Eleven Australians and two New Zealanders will face the Open Championship’s official starter, David Lancaster, on Thursday, chasing an 11th Open Championship title for this region.

Peter Thomson (5), Greg Norman (2) and Kel Nagle, Ian Baker Finch and Sir Bob Charles are those from Australasia to who have held aloft the Claret Jug aloft to date.

In world ranking order, Cameron Smith, Adam Scott, Ryan Fox (NZ) Lucas Herbert, Marc Leishman, Min Woo Lee, Brad Kennedy, Jason Scrivener, Anthony Quayle, Jed Morgan, Dimi Papadatos, Ben Campbell (NZ) and Matthew Griffin will play the 150th Open Championship and, irrespective of how they perform, they will look back in the fullness of time as being one of the lucky ones to have made up the field of 156 on this historic occasion.

With world ranking ranging from number 6 (Cameron Smith) to number 742 (Matthew Griffin) highlighting the broad nature of the qualifying criteria, the Open Championship brings together an eclectic mix of golfers via a range of means from throughout the world and the lineup of Australasians highlights that diversity.

Cameron Smith will play his fifth Open Championship, his best finish to date was when 20th at the 2019 version won by Shane Lowry in Northern Ireland. Last year he was 33rd but if has been just one poor round in each of his last two appearances which have cost him a significantly higher finish as was the case last week and if he can improve that aspect he stands a chance.

I thought Smith was good last week when finishing strongly at the Scottish Open to share 10th place which came after a couple of indifferent performances in the US. Smith appears on track to be the leading Australian and perhaps a contender for the title.

Amazingly, Adam Scott plays his 22nd Open Championship and has a best of runner-up in 2012. He struggled early in his career in this event but in more recent times he has begun to play the event closer to his overall standing in the game.

Scott gave the Scottish Open a miss last week preferring to prepare by easing his way into the major. His last start 14th at the US Open was encouraging enough and he did finish a meritorious 10th at St Andrews in 2015.

Ryan Fox has elevated his standing in the game considerably in 2022 and arrives at St Andrews as the third highest ranked Australasian in world men’s golf. He recent efforts at the Irish Open and in Germany and even last week when he recovered from a slow start to make the cut and then finish 47th at the Scottish Open suggests that his game is not too far from where it needs to be for him to better or equal his previous best in a major when 16th at the 2019 Open Championship.

Fox will have fond memories of his Open debut at St Andrews in 2015 as although he finished only 49th, it was an encouraging effort and a week later he won an event on the Challenge Tour which got him his European Tour card and the rest as they say is history.

Lucas Herbert will play his third Open Championship and although he has made only one cut and finished 51st then, he is a much more accomplished and credentialed player now with wins on both the European and USPGA Tours and as such commands some respect.

Herbert’s form has been a bit of a roller coaster in recent weeks but at his best he can do well this week. The question is whether he can produce it.

This will be Marc Leishman’s 11th Open Championship, his highlight being on this very layout when runner-up after a playoff to Zach Johnson in 2015. The event has been a bit of a roller coaster for Leishman however four missed cuts in those ten starts top go with three top 6 finishes.

Leishman’s most recent form is a concern, three missed cuts in his last four starts leaving a cloud over his chances of a repeat of the 2015 effort.

Min Woo Lee is another to be struggling with form at present, having missed four of his last six cuts after an impressive debut 14th at the Masters. In his two important lead-up events he missed the cut including when defending his title last week at the Scottish Open and finished well back in Ireland.

This will be only Lee’s second Open Championship having missed the cut last year.

Brad Kennedy, at the age of 47, gets to play his 4th Open Championship but he is yet to make a cut in any. The Gold Coast golfer earned his right to play via the Japan Tour’s Mizuno Open and has been playing well in Japan in recent starts with four consecutive top tens including a runner-up finish at his last event.

Kennedy has, in fact, recorded a total of eight top tens in 2022 in both Australia and Japan but of course this is very much a different level again.

Jason Scrivener just keeps getting better each and every season in professional golf. He impressed with a final round of 65 at the Scottish Open to finish 16th and two starts earlier he finished 3rd in a DP World Tour event in Sweden.

The South African born but now West Australian will tee it up for the second time in an Open Championship having missed the cut on debut last year.

Anthony Quayle plays his first Open Championship having gained a start via the Mizuno Open in Japan. The Gold Coast based golfer is again playing well in Japan this season having recorded three top 6 finishes in eight starts there this season along with a win at the Queensland PGA Championship earlier in the year. This, though, is a whole new level and despite the fact that he is an extremely talented young golfer he faces a big task.

Jed Morgan is another to be playing the Open Championship for the first occasion, his win in the PGA Tour of Australasia’s Order of Merit paving his way to St Andrews. The former Australian Amateur and current Australian PGA Champion is clearly a significant although he has struggled since that win in Brisbane in January and, although an emerging talent, this will test him out.

Dimi Papadatos is at St Andrews courtesy of a win at the Vic Open earlier this year, gaining one of the Open Championship spots on offer at that event. He continued to play well in ongoing events in Australia but over recent months in events on the European Challenge Tour, the form has dropped away.

Papadatos has one previous Open Championship appearance for a missed cut at Royal Portrush.

New Zealand’s Ben Campbell managed to secure his place in the field as a result of a runner-up finish at the Vic Open earlier in the year and gets to play his first Open Championship and his very first major. Campbell has played only sparingly in 2022 and so not a lot can be expected of the talented young golfer this week.

Matt Griffin is another to have struggled in 2022 although like Campbell he played his way into what will be his second Open Championship by finishing 3rd at the Vic Open. Griffin missed the cut in his only other start at the Open Championship in 2017 and his current form suggests that things would need to improve sharply for that record to be improved.

It is hard to go past Cameron Smith as Australasia’s only genuine chance of contending for the title and joining Peter Thomson and Kel Nagle as Open Championship winners from this region at St Andrews but the likes of Adam Scott and Ryan Fox might yet give some cheek during the course of the week.

Cameron Smith during his press conference this week – photo R&A and Getty


St Andrews and the Open Championship go hand in hand – photo R&A

I have heard it so often and it happened to me.

On arrival in St Andrews for the very first time in 1973, I was a little underwhelmed by what I saw. I was there to caddy for the now late Australian golfer, Bob Shearer, at the Scottish Open in July of that year and after our first practice round I was struggling to understand just what all the fuss was about.

Admittedly, even though by then I had caddied in 20 or so tournaments and three of those for wins by Jumbo Ozaki and John Lister, I was still (at the age of 19) developing an understanding of golf courses and learning what made good golf courses good and vice versa.

By the end of that very first week at St Andrews, however, I had fallen in love with the not only the golf course but the township of St Andrews itself and, looking back now, it had opened my eyes to the subtleties of links golf and just how a golf course which had staged its first Open Championship 100 years earlier, could still offer such intrigue and strategic demands. Another 49 years on, despite the changing face of golf technology, it still does.

Shearer finished 14th that week with a score of 9 over par, the winner being a man who I would go on to caddy for on many occasions, Graham Marsh, his winning score of 2 under par 286, giving him a six-shot victory over the superb English golfer, Peter Oosterhuis.

What I learnt that week was that the demands and difficulty of links golf on any given day are very much determined by the overhead elements as much as the layout which is being played, but also that a golf course which had, at that point, seen not a lot of change over so many years was still capable of challenging some of the world’s best.

When playing St Andrews you might walk past a bunker one day and wonder just why anyone would bother to put a bunker in a certain position and the next day you could well find yourself in the middle of that bunker. Certainly not unique to St Andrews, admittedly, but typical of links golf generally with those variations subject to changing conditions daily and at times even during the course of any one day where the changing tide, from the adjacent North Sea in St Andrews’ case, can influence the direction and strength of the winds.

It was not only the golf course that left an indelible mark on me at the time, it was the township itself, so full of the history of golf and education (it is a university town) and character and that I was there in the middle of summer, that made it such a fun place to be for a young impressionable man with a passion for golf, life and history.

In mid-summer, daylight lasts to 10.30 pm or so in that region and I can recall in the days when caddies were required to survey the pin positions each morning, going out after a few beers at the 19th alongside the 18th to get the pin positions for the following day after they had been cut, or pinpointed at least, that evening.

In more recent years, pin positions have been made available to all on the first tee at all events avoiding an armada of caddies wandering around the golf course early in the morning viewing and sourcing such information, but having the opportunity of doing so late in the evening was another special memory I have for the venue.

The first time the Open Championship was played over 72 holes at St Andrews the winning score was 322 and it is interesting to see the progression in scores since. 300 was broken for the first time in James Braid’s 5th Open Championship victory in 1910 (299) and in general scores have continued to lower since.

Tiger Woods’ remarkable victory in 2000, when he produced a 19 under par score of 269 is still the lowest winning total at St Andrews. Woods not once visited one of The Old Course’s, at times, notorious bunkers throughout his 72 holes. It must still go down as one of one of Wood’s most emphatic and clinical victories.

Woods won by 8 shots over Thomas Bjorn that week and even though he won the US Open a few weeks earlier by 15 shots his effort at St Andrews was him at his very best.

The history, mystique, intrigue, design subtlety and longevity of the golf course along with its standing as the Home of Golf and the history surrounding the town itself, make St Andrews a must visit for all golf fans and this year’s 150th staging of the Open Championship is one of those week’s that those who get to be on site will forever look back and say ‘I was there’.


Steve Alker – photo Montana Pritchard PGA of America.

New Zealand’s Steve Alker has extended his lead in the Charl Schwab season long race by finishing in a share of 3rd place with Ernie Els at the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship in Akron in Ohio.

For Alker it was his 9th top three finish of the season and his cheque for US$198,000 this week takes his PGA Tour Champions earnings in 2022 to US$2,215,000.

Alker’s bogey at the last effectively cost him US$42,000 but given that he now leads the money list by some US$810,000 over Steve Stricker, he is doing ok.

“I just didn’t have it today,” said the soon to be 51 year old who joined the PGA Tour Champions as a Monday qualifier at the Boeing event in August of last year.

“I just made too many bogeys over the weekend, that was the difference. I made one bogey in 36 holes, first 36, and I don’t know how many I made over the weekend. It was a lot.

Alker will now set his sights on the Senior Open Championship at Gleneagles in Scotland where he is expected to be once again in contention for a ‘senior major’.

“British Senior a couple weeks,” said Alker. “My wife’s English, we’re going to see some family and things. We’ll get over tomorrow and just get up there early and get to know the course. Looking forward to it.”

Queensland’s Rod Pampling also had another good week when he finished tied for 13th and now has earnings over US$522,000 in 2022.

The winner, Jerry Kelly, moved into third place in the standings when he won by one shot over Stricker, winning his 10th PGA Tour Champions title and gets to play in next year’s Players Championship.

RESULTS


Xander Schauffele – photo Getty Images / DP World Tour

Cameron Smith staged an impressive weekend recovery over a windswept Renaissance Club at the Genesis Scottish Open and has finished in a share of 10th in the lead-up to this coming week’s Open Championship.

Smith’s second round of 75 cost him any chance of contending for the title but he bounced back over the weekend to move from 49th to 10th over the final 36 holes and will no doubt head up the road to St Andrews feeling good about his game.

The tournament was won by Olympic Gold Medal winner, Xander Schauffele, who continues his recent form having won at his last start at the Travelers Championship last month and the Pro Am event in Ireland last week and he must now enter calculations as a genuine chance for success at the 150th open Championship.

Schauffele will move from his current 11th place in the world ranking to 5th given the strength of this week”s field

Schauffele was delighted to have been the first player to win an event jointly sanctioned between the DP World Tour and the PGA Tour of America.

“It’s great to win the first event that’s co-sanctioned between the two tours. It was an incredible week. Genesis has always put on — the tournaments I have played they have always put on incredible events and I knew this was going to be no different and what an honour to win in the Home of Golf.

“I’m playing some of the best golf of my life and capitalising on playing really well. There’s a lot of times all the top players, any player playing professionally plays very well but they don’t get everything out of it and I feel like I’ve been successful in getting the most out of my game.”

Looking ahead to next week Schauffele was asked how he felt about heading to St Andrews.

“To be honest, a bit rushed. I’ve never played St Andrews. I’ve never played the Old Course South so a lot of homework to do.

“I have to use this time, going down at eleven o’clock at night to my advantage to try to prepare to the best of my ability. Going to rely a lot on my caddie to do that. I’m tired. I’ve played a bit and I need a rest and I need to get ready for the week. I’m not even thinking about Sunday quite yet. I need to prepare.”

Smith headed the Australians in 10th place but Jason Scrivener also had a good week when he finished just one shot behind Smith and in a share of 16th place.

Scrivener produced the best of the day final round of 65 to jump 37 places and he too now heads to St Andrews for just his second start at The Open Championship, earning over 100,000 euro for his effort this week.

Ryan Fox finished 47th after a final round of 69.

RESULTS

 

Steve Alker – file photo USGA

Steve Alker has moved into a share of the lead at the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship at the famed Firestone Country Club, a second round of 66 having him in a share of the halfway lead in what is one of the PGA Tour Champions major titles.

Alker, who won his fourth PGA Tour Champions title and his first major at this level when successful in the recent KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship in May, birdied three successive holes in the middle of his back nine to close in on the leaders who then dropped shots to allow Alker to lead along with Alex Cejka, Tim Petrovic and Joe Durant.
Rod Pampling is also well placed in 13th position and just three from the lead.

Alker expressed satisfaction with his effort on day two especially given the demanding test that the layout at the Firestone Country Club provides.

“First of all, it’s nice to have a bogey-free round at Firestone,” said the 50 year old New Zealander.

“It’s that type of golf course, you’ve just got to keep going. But kind of everything, drove it in the fairway for the most part today and hit a lot of greens except for the last few. I scrambled nicely the last couple holes.

“Overall, just a solid day. Kind of kept my nose clean and haven’t done too much wrong. A few more putts would be nice, but yeah, at Firestone, just fairways and greens around here.”

Alker’s only a month or so away from the anniversary of his debut on the Champions Tour at the Boeing event last August and it has been quite a ride since. He leads the money list in 2022 by a huge margin over Miguel Angel Jimenez and remains thankful for what the tour has offered him.

“It’s gone super quick. It’s amazing. Boeing’s in like whatever, four, five weeks, like wow. Yeah, it’s just great. As I say, it’s just great to be out here and have the opportunity to play these golf courses, play against these guys. It’s been huge. I’ve learned a heck of a lot. As I’ve gone on the whole year, just learning things about just playing on the golf courses and getting to know the guys a bit better. It’s been a lot of fun.

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Cameron Tringale in action today – photo Getty Images DP World Tour

Despite being the 54th ranked golfer in the world, 34 year old American Cameron Tringale has yet to win on the PGA Tour but he has opened up that possibility by taking a three shot lead over Gary Woodland and Doug Ghim at the Genesis Scottish Open at the Renaissance Club in North Berwick as the event heads into the weekend.

Tringale was 11 shots worse on day two than his brilliant opening 61 but it was enough to retain his opening round three shot lead as the gusty wins buffeting the links layout took their toll on a field which included 14 of the 15 leading ranked world players in the game.

“Well, it was definitely more difficult for me today,” said the leader. “Yesterday, it seemed pretty easy, and today, it seemed like every hole was a grind to make par.

“I can’t speak for everyone but my group struggled. Long putts, it’s so tough to judge how much the wind is going to hurt, and then you get a putt that’s where the wind is going sideways, and I mean, it might be a ball, two, a cup, even as close as seven, eight feet.”

Tringale has been on the PGA Tour since 2010 and has earned more then US$17 million but that first win at this level has proven to be elusive. This week’s Scottish Open is for the first time a full sanctioned event on both the PGA and DP World Tours so it may yet be that this week provides that milestone.

Despite not winning Tringale has been runner-up on four occasions and four times third in PGA Tour events so a breakthrough win would be justice for the Californian.

The round of the day came from Xander Schaufelle whose 5 under 65 jumped him 65 positions to a share of 4th and he is now just four from the lead after beginning round two eleven shot behind Tringale.

New Zealander Ryan Fox was another to benefit from a strong second round, his 2 under 68 moving him from outside the top 100 to 38th and inside the cutline after appearing as if he might have the weekend off.

Also in 38th place is Jason Scrivener while Cameron Smith in 49th place is the only other Australasian to make the cut in 49th place at 3 over and ten shots behind Tringale. Smith struggled to a round of 75 but has a chance over the weekend to sharpen his game for what lies ahead at St Andres next week.

Lucas Herbert missed the final 36 holes by one, Marc Leishman by two, Scott Hend by six, defending champion Min Woo Lee by eight and Maverick Antcliff by a massive 15 shots.

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Cameron Tringale – an opening round of 61 – photo DP World Tour / Getty Images

A day that began so promisingly for the Australian contingent at the Genesis Scottish Open did not end that way although Cameron Smith (15th), and Lucas Herbert and Jason Scrivener (28th) have made reasonable starts in the traditional Open Championship lead-up at the Renaissance Club in North Berwick.

On a breezy yet fine day, Scrivener, in particular, was quickly out of the blocks and through seven holes he had recorded four birdies and led the event and was still at 4 under through 10 holes before four bogeys over the closing stages along with a lone birdie left him at 1 under.

Cameron Smith, though, finished as the best of the Australians at 2 under and tied for 15th although a massive seven shots behind the tearaway leader Cameron Tringale who leads by three over fellow American Gary Woodland.

Smith reached the turn in 3 under 32 but was back in 36 for his round of 68 although like Scrivener and Herbert he will play in the afternoon field tomorrow.

Herbert, too, began well with three birdies in his first four holes but he was unable to capitalise on such a hot start and finished with a round of 69.

Marc Leishman continued his recent struggles when he opened with a round of 73 to be tied for 89th which, given he began with two early birdies, was particularly disappointing.  Leishman will require a round under par tomorrow to be around for the weekend as he looks to a return to St Andrews next week where he lost a playoff for the 2015 Open Championship.

Last week’s runner-up in Ireland, Ryan Fox, never recovered from an outward nine of 4 over and finished with 74 to be tied for 112th and he too has a big task tomorrow if he is to be around for the weekend. The cut appears at this stage at least as if it will be around 1 or 2 over so Fox will need 68 or better it would seem to play all 72 holes here.

Scott Hend also had 74 but for the defending champion Min Woo Lee it was a nightmare start and finish. Three bogeys in his first four holes was not helped by four consecutive bogeys to finish his round and at 7 over 77 he is in 148th place while Queensland’s Maverick Antcliff had 82.

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Min Woo Lee – with last year’s trophy but no PGA Tour card then – photo DP World Tour Getty Images

This week’s Genesis Scottish Open at the Renaissance Club in North Berwick offers an opportunity to not only win one of the European Tour’s more significant events, but, for the first time in the history of the event it provides the winner with a PGA Tour card.

The now closer alliance between the DP World Tour and the PGA Tour has resulted in a cross pollination of several events between the tours and this week’s Genesis Scottish Open, the Barabasol Championship in Kentucky and next week’s Barracuda Championship in California all now count toward both order of merit tables.

In a practical sense as far as this week’s Genesis Scottish Open is concerned, is that a victory would open the door to the riches of the PGA Tour for someone who does not already hold a PGA Tour card.

Several Australasians including defending champion Min Woo Lee will be keen to emulate his massive performance of twelve months ago when he defeated Matthew Fitzpatrick and Thomas Detry in a playoff to win €1,123,300 and jump from 240th to 61st in the world ranking at the time.

The one thing Lee did not gain last year however but could in 2022 is a PGA Tour card as a result of his victory and although he has been able to play nine events in the USA this year, Lee has still to earn playing rights on the PGA Tour.

“The Australian’s play-off success last year was his second DP World Tour victory, following his win on home soil at the ISPS Handa Vic Open in 2020, as he finished last season inside the top 50 on the Official World Golf Ranking,” said the DP World Tour.

“On his debut at the Masters Tournament in April, Lee shot a record-tying front nine of six-under-par 30 in the final round to finish tied 15th at Augusta National Golf Club.”

“Last year at the Renaissance Club was such an awesome experience, said Lee. “I was proud of my game on Sunday and how I closed out the play-off for my first Rolex Series title,” he said. “It was a huge win and opened up even more experiences, like playing in The Open for the first time the following week. My aim is to keep my hands on that trophy this season.”

Ryan Fox is another who is in a similar situation this week given his recent form and that he has been inside the top six on two occasions in this event previously. His near miss last week in Ireland continued an outstanding season for the 35-year-old and if he could find a way tow in he would gain full playing rights on the PGA Tour.

With 14 of the leading 15 ranked players in the field it is not about to be an easy task but that could have been said prior to Min Woo Lee’s win last year also although this is a stronger field in 2022.

Other Australasians in the field are Cameron Smith, Lucas Herbert, Marc Leishman, Jason Scrivener, Scott Hend and Maverick Antcliff with Scrivener, Hend and Antcliff all without PGA Tour status at this stage.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Australian’s play-off success was his second DP World Tour victory, following his win on home soil at the ISPS Handa Vic Open in 2020, as he finished last season inside the top 50 on the Official World Golf Ranking. On his debut at the Masters Tournament in April, Lee shot a record-tying front nine of six-under-par 30 in the final round to finish tied 15th at Augusta National Golf Club. “Last year at the Renaissance Club was such an awesome experience. I was proud of my game on Sunday and how I closed out the play-off for my first Rolex Series title,” he said. “It was a huge win and opened up even more experiences, like playing in The Open for the first time the following week. My aim is to keep my hands on that trophy this season.”

The Open Trophy – The Claret Jug

With just two events remaining before the final field for the 150th Open Championship is settled, 13 Australians and New Zealanders are already confirmed to tee it up at St Andrews beginning on July 14th.

This week’s PGA Tour’s Barbasol Championship in the USA and the DP World Tour’s Scottish Open provide several Australasians one last chance of gaining a start in the historic event for those not otherwise qualified but, either way, Australasian golf will be well represented.

Peter Thompson (1955) and Kel Nagle (1960) are the Australasian golfers to have won an Open Championship at St Andrews but Thomson also finished runner-up there in 1957 during his remarkable run at the Open Championship between 1952 and 1958 when he finished either first or second in seven consecutive Open Championships.

New Zealand’s Simon Owen also finished runner-up behind Jack Nicklaus at St Andrews in 1978 after leading through 16 holes on the final day and Marc Leishman lost a playoff to Zach Johnson the last time the Open was played at the home of golf in 2015.

In world ranking order, Cameron Smith, Adam Scott, Ryan Fox, Lucas Herbert, Marc Leishman, Jason Scrivener, Min Woo Lee, Brad Kennedy, Jason Scrivener, Anthony Quayle, Jed Morgan, Dimi Papdatos and Ben Campbell are the 13 from this part of the world to earn their right through various means to play such an historic Open Championship.

Smith, Scott, Herbert and Leishman are in because of their world ranking, Fox first gained his start via the Dutch Open a few weeks ago although he is now inside the top 50 in the world, Lee and Scrivener because of their finishes inside the top 30 in the DP World Tour rankings in 2021, Papadatos, Campbell and Griffin courtesy of their finishes at the Vic Open, Quayle and Kennedy via their efforts at an event on the Japan Tour and Jed Morgan as a result of finishing atop the PGA Tour of Australasia money list.

 

 

 

 

Cameron Davis – file photo Bruce Young

US based Sydney golfer, Cameron Davis, recorded his 4th PGA Tour top ten of 2022 when he finished in a share of 8th at the John Deere Classic in Silvis, Illinois.

Davis’ last round of 68 improved his standing from an overnight 10th but it was a frustrating run for him over the final nine holes as missed several makeable opportunities in a run of ten straight pars to finish after starting with three birdies in his first eight holes.

The weekend at the TPC Deere Run was significantly better than that he produced a week ago in Hartford, having contended there early before a disappointing final 36 holes.

Davis will move to 81st in the Fedex Cup standing and with just a month to go until the finals begin in just over one month’s time he is well placed to progress into well into the final stages of the FedEx Cup.

The 2016 World Amateur Individual Champion and a member of the Australian winning Eisenhower Trophy team that same year would win the 2017 Australian Open just over a year later and made his way on to the PGA Tour for the 2019 season.

The 27-year old’s PGA Tour career earnings to date are now beyond US$5.5 million but he is clearly improving each year and appears to be well established as a PGA Tour member and on track for a very successful career.

The winner J.T. Poston won his second PGA Tour title having won the Wyndham Championship in 2019 and he also earns a start at the Open Championship as a result of his top three finish of those not otherwise qualified for St Andrews along with Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Emiliano Grillo.

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