[17]

Prior to the 1980 season, Robinson was nearly dealt to the Houston Astros,[18] as he was 36 years old and beginning to show his age. Injuries, and the emergence of Mike Easler as a younger, better option in left, limited Robinson to just 69 starts, mostly at first base. He saw even less action in the strike-shortened 1981 season, batting just .216 in twenty starts.

Phillies again edit

On June 15, 1982, Robinson was traded back to the Phillies, in a three-team deal that landed the Pirates Wayne Nordhagen from the White Sox.[19] Splitting time with George Vukovich and Dick Davis in right field, Robinson performed decently in his limited role, batting .261 with three home runs. His role diminished further in 1983, and he was released on June 9, with a .143 batting average.

Games PA AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO HBP Avg. Slg. Fld%
1472 4730 4364 536 1127 229 29 166 641 71 263 820 16 .258 .438 .980

Post-playing career edit

 
Robinson as New York Mets hitting instructor

Shortly after retiring as an active player, Robinson accepted a job as hitting instructor (a title he insisted on being called as opposed to the more common term "batting coach") for incoming manager Davey Johnson's Mets. His players, most notably second baseman Wally Backman and outfielder Kevin Mitchell, affectionately called him "Uncle Bill."

During his tenure with the team, Robinson also managed the Caracas Lions of the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League,[20] in order to gain experience that would make him a more attractive candidate for MLB teams looking to fill managerial vacancies.[21] After the Mets unceremoniously dropped him following the 1989 season, he gave up his managerial dream, and signed to broadcast baseball games for ESPN.[22]

In 1992, Robinson returned to the managing ranks, leading the San Francisco Giants' AA affiliate,[23] the Shreveport Captains to a 77-59 record, and first place in the Texas League's Eastern Division. He also managed the AA Eastern League Reading Phillies in 1996. Robinson also served as a minor league hitting coach for the Yankees and was a minor league coach and manager in the Phillies' farm system.[13]

Death edit

Robinson died on July 29, 2007, at age 64 in a Las Vegas hotel room; the cause of death is unknown, although he was known to be suffering from diabetes. Robinson had been working as the Los Angeles Dodgers' minor league hitting coordinator, and had been visiting their AAA affiliate Las Vegas 51s, when he died. He was survived by his wife, Mary Alice, a son, and a daughter.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ Malcolm Moran (October 23, 1986). "Players; Robinson and His Gifted Student". The New York Times.
  2. ^ "Atlanta Braves 5, St. Louis Cardinals 1". Baseball-Reference.com. September 20, 1966.
  3. ^ "Atlanta Braves 6, Pittsburgh Pirates 2". Baseball-Reference.com. September 25, 1966.
  4. ^ Fritz Peterson (June 26, 2015). "Remembering Bill Robinson". FritzPeterson.org.
  5. ^ "New York Yankees 8, Washington Senators 0". Baseball-Reference.com. April 10, 1967.
  6. ^ "New York Yankees 3, Kansas City A's 0". Baseball-Reference.com. May 31, 1967.
  7. ^ "Yanks, White Sox in 2‐Player Deal," The New York Times, Friday, December 4, 1970. Retrieved January 20, 2023.
  8. ^ "National League Championship Series". Baseball-Reference.com.
  9. ^ "San Diego Padres 11, Pittsburgh Pirates 9". Baseball-Reference.com. June 5, 1976.
  10. ^ "Pirates Awards". The Official Site of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
  11. ^ Eric Prewitt (March 17, 1977). "A's Deal Garner in Nine Player Trade". Schenectady Gazette. p. 38.
  12. ^ Jim Kaplan (April 25, 1977). "He's an Irregular Regular". Sports Illustrated.
  13. ^ a b Scott Thompson (February 2, 2014). "Bill Robinson: A Baseball Survivor". Laurens County African American History.
  14. ^ "Atlanta Sweeps Houston; Rose Gets 200 Hits Again". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. September 25, 1979. p. B3.
  15. ^ "Oldsters Stargell, Robinson Lead Pirates to Division Title". Lodi News-Sentinel. October 1, 1979. p. 11.
  16. ^ "National League Championship Series". Baseball-Reference.com.
  17. ^ "World Series". Baseball-Reference.com.
  18. ^ "Bill Robinson May Stay a Pirate". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. February 20, 1980.
  19. ^ Neil Rudel (June 20, 1982). "Nordhagen a Hit in Pirate Debut". The Beaver County Times.
  20. ^ "Baseball". Pittsburgh Press. June 26, 1987.
  21. ^ George Vescey (March 27, 1988). "Sports of the Times; Robinson Ready for Next Step". The New York Times.
  22. ^ "Robinson Sought for TV". The New York Times. February 19, 1990.
  23. ^ "Sports People: Baseball;Giants Hire Robinson". The New York Times. December 17, 1991.
  24. ^ "Bill Robinson, former '79 Pirate, dies at 64". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. July 29, 2007.

External links edit

  • Career statistics and player information from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
  • Bill Robinson at the SABR Baseball Biography Project
  • Bill Robinson at Baseball Almanac
  • Bill Robinson at BaseballBiography.com
  • Bill Robinson at Ultimate Mets Database
  • Bill Robinson at Pura Pelota (Venezuelan Professional Baseball League)
  • Bill Robinson at The Deadball Era 2019-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • Bill Robinson at Find a Grave

bill, robinson, outfielder, william, henry, robinson, june, 1943, july, 2007, american, professional, baseball, outfielder, played, major, league, baseball, from, 1966, 1983, several, teams, also, played, some, first, third, base, robinson, batted, threw, righ. William Henry Robinson Jr June 26 1943 July 29 2007 was an American professional baseball outfielder who played in Major League Baseball MLB from 1966 to 1983 for several teams He also played some first and third base Robinson batted and threw right handed Bill RobinsonOutfielderBorn 1943 06 26 June 26 1943McKeesport Pennsylvania U S Died July 29 2007 2007 07 29 aged 64 Las Vegas Nevada U S Batted RightThrew RightMLB debutSeptember 20 1966 for the Atlanta BravesLast MLB appearanceMay 23 1983 for the Philadelphia PhilliesMLB statisticsBatting average 258Home runs166Runs batted in641TeamsAtlanta Braves 1966 New York Yankees 1967 1969 Philadelphia Phillies 1972 1974 Pittsburgh Pirates 1975 1982 Philadelphia Phillies 1982 1983 Career highlights and awards3 World Series champion 1979 1986 2003 After his playing days ended Robinson moved on to a successful coaching career He is cited as having been a key mentor in Darryl Strawberry s career 1 as well as several other young players he coached with the New York Mets Robinson collected three World Series rings with the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates as a player and as a coach for both the 1986 Mets and 2003 Florida Marlins Contents 1 Early years 2 Playing career 2 1 Atlanta Braves 2 2 New York Yankees 2 3 Philadelphia Phillies 2 4 Pittsburgh Pirates 2 5 Phillies again 3 Post playing career 4 Death 5 References 6 External linksEarly years editRobinson Jr was born in McKeesport Pennsylvania to William Sr and Nellie Mae Robinson He starred in basketball as well as baseball at Elizabeth Forward High School and received a basketball scholarship offer from Bradley University However Robinson chose baseball over basketball and signed with the Milwaukee Braves upon graduation in June 1961 Playing career editAtlanta Braves edit After six seasons in the Braves farm system in which he batted 298 with 69 home runs and 339 runs batted in RBI Robinson made his MLB debut for the newly relocated Atlanta Braves on September 20 1966 pinch running for Hank Aaron and staying in the game in right field 2 He got his first hit in his first start September 25 against the Pirates With the Braves leading 4 2 Robinson hit an RBI single off Al McBean driving him out of the game 3 For the season he collected three hits including one triple in eleven at bats and drove in three runs Following his only big league season in Atlanta Robinson and pitcher Chi Chi Olivo were dealt to the New York Yankees for third baseman Clete Boyer New York Yankees edit Robinson impressed upon arrival with his new franchise receiving the James P Dawson Memorial Award from Yankees sportswriters for the outstanding rookie in Spring training 1967 4 and homering in the regular season opener 5 Things soon went south for the man who was expected to replace Roger Maris in right field By the end of the first month of the season he lost his starting job in right to Steve Whitaker and was relegated to fourth outfielder duties Following an 0 for 3 performance against the Kansas City A s on May 31 1967 Robinson s batting average fell to a season low 101 6 By season s end he did manage to raise his average to 196 with seven home runs and 29 RBIs Robinson remained the Yankees fourth outfielder throughout 1969 before spending the entire 1970 season with the International League Syracuse Chiefs He was sent from the Yankees to the Chicago White Sox for Barry Moore on December 3 1970 7 Philadelphia Phillies edit Robinson spent the 1971 season in the White Sox organization batting 275 with fourteen home runs and 81 RBIs for the AAA Tucson Toros That December 13 he was dealt to the Phillies for minor league catcher Gerardo Rodriguez Tearing up the Pacific Coast League with a 304 batting average twenty home runs and 66 RBIs Robinson received a call up to Philadelphia in June 1972 Again a fourth outfielder Robinson made 82 appearances and displayed decent power clubbing eight home runs in 188 at bats Robinson s breakthrough came in 1973 Platooning with Mike Anderson in right field while occasionally playing center and left and making fourteen appearances at third base he batted 288 with 25 home runs and 65 RBIs However Robinson s numbers dipped drastically in 1974 and just as the 1975 season was set to begin he was dealt to the Pirates for Wayne Simpson Pittsburgh Pirates edit During the 1975 season Robinson batted 280 and reached the post season for the first time in his career He went hitless in two at bats as the Pirates were swept by Cincinnati s Big Red Machine in the 1975 National League Championship Series 8 With the superstar outfield of Richie Zisk Al Oliver and Dave Parker Pirates manager Danny Murtaugh experimented with Robinson at third base in 1976 despite his limited experience at the position On June 5 Robinson hit two home runs against San Diego Padres Cy Young Award winning pitcher Randy Jones When the game went into extra innings Robinson hit a third home run in the fourteenth inning off Dave Freisleben 9 Between the four positions Robinson made 416 plate appearances and batted over 300 with 21 home runs to win the Roberto Clemente Memorial Award from the Pittsburgh sportswriters 10 Starting third baseman Richie Hebner signed as a free agent with the Phillies after the season and Robinson went into Spring training 1977 preparing to take over the position However shortly into Spring training the Pirates completed an eight player trade with the Oakland Athletics that brought Phil Garner to Pittsburgh 11 with the intention to shifting him from second to third base Injuries to teammates kept Robinson in the lineup despite his not having a regular position An injury to Willie Stargell had Robinson playing first base for most of the first half of the season 12 He responded by batting 305 with ten home runs and 46 RBIs heading into the All Star break Despite these impressive numbers Robinson s name was kept off the 1977 Major League Baseball All Star Game ballot owing largely to his not having a regular position Feeling snubbed he vowed not to participate in the mid summer classic at Yankee Stadium even if National League manager Sparky Anderson selected him as a reserve 13 His hot hitting continued after the break Over the rest of the month of July Robinson batted 367 with four home runs and seventeen RBIs to pull within a game and a half of the first place Phillies For the season he put up career highs in home runs 26 RBIs 104 batting average 304 and runs 74 On December 8 1977 the Pirates Mets Texas Rangers and Atlanta Braves completed a four team eleven player trade that sent Oliver to the Rangers This opened up a starting job for Robinson in left field with John Milner acquired from the Mets in the same deal assuming the job of fourth outfielder and backup first baseman Though his production fell off considerably in 1978 he was third on the Pirates in home runs 14 and RBIs 80 to Parker and Stargell in both cases After having finished second to the Phillies in the National League East for the previous three seasons the We Are Family Pirates of 1979 engaged in a season long battle with the Montreal Expos for the division The season came down to a four game set at Three Rivers Stadium September 24 to 26 The Expos came to Pittsburgh a half game up on the Pirates and kept that half game lead with the split of a doubleheader on the 24th Robinson was the hitting star of the game one win with a home run triple and three RBIs 14 For the series he batted 400 to help his team take three of the four games and capture first place The Pirates clinched the division to head to the 1979 National League Championship Series against the Cincinnati Reds on the final day of the season Robinson who entered the game as a defensive replacement in the sixth inning singled with the bases loaded in his only at bat to drive in the two deciding runs in the Pirates 5 3 victory over the Chicago Cubs 15 The Pirates exacted some revenge for the 1975 NLCS this time sweeping the Reds in three games 16 to head to the World Series against the Baltimore Orioles Robinson went five for nineteen with two RBIs and two runs scores in the Pirates stunning come from behind World Series victory 17 Prior to the 1980 season Robinson was nearly dealt to the Houston Astros 18 as he was 36 years old and beginning to show his age Injuries and the emergence of Mike Easler as a younger better option in left limited Robinson to just 69 starts mostly at first base He saw even less action in the strike shortened 1981 season batting just 216 in twenty starts Phillies again edit On June 15 1982 Robinson was traded back to the Phillies in a three team deal that landed the Pirates Wayne Nordhagen from the White Sox 19 Splitting time with George Vukovich and Dick Davis in right field Robinson performed decently in his limited role batting 261 with three home runs His role diminished further in 1983 and he was released on June 9 with a 143 batting average Games PA AB Runs Hits 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO HBP Avg Slg Fld 1472 4730 4364 536 1127 229 29 166 641 71 263 820 16 258 438 980Post playing career edit nbsp Robinson as New York Mets hitting instructor Shortly after retiring as an active player Robinson accepted a job as hitting instructor a title he insisted on being called as opposed to the more common term batting coach for incoming manager Davey Johnson s Mets His players most notably second baseman Wally Backman and outfielder Kevin Mitchell affectionately called him Uncle Bill During his tenure with the team Robinson also managed the Caracas Lions of the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League 20 in order to gain experience that would make him a more attractive candidate for MLB teams looking to fill managerial vacancies 21 After the Mets unceremoniously dropped him following the 1989 season he gave up his managerial dream and signed to broadcast baseball games for ESPN 22 In 1992 Robinson returned to the managing ranks leading the San Francisco Giants AA affiliate 23 the Shreveport Captains to a 77 59 record and first place in the Texas League s Eastern Division He also managed the AA Eastern League Reading Phillies in 1996 Robinson also served as a minor league hitting coach for the Yankees and was a minor league coach and manager in the Phillies farm system 13 Death editRobinson died on July 29 2007 at age 64 in a Las Vegas hotel room the cause of death is unknown although he was known to be suffering from diabetes Robinson had been working as the Los Angeles Dodgers minor league hitting coordinator and had been visiting their AAA affiliate Las Vegas 51s when he died He was survived by his wife Mary Alice a son and a daughter 24 References edit Malcolm Moran October 23 1986 Players Robinson and His Gifted Student The New York Times Atlanta Braves 5 St Louis Cardinals 1 Baseball Reference com September 20 1966 Atlanta Braves 6 Pittsburgh Pirates 2 Baseball Reference com September 25 1966 Fritz Peterson June 26 2015 Remembering Bill Robinson FritzPeterson org New York Yankees 8 Washington Senators 0 Baseball Reference com April 10 1967 New York Yankees 3 Kansas City A s 0 Baseball Reference com May 31 1967 Yanks White Sox in 2 Player Deal The New York Times Friday December 4 1970 Retrieved January 20 2023 National League Championship Series Baseball Reference com San Diego Padres 11 Pittsburgh Pirates 9 Baseball Reference com June 5 1976 Pirates Awards The Official Site of the Pittsburgh Pirates Eric Prewitt March 17 1977 A s Deal Garner in Nine Player Trade Schenectady Gazette p 38 Jim Kaplan April 25 1977 He s an Irregular Regular Sports Illustrated a b Scott Thompson February 2 2014 Bill Robinson A Baseball Survivor Laurens County African American History Atlanta Sweeps Houston Rose Gets 200 Hits Again Spartanburg Herald Journal September 25 1979 p B3 Oldsters Stargell Robinson Lead Pirates to Division Title Lodi News Sentinel October 1 1979 p 11 National League Championship Series Baseball Reference com World Series Baseball Reference com Bill Robinson May Stay a Pirate Sarasota Herald Tribune February 20 1980 Neil Rudel June 20 1982 Nordhagen a Hit in Pirate Debut The Beaver County Times Baseball Pittsburgh Press June 26 1987 George Vescey March 27 1988 Sports of the Times Robinson Ready for Next Step The New York Times Robinson Sought for TV The New York Times February 19 1990 Sports People Baseball Giants Hire Robinson The New York Times December 17 1991 Bill Robinson former 79 Pirate dies at 64 Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 29 2007 External links editCareer statistics and player information from MLB or ESPN or Baseball Reference or Fangraphs or Baseball Reference Minors or Retrosheet Bill Robinson at the SABR Baseball Biography Project Bill Robinson at Baseball Almanac Bill Robinson at BaseballBiography com Bill Robinson at Ultimate Mets Database Bill Robinson at Pura Pelota Venezuelan Professional Baseball League Bill Robinson at The Deadball Era Archived 2019 11 23 at the Wayback Machine Bill Robinson at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bill Robinson outfielder amp oldid 1179729930, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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