I broke down the NFC playoff picture two weeks ago, which essentially
had two guaranteed spots and then nine teams in a free-for-all for the other
four opportunities. The Falcons and Packers have probably played their way out
of that race, but we're still looking at seven teams for four spots. Some good
team is going to miss out.
Let's run through the AFC, where
things are a little clearer. Five teams are huge favorites to make the
postseason, according to ESPN's Football Power Index (FPI), but they're all fighting
for seeding and holding off the competition. The sixth spot is going to be fun
chaos, and there's still a reasonable chance one of those five teams could slip
and make an unexpected tumble out of the playoff picture.
I'll start by
looking at the bottom of the race and the three teams that would need to string
together a big streak to start dreaming about the playoffs:
TIER I: THE
EXTREME OUTSIDERS
These teams basically have to run
the table or come close to make it into the postseason. The good news for these
fan bases: It happens more than you might think. In 2017, the Bills were at 5-5
after the Nathan Peterman game, but they beat the Chiefs, finished
4-2 and sneaked into the playoffs. The 2015 Steelers were 6-5 and finished 4-1
to win a wild-card berth. The 2013 Chargers were left for dead at 4-6, but they
won five of their last six games to make the postseason at 9-7.
11. MIAMI
DOLPHINS (5-6)
FPI playoff chances: 1.8
percent
The Dolphins really needed to
win Sunday's game against the Colts in which they led 24-14
with less than nine minutes to go and failed to come up with a victory. Adam
Gase's play calling came in for criticism, given that the Dolphins' final two
drives protecting that lead combined for zero first downs, minus-1 yards and
less than two full minutes taken off of the clock.
Gase chalked up his decision-making to the Colts' run blitzes and poor field
position, but the Colts aren't the first team to run-blitz in a
close game. The Dolphins had poor field position because Xavien Howard,
who had two interceptions on consecutive Colts snaps, took a personal foul for
a late hit on Eric Ebron's
game-tying touchdown, which was followed by a pair of penalties (one of which
was accepted) on the ensuing short kickoff. The Dolphins didn't execute with
the game on the line.
While Miami was able to
force Andrew Luck into two interceptions and got the first sack
on Luck since early October, the Dolphins haven't had the pass rush needed to
hold up against the tougher elements of their schedule. Miami ranks 29th in
sack rate despite a roster in which four of the six highest cap hits belong to
pass-rushers with Robert Quinn ($11.4
million), Andre Branch ($10
million), Cameron Wake ($9.6
million) and the departed Ndamukong Suh,
who is responsible for $9.1 million in dead money.
The Dolphins have
wasted their 3-0 start. They're in rough tiebreaker shape at 4-4 in the AFC,
and losses to the Bengals, Colts and Texans will make it tough to win a
head-to-head tiebreaker, though they beat the Titans in the season opener. The
good news is that they still have a home game against the Jaguars and a
home-and-home with the Bills to come, but even if they win those three games,
their other two matchups are a home game against the Patriots and a road trip
to Minnesota. Their victories have come over the Titans (in a game broken up by
multiple lightning delays and with an injured Marcus
Mariota), Bears (with an injured Khalil Mack),
and then a win over the Raiders and two over the Jets. It's asking too much of
Miami to go 4-1 the rest of the way.
10. CINCINNATI
BENGALS (5-6)
FPI playoff chances: 4.0
percent
It's tempting to say the Bengals'
season turned on the final two minutes of their game with the Steelers in Week 6.
The 4-1 Bengals took a 21-20 lead on a Joe Mixon touchdown
with 1:21 left, but a holding penalty on Kirkpatrick extended Pittsburgh's
ensuing drive before Antonio Brown brought
in a 31-yard touchdown with 15 seconds left to further Pittsburgh's spell on
its divisional rivals. The Bengals lost and have gone 1-4 since, including
a 35-20
beatdown by the Browns on Sunday afternoon.
The more accurate reality is that
the Bengals have reacted to a lopsided schedule. Their victories have come
against the Buccaneers, Dolphins, Falcons, Ravens and a Colts team with a
still-limited Andrew Luck in
Week 1. It took an 83-yard fumble return on a would-be game-winning drive
against the Colts to seal things against Indy. The Bengals scored with seven
seconds left to top the Falcons 37-36. They blew a 34-16 lead before Randy Bullock hit
a field goal on the final play of the game to clinch a win over the Bucs. Even
at its best, this was not a dominant football team.
Before Sunday, meanwhile, their
losses had come against far tougher competition. Carolina. Pittsburgh. Kansas
City. New Orleans. The Bengals lost their return engagement to the Ravens
in Lamar Jackson's
debut, and then Baker
Mayfield ripped them apart for 245 yards and three touchdowns
in the first half on Sunday.
Rightfully, Cincinnati's
absolutely absent defense has been the story. Over the past five games, the
Bengals have been allowing 3.3 points per possession on defense. To put that in
context, the league average is 2.1 points per drive. The second-worst defense
in the league over that time frame has been the Raiders, who are closer to the
Jets in 19th place than they are to the Bengals. The Bengals have been allowing
9.3 yards per pass attempt, which is about what Patrick
Mahomes and Jared Goff are
averaging this season.
You can win with
a bad defense. The Rams rank in the bottom five in both points per drive and
yards per attempt over that same time frame, but they have a great offense. The
Bengals haven't had a great offense since A.J. Green went
down. In 2018, Andy Dalton has
posted a 96.5 passer rating and a 71.6 Total QBR with Green
on the field. In 116 dropbacks with Green on the sideline, Dalton's passer
rating has fallen to 72.6 with a Total QBR of 49.3. In terms of the numbers,
that's like going from Tom Brady (96.3
passer rating, 69.0 QBR) to C.J. Beathard (81.9
rating, 49.0 QBR).
Cincinnati is about cooked. Three
of its final five games are on the road, and while its home games are against
the Broncos and Raiders, the Bengals are going to need to beat the Chargers or
the Steelers away from home to have a realistic shot of making the postseason.
There just isn't much evidence that Marvin Lewis' team has a win over a big
team in it.
9. DENVER
BRONCOS (5-6)
FPI playoff chances: 9.7
percent
Two weeks ago, I mentioned
that record and likely to improve during the second half of the season. I
didn't expect those developments to take place immediately. The Broncos have
saved their season by beating the Chargers and Steelers in consecutive weeks. A
team that looked like it might be firing Coach Vance Joseph actually has an
outside shot at making it back to the postseason.
What has changed? To start, the
offense has held on to the football. Denver turned the ball over in each of its
first nine games, but Case Keenum &
Co. haven't been turned over once during this two-game winning streak. The
defense subsequently hasn't had to face a single drive starting on Denver's
side of the field and has faced just two drives beginning past the opponent's
30-yard line.
Both those drives came on Sunday
against the Steelers, and Pittsburgh scored zero points across
them. James Conner fumbled
away a screen at the end of a big gain on the first drive,
and Roethlisberger threw a stunning, game-ending interception into the
hands of nose tackle Shelby Harris in
the end zone to seal the victory.
It's also realistic to note that
the Broncos have been lucky. Roethlisberger could have had a 550-yard game on
Sunday if it weren't for poor throws. The Steelers repeatedly torched Denver's
cornerbacks with double moves, but Roethlisberger overthrew JuJu
Smith-Schuster on one would-be long touchdown past Tramaine
Brock before hitting him on a double move for a 97-yard score
past Bradley Roby.
Later in the game, Roethlisberger missed James
Washington on a similar move past Isaac Yiadom.
Last week, Denver beat the Chargers in a game in which Los Angeles had a key
fumble recovery overturned. The Broncos won by one in a game in which Chargers
kicker Michael Badgley missed an extra point.
With the win,
though, the Broncos unlock the easiest part of their schedule. It includes
three road games in four weeks, but the opponents -- the Bengals, 49ers, Browns
and Raiders -- aren't scaring anyone. The best-case scenario for the Broncos is
that they stay on a hot streak while the Chargers struggle without Melvin Gordon in
advance of a Week 17 rematch between the two in Denver.
TIER II: THE JOY
OF SIX
With five AFC teams already north
of 90 percent, the most likely scenario is that one of these three teams will
make its way into the postseason as the sixth seed. Getting into the playoffs
might be enough to win one of two rookie coaches a Coach of the Year nod. More
pressingly, a playoff berth might also be enough to save one veteran coach's
job.
8. TENNESSEE
TITANS (5-6)
FPI playoff chances: ~14
percent
While Tennessee lost to the
division rival Texans on Monday
night, its playoff odds only dropped by 5.8 percentage points. The
Titans can safely write their chances of winning the division off -- their
chances of a South title are a mere 2.0 percent -- but their schedule from here
on out is extremely generous.
Marcus
Mariota & Co. finish their season with four home games over
the next five weeks. They host the Jets, Jaguars, Washington, and the Colts,
with only a road trip to the Giants taking the Titans away from Nashville. The
Titans could feasibly be favored in each of those five contests. Being favored
in five games doesn't mean you're going to win them all, of course, but the Titans
are well-positioned to beat up on lesser teams and go on a run.
The problem, sadly, is that we
don't know which Titans team is going to show up from week-to-week. I wrote about their inconsistencies last week, and it's
difficult to count on Tennessee to win the games they're supposed to win
against inferior competition. On Monday night, the Titans were up 10-0 after
six minutes, only to be blow the lead by the opening play of the second quarter
and lose by 17 points.
The Texans aren't
inferior competition, but the Titans looked like a different team from one
drive to the next. How can a team which blew out the Patriots lose their next
two games within the AFC South by a combined 45 points? Until the Titans figure
themselves out, it's tough to count on them to make the run their schedule
suggests is possible.
7. INDIANAPOLIS
COLTS (6-5)
FPI playoff chances: 38.4
percent
The Colts got away with one
Sunday, winning a sloppy game Dolphins despite turning the ball over three
times. It's tempting to take this as a positive sign that the Colts can squeeze
out victories without their best stuff, but history suggests that blowout wins
over mediocre teams like the Bills and Titans are much more meaningful and
promising than narrow victories over the Fins and Jaguars. Indy has mixed
victories of both types on its five-game winning streak, although the only
serious playoff contender among the five was the Titans.
Things get stiffer for Luck and
the Colts over the remainder of the season, although each of their final five
games is winnable. Indy still has to play its AFC South brethren on the road,
including the Jaguars and Texans over the next two weeks. Its home games are
against the Cowboys, who are surging, and the Giants, who represent the
opposite of surging.
For a thin, inexperienced team
like the Colts, the path to the postseason has to include staying healthy. The
offensive line really clicked once left tackle Anthony
Castonzo got back from injury, but with center Ryan Kelly out
this week, Luck was sacked for the first time in more than a month. Marlon Mack left
with a concussion, and while he averaged 5.7 yards per carry, replacement Nyheim Hines turned
his nine runs into a mere 28 yards. (To be fair, he might have been weighed
down by T.J. McDonald's soul after Hines juked McDonald out of his cleats on a
16-yard run.) Defensive Rookie of the Year candidate Darius
Leonard missed five snaps after going down on the opening play
of the game Sunday, but one was the 33-yard swing pass to Kenyan Drake for
a touchdown.
The Colts don't
have many stars, and their standouts have to stay on the field to keep them
humming at a playoff level. Chief among them is Luck, who was targeted for the
second consecutive week as a receiver. After stretching out and narrowly
missing a touchdown catch last week, Luck leaped for a fourth-and-1 conversion and took a hard shot in the process.
Luck continued the drive and led Indy to a touchdown, and he's big enough to
absorb hits from defensive backs, but this is the football equivalent of
picking up pennies in front of a steamroller. Frank Reich has done great work
with this offense, but turning Luck into a receiver in mid-November is too
risky, even for a fourth-down conversion or a possible touchdown.
6. BALTIMORE
RAVENS (6-5)
FPI playoff chances: 43.0
percent
For the second week in a row, the
Ravens pulled out a victory with Lamar Jackson at
the helm over a dismal defense. Last week, Jackson set a quarterback rushing
workload record while beating the Bengals. This week, the former Heisman Trophy
winner ran the ball only 11 times, instead dropping back and throwing 25 passes
during a 34-17 win over the Raiders. The advanced metrics were not
impressed. Total QBR, which takes into account his impact as a runner, dropped
Jackson from a dismal 27.3 mark one week ago to an even worse figure of 26.7
this week.
Why was QBR so skeptical of
Jackson on a day in which the Ravens scored 34 points? To start, the Ravens
scored on a Terrell Suggs fumble
return and a Cyrus Jones punt
return, so the offense contributed 20 points against one of the league's worst
defenses. Jackson threw two interceptions, including one in the end zone, and
fumbled on an exchange, although he recovered the ball. Seventy-four of his 178
passing yards came on one play, a gorgeous bomb to Mark Andrews.
I'm more optimistic about Jackson
than QBR given some additional context. Both of Jackson's interceptions were on
tipped passes, so even if I think Jackson went to the wrong place with the
football, those mistakes are more likely to end with an incompletion rather
than an interception. He was a clear threat as a runner even without carrying
the ball frequently and created running lanes for Gus Edwards,
who rushed 23 times for 118 yards. Jackson also had a perfect 48-yard
completion to John Brown wiped
away by holding on Orlando Brown.
Has Jackson shown
enough to justify a permanent role as the starting quarterback ahead of Joe Flacco?
It's difficult to say. The offense we saw against the Bengals in Week 11 had a
definite shelf life. On Sunday, we saw a more balanced attack, but the Ravens
averaged 6.0 yards per play against a Raiders defense that has allowed more
than that in eight of its 10 other games this season. It's tough to imagine the
Ravens thriving with this offense against tough defenses in the postseason.
At the same time, though, it
would hardly be a surprise for Jackson to feel more comfortable in a
sustainable offense as the season goes along. The Ravens are also entering a
two-game stretch in which running the football well could be extremely
valuable, given that they're about to face the high-powered offenses of the
Falcons and Chiefs. In both cases, the best game plan might be to focus on the
run and keep Matt Ryan and Patrick Mahomes off the field. If that's the case,
Jackson is clearly the better option.
TIER III: THE 90
PERCENTERS
These teams are basically assured
a playoff spot, as their playoff chances exceed 90 percent. Each has seven wins
or more, but we only have to go back to the 2014 Eagles to find a team that
started 8-3 and still managed to miss the postseason. Barring a dramatic
collapse, though, these teams are mostly battling for January seeding and an
outside chance at a first-round bye.
5. LOS ANGELES
CHARGERS (8-3)
FPI playoff chances: 94.2
percent
I have to admit: When the
Chargers went down 10-0 to the Cardinals in the first quarter on Sunday;
I was worried there might be a hangover effect from an inconsistent performance
against the Raiders and a sloppy loss to the Broncos last week. Philip Rivers took
care of that. The 36-year-old quarterback played arguably the most efficient
game of his career, going 28-of-29 passing for 259 yards with three touchdowns
before giving way to Geno Smith.
The Cardinals aren't slouches, either; this was the league's
fifth-best pass defense by DVOA heading into the week.
The Chargers took out Rivers, but
Anthony Lynn might regret leaving in Melvin Gordon long
enough to suffer a knee injury. Gordon had to talk his way into the lineup and
touched the ball 12 times before taking a hit on a reverse and leaving the
game. Early reports suggest Gordon suffered an MCL injury, which should cost him time but
not end his season.
I wouldn't have been concerned
about the Chargers missing Gordon in the past, because they've been basically
the same offense with and without Gordon in the fold. From 2015 to '17, the
Chargers averaged 3.7 yards per rush with Gordon on the field and ... 3.7 yards
per rush with him on the sideline. Over that same time frame, Rivers posted a
passer rating of 93.3 with the first-round pick in the lineup and a passer
rating of 91.7 with Gordon not on the field.
This year,
though, Gordon and the rest of the Chargers are averaging 5.4 yards per rush
with the Wisconsin star on the field and 4.3 yards per rush with Gordon
sidelined. Rivers' passing numbers are essentially the same, but Gordon was
having his most productive year by far. Austin Ekeler has
rounded into form as a useful complementary back, but it's asking a lot to
expect Ekeler to serve as an every-down player.
The timing also hurts, as the
Chargers are off to Pittsburgh to play an angry Steelers team next Sunday
night. They'll have to hope to get Gordon back for a critical Thursday night
game against the Chiefs in Week 15, a game the Chargers will realistically have
to win to have any shot of hosting a playoff game come January.
4. PITTSBURGH
STEELERS (7-3-1)
FPI playoff chances: 95.5
percent
It felt like this sort of loss
was coming for the Steelers, who had managed to survive a near loss in overtime
to the Browns, won a game they trailed with 1:18 left against the Bengals, and
came back for a victory against the Jags in a dramatic goal-to-go situation
last week. Last week, penalties helped the Steelers overcome a James Conner drop
to set up a game-winning score. This week, they weren't as lucky. Conner was
stuffed on a run from the 2-yard line before Roethlisberger was picked off on a
pop pass by nose tackle Shelby Harris.
The Steelers don't have much to
be worried about. Their offense generated 527 yards Sunday and left 100 more on
the field with drops. Most weeks, that's going to result in more than 10
points. (Xavier
Grimble, for one, probably won't fumble into the end zone for a
touchback again.) FPI still thinks they have a 91.9 percent shot of winning the
AFC North, owing to a guaranteed tiebreaker win over the Ravens. Pittsburgh's
superior divisional record means that the 6-5 Ravens will have to make up two
games over the final six weeks to surpass the Steelers, which is far tougher to
pull off without a head-to-head matchup on the calendar.
The Steelers
don't have to play the Ravens again, but their remaining schedule is going to
be a problem. Over the next four weeks, they host the Chargers, travel to play
the Raiders, host the Patriots and then head to New Orleans to play the Saints.
Those are three of the eight best teams in football and the Raiders. Two of the
three tough games are at home, but the Patriots have won their past five
contests against the Steelers. The Upshot's playoff model gives the Steelers a 27
percent of claiming a first-round bye. Lose to the Patriots and those chances
fall to 6 percent.
With the Steelers unlikely to
challenge the 9-2 Chiefs for a first-round bye given the head-to-head
tiebreaker, Mike Tomlin's team is more realistically competing for the 3-seed
in the AFC with the Texans. The gap between the Chargers (who are overwhelming
favorites to finish as the fifth seed) and the range of possible sixth seeds
looks to be more significant than the split between most wild-card teams.
There's real value in finishing third and avoiding Joey Bosa &
Co. in the first round. That should be Pittsburgh's goal heading into the
postseason.
3. HOUSTON
TEXANS (8-3)
FPI playoff chances: ~96
percent
The Texans aren't as good as
their record. They have the Pythagorean expectation of a 6.8-win team, leaving
them more than a full win ahead of their underlying level of play. They've
played the league's sixth-easiest schedule per FPI. They're currently on an
eight-game winning streak, but the toughest team the Texans have played over
that stretch is probably the Colts. Four of those wins have come by a field
goal, and a fifth was by a touchdown over the Bills. Their only comfortable
victories before stomping the Titans on Monday night came over the Jaguars, who
benched Blake Bortles,
and the Dolphins, who were starting Brock
Osweiler.
If you're a Texans fan, I have good
news: none of that is going to matter, because things aren't going to correct
themselves for a while. Bill O'Brien's team has already banked enough wins that
they can essentially make the postseason with two victories in their final five
games. They're in the middle of a three-game homestand, with the Browns and
Colts coming to town over the next two weeks. Beating Indy would lock up the
South.
Darren Woodson and John Fox agree
that the Texans will win their eighth straight overall vs. the Titans.
A 4-1 finish would
give the Texans a serious chance of a first-round bye, and they can do that by
winning three home games against the Browns, Colts, and Jaguars alongside a
road victory against the Jets. Chances are that the Texans will at least lose
one of those seemingly-winnable games, but that scenario is hardly implausible.
One subtle factor driving
Houston's turnaround: after years of disastrous performances, the Texans have
finally turned their special teams around. After ranking 26th or worse in
special teams DVOA for six straight seasons between 2012 and 2017, Houston
ranked eighth in the NFL heading into Week 12. The difference between their
2017 and 2018 special teams has been worth about two points per game to the
Texans, which only sounds like a lot when you consider that they won two
consecutive games before Monday's blowout by that exact margin.
TIER IV: THE LOCKS
It would take an unprecedented
collapse for one of the top two seeds in the AFC to miss the postseason. More
realistically, they're battling for home-field advantage throughout the AFC
playoffs.
2. NEW ENGLAND
PATRIOTS (8-3)
FPI playoff chances: 99.8
percent
The Patriots can clinch the AFC
East for the 10th consecutive season -- the 15th consecutive campaign with a
healthy Tom Brady, who missed most of the 2008 season -- by beating
the Dolphins in Week 14. To put this in context, the last quarterback duo to
pip a healthy Brady to the division title was Chad Pennington and Vinny
Testaverde in 2002. A win over the Steelers the following week would leave New
England in great shape to claim a first-round bye, although the Pats will need
the Chiefs to slip up one more time to have any chance of making their
tiebreaker advantage count.
Naturally, Pats fans are familiar
with the traditional story of New England getting off to a slow start before
finding its form and getting unbeatable over the second half of the season. By
my count, that has been the story of seven out of Brady's first 16 campaigns in
the league, including the 2017 Patriots. The 2018 Patriots also would seem set
to qualify, given that they started 1-2 before rolling off a six-game winning
streak.
Are the Patriots rounding into
form? Depends on where you look. The 24-point loss to the Titans in Week 10
doesn't lend credence to that claim, and the Pats came out of their bye looking
flat in going to a 10-10 halftime tie with the Jets on Sunday before
pulling away. Their defensive backs haven't been consistent; a problem that
nagged the Patriots a year ago and never went away. The Pats are going to play
the Chiefs or Steelers in the postseason and end up with a mismatch on every
snap. The Steelers are a little easier, since the Patriots can go with their
usual tactic of sticking Stephon Gilmore on Schuster
while doubling Antonio Brown with
a secondary cornerback and safety help, but that's not as easy against a Chiefs
team that has Travis Kelce and Kareem Hunt.
What's more promising, instead,
is the offense. While Brady & Co. haven't hit the heights their fans perennially
expect, they should be OK for January. After shockingly turning the ball over
in each of their first seven games, the Patriots haven't turned the ball over
on offense in a month. Over the past decade, the Pats are 57-8 in the regular
season and 5-1 in the postseason when they don't give the ball away.
More importantly,
both Rob
Gronkowski and Sony Michel have
rejoined the offense. Gronkowski doesn't look quite up to his usual speed, but
Belichick had enough faith in his star tight end to play Gronkowski on 66 of
the 67 offensive snaps Sunday, and Gronkowski responded with a 34-yard
touchdown catch among his seven targets. I wrote last week about how an active Gronk transforms Brady from Andy Dalton into Aaron Rodgers.
Michel doesn't hurt matters,
either. While the first-round pick was bottled up during the Titans game, he
racked up 133 yards and a touchdown on 21 carries against the Jets, and that's
not including the 41 rushing yards he had called back for penalties. Michel
briefly left the game with a hyperextended back before returning, and while
Patriots fans might be holding their breath every time he gets the ball and is
slow to get up, a healthy Michel has quickly become an essential part of this
offense.
1. KANSAS CITY
CHIEFS (9-2)
FPI playoff chances: 99.9
percent
The Chiefs haven't technically
clinched a spot yet, but they would still be a likely wild card if they lost
out. It's not going to happen. They still have a home-and-home to come with the
Raiders, and given that the road game is the Andy Reid bye week special, I
don't like Oakland's chances of coming away with a split. Sweeping the Raiders
and throwing in one more victory over the Ravens, Chargers or Seahawks would
essentially lock up a week off for the Chiefs in January.
The bigger picture story revolves
around Eric Berry.
The Chiefs haven't had any idea about when Berry might return from the
Haglund's deformity impacting his heel, as evidenced by the fact that they've
carried their star safety on the active roster all season in lieu of placing
him on the physically unable to perform or injured reserve lists. Reports on
Friday suggested Berry would start practicing this week in advance of a
December return.
It would be unfair to expect the
All-Pro safety to play like his normal self after missing nearly two full
seasons with the Haglund's deformity and a ruptured Achilles, but even a
limited Berry would be a valuable addition for the Chiefs. It's fair to wonder
if Kansas City might be 11-0 with a healthy Berry, given what has happened late
in its two losses. The Patriots isolated Rob Gronkowski against reserve defensive
back Josh Shaw for
a critical 39-yard catch on the final drive of the game. Shaw hadn't played on
defense before the Pats game and isn't even on the Chiefs' roster anymore.
Sean McVay went to the same well
with Gerald
Everett last Monday night.
The Chiefs got Daniel
Sorensen, who had served as Berry's replacement a year ago, back
from injured reserve. Sorensen was an upgrade on Shaw, but Everett was still
able to beat Sorensen for the final two Rams touchdowns of the game. Put Berry
in those situations and we might be looking at a Chiefs team chasing history
right about now.
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