Angelos “Ange” Postecoglou represents one of football’s most remarkable and unlikely success stories—a Greek-born, Australian-raised manager whose unconventional pathway through global football ultimately led to him becoming the first Australian and first manager from an AFC confederation country to win a major European club trophy. Born on 27 August 1965 in Athens, Greece, Postecoglou immigrated to Australia at age five, establishing his entire professional football identity within Australian football structures before progressively elevating his career through international management roles in Japan, Scotland, and the English Premier League.
His distinctive tactical philosophy, dubbed “Angeball” by supporters and media commentators, emphasizes aggressive attacking football, high-pressing defensive structures, and entertaining, possession-based football that frequently sacrifices defensive stability for attacking productivity. This philosophy produced extraordinary success at Brisbane Roar, where he established a 36-game unbeaten run and consecutive A-League championships, and at Celtic, where he won five trophies in two seasons—an extraordinary achievement that attracted attention from one of Europe’s most prominent clubs.
His 2023 appointment as Tottenham Hotspur head coach represented the peak of his managerial career, positioning him to potentially revolutionize one of the Premier League’s most commercially significant yet trophy-starved institutions. Most remarkably, despite Tottenham’s disastrous 2024-25 domestic season—their worst in decades, finished outside the top four and generating criticism for his tactical inflexibility—his side won the UEFA Europa League in May 2025, securing the club’s first trophy since 2008 and first European trophy since 1984.
However, this triumph was overshadowed by his subsequent dismissal and brief, disastrous 39-day tenure at Nottingham Forest, raising substantial questions about his adaptability to different institutional circumstances and philosophical compromises. At age 59, Ange Postecoglou’s career represents a fascinating study in how distinctive tactical vision, cultural persistence, and international mobility can enable extraordinary achievement, while simultaneously demonstrating how tactical rigidity and contextual inflexibility can produce dramatic failure.
Early Life and Family Background
Angelos Postecoglou was born on 27 August 1965 in Nea Filadelfeia, a suburb of Athens, Greece. His early childhood in Athens was shaped by his family’s experience within post-war Greek society, with his parents working toward establishing better circumstances for their family. Rather than remaining in Greece, Postecoglou’s parents decided to immigrate to Australia in pursuit of greater economic opportunities and a different life environment for their children.
At age five, in 1970, Postecoglou immigrated to Australia alongside his parents and siblings, settling in Melbourne, Victoria. This immigration experience at such a formative age meant that Postecoglou’s cultural identity, educational development, and social formation were genuinely Australian despite his Greek origin. He grew up in Melbourne during the 1970s and 1980s, developing within Australian schooling systems, Australian peer groups, and Australian cultural contexts. While maintaining awareness of and connection to his Greek heritage—a common experience among Greek-Australian families—his primary identity formation was Australian.
His early introduction to football occurred within this Australian context. Football (soccer) was not Australia’s primary sports culture during the 1970s and 1980s, with Australian Rules Football and cricket dominating national sporting consciousness. However, Melbourne’s significant Mediterranean immigrant communities, particularly Greek and Italian populations, maintained football traditions from their countries of origin. Postecoglou developed his early football interests within this Greek-Australian community context, representing the cultural transmission of football interest from Southern European immigrant communities to their Australian-born children.
Playing Career and South Melbourne Hellas
Postecoglou’s playing career spanned from the mid-1980s through the early 1990s, establishing him as a reliable and respected defender within Australian professional football contexts. He spent substantially his entire professional playing career with South Melbourne Hellas, making 193 competitive appearances for the club between 1984 and 1993.
Career Statistics and Playing Style
As a defender, Postecoglou was respected for his positioning, defensive intelligence, and leadership qualities. While not characterized as exceptionally physically dominant or athletically outstanding, he was recognized as a technically competent and tactically intelligent defender. His longevity at South Melbourne reflected the club’s respect for his contributions and his reliable performance standards across extended periods.
Postecoglou achieved the significant distinction of being involved in South Melbourne’s National Soccer League title victories: he participated as a player in their championships in 1984 and 1990-91 (the latter as club captain), establishing him as a core member of the club’s most successful periods. This involvement in championship-winning teams during his playing career provided him with early understanding of elite performance standards and championship-winning cultures that would later inform his coaching philosophy.
International Playing Career
Beyond his club career, Postecoglou represented Australia’s national team (the Socceroos) on four occasions between 1986 and 1988, establishing himself as an international footballer during this period. While his international career was relatively brief and limited in appearances, it represented recognition that he met elite national team standards and international competitive requirements. His international experience, though limited, provided valuable perspective on international football culture and competitive structures that would later inform his international managerial career.
Early Coaching Career: South Melbourne and Youth Development
Following the conclusion of his playing career in 1993, Postecoglou transitioned into coaching, initially serving as an assistant coach at South Melbourne before progressing to head coaching responsibilities.
South Melbourne Head Coaching Period
Postecoglou assumed the South Melbourne head coaching position in 1996, taking responsibility for the club at a moment of relative institutional decline. The club had experienced extended periods without major trophy success, establishing a seven-year drought without National Soccer League titles. Postecoglou was appointed to reverse this trajectory and restore the club’s competitive standing within the league.
His appointment produced immediate and substantial results. In the 1997-98 season, just two years into his tenure, Postecoglou led South Melbourne to the National Soccer League title, ending their seven-year trophy drought. The following season (1998-99), the club won a consecutive NSL title, establishing Postecoglou as an exceptionally effective and successful domestic coach.
Most remarkably, South Melbourne won the 1999 Oceania Club Championship under Postecoglou’s management, a continental-level victory that qualified them for participation in the 2000 FIFA Club World Championship—a genuinely exceptional achievement for an Australian football club during that era.
Postecoglou’s South Melbourne career established him as one of Australian football’s most successful and respected coaches, despite the club’s relatively modest institutional profile compared to larger Australian football structures. His achievement as the only person to have been involved in all four of South Melbourne’s NSL title-winning teams—two as a player and two as coach—represents an exceptional institutional legacy and personal achievement.
Australian Youth Development Roles
Following his departure from South Melbourne in 2000, Postecoglou was appointed coach of Australia’s under-17 and under-20 national teams. This appointment represented recognition of his domestic success and positioned him to influence the development of young Australian footballers entering elite competitive structures.
His tenure as youth coach lasted from 2000 until February 2007, spanning approximately seven years. During this extensive period, Postecoglou was instrumental in identifying, developing, and preparing young Australian players for senior international football. His role in the youth development pipeline positioned him as responsible for developing the generational cohort that would potentially represent Australia in subsequent World Cups and international competitions.
However, his youth coaching tenure concluded disappointingly when Australia failed to qualify for the 2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup, representing a failure to achieve the qualification target for this age group championship. This failure resulted in his replacement as youth coach in February 2007, ending his youth development involvement.
Wilderness Years and Rehabilitation: 2007-2009
Following his dismissal as youth coach in 2007, Postecoglou experienced a substantial period of professional setback and limited employment opportunities. This period proved psychologically and professionally challenging, representing the kind of career interruption that many football managers face but some never successfully overcome.
The Craig Foster Controversy
A significant contributor to Postecoglou’s employment difficulties during this period was an on-air argument he had engaged in with football pundit Craig Foster during an episode of the television show The World Game. This public confrontation, gaining substantial media coverage and public attention, generated negative publicity that Postecoglou later acknowledged made him “feel unemployable” within Australian football structures.
The incident demonstrated early warning signs regarding Postecoglou’s personality characteristics, particularly a tendency toward confrontational engagement in public settings and resistance to criticism or alternative perspectives—characteristics that would recur throughout his subsequent career in various contexts.
Lower-League and Overseas Work
To rebuild his professional reputation and maintain coaching activity, Postecoglou accepted less prestigious positions. He briefly coached Panachaiki in the Greek third division (2008), attempting to leverage his Greek heritage to gain European football experience while accepting employment below his perceived capability level. However, he quickly departed Panachaiki in December 2008, returning to Melbourne and accepting lower-level coaching positions with Whittlesea Zebras while conducting coaching clinics and maintaining professional engagement through consultancy work.
This wilderness period, though limited in duration (approximately 2007-2009), represented a crucial test of Postecoglou’s resilience and commitment to football. His willingness to accept lower-level positions and continue pursuing football management despite professional setback and employment limitations demonstrated genuine commitment to his career pathway. Many managers might have abandoned professional ambitions during extended employment gaps, but Postecoglou maintained focus and subsequently emerged to achieve far greater success.
Brisbane Roar: The Breakthrough to Elite Success
The pivotal moment in Postecoglou’s career came in October 2009 when he was appointed head coach of Brisbane Roar, then a relatively undistinguished A-League team without significant trophy history or dominant institutional reputation. This appointment, made without substantial fanfare or industry expectation, ultimately launched him toward genuine elite-level achievement and international recognition.
Radical Team Reconstruction
Upon arrival at Brisbane Roar, Postecoglou inherited a squad that, while possessing some quality players, lacked the cohesion, philosophy, and distinctive identity required for elite performance. Rather than attempting incremental improvement, Postecoglou implemented radical squad reconstruction, releasing experienced players including Liam Reddy, Craig Moore, Bob Malcolm, and Charlie Miller—players with established reputations but whom he deemed incompatible with his tactical requirements.
His aggressive squad reconstruction, while initially generating criticism from media and supporters accustomed to incremental player transitions, proved strategically prescient. He asked to be “judged a year from the time he took over,” effectively requesting a grace period to implement his vision and reconstruct the team according to his specifications.
“Angeball” and Playing Philosophy
Postecoglou introduced what became known as “Angeball”—a tactical philosophy emphasizing aggressive, attacking football played with high-pressing defensive structures and possession-based football that prioritized entertainment and attacking productivity over defensive stability. This philosophy represented a significant departure from Australian football’s conventional approaches, which historically emphasized defensive organization and cautious tactical approaches.
The philosophical approach proved divisive initially, with some observers and traditionalists questioning whether such attacking, entertaining football could achieve competitive success in professional football. However, Postecoglou’s conviction in his tactical principles and the players’ gradual embrace of his system produced rapidly evident results.
Exceptional On-Field Performance and Records
The 2010-11 season, Brisbane Roar’s first season under Postecoglou with his reconstructed squad, produced exceptional results validating his radical approach. The team won both the A-League Premiership and the Championship—the league’s dual trophy structure—and established multiple records reflecting their exceptional performance level.
Most remarkably, Brisbane Roar achieved a 36-game unbeaten run during the 2010-11 season, breaking the previous Australian football record and establishing a dramatic demonstration of their dominance and consistency. The only loss the team suffered during the entire 2010-11 season, combined with this 36-game unbeaten streak, provided statistical evidence of historically exceptional performance.
Their Grand Final victory came against Central Coast Mariners by a 4-2 penalty shootout in front of 52,168 people at Lang Park (now Suncorp Stadium), providing a dramatic championship-winning conclusion to an exceptional season.
Consecutive Championships and Dynasty Establishment
Following their breakthrough 2010-11 success, Brisbane Roar continued achieving exceptional results. In the 2011-12 season, they won back-to-back A-League championships—becoming the first team in A-League history to achieve this feat. Additionally, they won the Premiership, establishing double-trophy seasons across consecutive years.
By the conclusion of the 2011-12 season, Postecoglou had established Brisbane Roar as Australia’s dominant football club and had himself become the most successful domestic football coach in Australian professional football history, with four national titles achieved in approximately two years—an extraordinary competitive record.
Media Praise and Cultural Impact
A particularly memorable performance came in round 13 of the 2010-11 season when Brisbane Roar defeated Adelaide United 4-0. This performance was celebrated by football media and observers as representing “some of the best football the A-League has ever seen,” validating Postecoglou’s tactical philosophy and demonstrating that entertaining, attacking football could be combined with elite competitive performance.
Brisbane Roar’s emergence under Postecoglou elevated the A-League’s global profile and demonstrated that Australian football, previously dismissed internationally as peripheral to global football culture, could produce genuine entertainment value and elite tactical sophistication.
Departure and Career Progression
Following two-and-a-half years at Brisbane Roar and achieving unprecedented domestic success, Postecoglou resigned in April 2012. His resignation came after achieving sustainable success and establishing what many observers anticipated would be a long-term dominant dynasty. His departure, while surprising to many who anticipated extended tenure, reflected his ambition to test himself at higher competitive levels and pursue international football management opportunities.
International Management: Australia and the AFC Asian Cup
In November 2013, Postecoglou was appointed head coach of Australia’s senior national team—the Socceroos—representing his elevation to international management responsibility and a genuine career pinnacle. His appointment came with expectations to improve Australia’s international competitive standing and achieve qualification for the 2014 FIFA World Cup.
2014 FIFA World Cup Qualification and Participation
Under Postecoglou’s management, Australia qualified for the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil, meeting the primary objective of his international appointment. While their World Cup campaign was not exceptional—they were eliminated in the group stage following matches against Chile, Spain, and the Netherlands—the qualification itself represented achievement of a primary competitive objective.
The 2015 AFC Asian Cup Victory
More remarkably, in 2015, Postecoglou led Australia to win the AFC Asian Cup—the continental championship for Asian football. This victory, secured in front of 75,000 supporters at ANZ Stadium in Sydney, represented Australian football’s greatest achievement to that point and provided extraordinary emotional validation for Australian football supporters and the national team.
The victory came in dramatic circumstances against South Korea in the final, with Australia securing 2-1 victory in extra time. The dramatic circumstances and emotional resonance of the victory created a defining moment for Australian football and cemented Postecoglou’s legacy as the architect of Australia’s greatest recent football achievement.
This victory earned Postecoglou the AFC Coach of the Year award in 2015, with Australia’s national team simultaneously recognized as the AFC’s best national team, providing dual recognition of his achievement.
2018 World Cup Qualification and Resignation
Postecoglou continued managing Australia through the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification campaign, ultimately leading them to successfully qualify for the 2018 World Cup in Russia. However, less than two weeks following Australia’s World Cup qualification, Postecoglou announced his resignation from the national team position.
His early resignation, despite successfully achieving World Cup qualification, reflected his decision to exit while his tenure remained positively regarded rather than risk the substantial downside risks associated with managing at the World Cup at his career stage. The 2018 World Cup in Russia would prove a disappointing experience for Australia, and Postecoglou’s decision to resign before the tournament avoided potential negative association with a World Cup campaign failure.
International Playing Impact
Postecoglou’s international management career, spanning 2013 to 2017, established him as one of Australian football’s most successful managers and demonstrated his capacity to operate at international level despite limited prior international management experience. His tactical innovations and competitive success at international level provided credibility for subsequent European employment.
Japanese Football: Yokohama F. Marinos
Following his resignation from the Australian national team in 2017, Postecoglou worked briefly in consultancy and broadcasting before accepting an appointment as manager of Yokohama F. Marinos, a major Japanese J1 League club.
At Yokohama F. Marinos, Postecoglou achieved singular domestic success by winning the J1 League championship in 2019—establishing him as a successful manager across multiple countries and football cultures. This achievement demonstrated that his tactical approach and managerial capabilities translated effectively across different football leagues and contexts, validating his broader managerial quality beyond domestic Australian or international contexts.
Celtic: Scottish Success and European Validation
In June 2021, Postecoglou was appointed manager of Celtic, the Scottish Premiership club with an exceptional institutional history and significant financial resources. This appointment represented his entry into major European football and represented a significant step in his career progression toward elite-level European football management.
Unprecedented Trophy Success
Postecoglou’s Celtic tenure produced extraordinary results. In just two seasons (2021-22 and 2022-23), he won five trophies with Celtic, including two Scottish Premiership titles. This extraordinary trophy haul established him as one of Celtic’s most successful recent managers and demonstrated his capacity to compete and achieve success within major European football structures.
His success at Celtic included winning the Scottish Premiership in consecutive seasons, establishing Celtic’s domestic dominance and justifying their institutional status as Scottish football’s most successful club. This success attracted attention from Europe’s most prominent football institutions, including major Premier League clubs.
Tottenham Hotspur: Premier League Appointment and European Glory
In June 2023, Tottenham Hotspur appointed Postecoglou as their new head coach, succeeding Antonio Conte. This appointment represented Postecoglou’s entry into the Premier League, English football’s most commercially significant and internationally prominent league. More specifically, Tottenham represented one of the Premier League’s most historically significant clubs, with exceptional financial resources and European tradition, though notably lacking trophy success in recent years (their most recent trophy being the 2008 League Cup).
The 2023-24 Season: Transition and Mixed Results
Postecoglou’s first season at Tottenham (2023-24) produced mixed results. While he guided Tottenham to European competition success, their domestic Premier League campaign was unremarkable, finishing outside the top four and failing to achieve competitive expectations within the league.
The 2024-25 Season: Domestic Failure and European Triumph
The 2024-25 season proved dramatically problematic for Tottenham domestically. Despite substantial financial investment in new players and managerial resources, Tottenham experienced one of their worst domestic seasons in recent history. Their Premier League performance was significantly below expectations, finishing outside European qualification positions and generating substantial criticism regarding Postecoglou’s tactical approaches and their apparent ineffectiveness within the Premier League context.
The UEFA Europa League Victory
Despite this domestic failure, Tottenham achieved extraordinary success in the UEFA Europa League, ultimately winning the competition in May 2025. This victory represented Tottenham’s first trophy since 2008 and their first European trophy since 1984—a genuinely exceptional achievement given their extensive period without trophy success.
More significantly, Postecoglou became the first Australian and the first manager from an AFC confederation country to win a major European club trophy, representing a genuinely historic achievement for both Postecoglou and Australian football.
However, this triumph was substantially overshadowed by Tottenham’s disastrous domestic performance during the same season, generating the unusual circumstance where a club won a major European trophy while simultaneously experiencing their worst domestic campaign in years.
Dismissal and Departure
Following the Europa League victory, Tottenham’s board determined that Postecoglou’s inflexibility regarding tactical approaches and his apparent inability to adapt to the technical demands of consistent Premier League football competition made his continuation untenable. Consequently, despite the Europa League triumph, Postecoglou was dismissed from his position, ending his Tottenham tenure despite the European trophy achievement.
Nottingham Forest: The Disastrous Interlude
In September 2025, barely months following his Tottenham dismissal, Postecoglou was appointed manager of Nottingham Forest, another Premier League club seeking managerial renewal.
Catastrophic Performance
Postecoglou’s Nottingham Forest tenure proved disastrous. He remained in the position for only 39 days without achieving a single victory across eight matches in charge. This extraordinarily poor performance led to his rapid dismissal, representing one of the most dramatic managerial failures of recent years.
The catastrophic Nottingham Forest experience raised serious questions about Postecoglou’s adaptability to different institutional contexts and his capacity to manage within different tactical and strategic environments than those where he had previously achieved success.
Tactical Philosophy and “Angeball”
Postecoglou’s distinctive tactical philosophy, termed “Angeball” by supporters and media commentators, emphasizes several key principles that have defined his managerial approach throughout his career.
Aggressive Attacking Football
Central to “Angeball” is a commitment to aggressive, entertaining attacking football that prioritizes goal-scoring and attacking production over defensive stability. Rather than adopting conservative approaches emphasizing defensive solidity, Postecoglou’s teams typically play with high-pressing defensive structures and aggressive attacking play designed to generate maximum attacking opportunity.
High-Pressing and Defensive Aggression
Postecoglou’s teams employ high-pressing strategies, attempting to recover possession in advanced areas rather than accepting defensive organization in deeper positions. This approach requires significant physical conditioning and technical sophistication but generates opportunities for rapid attacking transitions when possession is recovered in advanced areas.
Possession-Based Football
His teams emphasize possession maintenance and ball circulation, attempting to dictate matches through superior possession rather than reactive defending against opposition attacks. This possession emphasis reflects a philosophy that superior ball control and circulation provide the most effective mechanism for competitive success.
Financial Status and Compensation
While specific salary figures for Postecoglou’s managerial positions are not universally disclosed, his compensation levels have increased substantially across his career progression.
Tottenham Salary
At Tottenham Hotspur, Postecoglou received compensation substantially higher than previous positions, reflecting the Premier League’s financial resources and Tottenham’s institutional status. Premier League managerial positions typically provide annual salaries in the £3-6 million range for established managers at top-six clubs, suggesting Postecoglou likely received compensation within this range.
Net Worth
Postecoglou’s estimated net worth as of 2025 is likely between £5-10 million, accumulated through decades of managerial employment and compensation packages across multiple countries and clubs. However, specific figures are not publicly disclosed.
Frequently Asked Questions About Ange Postecoglou
Who is Ange Postecoglou?
Ange Postecoglou is a Greek-born, Australian-raised football manager born on 27 August 1965 in Athens. He is best known for his successful management of Brisbane Roar (winning consecutive A-League championships), Australia national team (winning the 2015 AFC Asian Cup), Celtic (winning five trophies in two seasons), and Tottenham Hotspur (winning the 2025 UEFA Europa League). He is the first Australian to win a major European club trophy.
What is “Angeball”?
“Angeball” is the tactical philosophy associated with Ange Postecoglou, emphasizing aggressive, attacking football with high-pressing defensive structures and possession-based play. Rather than prioritizing defensive stability, his teams typically adopt attacking approaches designed to generate maximum scoring opportunities and entertainment value.
How many trophies has Ange Postecoglou won?
Ange Postecoglou has won multiple trophies across his managerial career including: two NSL titles with South Melbourne (1997-98, 1998-99), the 1999 Oceania Club Championship, multiple A-League titles with Brisbane Roar (2010-11 Premiership and Championship, 2011-12 Championship), the 2015 AFC Asian Cup with Australia, the 2019 J1 League with Yokohama F. Marinos, five trophies with Celtic (including two league titles), and the 2025 UEFA Europa League with Tottenham.
What was Ange Postecoglou’s playing career?
Postecoglou played as a defender for South Melbourne Hellas from 1984-1993, making 193 appearances. He was involved in South Melbourne’s NSL championship victories in 1984 (as a player) and 1990-91 (as captain). He represented Australia on four occasions between 1986-1988.
When did Ange Postecoglou become Tottenham manager?
Postecoglou was appointed Tottenham Hotspur head coach in June 2023. He won the UEFA Europa League in May 2025 but was subsequently dismissed despite this trophy achievement due to Tottenham’s poor domestic Premier League performance.
Did Ange Postecoglou win the Premier League?
No, Ange Postecoglou has not won the Premier League. His Tottenham tenures produced poor domestic league results, with Tottenham finishing outside the top four and below European qualification positions.
What happened at Nottingham Forest?
Postecoglou was appointed Nottingham Forest manager in September 2025 but was dismissed after just 39 days without winning any of his eight matches in charge, representing one of the most dramatically unsuccessful managerial tenures in recent years.
Has Ange Postecoglou ever managed in the World Cup?
Ange Postecoglou managed Australia at the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil, where they were eliminated in the group stage. He resigned from the Australian national team position in 2017 after successfully qualifying them for the 2018 World Cup but before the tournament began.
When was Ange Postecoglou born?
Ange Postecoglou was born on 27 August 1965 in Athens, Greece. He immigrated to Australia at age five in 1970, developing his football identity within Australian contexts.
What was the AFC Asian Cup 2015 victory?
In 2015, Postecoglou led Australia to win the AFC Asian Cup, the continental championship for Asian football. Australia defeated South Korea 2-1 in the final in front of 75,000 supporters at ANZ Stadium in Sydney, representing Australia’s greatest football achievement to that point.
How long was Ange Postecoglou at Brisbane Roar?
Postecoglou managed Brisbane Roar for approximately two-and-a-half years from October 2009 until April 2012, during which he established the club as Australia’s dominant team and won multiple championship titles.
What was Ange Postecoglou’s first managerial position?
Postecoglou’s first head coaching position was at South Melbourne in 1996, where he led the club to consecutive NSL titles in 1997-98 and 1998-99 after ending their seven-year trophy drought.
Has Ange Postecoglou managed in multiple countries?
Yes, Postecoglou has managed in multiple countries including Australia (South Melbourne, Brisbane Roar, Australia national team, Melbourne Victory), Greece (Panachaiki), Japan (Yokohama F. Marinos), Scotland (Celtic), and England (Tottenham, Nottingham Forest).
What is the significance of Ange Postecoglou’s UEFA Europa League victory?
Postecoglou’s 2025 UEFA Europa League victory with Tottenham was historically significant as he became the first Australian and first manager from an AFC confederation country to win a major European club trophy, representing an exceptional achievement for Australian football representation in European contexts.
Why was Ange Postecoglou dismissed from Tottenham?
Postecoglou was dismissed from Tottenham following the 2024-25 season despite winning the UEFA Europa League. His dismissal resulted from Tottenham’s catastrophic domestic Premier League performance during the same season, with the club finishing outside European qualification positions and the board determining his tactical inflexibility made his continuation untenable.
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