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Football in France

Association football is the most popular sport in France.[1][2] The French Football Federation (FFF, Fédération Française de Football) is the national governing body and is responsible for overseeing all aspects of association football in the country, both professional and amateur.[3][4] The federation organizes the Coupe de France and is responsible for appointing the management of the men's, women's and youth national football teams in France. The federation gives responsibility of Ligue 1 and Ligue 2 to the Ligue de Football Professionnel who oversee, organize, and manage the country's top two leagues. The LFP is also responsible for organizing the Coupe de la Ligue, the country's league cup competition. The French Football Federation also supervises the overseas departments and territories leagues and hosts football club AS Monaco, a club based in the independent sovereign state of Monaco. In 2022, the FFF has 2.1 million licensees, 1.8 million players and 14,000 registered clubs.[5]

Football in France
Parc des Princes is the home stadium of the club Paris Saint-Germain.
CountryFrance
Governing bodyFFF
National team(s)France
First played1863; 160 years ago (1863)
Clubs18,194
National competitions
Club competitions
International competitions

The first football club was introduced to France in 1863, as described in a newspaper article by The Scotsman, which stated "A number of English gentlemen living in Paris have lately organised a football club... The football contests take place in the Bois de Boulogne, by permission of the authorities and surprise the French amazingly."[6] Modern football was introduced nine years later in 1872 by English sailors playing in Le Havre in 1872.[7]

League system

Ligue de Football Professionnel

 
The Stade Vélodrome, home of Olympique de Marseille, before a match against Paris Saint-Germain in 2015.

The top two divisions of French football, Ligue 1 and Ligue 2, are governed by the Ligue de Football Professionnel. The league is responsible for organizing, overseeing and managing the top two leagues and is also responsible for the 46 professional football clubs that contest football in France (20 in Ligue 1, 20 in Ligue 2, and 6 in the Championnat National).[8][9][10]

Ligue 1 is the French professional league for football clubs. It is the country's primary football competition and serves as the top division of the French football league system. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with Ligue 2. Ligue 1 is one of the top national leagues, currently ranked fifth in Europe behind the English Premier League, Spanish La Liga, German Bundesliga, and the Italian Serie A. Ligue 1 was inaugurated on 11 September 1932 under the name National before switching to Division 1 after a year of existence. The name lasted until 2002 before switching to its current name. The current champions of France are Paris Saint-Germain, who won their tenth title in 2022.

Ligue 2 is the second division of French football. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the Championnat National. The league was created in 1934, a year after Ligue 1 and consisted of 23 clubs that were divided into two groups, Nord and Sud.

Championnat National

The Championnat National is the third division of French football. Though the league has several clubs that are members of the Ligue de Football Professionnel, it is not governed by the organization primarily because of the LFP's refusal to divide its profits into smaller shares, so they can collaborate with the many amateur clubs in the league to help them become professional. The French Football Federation moderates the league, which was founded in 1993 under the name National 1. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the Championnat de France amateur.

Championnat National 2

The Championnat National 2 is the fourth division of French football and normally features 72 football clubs. Most clubs that participate in the league are amateur clubs, but a small number of clubs are semi-professional. The CFA consists of 72 clubs spread into 4 parallel groups of 18. It is open to the best reserve teams in France and amateur clubs in France, although only the amateur clubs are eligible for promotion to the Championnat National. The highest-placed amateur team in each pool are promoted, replaced by the 4 lowest-placed in the Championnat National.

Championnat National 3

The Championnat National 3 is the 5th division in French football and normally consists of 168 teams in 12 groups of 14 organised to align with the regional leagues. The twelve teams (both amateur and reserves of professional teams in higher divisions) that top their league are promoted to Championnat National 2. Relegation from Championnat National 3 is defined by both position in the group and the region the club belongs to. Normally, one club is relegated to each regional league that feeds that group.

Lower divisions

Some of regional leagues are organised and managed by the Ligue du Football Amateur. The LFA, under the watch of the French Football Federation, is responsible for administering and federating the actions of the regional and district leagues.

Women's football

Women's football in France consists of three divisions, Division 1 Féminine, Division 2 Féminine, and Division 3 Féminine. The D1 Féminine is the top league for women's association football clubs in France. It is the female equivalent to the men's Ligue 1 and is contested by 12 clubs. The league operates on a system of promotion and relegation with lower leagues and is governed by the French Football Federation, who resurrected the women's league in 1974.

Overseas leagues

The leagues based in the overseas departments and territories of France are run by their respective associations under the watch of the French Football Federation. Under the rules of the FFF, clubs in the leagues are allowed to participate in confederation competitions based on their regional locations. For example, the champion of the Réunion Premier League is allowed inclusion into the CAF Champions League.

Cup competitions

The most important cup competition in France is the Coupe de France. However, several other national cups are targeted at clubs at different levels.

  • The Coupe de France is the premier knockout cup competition in French football. It is open to all amateur and professional football clubs in France, including clubs based in the overseas departments and territories. The final is played at the Stade de France and, during the 2016–17 season, celebrated its 100th anniversary.
  • The Coupe de la Ligue was the second major cup competition in France. It was known outside France as the French League Cup and was a knockout league cup competition organised by the Ligue de Football Professionnel. Unlike the Coupe de France, it was only open to professional clubs who were members of the LFP. The competition was discontinued in 2020 to prevent fixture congestion.
  • The Trophée des Champions is played each July as a one-off match between the Coupe de France winners and the Ligue 1 champions.
  • Regional amateur leagues of France organise their own cup competitions that are run by the French Football Federation. For example, the Coupe Bourgogne only features amateur clubs that are based in the region of Burgundy.
  • Youth cups include the Coupe Gambardella, Coupe Nationale, and the Coupe Fédérale. The Coupe Gambardella cup competition held between the under-19s of the French football clubs. The Coupe Nationale holds dual competitions for the under-13 and under-15 teams of football clubs, while the Coupe Fédérale holds a national cup competition for under-16 teams.
  • The Coupe de l'Outre-Mer is a football cup competition that was created in 2008. It was designed to have the national football teams of the overseas territories compete against each other.
  • Women's football cup competitions in France consists of the Challenge de France, Coupe Nationale, and the Coupe Fédérale. The Challenge de France is the premier cup competition reserved exclusively for French women's football clubs. The competition is open to all professional and non-professional women's teams in the country. The Coupe National holds a youth cup competition for the under-14 teams, while the Coupe Fédérale holds cup competitions for the under-13 and under-16 teams.

Competition records

UEFA Champions League

The following teams have qualified for the last eight of the European Cup / UEFA Champions League.

National teams

 
Zinedine Zidane, member of the national team from 1994 to 2006.

The France national football team represents France in international football.[11] France was one of the four European teams that participated at the inaugural World Cup in 1930 and are one of eight national teams to have won the competition, which they did in 1998 when they hosted the Cup, defeating Brazil 3–0 in the final. They won their second world title 20 years later, after defeating Croatia 4–2 in the final of the 2018 edition in Russia. France also won two European Championships in 1984 and 2000, and hosted the tournament on three occasions, including their victorious 1984 campaign. Following France's 2001 Confederations Cup victory, they became the first national team to win the three most important men's titles organised by FIFA: the FIFA World Cup, the FIFA Confederations Cup, and the Olympic Tournament. This would be followed with Argentina and Brazil's victories at the Summer Olympics in 2004 and 2016. France additionally went on to win a UEFA Nations League title in 2021.

The France women's national football team represents the country in international women's football. The France women's national team initially struggled on the international stage failing to qualify for three of the first FIFA Women's World Cups and the six straight UEFA European Championships before reaching the quarter-finals in the 1997 edition of the competition. However, since the beginning of the new millennium, France have become a mid-tier national team and one of the most consistent in Europe, having qualified for their first-ever FIFA Women's World Cup in 2003 and reaching the quarter-finals in the last three consecutive European Championships. They also hosted the 2019 Women's World Cup, reaching the quarter-finals.

The France national youth football teams consists of age-specific national teams beginning with the France national under-16 football team and ending with the France national under-21 football team. Since the coaching tenure of Aimé Jacquet, there is an unwritten rule among senior national team coaches that players called up to the national team must have had prior international experience with the under-21 team.

Overseas departments national teams

The following overseas department national teams act as feeder teams for the France national football team. All teams are run by their respective federation under the authority of the French Football Federation.

 
Lilian Thuram, from Guadeloupe, is the nation's second-most capped male football player.

As an overseas department of the French Republic, each national team is not a member of FIFA, therefore they are not eligible to enter the World Cup. However, since inhabitants of the overseas departments are French citizens, players are eligible to play for the France national football team. Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Martin, and French Guiana are associate members of CONCACAF and are full members of the Caribbean Football Union, and are thus eligible for all competitions organized by both, while Réunion are associate members of CAF. Indeed, according to the status of the FFF (article 34, paragraph 6): "[...]Under the control of related continental confederations, and with the agreement of the FFF, those leagues can organize international sport events at a regional level or set up teams in order to participate to them."

A special rule of the CONCACAF Gold Cup only allows players to join the team if they have not played for France during the previous five years. On the other hand, any player joining the team is allowed to join the France national team afterward with no time restrictions.

The use of overseas department players has been extremely beneficial for the France national team. Lilian Thuram and Bernard Lama, who were born in Guadeloupe and Martinique, respectively, were a part of the winning team at the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Also on the team were Thierry Henry and Bernard Diomède, who, though born in metropolitan France, were descendants of parents from overseas departments. Currently, Florent Malouda (French Guiana), William Gallas, Mikaël Silvestre, Michaël Ciani (Guadeloupe), Nicolas Anelka (Martinique), and Guillaume Hoarau and Florent Sinama Pongolle (Réunion) are members of the national team who either hail from or whose families hail from the overseas departments.

See also

References

  1. ^ Popular sports in France
  2. ^ "Sport in France". Topend Sports. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  3. ^ "A French paradox: multicultural celebrities are popular, but so is Le Pen". The Independent. January 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  4. ^ "France's Aversion To Its National Soccer Team". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  5. ^ "Le budget et les chiffres clés". French Football Federation. from the original on 9 June 2022. Retrieved 22 August 2022. (the last successful archive is 2021 statistics: 1.9 million licensees, 1.8 million players and 15,000 clubs.)
  6. ^ The Scotsman newspaper, 22 December 1863, page 8
  7. ^ "History of Football". Ifhof.com. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  8. ^ "In France Paris St. Germain Is A League Apart". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  9. ^ Inti Landauro and William Horobin (25 October 2013). "Top French Soccer Clubs Call Tax Strike". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  10. ^ WSC Daily. "When Saturday Comes – Victory for French fans over TV scheduling". Wsc.co.uk. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  11. ^ "France's Aversion To Its National Soccer Team". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 December 2014.

External links

  • Official site

football, france, championnat, france, redirects, here, other, uses, french, championship, disambiguation, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, french, october, 2018, click, show, important, translation, instructions, . Championnat de France redirects here For other uses see French Championship disambiguation This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in French October 2018 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Histoire du football en France see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fr Histoire du football en France to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Association football is the most popular sport in France 1 2 The French Football Federation FFF Federation Francaise de Football is the national governing body and is responsible for overseeing all aspects of association football in the country both professional and amateur 3 4 The federation organizes the Coupe de France and is responsible for appointing the management of the men s women s and youth national football teams in France The federation gives responsibility of Ligue 1 and Ligue 2 to the Ligue de Football Professionnel who oversee organize and manage the country s top two leagues The LFP is also responsible for organizing the Coupe de la Ligue the country s league cup competition The French Football Federation also supervises the overseas departments and territories leagues and hosts football club AS Monaco a club based in the independent sovereign state of Monaco In 2022 the FFF has 2 1 million licensees 1 8 million players and 14 000 registered clubs 5 Football in FranceParc des Princes is the home stadium of the club Paris Saint Germain CountryFranceGoverning bodyFFFNational team s FranceFirst played1863 160 years ago 1863 Clubs18 194National competitionsFIFA World Cup UEFA European Championship UEFA Nations LeagueClub competitionsList League Ligue 1Ligue 2Championnat National Championnat National 2 Championnat National 3 Regional 1 Regional 2 Cups Coupe de France Trophee des ChampionsInternational competitionsFIFA Club World Cup UEFA Champions League UEFA Europa League UEFA Europa Conference League UEFA Super CupFrance at the 1900 Summer Olympics The first football club was introduced to France in 1863 as described in a newspaper article by The Scotsman which stated A number of English gentlemen living in Paris have lately organised a football club The football contests take place in the Bois de Boulogne by permission of the authorities and surprise the French amazingly 6 Modern football was introduced nine years later in 1872 by English sailors playing in Le Havre in 1872 7 Contents 1 League system 1 1 Ligue de Football Professionnel 1 2 Championnat National 1 3 Championnat National 2 1 4 Championnat National 3 1 5 Lower divisions 1 6 Women s football 1 7 Overseas leagues 2 Cup competitions 3 Competition records 3 1 UEFA Champions League 4 National teams 4 1 Overseas departments national teams 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksLeague system EditSee also French football league system Ligue de Football Professionnel Edit The Stade Velodrome home of Olympique de Marseille before a match against Paris Saint Germain in 2015 The top two divisions of French football Ligue 1 and Ligue 2 are governed by the Ligue de Football Professionnel The league is responsible for organizing overseeing and managing the top two leagues and is also responsible for the 46 professional football clubs that contest football in France 20 in Ligue 1 20 in Ligue 2 and 6 in the Championnat National 8 9 10 Ligue 1 is the French professional league for football clubs It is the country s primary football competition and serves as the top division of the French football league system Contested by 20 clubs it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with Ligue 2 Ligue 1 is one of the top national leagues currently ranked fifth in Europe behind the English Premier League Spanish La Liga German Bundesliga and the Italian Serie A Ligue 1 was inaugurated on 11 September 1932 under the name National before switching to Division 1 after a year of existence The name lasted until 2002 before switching to its current name The current champions of France are Paris Saint Germain who won their tenth title in 2022 Ligue 2 is the second division of French football Contested by 20 clubs it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the Championnat National The league was created in 1934 a year after Ligue 1 and consisted of 23 clubs that were divided into two groups Nord and Sud Championnat National Edit The Championnat National is the third division of French football Though the league has several clubs that are members of the Ligue de Football Professionnel it is not governed by the organization primarily because of the LFP s refusal to divide its profits into smaller shares so they can collaborate with the many amateur clubs in the league to help them become professional The French Football Federation moderates the league which was founded in 1993 under the name National 1 Contested by 20 clubs it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the Championnat de France amateur Championnat National 2 Edit The Championnat National 2 is the fourth division of French football and normally features 72 football clubs Most clubs that participate in the league are amateur clubs but a small number of clubs are semi professional The CFA consists of 72 clubs spread into 4 parallel groups of 18 It is open to the best reserve teams in France and amateur clubs in France although only the amateur clubs are eligible for promotion to the Championnat National The highest placed amateur team in each pool are promoted replaced by the 4 lowest placed in the Championnat National Championnat National 3 Edit The Championnat National 3 is the 5th division in French football and normally consists of 168 teams in 12 groups of 14 organised to align with the regional leagues The twelve teams both amateur and reserves of professional teams in higher divisions that top their league are promoted to Championnat National 2 Relegation from Championnat National 3 is defined by both position in the group and the region the club belongs to Normally one club is relegated to each regional league that feeds that group Lower divisions Edit Some of regional leagues are organised and managed by the Ligue du Football Amateur The LFA under the watch of the French Football Federation is responsible for administering and federating the actions of the regional and district leagues Women s football Edit Main article Women s football in France Women s football in France consists of three divisions Division 1 Feminine Division 2 Feminine and Division 3 Feminine The D1 Feminine is the top league for women s association football clubs in France It is the female equivalent to the men s Ligue 1 and is contested by 12 clubs The league operates on a system of promotion and relegation with lower leagues and is governed by the French Football Federation who resurrected the women s league in 1974 Overseas leagues Edit The leagues based in the overseas departments and territories of France are run by their respective associations under the watch of the French Football Federation Under the rules of the FFF clubs in the leagues are allowed to participate in confederation competitions based on their regional locations For example the champion of the Reunion Premier League is allowed inclusion into the CAF Champions League Cup competitions Edit Coupe de la Ligue trophy The most important cup competition in France is the Coupe de France However several other national cups are targeted at clubs at different levels The Coupe de France is the premier knockout cup competition in French football It is open to all amateur and professional football clubs in France including clubs based in the overseas departments and territories The final is played at the Stade de France and during the 2016 17 season celebrated its 100th anniversary The Coupe de la Ligue was the second major cup competition in France It was known outside France as the French League Cup and was a knockout league cup competition organised by the Ligue de Football Professionnel Unlike the Coupe de France it was only open to professional clubs who were members of the LFP The competition was discontinued in 2020 to prevent fixture congestion The Trophee des Champions is played each July as a one off match between the Coupe de France winners and the Ligue 1 champions Regional amateur leagues of France organise their own cup competitions that are run by the French Football Federation For example the Coupe Bourgogne only features amateur clubs that are based in the region of Burgundy Youth cups include the Coupe Gambardella Coupe Nationale and the Coupe Federale The Coupe Gambardella cup competition held between the under 19s of the French football clubs The Coupe Nationale holds dual competitions for the under 13 and under 15 teams of football clubs while the Coupe Federale holds a national cup competition for under 16 teams The Coupe de l Outre Mer is a football cup competition that was created in 2008 It was designed to have the national football teams of the overseas territories compete against each other Women s football cup competitions in France consists of the Challenge de France Coupe Nationale and the Coupe Federale The Challenge de France is the premier cup competition reserved exclusively for French women s football clubs The competition is open to all professional and non professional women s teams in the country The Coupe National holds a youth cup competition for the under 14 teams while the Coupe Federale holds cup competitions for the under 13 and under 16 teams Competition records EditUEFA Champions League Edit The following teams have qualified for the last eight of the European Cup UEFA Champions League Marseille 1989 90 Semi finals 1990 91 Runners up 1992 93 Champions 2011 12 Quarter finals Monaco 1993 94 Semi finals 1997 98 Semi finals 2003 04 Runners up 2016 17 Semi finals Saint Etienne 1974 75 Semi finals 1975 76 Runners up 1976 77 Quarter finals Lyon 2003 04 Quarter finals 2004 05 Quarter finals 2005 06 Quarter finals 2009 10 Semi finals 2019 20 Semi finals Reims 1955 56 Runners up 1958 59 Runners up 1962 63 Quarter finals Bordeaux 1984 85 Semi finals 2009 10 Quarter finals Paris Saint Germain 1994 95 Semi finals 2012 13 Quarter finals 2013 14 Quarter finals 2015 16 Quarter finals 2019 20 Runners up 2020 21 Semi finals Nantes 1995 96 Semi finals Auxerre 1996 97 Quarter finals National teams Edit Zinedine Zidane member of the national team from 1994 to 2006 See also France national football team France women s national football team and France national youth football team The France national football team represents France in international football 11 France was one of the four European teams that participated at the inaugural World Cup in 1930 and are one of eight national teams to have won the competition which they did in 1998 when they hosted the Cup defeating Brazil 3 0 in the final They won their second world title 20 years later after defeating Croatia 4 2 in the final of the 2018 edition in Russia France also won two European Championships in 1984 and 2000 and hosted the tournament on three occasions including their victorious 1984 campaign Following France s 2001 Confederations Cup victory they became the first national team to win the three most important men s titles organised by FIFA the FIFA World Cup the FIFA Confederations Cup and the Olympic Tournament This would be followed with Argentina and Brazil s victories at the Summer Olympics in 2004 and 2016 France additionally went on to win a UEFA Nations League title in 2021 The France women s national football team represents the country in international women s football The France women s national team initially struggled on the international stage failing to qualify for three of the first FIFA Women s World Cups and the six straight UEFA European Championships before reaching the quarter finals in the 1997 edition of the competition However since the beginning of the new millennium France have become a mid tier national team and one of the most consistent in Europe having qualified for their first ever FIFA Women s World Cup in 2003 and reaching the quarter finals in the last three consecutive European Championships They also hosted the 2019 Women s World Cup reaching the quarter finals The France national youth football teams consists of age specific national teams beginning with the France national under 16 football team and ending with the France national under 21 football team Since the coaching tenure of Aime Jacquet there is an unwritten rule among senior national team coaches that players called up to the national team must have had prior international experience with the under 21 team Overseas departments national teams Edit The following overseas department national teams act as feeder teams for the France national football team All teams are run by their respective federation under the authority of the French Football Federation National team Elo Ranking Manager Stadium Member Association s French Guiana 159 Ghislain Zulemaro Stade de Baduel CONCACAF and CFUGuadeloupe 91 Roger Salnot Stade Rene Serge Nabajoth CONCACAF and CFUMartinique 115 Theodore Antonin Stade d Honneur de Dillon CONCACAF and CFUReunion 138 TBD Stade Jean Ivoula CAFSaint Martin 193 Andy Gerard TBD CONCACAF and CFU Lilian Thuram from Guadeloupe is the nation s second most capped male football player As an overseas department of the French Republic each national team is not a member of FIFA therefore they are not eligible to enter the World Cup However since inhabitants of the overseas departments are French citizens players are eligible to play for the France national football team Guadeloupe Martinique Saint Martin and French Guiana are associate members of CONCACAF and are full members of the Caribbean Football Union and are thus eligible for all competitions organized by both while Reunion are associate members of CAF Indeed according to the status of the FFF article 34 paragraph 6 Under the control of related continental confederations and with the agreement of the FFF those leagues can organize international sport events at a regional level or set up teams in order to participate to them A special rule of the CONCACAF Gold Cup only allows players to join the team if they have not played for France during the previous five years On the other hand any player joining the team is allowed to join the France national team afterward with no time restrictions The use of overseas department players has been extremely beneficial for the France national team Lilian Thuram and Bernard Lama who were born in Guadeloupe and Martinique respectively were a part of the winning team at the 1998 FIFA World Cup Also on the team were Thierry Henry and Bernard Diomede who though born in metropolitan France were descendants of parents from overseas departments Currently Florent Malouda French Guiana William Gallas Mikael Silvestre Michael Ciani Guadeloupe Nicolas Anelka Martinique and Guillaume Hoarau and Florent Sinama Pongolle Reunion are members of the national team who either hail from or whose families hail from the overseas departments See also EditSport in France List of football stadiums in FranceReferences Edit Popular sports in France Sport in France Topend Sports Retrieved 7 June 2016 A French paradox multicultural celebrities are popular but so is Le Pen The Independent January 2012 Retrieved 21 December 2014 France s Aversion To Its National Soccer Team The New York Times Retrieved 21 December 2014 Le budget et les chiffres cles French Football Federation Archived from the original on 9 June 2022 Retrieved 22 August 2022 the last successful archive 9 June 2022 is 2021 statistics 1 9 million licensees 1 8 million players and 15 000 clubs The Scotsman newspaper 22 December 1863 page 8 History of Football Ifhof com Retrieved 21 December 2014 In France Paris St Germain Is A League Apart The New York Times Retrieved 21 December 2014 Inti Landauro and William Horobin 25 October 2013 Top French Soccer Clubs Call Tax Strike The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 21 December 2014 WSC Daily When Saturday Comes Victory for French fans over TV scheduling Wsc co uk Retrieved 21 December 2014 France s Aversion To Its National Soccer Team The New York Times Retrieved 21 December 2014 External links EditOfficial site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Football in France amp oldid 1133323163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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