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  • Broncos QB coach Davis Webb explains where he’s seen Bo Nix grow in Year 2

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    Steve Spagnuolo tried to throw a changeup on a Christmas night third-and-6.

    Bo Nix didn’t hesitate.

    The Broncos this season saw more zone coverage from opposing defenses than any team in the NFL, according to Sumer Sports data.

    The undermanned Chiefs delivered a heavy diet in Week 17.

    “We saw a ton of zone coverage, soft zone,” Denver coach Sean Payton said after. “They were going to force us to rope-a-dope a little bit.”

    Do Broncos own advantage over Bills because of week off?

    Kansas City did just that and kept the Broncos close throughout the game.

    On this third down, though, Spagnuolo, the Chiefs’ veteran defensive coordinator, brought pressure and played man coverage behind it.

    Nix, operating out of the gun, started a half roll to the right. Kansas City’s pressure overloaded from his left and tight end Adam Trautman did a good job pushing defensive lineman Charles Omenihu up the field on the right side.

    Nix never even hit the top of his drop. He recognized the coverage and the gaping ‘B’ gap in front of him, bailed out of his drop and took off for 14 yards.

    If Nix stepped through an ankle tackle by George Karlaftis, he’d have broken a huge gain and perhaps even a 55-yard touchdown.

    “He saw it, he shot his shot and it worked out really good,” Denver quarterbacks coach Davis Webb told The Post recently.

    Broncos quarterback Bo Nix (10) in the first half against the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri on Thursday, December 25, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

    Rhythm, recognition and calmer feet

    Nix is through two regular seasons now as a starter. He’s played 35 NFL games, including last year’s wild-card loss to Buffalo.

    His Year 2 numbers look, on the whole, a lot like his Year 1 numbers. He didn’t make the leap into the stratosphere. Completion percentage? Slightly down. Quarterback rating? Same. Estimated points added per drop back? Slightly up. So on and so forth.

    Stats, of course, don’t tell the entire story of Nix’s 2025 season. His coaches saw improvement, particularly in the second half of the season, after some weeks of considerable struggle.

    Now, at the helm of a 14-3 team and two home postseason wins from the Super Bowl, Nix is tasked with trying to guide the Broncos on a run toward a world championship.

    How is he, in particular, better equipped to do so than a year ago?

    “I think the offense as a whole has found a decent rhythm in regards to how we want to play it, run and pass,” Webb said. “He’s done a good job, really the last seven or eight weeks, of really controlling the line of scrimmage. In and out of the huddle, operation, protections.

    “He’s made a jump in recognition.”

    Also on the list: calmer feet and a more decisive approach for when to take off and run. They’re all related and intertwined. The third down against the Chiefs shows all three at work and perhaps provided a blueprint for how Denver can maximize Nix’s effectiveness in the postseason.

    Start with the recognition.

    Nix has now seen Spagnuolo’s defense four times in his career. Same for Los Angeles Chargers coordinator Jesse Minter and Las Vegas’ Patrick Graham. All three draw high praise from Payton and the Broncos’ coaching staff.

    But it’s not just specific coordinators.

    Webb and the Broncos quarterback room talk frequently about coordinator “families.”

    “Jesse Minter, he comes from the Baltimore family,” Webb said. “So that’s Wink Martindale, that’s Mike Macdonald in Seattle. His first game ever was against Mike Macdonald. So you can pull from those experiences.”

    The more you see, the more you know, the more you can cross-reference, the more comfortable you get.

    Each coordinator has his own wrinkles for each matchup and preparation matters, but there’s not much substituting for experience.

    Nix has some familiarity with Buffalo and Sean McDermott, of course, since they played a year ago in the postseason. He also has a terrific resource in Webb, who spent three seasons as a player with the Bills and knows McDermott well.

    The staff also sees Nix’s footwork calming as the season progresses.

    In mid-December, offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi said Nix’s feet, “have gotten a lot better,” since just before the Broncos’ Week 12 bye, noting “the way he handles himself in the pocket and just trusting the protection.”

    For Webb, that carried through the latter stages of the regular season. In part because of Nix’s between-snap habits, but also because of the leap in recognition.

    There’s a time and a place for happy feet. There are times and places where being too itchy to get moving can wipe big-play potential off the board.

    “It’s not allowing a pressure or something to affect him for the next throw,” Webb said. “‘Hey, deep breathe it out, understand this is the game within the game.’ Understand when the pocket is clean and we’ve got guys with either space or a coverage beater or a man-to-man matchup. That’s the time to have conviction with your throws as opposed to ‘uhhhhh’ and thinking about what happened before.

    “He’s done a good job of that as of late.”

    Bo Nix (10) of the Denver Broncos scrambles for a gain against the Los Angeles Chargers during the third quarter at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, January 4, 2026. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
    Bo Nix (10) of the Denver Broncos scrambles for a gain against the Los Angeles Chargers during the third quarter at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, January 4, 2026. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    Escaping pressure

    Interestingly, Nix has also done something else lately: He’s taken off and run more.

    Part of that is opponent and plan-driven. Part of it is pressure-driven. Nix’s two highest scramble totals, per charting by The Post, have come against the Chargers. Perhaps not surprisingly, those two games are also the two highest pressure rates against Nix.

    In Weeks 17 and 18, though, Nix scrambled 10 total times. That’s Nix running on a designed pass play, so not including anything that looks like a designed run option for him or quarterback draws, sneaks and kneeldowns.

    Before Week 17, he’d scrambled 10 times in Denver’s previous nine games.

    Payton, during the Christmas game, told Nix and Webb he thought there were running lanes to exploit, but Nix said after Week 18 that he doesn’t think that’s what’s led to the uptick.

    “Sometimes I see or feel good lanes, sometimes I don’t have it that day and it’s harder to feel,” he said after Denver’s 19-3 win over L.A. earlier this month. “Some of that is doing it early and feeling it early. I think today, the third play of the game, we got a pressure. It just happens and you escape, you get there and it sort of gets you involved. It’s like hitting a free throw early in a basketball game. You just feel what it feels like, see the ball go through.”

    Nix scrambled a season-high six times against the Chargers for 48 yards. The week before: Four for 32.

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    Parker Gabriel

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  • Sean Payton: Broncos aren’t ‘looking to send a message’ at NFL trade deadline

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    The question started innocently enough, only for Sean Payton to obfuscate the Broncos’ intentions as much as possible.

    With the trade, and you’re in a buyer position, philosophically, do you believe in the benefit–

    “With what trade?” Payton said on a Monday conference call, interrupting a reporter.

    Philosophically, do you believe in sending a message to the team that you’re all in? 

    “We would never make a trade to send a message to the team,” Payton said. “Everyone in the locker room, our players, coaches, management, front office, knows that we’re all in to win.

    “The trade would take place — this supposed trade — if we found value in something that could help us,” Payton continued. “Period. That’s it. We’re not looking to send a message.”

    As Tuesday’s 2 p.m. trade deadline approaches, the NFL world is keeping a close eye on the Broncos’ aggressiveness, as the club evaluates a potential Payton-dubbed supposed trade. Denver is 7-2 and a game up in the AFC West entering a key stretch run, with two divisional games against the Chiefs remaining. They also still carry a litany of glaring issues, making them a potential buyer at the deadline.

    But would they gamble away draft picks for an all-in rental?

    “We’ll see,” Payton responded when asked Monday if Denver was in a position where they wanted to make a move.

    Payton and others have expressed public confidence in the current Broncos roster. Anything is possible in the next 24 hours, but a trail of breadcrumbs leads to a single most likely outcome: Denver either stands pat or doesn’t make an overall massive splash.

    “It is what it is,” Payton said in Sunday’s postgame presser when asked to evaluate his team at the halfway point. “It’s our record. I lost track…”

    Someone reminded him that the Broncos are 7-2.

    “There you go,” Payton continued. “That’s how I see it. That’s pretty good.”

    Trade rumors have floated around the Broncos for weeks. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that Denver is one of a few teams that’ve made a call inquiring about wide receivers. And Denver has a few positions where it could look to upgrade or find depth: receiver, tight end and left guard, most notably.

    But there are considerations with each of those position groups that muddy the waters.

    In his almost 20 years as an NFL head coach, Payton’s teams have never traded for a wide receiver at the deadline. In late October, offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi also expressed faith in the receivers Denver has on its roster when asked if they could look to the deadline for WR help. Plus, Denver gave $16.5 million guaranteed to tight end Evan Engram in the offseason and still hasn’t figured out how to consistently use him in its offense (0 catches on 3 targets at the Texans Sunday).

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    Luca Evans

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  • Renck: With Broncos’ offense out of sync, time for Sean Payton to let Bo Nix go more uptempo

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    Denver is well known for LoDo and RiNo.

    GoBo better join that list if the Broncos are serious about becoming a Super Bowl contender.

    The Broncos delivered a second-half performance against the Jets that was embarrassing. So, you let me have it.

    Preparing to board my flight from London Heathrow to DIA, the criticisms veiled as questions included, “Who calls a pass on the 1-yard line and risks a safety? Was that a fullback draw on third-and-10? Why doesn’t Evan Engram play more?” And my personal favorite from a man with a heavy British accent, “If I wanted to watch a game with no scoring,” you guessed it, he could have saved his money for a fútbol game.

    The fans are mad. They are angry. They are right.

    We will find out more about the Broncos, so much more with a normal practice schedule and no travel, when they host the New York Giants. We will find out an answer to the question hanging over this season: Will coach Sean Payton do more to help Bo Nix?

    Will he employ doses of uptempo?

    Until Payton provides that answer, the question on whether or not the Broncos are a legitimate AFC threat will remain an unequivocal no.

    Teams that play deep into January don’t rank in the middle of the pack or worse in every meaningful offensive category.

    The reason this is the case? Nix and Payton are not in rhythm.

    This season has been an exercise in frustration.

    For every eye-opening quarter, there has been a dizzying array of punts. Nix admitted Wednesday that it was “a relief” when Engram converted a first down on the cgame-winning drive last Sunday.

    Is that the new reality for Nix and this offense? It better not be or the Broncos will waste one of the greatest defenses in franchise history.

    What unfurled against the Jets was so odorous that it suggests that the Nix and Payton have contrasting visions of how to achieve success.

    Nix needs to go fast. At least for the foreseeable future.

    He was 11-for-15 for 96 yards in uptempo against the Jets, according to Next Gen stats. He excels at the quick hitters, not surprisingly since he mastered it over his final two years at Oregon. The Jets and the Giants are the not the same defensively, but they have this in common: they bring the heat.

    Nix is already getting rid of the ball quickly. Why not add wrinkles with sprinkles of tempo? The quarterback sure sounds like he would be all for it.

    “It gets the defense off balance. We play well from the quick game. It’s tough on defenses,” said Nix, who is completing 64.6 % of his passes with nine touchdowns and four interceptions. “You are more attacking them, instead of letting them attacking you.”

    Will Payton consistently hit the throttle? Unlikely. He has pumped the brakes anytime the issue has been raised over the past two seasons. His reasoning is sound, that going too fast too much will compromise his own defense.

    Let’s be clear, I am not suggesting there is a disconnect between the coach and the quarterback. But there appears to be a difference in preference.

    Nix believes uptempo “can limit what the defenses will do, and they may not be in the right set.”

    Payton sees its value, but likes it more as a situational weapon.

    “I think a lot of it is dependent on what personnel we’re in, what do we want to get to. I think it’s always part of our plan. It’s just a matter of where we’re at field position-wise and what we’re trying to accomplish,” Payton said. “I can’t recall that we went away (from it last week). There are times when— like the touchdown was kind of an up-tempo play. We’ll use it each week where we see fit.”

    He’s the boss. But it is obvious the Broncos need more of it and fewer personnel groups.

    As it stands, Denver’s passing attack is akin to an NBA team that relies on layups and 3-pointers. There is no intermediate game, though Engram could change that if, you know, he ever becomes a focal point of the offense.

    Given the reliance on the short passes to set up deep strikes, it makes sense to press the pedal. Nix admits that he picks his spots when going over the game plan with offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi and Payton, a concession to their experience.

    But the six-game sample size is something. Nix has raised his voice before during games, and would be well-served to speak up now with a third of the season over. This could shift him into high gear.

    The offensive issues are more than a Nix problem. But wouldn’t the speed game help solve some of them?

    “Yeah, I think he likes that we’ll probably get a really simple or base defense, or coverage from lining up fast and putting tempo on ’em. For example, like, with the Giants, those guys up front – they’re real. It also has a little bit to do with like, wearing guys down,” receiver Troy Franklin said. “Just getting them to move fast, they’re bigger guys. So it’ll help us in the long run and stuff, for sure.”

    This week will begin answering questions. No matter how you break down the numbers, the Broncos’ offense has been average at best, disappointing at worst. Payton is fond of saying that all teams begin the season a race to find their identity.

    It is clear that the coach can speed up that process for his quarterback by going uptempo.

    It is time for BoGo.

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    Troy Renck

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  • The Bo Nix Index, Week 5: How tempo, blitz recognition keyed QB’s fourth-quarter breakout

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    Eventually, they stopped talking about points. Bo Nix, and the rest of the Broncos’ offense around him made clear: they needed to go get six.

    They had punted on six straight possessions in Philadelphia. Nix was playing some of his worst football in a topsy-turvy start. He “wasn’t happy,” as he put it postgame.

    And then a shining version of Nix unfurled before the hostile Philly crowd, the best version of the second-year quarterback shooting the Eagles down in the fourth quarter in one of the most important performances of his young career.

    “We handled it how we handled it,” Nix said after the Broncos’ 21-17 win, “and we went out and won the game.”

    Welcome back to The Denver Post’s Bo Nix Index, reviewing every drop-back from Nix’s performance the previous week. For Week 5, let’s focus specifically on the factors that contributed to the quarterback’s star-making final frame: 9-of-10 passing, 127 yards, a touchdown. Plenty of reps both explained Nix’s erratic play early and his steadiness down the stretch. Here are four key themes.

    1. Nix favors tempo. It worked against Eagles

    Last week, head coach Sean Payton noted that Nix “likes tempo” to start a game — a kind of fast-paced offense that incorporates no-huddle and motion to wear defenses down. Within that, too, Payton hinted his staff has adapted to reduce verbiage in play calls so Nix can get to the line quicker.

    “He’ll have input like, ‘Hey, this is a play I really like, can we get that in?’” Lombardi said of Nix. “And nine times out of 10, we do it.”

    Denver went straight to tempo in their first drive against the Eagles. Nix clapped his hands in an early no-huddle third-down look, smoothly one-handing a high snap, pivoting, and firing a quick comebacker to Courtland Sutton for a first down. The Broncos went no-huddle three times across that first drive, and Nix moved them into Philadelphia territory before a sack by Cooper DeJean stalled the drive.

    After veering away from tempo in the third quarter, Nix got rolling in Denver’s early fourth-quarter drive with some faster looks. He hit Sutton again on a quick play-action back-shoulder ball for a first down to push the Broncos into Eagles territory. His eventual game-tying touchdown pass came off tempo, as Nix cycled through his reads while rolling out and found Evan Engram for a score.

    Nix has a 108.8 quarterback rating this season on play-action passes, and a 101.5 QB rating when taking less than 2.5 seconds to throw, according to Next Gen Stats. Generally, he appears to make quicker decisions when Payton speeds up opposing defenses.

    2. Nix scraps strange statue-feet habit

    As has been pointed out in previous Bo Nix Indexes, the QB is better when he actually sets his feet to throw — and more importantly, doesn’t drift. But Nix also has a particular mechanical quirk at the opposite end of the spectrum. At times, on quick-hits, he’ll take a snap and fire with only a tiny tap of his front foot, generating little lower-body momentum.

    Sometimes, it works out fine — like a second-quarter strike to Trent Sherfield, when Nix fired quickly to expose an opening in the middle of the Eagles’ zone. But it can also backfire.

    On a late Broncos third-quarter drive that stalled out, Nix had receiver Marvin Mims Jr. open on a short flare on third-and-2. He turned his body in Mims’ direction toward the right sideline. But instead of shuffling his feet again to point parallel at Mims, Nix planted near-horizontally and fired a sidearm throw. The ball sailed and tipped off an outstretched Mims’ fingertips for an ugly incompletion.

    Nix’s feet went topsy-turvy at times throughout the fourth quarter, as he’s wont to do. But each of his most visible strikes — a 10-yard hit to Troy Franklin, an 18-yard crosser to Engram, a pivotal 34-yard connection with Sutton — came with drive off his back foot. He switched off statue mode, and the Broncos were better for it.

    3. Nix deciphered and felt out pressure much more quickly in fourth quarter

    Broncos third-string running back Tyler Badie got more snaps on Sunday than rookie RJ Harvey, in large part because Denver trusts him more in pass protection (and two-minute situations). Badie absolutely wiped out Eagles inside linebacker Zack Baun on an early third-down ILB blitz.

    Harvey, meanwhile, got smoked by DeJean on a blitz on that same drive, and Nix nearly was dinged for a game-changing sack-fumble.

    That play knocked the Broncos out of field-goal range and an early opportunity to put points on the board. But it wasn’t all on Harvey. Nix had a few puzzling moments where he got himself into trouble against the Eagles by not feeling pressure off the edge.

    Harvey wasn’t even blocking DeJean on Nix’s blind side, and the quarterback had ample room to step up or even escape the pocket on that third down. This played out again in the second quarter, when Azeez Ojulari got an angle on Broncos left tackle Garett Bolles and hit Nix for an incompletion when he didn’t step up.

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    Luca Evans

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  • Broncos TE Evan Engram on track to play vs. Bengals, still has ‘trust’ in team’s plan for him

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    Evan Engram has been through the high of the highest and the lowest of the low, ex-Giants tight end coach Lunda Wells put it this offseason. These days, he tends to stay somewhere in between.

    The Broncos’ much-hyped tight end is back on track to play in Week 4, after two straight days of full participation in practice. It’s a Monday night chance to stabilize an early tenure in Denver that hasn’t gone to plan. In Week 1, the 31-year-old tweaked his calf . In Week 2, his back “flared up,” as Engram told The Denver Post on Friday.

    Engram said his back “feels good” on Friday, though, and largely shrugged off his rocky start.

    “I feel like God just kinda throws little curveballs at you sometimes,” Engram told The Post. “And I just take pride in responding to it the best way I can. And I think everything’s leading in the right direction.”

    After missing last week’s practices and game against the Chargers, the Broncos’ self-dubbed “cleaner” has returned to tidy up a messy offensive kitchen in Denver. Quarterback Bo Nix has lacked a consistent option over the middle, beyond Courtland Sutton on crossing routes. The Broncos still have yet to get any passing-game production from their tight ends, a room with a collective 10 catches for 63 yards.

    That lack of production is precisely why the Broncos signed Engram back in March. In the two games he’s played, though, Engram’s been on the field less than half of Denver’s offensive snaps — and coach Sean Payton made clear last week that injuries hadn’t played a factor in his on-field role.

    “I don’t know if there’s anything that hasn’t clicked,” offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi said Friday. “I think, a little bit like the running backs, we’ve got a bunch of tight ends that we like. And they all do different things well.

    “But, yeah — we’re aware of what that guy’s strengths are. And he’ll be getting going here real soon.”

    Engram nodded when asked if he feels there’s a plan to escalate his usage.

    “I really do,” he told The Post. “That’s one of the big reasons why I came here, is because I trust the coaches. I trust their plan for me. And I think new things like this take time.”

    Engram noted it took a “couple weeks” to find his groove when he first arrived in Jacksonville in 2022, after playing five years with the New York Giants. Indeed, in his third and fourth games of that first year with the Jaguars, Engram had a combined two catches on four targets .

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    Luca Evans

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  • Broncos WR room in good hands with Courtland Sutton, an improvement ‘thief,’ leading the way

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    The Broncos’ 2025 wide receiver corps has a high ceiling because of the upside several players in the room possess.

    Perhaps just as important: The group has a pretty stable floor because of Courtland Sutton, the trusty veteran and No.1 option.

    Sutton is coming off perhaps the best year of his professional career in 2024, is newly signed to a four-year, $92 million contract extension, and is primed to carry on into 2025 as the top option for second-year quarterback Bo Nix in the passing game.

    None of that seemed like a guarantee when the 2018 second-round pick got off to a slow start with Nix last year, but over the course of the season, their connection continually strengthened.

    By the end of Week 18, Sutton logged career highs in catches (81) and targets (135), topped 1,000 yards for the first time since 2019, and set himself up to be part of Denver’s long-term future.

    “He’s been a captain,” head coach Sean Payton said this summer. “If he didn’t say a word, the young guys watch his preparation and his work ethic. Yet, obviously, his experience (helps) with all of those players. It really starts with his preparation in (the building) and on to the field.

    “He’s everything you want in a pro.”

    In 2024, he started slow but turned himself into everything Nix needed as a rookie trying to navigate his first NFL season.

    Sutton finished third in third-down catches (30) and led the NFL in both third-down yardage (452) and first downs generated (27), according to Football Database data.

    At 6-foot-4 and 215-plus pounds, Sutton gave Nix a big target to trust down the field and in traffic.

    According to Next Gen Stats, Sutton accounted for 45.7% of the Broncos’ downfield targets, which was the second-highest share on throws of 10-plus air yards in the league.

    That led to a lot of good (812 yards on downfield throws between Nix and Sutton), some bad (six interceptions on such attempts), and a clear trust built between the two.

    Payton said this summer that Sutton reminds him of former New Orleans receiver Marques Colston, a seventh-round pick who went on to log six 1,000-yard seasons, 9,759 total receiving yards and 72 touchdowns over a 10-year career.

    “Marques was maybe a little quieter, but day in and day out, so consistent in their performance,” Payton said. “And then on gamedays, they were very similar. They both played split end, strong hands in traffic, really, really good football instincts. …

    “When you get to know (Sutton), he doesn’t have too many bad days. Those guys with the right energy, there’s a lot to be said for that because you’re going to hit some tough times and you’re going to hit some walls during the course of any season. He’s one of those guys who is part of the solution. Always.”

    Sutton turns 30 in early October — he’ll celebrate the big, round number while the Broncos are in London preparing to play the New York Jets — but has shown no signs of slowing down. Even in 2024, when he skipped the voluntary portion of Denver’s offseason in protest of his contract status, Sutton showed up to training camp in terrific shape.

    This year proved no exception.

    “Courtland has been having a really good camp,” offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi said recently. “He looks to me even better than he did last camp.”

    Denver Broncos head coach Sean Payton talks to Denver Broncos wide receiver Courtland Sutton (14) and QB Bo Nix (10) during training camp at Broncos Park Powered by CommonSpirit in Centennial on Thursday, July 31, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

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    Parker Gabriel

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