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Tag: bat

  • MLB free-agent tracker: Sluggers Cody Bellinger, Kyle Tucker and Kyle Schwarber head the list

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    Kyle Schwarber, 33, DH, 4.7, 19.9: Schwarber is a premier slugger with 187 home runs in four seasons with Philadelphia, where he also was an exceptional clubhouse leader. He is pretty much restricted to designated hitter and is approaching an age where offensive production might decline. He still merits a lucrative multi-year deal, although going longer than four years at a $30 million average annual value (AAV) might be inviting buyer’s remorse by 2030.

    Kyle Tucker, 29, OF, 4.5, 27.3: Although his 2025 bWAR was lower than that of Bellinger and Schwarber, Tucker might have the highest sticker price in this free-agent class. The average of projections from 20 ESPN experts is 10 years and $391.5 million for a $38.8 million AAV. The Dodgers are considered a prime suitor because of their deep pockets and need for a productive corner outfielder.

    Eugenio Suárez, 34, 3B, 3.6, 26.8: A drop of nearly one win above replacement from the top three free agents — Bellinger, Schwarber and Tucker — still puts Suárez in an enviable position. Splitting the season between the Diamondbacks and Mariners, Suarez tied a career high with 49 home runs and drove in 118 runs.

    Alex Bregman, 32, 3B, 3.5, 43.1: Even though Bregman’s bWAR was slightly lower than that of Suárez, he should command a larger deal because he’s younger and more well-rounded. Bregman missed 44 games because of injury in his single season in Bosto but put up solid numbers. His average bWAR over his 10-year career is 4.3.

    Trent Grisham, 29, OF, 3.5, 14.6: Grisham is an enigma, a first-round draft pick who blossomed with the Padres only to crater and bat under .200 three years in a row. He rebounded in 2025, swatting a career-high 34 home runs with the Yankees. Grisham also has two Gold Gloves in center field.

    Bo Bichette, 28, SS, 3.4, 20.8: Bichette showed his toughness by playing effectively in the World Series despite a lingering knee injury. Bichette can flat-out hit, accumulating more than 175 hits in four of the last five seasons with above-average power. He also plays a premium position and will turn only 28 in March, meaning he could command a contract exceeded only by that of Tucker.

    Toronto Blue Jays’ Bo Bichette hits a three-run home run during Game 7 of the World Series, Nov. 1, 2025, in Toronto.

    (Ashley Landis/AP)

    Pete Alonso, 31, 1B, 3.4, 23.3: Alonso was disappointed by the tepid interest in him as a free agent last offseason, re-signing with the Mets on a one-year, $30-million deal with a player option. He’s expected to test the market again after once again posting the glittering power numbers that have made him a fan favorite in New York for seven years.

    Josh Naylor, 28, 1B, 3.1, 8.4: The 5-foot-10, 235-pound left-handed slugger produced well in 2025 while splitting the season between the Diamondbacks and Mariners, batting a career-high .295 and hitting precisely 20 home runs for the third time in five seasons.

    Gleyber Torres, 29, 2B, 2.9, 18.7: Torres needed to restore his value after taking a one-year deal with the Tigers following a ho-hum 2024 season with the Yankees. He did so incrementally and should land a measured multi-year deal this time around.

    J.T. Realmuto, 35, C, 2.6, 38.8: Realmuto is recognized as one of the top-hitting catchers in baseball, and he’s clearly the top free-agent backstop, proving in 2025 that he can still catch upward of 130 games while putting up solid offensive numbers. Still, he will be 35 on opening day and his .700 OPS was his lowest in a decade.

    Jorge Polanco, 32, 2B, 2.6, 20.7: Polanco hit 26 home runs and posted an .821 OPS, the switch-hitter’s best season since 2021 when he hit 33 homers and drove in 98 runs. Chronic knee problems have put his shortstop days behind him and cut into his range at second or third base, but the bat still plays.

    Mike Yastrzemski, 35, OF, 2.6, 16.8: Although the grandson of Hall of Famer Carl Yastrzemski posted his best OPS (.839) since the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, he might be entertaining only contract offers of one year at $10 million or so.

    Ryan O’Hearn, 31, 1B/DH, 2.4, 3.1: O’Hearn is an accomplished left-handed hitter coming off a season split between the Orioles and Padres. He can expect a large raise from the $3.5 million he made in 2025, perhaps tripling it.

    Marcell Ozuna, 35, OF/DH, 1.6, 29.5: Ozuna is a proven power bat who has exceeded 20 home runs in nine seasons and led the NL with 18 homers and 56 RBIs in pandemic-shortened 2020. After tremendous 2023 and 2024 seasons in which he totaled 79 homers and 204 RBIs, Ozuna slipped in 2025, batting .232 with 21 home runs while battling hip pain.

    Luis Arráez, 29, 1B, 1.3, 16.5: Arráez doesn’t get much love from bWAR or fWAR, but he sure can hit, leading all major leaguers with a .317 lifetime average. He led the NL with 181 hits in 2025, but because he doesn’t hit for power or walk much, his OPS was a pedestrian .719. The three-time batting champion should continue to be paid about $14 million a year, with the question becoming for how long.

    Paul Goldschmidt, 38, 1B, 1.2, 63.8: Goldschmidt boasts the highest career bWAR of any free-agent hitter and he has made it clear that he is not ready to retire. His productivity, however, is trending downward, especially his power. With only 10 homers and 45 RBIs in 534 plate appearances with the Yankees last season, Goldschmidt is no longer an elite hitter.

    Victor Caratini, 32, C, 0.9, 4.3: Catchers are at a premium in this free-agent class and Caratini is one of the few with a potent bat and ability to play more than 100 games in a season. He most recently delivered on a two-year, $12-million deal with the Astros and could land a similar contract because of the scarcity of backstops.

    Steve Henson

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  • Fan gives back Mike Trout’s 400th career home run ball, but not before getting something cool

    Many people have a fond memory of playing catch with someone special — a parent, a grandparent, a sibling, a lifelong friend.

    A fan who sat 485 feet from home plate at Coors Field on Saturday probably never dreamed he’d be doing so with a future Hall of Famer.

    But thanks to his quick thinking, the fan, whose first name reportedly is Alberto, boldly asked Mike Trout for the favor after the Angels defeated the Colorado Rockies 3-0.

    What a cool request! Trout had already agreed to give Alberto — who attended the game with his wife and two children — three signed bats and two signed baseballs in exchange for the ball he crushed.

    While Trout signed the balls and bats in the dugout long after the game had ended, Alberto politely asked him while making a throwing motion with his right arm, “You mind if we play catch with a ball on the field?” the three-time American League Most Valuable Player didn’t hesitate, saying, “Yeah, you want to do it?” Alberto grabbed his glove.

    A post on the MLB.com X account shows Alberto tossing the ball back and forth to Trout, who catches it with his bare hands while wearing his cap backward. At one point, Trout says something to Alberto’s young son, who is watching in awe.

    And no wonder. Shortly before Trout hit No. 400, Alberto told Trout he’d turned to his son and said, “He’s got a lot of power.” No kidding, enough to drive the ball deep into the left-center field stands. Alberto caught the blast with his bare hands.

    It was Trout’s third home run of at least 485 feet since Statcast began tracking long balls in 2015, the most of any player. The 34-year old outfielder in his 15th season became the 59th MLB player to reach 400 homers and the 20th to hit them all with one franchise.

    The No. 400 ball clearly had more monetary value than the signed balls and bats, but nowhere near the value of a career 500 home run ball or, say, the home run the Dodgers’ Freddie Freeman hit to win Game 1 of the 2024 World Series — which was sold at auction for $1.56 million.

    The home run was meaningful to Trout, who admitted to feeling pressure as he approached the milestone. It was only his second long ball since Aug. 7.

    He also recognized that catching the ball and returning it to the player who belted it was meaningful to Alberto, who likely has already done what dads do — play catch with his children.

    “Once they get older and realize, that’ll be an awesome memory for the dad to tell the kids, to experience that,” Trout told reporters. “I know how I felt when I went to a ballgame with my dad.”

    Steve Henson

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  • Cal Raleigh hits 50th homer, joining Mickey Mantle as switch-hitters to reach mark

    Cal Raleigh hits 50th homer, joining Mickey Mantle as switch-hitters to reach mark

    So this is not the bat that the Yankees were using to pound out 36 runs in 3 games. This is not *** torpedo bat. This is like *** traditional bat. Yeah, if that’s the bat they were using, we wouldn’t be talking about. Oh there you go. What is going on here with this? I, so basically the Yankees have apparently over for 2 years have been working on this, and they have figured out. That all the all the rules say *** bat needs to be is it can’t be bigger than *** certain length it can’t be fatter than *** certain, but otherwise, as long as it’s ***. Straight stick that the fattest part fits within these measurements and they’re hitting it out they they move the barrel basically down and they’re taking guys like Anthony Volpe where they collect so much data now, right? They know where Anthony Volpe typically hits right and if he’s not consistently hitting it on the barrel. Their solution was let’s not teach Anthony Volpe to hit different. Let’s just move the barrel. So they basically so simple bats that are customized to these hitters and to where they’re making contact. It’s, I mean, it’s very unusual and when they come out of the gate like this with *** 20 run game where, you know, like 9 homers in the game, it’s gonna get *** whole lot of attention, but by the rules this seems to be allowed. It’s just wild to see *** team do it and come out like this, right? And it’s the Yankees. Oh, it’s the Yankees, Chad. So, um, so there’s gonna be *** tension there anyway, but it’s, it’s fascinating. And I mean, who, you know, is this something that’s gonna catch on? We’re, I think everybody 2 my other teams my outlet included are all trying to chase this going where, where is this going, you know.

    Cal Raleigh hits 50th homer, joining Mickey Mantle as switch-hitters to reach mark

    Updated: 12:15 AM EDT Aug 26, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Cal Raleigh hit his 50th homer on Monday night, extending his major league record for home runs by a catcher and entering some elite company.Raleigh joined Mickey Mantle as the only switch-hitters to hit 50 homers in a season, and he became the eighth player in major league history to reach the half-century mark in August.Video above: Baseball writer explains new ‘torpedo’ bats in MLBBatting from the right side, the Big Dumper sent a 3-2 fastball from San Diego’s JP Sears 419 feet into the second deck in left field.He’s the second Mariners player to hit 50 homers in a season. Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. hit 56 in 1997 and again in ’98.Raleigh has three homers in the past two games. He hit Nos. 48 and 49 during Sunday’s 11-4 win over the Athletics. Salvador Perez had the previous record for homers by a catcher with 48 in 2021.

    Cal Raleigh hit his 50th homer on Monday night, extending his major league record for home runs by a catcher and entering some elite company.

    Raleigh joined Mickey Mantle as the only switch-hitters to hit 50 homers in a season, and he became the eighth player in major league history to reach the half-century mark in August.

    Video above: Baseball writer explains new ‘torpedo’ bats in MLB

    Batting from the right side, the Big Dumper sent a 3-2 fastball from San Diego’s JP Sears 419 feet into the second deck in left field.

    He’s the second Mariners player to hit 50 homers in a season. Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. hit 56 in 1997 and again in ’98.

    Raleigh has three homers in the past two games. He hit Nos. 48 and 49 during Sunday’s 11-4 win over the Athletics. Salvador Perez had the previous record for homers by a catcher with 48 in 2021.

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  • Plate umpire Nick Mahrley exits game between Rockies and Yankees after broken bat hits his neck

    Plate umpire Nick Mahrley exits game between Rockies and Yankees after broken bat hits his neck

    NEW YORK (AP) — Plate umpire Nick Mahrley exited in the fifth inning of the Rockies-Yankees game when he was hit in the neck by Giancarlo Stanton’s shattered bat.

    Stanton’s bat broke when he hit a bloop single to left field.

    The barrel hit Mahrley on the left side of his mask, knocking it off.

    Mahrley immediately fell down and was attended to by New York’s athletic training staff.

    A medic came on the field and Mahrley was helped onto a stretcher as the crowd applauded.

    When play resumed, crew chief Marvin Hudson took over behind the plate.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos

    At Denver7, we’re committed to making a difference in our community. We’re standing up for what’s right by listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the featured videos in the playlist above.

    The Associated Press

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  • Queens homeowner armed with bat puts out fake package to nab porch pirate

    Queens homeowner armed with bat puts out fake package to nab porch pirate

    QUEENS, New York (WABC) — A New Yorker fed up with porch pirates targeting him and his neighbors decided to take matters into his own hands in what must be the most “New York” way possible.

    Carlos Mejia of Queens got creative after falling victim to a string of package snatchings. He says he and his wife have been victims of porch pirates dozens of times.

    “My wife ordered a jacket that was $1,500 and they took it,” Mejia said.

    Just last Wednesday, his camera caught a man stealing a package with sneakers off their porch.

    In attempt to catch the thief, Mejia put out a decoy package, filled with old French fries, used puppy training pads and dog feces, and armed himself with a baseball bat.

    Sure enough, he got a nibble and reeled himself in a suspected petit larcenist. All of it was caught on camera, a video that has since gone viral.

    Mejia came out with a bat in hand.

    “I wasn’t thinking at the moment,” Mejia said. “It was just anger. I wanted to hurt him. But I know that if I had, I would have been in trouble.”

    So, Mejia held the snatcher there by himself until the police arrived.

    It wasn’t the same man who stole the sneakers, but it was 36-year-old Victor Stazzone.

    At one point, video shows Stazzone trying to get away, but he was ultimately arrested for stealing and trespassing.

    Mejia handled the situation about as well as anyone could, but authorities have always cautioned civilians from engaging a suspected criminal.

    Thankfully, the suspect wasn’t armed, and no one was hurt.

    There is no word on what charges, if any, the suspected porch pirate might be facing.

    Mejia say he hopes the video is enough to make people think twice before swiping packages.

    “Cause today it was me with a bat. That somebody else could pull out a shotgun and not be as nice as I was, you know? And losing your life for $200. It’s not what you want,” Mejia said.

    The New York City Department of Transportation says 90,000 packages are lost or stolen in the city every single day.

    ALSO READ | Half of NYC families lack enough income to survive without assistance: report

    Anthony Carlo has more on the cost of living in New York City.

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    WABC

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  • Can A Lawsuit Save Small Cannabis Businesses

    Can A Lawsuit Save Small Cannabis Businesses

    Marijuana has become increasing mainstream.  With 90% of the public open to it being legal in some form. Companies from Pfizer to Miracle Grow have jumped in and other “vice” companies from BAT, Molson Coors, and Heineken to the $22+ billion market.  It seems great, but the industry is struggling. Can a lawsuit save small cannabis businesses?

    The Biden administration has been incredibly slow following up on his campaign promise to bring on federal legalization, the Trump term did nothing, rescheduling is just starting and California and New York have ongoing major issues. The House passed SAFE Banking 7 times and now the Senate is on board with SAFER Banking and the new House Speaker is not a fan of helping the industry.  Small businesses continue to struggle.

    RELATED: California or New York, Which Has The Biggest Marijuana Mess

    Some cannabis companies have turned to superlawyer David Boies who is suing Attorney General Merrick Garland to strike down marijuana restrictions now in place under the federal Controlled Substances act.  This could provide the relief mom and pop businesses need.

    What the public doesn’t understand and Congress refuses to address is owning a small business is a major, hard endeavor, and currently, federal policy makes it even harder.  Small businesses receive very little tax write-offs, can’t use Small Business Adminstration loans, major banks won’t touch them and ding the owners and employees for personal loans if revealed they work for a weed company.

    Ted Olson, a conservative attorney who knows Boies and has opposed him shared “His timing is good. this is the sort of thing this court is looking at”.

    “An overwhelming percentage of the American people believe marijuana sales should be legal and also safe and regulated”, said Boies

    RELATED: Science Says Medical Marijuana Improves Quality Of Life

    There are mixed winds about cannabis right now, the public wants it and Ohio just switched to full recreational.  But Congress is in disarray and the Speaker doesn’t drink, smoke or swear and discourages is staff from doing any of it. Maybe the lawsuit can force the current administration to update the laws and help small businesses.

    Terry Hacienda

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  • Bats Could Hold the Secret to Better, Longer Human Life

    Bats Could Hold the Secret to Better, Longer Human Life

    In Linfa Wang’s ideal world, all humans would be just a bit more bat-like.

    Wang, a biochemist and zoonotic-disease expert at Duke-NUS Medical School, in Singapore, has no illusions about people flapping about the skies or echolocating to find the best burger in town. The point is “not to live like a bat,” Wang told me, but to take inspiration from their very weird physiology in order to boost the quality, or even the length, of human life. They might not look it, but bats, Wang said, are “the healthiest mammals on Earth.”

    That thought might be tough to square with bats’ recent track record. In the past three decades—from 1994, when Hendra virus jumped to humans, to 2019, when SARS-CoV-2 emerged—at least half a dozen of the most devastating viral epidemics known to have recently leapt into people from wildlife have had their likeliest origins in bats. But bats themselves rarely, if ever, seem to fall ill. Ebola, Nipah, Marburg, and various coronaviruses don’t appear to trouble them; some bats can survive encounters with rabies, which, left untreated in humans, has a near 100 percent fatality rate. “They’ve evolved mechanisms to limit the damage of disease,” says Emma Teeling, a bat biologist at University College Dublin, who collaborates with Wang.

    The creatures’ apparent ability to defy death goes even beyond that. Some nectar-devouring species spend years spiking their blood-sugar levels high enough to send a human into a hyperglycemic coma—and yet, those bats never seem to develop what we’d call diabetes. Others have been documented surviving up to 41 years in the wild—nearly 10 times as long as mammals of their size are generally expected to live—all the while avoiding cancer and fertility dips.

    Wang and Teeling, along with several colleagues, were recently awarded a $13 million grant by the European Research Council to try to better understand the biology behind these batty abilities—and how it might help other creatures. (And they’re certainly not the only ones trying to find out.) Wang’s team, as he likes to cheerfully boast, has already put some of his ideas to the test by genetically engineering a healthier, more disease-tolerant “bat-mouse.” He and his colleagues are still years away from creating any sort of bat person, but they are confident that this line of thinking could one day inform new treatments for humans—to combat diabetes, to temper infectious diseases, maybe even to extend the life span.

    The key to bats’ health seems to be flight, or at least the effects that evolving flight has had on the bat body. Flight, for all its perks, is one of the most energetically taxing transportation options: When bats fly, their metabolism can rev up to 15 to 16 times above its resting state; their heart rate may soar above 1,000 beats per minute; their body temperature can exceed 105 degrees Fahrenheit, effectively plunging the animals into an epic fever state. Put all of that on virtually any other mammal, and their body would likely be overwhelmed by the blaze of extreme inflammation, the toxic by-products of their metabolism effectively rending cells apart.

    To cope with this self-destructive form of locomotion, bats have evolved two essential safeguards. First, they are extraordinarily good at maintaining bodily Zen. Even when pushed into extreme forms of exertion, bat bodies don’t get all that inflamed—maybe in part because they lack some of the molecular machinery that kicks those systems into gear. Which means that bats simply rack up less damage when their bodies get stressed. And for any damage that does occur, bats have a second trick: Their cells appear to be unusually efficient at cleanup and repair, rapidly stitching back together bits of torn-up DNA.

    Those strategies, Wang and Teeling told me, haven’t just made flight a breeze for bats. They also mitigate other types of bodily harm. Cancer tends to unfurl after errors appear in particular parts of our genetic code. And, molecularly speaking, aging is basically what happens to the body as it accumulates a lifetime of cellular wear and tear. In a sense, stress is simply stress: The root causes of these chronic health issues overlap with the greatest taxes of flight. So the solutions that keep a bat body running smoothly in the air can address problems throughout its lifetime. While humans get worse at repairing damage with age, bats’ ability improves, Teeling told me.

    All of this can also help explain why bats are such hospitable hosts for pathogens that can kill us. Many of the most dangerous cases of infectious disease are driven by the body’s overzealous inflammatory response; that reaction can pose a greater threat than any damage that a pathogen itself might do to cells. Many of our defenses are like bombs set off on our home turf—capable of killing invaders, yes, but at great cost to us. Bats have such a high threshold for igniting inflammation that many viruses seem able to inhabit their tissues without setting off that degree of destruction. In laboratory experiments, bats have been dosed with so much virus that their tissues end up chock-full—clocking some 10 million units of Ebola virus per milliliter of serum, or 10 million units of the MERS coronavirus per gram of lung——and researchers were still unable to discern serious problems with the bats’ health. Bats and their viruses have, in effect, struck “an immunological detente,” says Tony Schountz, a bat immunologist at Colorado State University.

    Such astronomical levels of virus aren’t a bat’s preferred state. Bat bodies also happen to be very good at tamping down viral replication up front. Part of the reason seems to be that, in certain bat species’ bodies, parts of their antiviral defense system “are always on,” Wang told me. “I call them ‘battle ready.’” So when a pathogen does appear, it knocks up against a host that is already teeming with powerful proteins, ready-made to block parts of the viral life cycle, hindering the microbe from spinning out of control.

    The catch here is that the viruses have wised up to bats’ tricks—and evolved to be more forceful as they attempt to infiltrate and replicate inside of, and then spread between, those well-defended cells. And that bat-caliber offense can be excessive in a human that lacks the same shields, says Cara Brook, a disease ecologist at the University of Chicago. That might help explain why so many bat viruses hit us so hard.. Couple that show of force with our difficulties reining in our own inflammation, and what might have been a trivial infection for a bat can turn into utter chaos for a person.

    One of Wang’s primary ideas for dealing with this kind of host-pathogen mismatch is to use drugs to make our inflammatory responses a bit more muted—that is, a bit more bat-like. That option is especially intriguing, he told me, because it could also lower the risk of autoimmunity, maybe even forestall aging or certain kinds of chronic metabolic disease. His bat-mouse, which was engineered to express a particular inflammation-suppressing bat gene, is an experiment with that principle, and it seemed to fare better against flu, SARS-CoV-2, even gout crystals.

    But the idea of muffling inflammation isn’t exactly new: Our medical armamentarium has included steroids and other immune-system-modulating drugs for decades. All have their limits and their drawbacks, and a treatment specifically inspired by bats would likely be subject to the same caveats, says Arinjay Banerjee, a virologist and bat immunologist at the University of Saskatchewan. Inflammation, as damaging as it can be, is an essential defense. Any drug that modifies it—especially one taken long-term—must avoid the hurt of too much while skirting the risk of not enough. And ultimately, humans just aren’t bats. Plop a bat’s defense into a human body, and it might not work in the way researchers expect, says Hannah Frank, a bat immunologist at Tulane University. To truly see bat-like benefits in people, chances are, we’d need more than one treatment turning more than one physiological dial, Banerjee told me.

    As much as researchers are learning about bats, the gaps in their knowledge are still huge. What’s observed in one of the more than 1,400 species of bats may not hold true for another. Plus, bat physiology is distinct enough from ours that no one really can precisely say what optimal health for them looks like, Frank told me. Although bats rarely die from their viruses, those infections may be still taking a toll in ways that researchers have yet to appreciate, Brook told me. Bats aren’t the only intriguing virus-carriers, either. Rodents, too, haul around a lot of deadly pathogens without falling sick, as Schountz points out. Nor are they the only mammals that live at extremes. Naked mole rats withstand low-oxygen conditions underground; seals must cope with organ-crushing pressures when they dive. Like flight, those adaptations may have rejiggered immunity in yet untold ways.

    Certainly, though, bats have more to offer us than many people give them credit for. In the aftermath of a Hendra virus outbreak in Australia, years ago, “we even had a politician say, Let’s bomb the bats,” Wang told me. The start of the coronavirus pandemic, too, ignited calls for bat cullings; some animals were even reportedly burned out of roosts. “I still don’t want a bat as a pet,” Wang told me. But if his findings keep panning out, maybe someday people will associate bats less with the diseases we don’t want to get from them, and more with the healthy traits we do.

    Katherine J. Wu

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