How Nets, Kyrie Irving’s season was derailed by NYC vax mandate tweak

The Nets’ 2021-22 season — and possibly the breakup of the dynasty that never was — can be traced to a four-day stretch last summer, and a single one-line update in a city mandate.

New York City’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate — from the way it abruptly changed to the way the situation was handled — may have left a bad taste with some players, sources said.

From Kyrie Irving missing two-thirds of the season, prompting James Harden to demand a trade and now Kevin Durant having followed suit, Brooklyn could lose three future Hall of Famers in less than six months — along with any chance at a title.

This train first went off the rails not during the season but in the preseason; in August 2021 when Mayor Bill de Blasio issued an emergency executive order allowing unvaccinated local athletes who lived outside the city to play home games, then switched the city mandate just four days later to bar them as well.

“There was a time where I got my hopes really, really high and all the air was just let out. And it’s just a level of disappointment,” Irving had said cryptically during the season, never spelling out clearly when that time was. But The Post can.

De Blasio’s initial executive order on Aug. 16 initially specified among the exemptions, “A nonresident professional athlete/sports team who enters a covered premises as part of their regular employment for purposes of competing.”

Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving
Getty Images

That meant Irving — who lives in West Orange, N.J. — would’ve been eligible to play despite not adhering to the vaccine mandate. It would’ve also provided a path for any other Nets to remain unvaccinated and still suit up. In theory, under the original mandate, any unvaccinated player could have temporarily moved outside the city and still played.

“Kyrie wasn’t the only one on the Nets who didn’t want to get vaccinated,” a source with direct knowledge of the situation told The Post.

“No one was expecting the mandate the way in which he wouldn’t be able to play. No one expected it,” a source close to Irving said. “The entire thing was that vaccination was absolutely going to be a choice and not anything that was forced.

“There were conversations around that whole artist component, so if you were an artist visiting from outside — also if you didn’t live in New York City — you’d be allowed to play. When the mandate came down everybody was confused because no one expected for it to take on that tone … everybody was a little surprised.”

The Nets claim to have been as caught off-guard as anyone when the mayor reversed the exemption on Aug. 20, despite there having been talk de Blasio might change that non-resident exemption to only apply to unvaccinated players on visiting teams.

“There is a chance the Nets could have got the mayor to stick to the original language,” one of the direct sources said.

NYC
Former Mayor Bill deBlasio
John Roca

There was chatter that de Blasio might tweak the original language somewhat, and Nets owner Joe Tsai is not believed to have lobbied city hall in the immediate aftermath to keep the executive order the same.

But the Nets say they were as stunned as everybody else when the change happened. As it turns out, the lightning-quick four-day time frame didn’t allow the Alibaba co-founder — who spends much of his time in Hong Kong — time to act; and a source close to Irving felt it unlikely to have made a difference if he had.

“[Tsai’s] hands were tied,” said a source close to Irving.

“Mr. Tsai had no knowledge that Mayor de Blasio’s office was going to change the original Key to NYC mandate making vaccines required for home team players who were non-residents of New York City,” said Mandy Gutmann, the Executive VP of Communications for BSE, the Nets’ parent company told The Post this week.

Tsai is admittedly pro-vaccine, which Irving was well aware of. But Tsai might have underestimated just how deeply dug in Irving’s heels were, how long-standing his vaccine hesitancy is. But the Nets found out the hard way that trying to predict the mercurial guard is risky, as the Cavaliers and Celtics had already learned.

Every other Nets player got vaccinated before their Sept. 27 Media Day and ensuing San Diego-area training camp, leaving Irving as the lone holdout.

“[Tsai] laid it out that you needed to be vaccinated or you can’t play,” a source close to the situation said. “A number of players did not want to get vaccinated. They all decided to get vaccinated except Kyrie. … The thinking was the players would all blink.”

But rather than blink, Irving held a laser-focus on staying unvaccinated.

After Tsai hosted Irving and the other Nets at his La Jolla, Calif., estate during training camp, it became clear that the guard was steadfast in his refusal. And while sources close to both Irving and Durant stressed that Tsai never pressured any players to get vaccinated, the e-commerce billionaire did — at least initially — draw the line at allowing part-time players.

When Tsai decided the next month to bar Irving from playing road games — despite paying his salary — a source close to the situation said it wasn’t due to any personal feeling on vaccines but because he felt a part-time player would be bad for the team.

But the season began to unravel anyway. After watching his struggling team be decimated by injuries, Tsai did an about-face to let Irving play unvaccinated. He made his road debut on Jan. 5 at Indiana.

Nets owner Joe Tsai
South China Morning Post via Getty

“My only religion is to win games and win the championship,” Tsai told The Post at the time. “That’s where we are.”

It’s clear the mandate change and Irving’s stance put an end to those title hopes. Sitting second in the East on Jan. 15, the Nets dropped 16 of 21 after Durant suffered a left knee injury. They fell to eighth by the time he returned six weeks later — and Tsai took action.

On Feb. 6, Irving said, “Anything can happen these next few days, the next week. Just crossing my fingers that something can come up either before All-Star break or even just after.” Two days later — with the Nets on an eight-game losing skid — they hired ex-New York City Council Speaker Corey Johnson to lobby new Mayor Eric Adams about changing the mandate so Irving could play at home.

After the Nets had lacked the time or possibly the interest in lobbying de Blasio, financial records show they agreed to spend $18,000 a month on lobbying Adams for 18 months.

But the very same day they inked that contract, Harden spoke with general manager Sean Marks and then Tsai, requesting a trade.

Just over 48 hours later, Harden was gone to the 76ers, taking with him hopes of seeing that prolific Big 3 lead the Nets to a title.

Kyrie Irving
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

But the mandates were still there, well over a month later.

“At this point, now it feels like somebody’s trying to make a statement or a point to flex their authority. But everybody out here is looking for attention, and that’s what I feel the mayor wants right now is some attention. He’ll figure it out soon. He better,” Durant said. “Now it just looks stupid.”

Adams eventually relented, changing the rules on March 24 allowing Irving to play home games despite being unvaccinated. But the Nets got swept out of the first round of the playoffs by Boston, in large part because they did not have enough time to gel as a team.

They may never get that time, with Durant requesting a trade. If the former MVP goes, it’s expected that Irving will as well.

Should that happen, the best team that never was can point back to a four-day span as where it all started to go wrong — and rue a one-line tweak in a city document that turned a potential title into a train wreck.

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Jose Trevino walks off Yankees again in 13-inning win over Cubs

A night after the Yankees’ offense bailed out an ineffective Gerrit Cole, they had to work overtime Friday night to make sure Luis Severino’s latest gem didn’t go to waste. 

Jose Trevino, the last man left on the bench, finally delivered the big hit that was missing all night, coming through with an RBI single in the 13th inning to give the Yankees a 2-1 win over the Cubs in The Bronx. 

Pinch-hitting for Kyle Higashioka, Trevino roped a line drive over the head of shortstop Nico Hoerner, driving home Joey Gallo from third base and setting off a celebration. 

Before Trevino’s game-winning hit, the Yankees (42-16) had been 0-for-18 with runners in scoring position and had left 15 men on base. On the flip side, Severino and the Yankees’ bullpen had shut down the Cubs (23-34), holding Chicago to 0-for-18 with runners in scoring position and stranding 13 runners. 

Jose Trevino connects on a walk-off hit in the 13th inning.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
Jose Trevino celebrates after his walk-off hit.
Robert Sabo for the NY POST

Clarke Schmidt (two innings), Wandy Peralta and Ron Marinaccio combined to keep the Cubs scoreless through four extra innings, not allowing a hit and stranding four runners. 

In the 11th, Schmidt induced a pop up and then helped himself out, snagging a line drive off the bat of Rafael Ortega and firing to second base for the double play. 

Schmidt had gotten a more conventional double play to end the 10th. After intentionally walking Ian Happ with one out, the Yankees reliever got Frank Schwindel to ground into a 5-4-3 twin killing to end the inning. 

The Cubs, meanwhile, intentionally walked Aaron Judge to lead off the 10th inning, Gleyber Torres to lead off the 11th and Judge again with one out in the 12th, but the Yankees couldn’t muster a rally in any of those situation. 

The Yankees celebrates after their 13-inning win over the Cubs.
Robert Sabo for the NY POST

The Yankees were coming off a 10-7 win at Minnesota on Thursday, in which Cole dug them a 7-3 deficit by the time he exited the game in the third inning. 

But the bats were quieter on Friday night. After Torres put the Yankees up 1-0 with a solo homer in the fourth inning, they did not record another hit until Josh Donaldson’s infield single in the eighth inning. 

Severino delivered another strong start, giving up just one run over six innings. He struck out 10 for a second straight outing, lowering his ERA to 2.80 and getting the Yankees’ rotation back on track after a rough series against the Twins. 

Severino was sharp early, striking out five of the first six batters he faced before he got some help from his defense in the third inning. 

Luis Severino pitches Friday during the Yankees’ win over the Cubs.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
Luis Severino reacts during the Yankees’ win over the Cubs.
Robert Sabo for the NY POST

With a runner on third, one out and the Yankees’ infield playing in, Christopher Morel hit a chopper to the left side. Torres fielded it and fired home to throw Jason Heyward out at the plate. 

Then, with runners on first and second, Judge — starting his sixth straight game in center field — made a diving grab in the left-center field gap to rob Happ and keep the Cubs off the scoreboard. 

Wade Miley shut the Yankees out for three innings, leaving the bases loaded in the third, before exiting the game with left-shoulder soreness. 

Gleyber Torres connects on a solo homer.
Robert Sabo for the NY POST

Daniel Norris entered in the fourth and, on the first pitch he threw, Torres greeted him with a home run, giving the Yankees a 1-0 lead. 

Heyward tied the score in the fifth inning when he cracked his first home run of the year, a solo shot off Severino. 

Nick Madrigal and Morel followed by pouncing on first pitches for back-to-back singles with no outs. But Severino buckled down, striking out Willson Contreras (swinging) and Happ (looking) before getting Schwindel to ground out to end the threat. 

Severino walked Patrick Wisdom to lead off the sixth, but then got a strike-him-out, throw-him-out double play to help expedite his final inning of work. 

The Yankees had the makings of a rally in the eighth inning when Giancarlo Stanton walked and Donaldson singled with one out. But former Yankees reliever David Robertson escaped the jam by striking out Torres and Aaron Hicks.

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Rangers, Lightning come to blows at end of Game 5

Tempers are high as the Eastern Conference Finals head back to Tampa.

At the end of the Lightning’s 3-1 win over the Rangers on Thursday night in Game 5 at Madison Square Garden, the fists began flying.

Bolts captain Steven Stamkos and Rangers forward Alexis Lafreniere jawed at one another behind Igor Shesterkin’s net before dropping the gloves.

The pair received fighting majors on the scoresheet for their troubles.

Stamkos and Lafreniere weren’t the only pair to engage in some post-buzzer shenanigans.

Tampa Bay’s Erik Cernak and Rangers defenseman Adam Fox received two minutes apiece for slashing one another, while Blueshirts center Ryan Strome also earned a pair for slashing Cernak.

Steven Stamkos and Alexis Lafreniere went at it after the final buzzer of Game 5.
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Losers of three straight, frustrations are boiling over for the Rangers, who must win Saturday’s Game 6 in Tampa to keep their season alive.

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Mets’ huge comeback falls short in crazy game that had everything

SAN FRANCISCO — These kings of late-inning drama were just getting started as much of their East Coast fan base was fading off into a haze.

But the difference in this latest miraculous Mets comeback was a counterpunch. The Giants offered not one, but two on a wild Tuesday night in the Bay Area.

Edwin Diaz allowed two runs in the ninth, including a walk-off RBI single to Brandon Crawford that sent the Mets to a 13-12 loss at Oracle Park.

Joc Pederson was the offensive hero, with three home runs and an RBI single in the ninth that tied the game before Crawford won it moments later.

Dominic Smith tripled leading off the ninth and pinch-runner Travis Jankowski scored on Brandon Nimmo’s sacrifice fly to put the Mets ahead.

Buried in a six-run hole, the Mets created buzz in the seventh inning and then went bonkers in the eighth to take an 11-8 lead before Pederson’s third homer of the game, a three-run blast against Drew Smith, tied it.

Francisco Lindor slapped a bases-loaded triple in the eighth that put the Mets ahead, but this was a rally that had plenty of heroes. And the team’s ability to put the ball in play and pressure the defense was at the forefront in an inning the Mets had three infield hits.

Darin Ruff slides safely to score the winning run as Tomas Nido drops the ball in the ninth inning of the Mets’ 13-12 loss to the Giants.
AP

With the Mets behind 8-4 (Lindor had smashed a two-run homer the previous inning), Jeff McNeil and Eduardo Escobar singled in succession to begin the epic rally. Mark Canha’s single off Crawford loaded the bases and Dominic Smith awoke from a slumber to deliver a two-run single that pulled the Mets within 8-6. After Luis Guillorme was retired on a fielder’s choice, Nimmo hit a slow grounder to third and beat Kevin Padlo’s throw, loading the bases. Starling Marte followed with a hard grounder off Padlo that brought in Smith. Lindor’s grounder past third base — which Pederson overran in left field — unloaded the bases and gave the Mets an 11-8 lead.

Chris Bassitt allowed three “bye-bye babies” to the Giants and never got through the fifth inning. The performance was a rare clunker for a Mets starting pitcher this season.

Bassitt (who arrived from across the Bay Bridge in Oakland in a March trade) surrendered eight earned runs on eight hits and three walks over 4 ¹/₃ innings in his worst start in a Mets uniform.

Starling Marte high-fives Pete Alonso after scoring one of the runs on Francisco Lindor’s three-run triple during the Mets’ loss.
AP

In his start against the Cardinals last week Bassitt also scuffled, allowing four earned runs over 6 ¹/₃ innings. But his biggest tormentors have been the Giants, who also beat him at Citi Field last month, when he allowed five earned runs over six innings.

The Mets certainly would welcome the return of the Bassitt, who was sitting 11 days ago with a 2.34 ERA (that number has since jumped to 3.91) as they try to weather recent injuries to Max Scherzer and Tylor Megill that have shortened the rotation. That’s on top of the fact Jacob deGrom hasn’t yet thrown a pitch for the Mets this season. In those spots the team has turned to David Peterson and looks ready to give Thomas Szapucki an audition. Trevor Williams has also twice been used as a starter in doubleheaders.

Bassitt allowed his third homer in as many innings, a two-run shot to Pederson in the fifth that buried the Mets in an 8-2 hole. The blast was the second of the game and ninth of the season for Pederson, who arrived last winter as a free agent after helping the Braves win a World Series title.

Joc Pederson, who hit three home runs and drove in eight runs, hugs Brandon Crawford after Crawford’s walk-off single gave the Giants a win over the Mets.
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Tommy La Stella’s three-run blast in the fourth had extended the Giants’ lead to 6-1. Luis Gonzalez doubled in the inning and Michael Papierski walked before La Stella unloaded into the right-field seats.

In the fourth, Bassitt walked Mike Yastrzemski before leaving a cutter over the plate that Pederson blasted for a two-run homer.

The Giants jumped on Bassitt from the start. La Stella singled leading off the game and Yastrzemski doubled before Darin Ruf’s ground out brought in a run.

Logan Webb was tough on the Mets, allowing two runs on five hits over five innings. Canha stroked an RBI single in the second that tied it 1-1. The Mets got another run in the fifth on Lindor’s sacrifice fly after Brandon Nimmo was hit by a pitch leading off the inning.

Lindor launched a two-run homer in the seventh that pulled the Mets within 8-4. The homer was Lindor’s seventh of the season.

Stephen Nogosek stepped up in long relief. In his first appearance in nine days, the right-hander fired 3 ²/₃ scoreless innings behind Bassitt. In his only other major league appearance this season Nogosek pitched three scoreless innings against the Nationals.

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Jose Trevino’s clutch hit in 11th helps Yankees snap skid

Just as the Yankees’ first pothole of the 2022 season was beginning to crater, they pulled out a needed last-minute victory.

Michael King was rocked for a three-run homer in the seventh, but the Yanks quickly came back to tie the score before Jose Trevino’s RBI single lifted them to a 7-6 win in 11 innings, halting their season-worst losing streak at three games.

Gleyber Torres belted two of the Yankees’ four home runs on a night that DJ LeMahieu was a late scratch from the lineup with left wrist discomfort. Giancarlo Stanton also was pinch hit for by Estevan Florial in the seventh inning due to tightness in his right calf.

King, who had given up two runs Saturday against the White Sox, entered with a 3-2 lead following Austin Hays’ leadoff homer off starter Jordan Montgomery in the seventh. King allowed a single and a walk before surrendering a three-run homer to right by former Yankee Rougned Odor for a 5-3 game. It was only the second home run permitted by King in 27 innings this season.

Torres ripped his second solo homer of the game off Baltimore starter Bruce Zimmermann in the bottom of the inning, and Trevino added a two-out RBI single four batters later off reliever Logan Gillaspie for a 5-5 tie.

Jose Trevino celebrates after hitting a game-winning single in the 11th inning of the Yankees’ 7-6 win over the Orioles.
AP

Clay Holmes, Wandy Peralta and Clarke Schmidt recorded the next nine outs — one inning apiece — before the Orioles took a 6-5 lead against Schmidt in the 11th when third baseman Marwin Gonzalez couldn’t handle Hays’ hard grounder with the infield in, enabling Ryan McKenna to score.

The Yanks came back to tie again on Isiah Kiner-Falefa’s single to center in the bottom half against Bryan Baker, and after Gonzalez also singled, Trevino recorded his third RBI of the game with a single down the left-field line.

Rizzo and Trevino also had belted solo shots earlier in the game against Zimmermann for the Yankees (30-13).

The AL-leading Yanks entered facing what Aaron Boone acknowledged as their first true adversity of the season, with three straight losses for the first time alongside the Josh Donaldson incident/suspension, the IL assignments of Chad Green and Aroldis Chapman, and the COVID-list absences of Kyle Higashioka (activated Tuesday), Donaldson and Joey Gallo.

“As I always say, we know it’s coming,” Boone said before the game. “You’re going to have these bumps along the way, whether it’s on the injury front, guys getting ill, whatever.

Gleyber Torres hits one of his two home runs in the Yankees’ win over the Orioles.
Robert Sabo

“We’re prepared to deal with that. We’ve been hit here a little bit these last few days, but feel like we’re in a good spot to deal with it and move on. … This group welcomes it and will handle it.”

Montgomery handled the Orioles’ lineup in the early innings, retiring the first eight batters he faced until Jorge Mateo’s single in the third. Montgomery has posted a 3.30 ERA over nine starts, but the lefty has an 0-1 mark with eight no-decisions due to scant ran support.

The slumping Rizzo provided Montgomery a 1-0 lead with a solo blast to right off Zimmerman in the first, only his second homer in May after belting nine in April.

Trevino also went deep to left in the third, his second of the season, before Torres made it 3-0 with his sixth of the year one inning later. The two homers on the night gave Torres 18 in his career against the Orioles, easily his most against any opponent.

Montgomery didn’t allow a runner to reach scoring position until Ramon Urias’ double down the left-field line in the fifth. The Orioles posted their first run against the lefty on Odor’s groundball out for a 3-1 game.

Boone allowed Montgomery to start the seventh after throwing 84 pitches through six, but Hays tagged him for a leadoff homer to right to shave the Yankees’ lead to one before King entered and surrendered the lead.

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How Rangers can win Game 2 against Hurricanes

The Rangers played a game they could have won on Wednesday, and everything they’ve said about the 2-1 overtime loss to the Hurricanes in Game 1 of this second-round series has reflected that fact.

They controlled play for 40 minutes, and it looked like that would be enough to escape PNC Arena with a 1-0 lead in the series until Sebastian Aho finally got one past Igor Shesterkin with 2:23 to go. Despite the unpleasant reality of the loss, coupled with the Hurricanes finding a groove in the final period of regulation, the tone emanating from coach Gerard Gallant and his players has been positive. 

Gallant pointed out to reporters on Thursday that Carolina had dominated the last two matchups between these teams in their building, and was right in saying that this one felt different.

Reality, though, has a way of kicking you in the teeth. And the Rangers still woke up on Thursday needing to overcome a deficit to keep their season alive, just days after having successfully done just that against the Penguins.

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Hurricanes have edge historically against Rangers

The Rangers lost the regular-season series with the Hurricanes 3-1. And were swept in their lone playoff matchup — albeit in a best-of-five qualifying-round series in the 2020 bubble playoffs. Here’s a look back: 

Regular-season recap 

Jan. 21 in Raleigh, N.C. 

Hurricanes 6, Rangers 3 

The Hurricanes dominated the first 40 minutes, scoring five of the game’s first six goals and cruised to victory. Sebastian Aho and former Ranger Tony DeAngelo each notched three points in the one-sided win. 

March 20 in Raleigh, N.C. 

Rangers 2, Hurricanes 0 

The Rangers’ lone victory during the regular season came on the strength of their backup goalie. Alexandar Georgiev made 44 saves in a masterful performance and Chris Kreider snapped a scoreless tie late in the second period. 

The Rangers and Hurricanes square off in the second round.
Getty Images

April 12 at MSG 

Hurricanes 4, Rangers 2 

A game that went a long way to deciding the Metropolitan Division winner, Seth Jarvis and Jordan Staal scored third-period goals as the Hurricanes moved four points ahead of the Rangers. Chris Kreider notched his 50th goal of the season, becoming the fourth player in franchise history to reach the plateau, in defeat. 

April 26 at MSG 

Hurricanes 4, Rangers 3 

Carolina clinched the Metropolitan Division at the Garden behind 31 saves from rookie goaltender Pyotr Kochetkov and two assists from one-time Ranger defenseman Brady Skjei. Down three goals in the third period, the Rangers rallied to get within one after goals from Jacob Trouba and Alexis Lafreniere, but couldn’t finish off the comeback. 

Playoff History 

The Rangers and Hurricanes have met just once in the postseason, during the 2020 bubble playoffs. It was the qualifying round, and the Rangers were swept, 3-0. Carolina, the sixth seed, took down the 11th-seeded Blueshirts 3-2 in Game 1 and by matching 4-1 scores in the next two games. 

Sebastian Aho had three goals and eight points in the series and Andrei Svechnikov notched the Hurricanes’ first playoff hat trick in Game 2. Igor Shesterkin made his playoff debut in Game 3, producing 27 saves in the loss. 

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Elden Ring – Someone Completed In Just 12 Minutes & 32 Seconds

Yesterday, YouTuber and speedrunner MitChriz beat Elden Ring in simply 12 minutes and 32 seconds, setting what seems to be a new record in the “any% unrestricted” speedrunning category for the game.

To pull this off, you probably already guessed that there were some shenanigans and trickery happening in the run. And you would be correct. MitChriz used an Elden Ring speedrunning trick known as “zipping” to basically teleport around the world. This saves a lot of time compared to running in every single place or even using your trusting, double-jumping horse.

Using this trick, MitChriz was easily able to bypass the Limgrave section of the game and then popped straight over to Liurnia, where they use a now accessible waygate to access a late-game area. Using the zipping trick, they then skip past all but one of the bosses and reach the final boss in record time. Using the zip trick they skip past that boss fight too and finish the game in under 13 minutes.

I remember last month when I thought beating Elden Ring in 37 minutes was fast.

What is Zipping in a Game?

Well, it’s a speedrunning technique that has become more popular recently among runners focused on setting new record times in the any% unrestricted category for Elden Ring. On this specific category, players aren’t required to get all the runes, complete all the steps or do anything else that is usually needed to progress through the game. The main goal in this speedrun is to just reach the end and get to the ending as fast as possible using any tricks or methods you can.

And before someone gets angry at MitChriz for using glitches or tricks to beat the game, remember that this is just one type of speedrun category that exists for Elden Ring and that other players are out there setting times for runs that involve beating every boss or never taking damage, etc.

Let’s wait for someone else to beat Elden Ring in under 10 minutes.

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