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Bradley basketball falls to Drake: Recap, game highlights at MVC championship

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ST. LOUIS — The Bradley Braves run in the 2025 Missouri Valley Conference Tournament ended in heartbreak Sunday with a title game loss to rival Drake.

The Braves (26-8) cut a 10-point deficit in the second half down to six, but faded to a 63-48 loss as Valley Player of the Year Bennett Stirtz put it out of reach in the closing minutes.

Drake (30-3) clinched the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Braves were eliminated from Arch Madness by Drake for the third consecutive season, two of which came in the title game.

This story will be updated.

Below are game updates from Enterprise Center in St. Louis, Mo.

Bradley has gone 3:16 without a bucket from the field. Manyawu splits free throws after he goes hard to the deck on a flagrant foul from Hannah.

Deen fading left, drains a 3 from the left wing to close within 46-41 with 7:17 left.

Drake answers with a bucket, then a physical exchange under the basket results in matching technical fouls for contact after dead ball.

Hannah shoots Bradley’s pair, misses both. Mascari makes both for Drake.

Then the Bulldogs get a 3 from Stirtz at 5:52 left for a 53-41 lead.

Tavion Banks adds a pair of free throws for Drake and Bradley now down 55-41 with 4:45 left.

Drake on an 8-0 run.

Duke Deen drills his first 3-pointer of the game, from the left corner, Braves get a stop, and freshman Jaquan Johnson goes barreling to the rim to draw foul shots, which he split.

BU cuts it to 42-35 with 9:25 left.

Hannah hits a 3 from the left corner and now the Braves get it within six at 8:18. Hannah has 16 points for Bradley. No one else has more than 5.

The Braves now 1 of 8 from the field as the second half reaches 8:14 old. Drake only 3 of 10.

They go to the media break with 11:46 left and Bradley down, 37-29. Braves without points in the last 4:01.

Hannah fights a layin up and in for Bradley’s first points of the second half 4:15 into it.

Cuts Drake’s 10-point lead to 37-29. The Braves missed their first six shots of the half.

The Braves miss their first two shots of the second half — both 3-pointers.

Drake gets a second-chance layup from Daniel Abreu and a dunk from Cam Manyawu to break it open, 35-27 with 17:31 left.

Timeout, Bradley, plus media break.

Bradley has 9 points from Darius Hannah and 5 each from Demarion Burch and Christian Davis.

Drake has 12 from Bennett Stirtz.

Both teams are shooting 52% from the field.

Braves have the ball on a turnover and take a timeout with 20.5 seconds left in the half.

Duke Deen’s 3 from the top of the key is partially blocked, Drake recovers it and Isaiah Jackson races the other way for a layup as the buzzer goes off, sending Bradley to the locker room down four.

With the shot clock burning down, Darius Hannah takes a contested jumper, no good. But Ahmet Jonovic grabs an offensive rebound, kicks it out top to Demarion Burch, and he drains a 3 for a 27-24 Bradley lead with 4:02 left in the first half.

Big play guys everywhere. Burch put in a stepback jumper a minute earlier, and Christian Davis hit a corner 3 76 seconds before that.

Bennett Stirtz’s third 3-pointer, from the left wing, brings Drake back to a 20-19 lead with 7:36 left.

Bradley’s biggest lead has been four points, while Drake’s biggest has been three.

The Braves turn the game back their way as Christian Davis gets a dunk and Darius Hannah drive to the rim for an and-1 and a 19-15 BU lead with 9:06 left.

The Braves forced Drake into a shot clock violation after that with 8:37 left.

Drake takes timeout. Bradley on a 7-0 run over 2:28.

Zek Montgomery’s jumper as the shot clock is expiring is no good, and Drake takes it the other way for a 3 from the right wing by Bennett Stirtz and a 15-12 lead.

Jaquan Johnson ends up on the deck with the ball on the ensuing possession, but it’s ruled a jump ball and Drake gets it coming out of the 12-under break.

Bennett Stirtz knocks down a 3 from the right wing, then Duke Deen loses the handle for a turnover and the Bulldogs convert on a two-on-one break from Tavion Banks for a 12-10 lead with 14:24 left.

The Braves pick up a layin from Zek Montgomery to calm it down with a 12-12 tie.

Bradley senior Darius Hannah has gone to the rim twice in the first four minutes to help the Braves to an 8-6 lead at the under-16 media break.

All eight Bradley points have come in the paint.

Make that 10 of 10. Coming off the break, Hannah rolls to the rim and jams it in for 10-6 lead.

Bradley big men get right to working inside as Ahmet Jonovic and Darius Hannah both layin shots at the rim, and Duke Deen goes to the rim on a back cut for 6-2 in the first three minutes.

Bradley sticks with its openers, guards Duke Deen and Zek Montgomery, wing Christian Davis, forward Darius Hannah and big man Ahmet Jonovic.

Drake counters with guards Isaiah Jackson, Mitch Mascari and Bennett Stirtz and forwards Cam Manyawu and Daniel Abreu.

Bradley pre-game hangout: Braves fans can join the Bradley family, friends, cheerleaders, Bravettes, basketball pep band and Kaboom! at the pregame hangout at Bally Sports Live! at Ballpark Village during the Arch Madness Tournament in St. Louis this weekend.

On Sunday, the pregame party will start at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday.

There are trolleys to shuttle fans between Ballpark Village and the Enterprise Center. Those shuttles run continuous from Ballpark Village to Enterprise Center, starting one hour before the start of the first game each day and ending approximately one hour after the conclusion of the final game.

Sendoff from team hotel: Fans are welcome to attend the Braves team send-off from the Embassy Suites St. Louis Downtown Lounge (4th Floor) with the BU band, Bravettes, and Cheerleaders. Sunday send-off starts at 11:15 a.m.

Bradley is 26-7 overall now, the ninth-most wins in a single-season in program history. … Bradley head coach Brian Wardle’s 13 Missouri Valley Conference Tournament wins are most in program history. … Sunday’s matchup will mark the 20th time the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds have squared off in the title game in MVC Tournament history. … Bradley senior guard Duke Deen has 102 3-pointers this season. He has 260 in 103 career games, trailing only Jeremy Crouch (262) in program history. … Bradley has made 321 3-pointers this season, third-most in a single season in program history behind the 2006-07 team (349) and 2007-08 (346). … Deen has 356 career assists with the Braves, 12th all-time. He had 4 assists Saturday to pass Anthony Parker and Sam Maniscalco, both at 355. … Bradley is 20-8 all-time as a top 3 seed in the MVC Tournament. BU is 6-3 as the No. 2 seed, and 43-41 all-time in MVC tournament games. …The Braves now are 16-1 in games in which freshman Jaquan Johnson has at least two free throw attempts, an assist and a steal. … Bradley senior forward Darius Hannah extended his ongoing program record for career games played to 148. … CBS has Kevin Harlan slated to call Sunday’s title game.

More:Missouri Valley basketball preseason poll: Bradley basketball picked as favorite

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Game lines and odds from VegasInsider as of Saturday night:

Record: 26-7, 15-5

Dave Eminian is the Journal Star sports columnist, and covers Bradley men’s basketball, the Rivermen and Chiefs. He writes the Cleve In The Eve sports column for pjstar.com. He can be reached at 686-3206 or deminian@pjstar.com. Follow him on X.com @icetimecleve.

Bradley-Drake final score

FINAL: Drake 63, Bradley 48

56-43

Technical fouls

Braves picking it up

Both teams scuffling

Bradley fights back from 10 down

Drake opens 8-point lead

Numbers after 20

HALFTIME: Drake 31, Bradley 27

:20.5 left

Big play

Stirtz for 3

Hannah again

Drake 15, Bradley 12

Drake surges

Hannah imposing his will

Braves open 6-2

Starters

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Bradley vs Drake by the numbers

Bravely Speaking

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TEAMS 1st half 2nd half FINAL
Bradley 27 21 48
Drake 31 32 63

Drake claims third straight Missouri Valley championship

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ST. LOUIS — Bennett Stirtz scored 24 points, Tavion Banks added 13 and top-seeded Drake defeated No. 2-seed Bradley 63-48 on Sunday to win Arch Madness for the third consecutive time.

The Bulldogs (30-3) will be making their eighth NCAA Tournament appearance and fourth in the past five years. They won the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season championship for the first time since 2019.

A 3-pointer by Demarion Burch gave Bradley a 27-24 lead with four minutes left in the first half but the Braves did not score again until 15:20 remained in the second half. Drake finished the first half with a 7-0 run to lead 31-27 and the Bulldogs added the first six points of the second half.

Drake led 46-41 with seven minutes left in regulation then Bradley went cold again. The Bulldogs went on a 15-2 run capped by a dunk and a 3-pointer by Stirtz.

Bradley (26-8) went nearly 5 1/2 minutes without a made field goal before Darius Hannah scored in the paint to make it 61-47. Hannah’s bucket turned out to be the Braves’ only basket in seven attempts over the final 7:17.

Hannah led Bradley with 19 points that included 7-of-11 shooting. Bradley shot 52% in the first half and 28% in the second, finishing at 42% for the game.

Stirtz made 5 of 7 3-pointers and was 7 for 13 overall for Drake. Banks had a game-high nine rebounds. Drake hit on 46% from the field.

Cooper Flagg takes it to the cup and slams it home to seal Duke’s victory over North Carolina. (0:37)

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Duke played without Cooper Flagg for nearly 10 minutes in the first half, and as the Blue Devils’ “ran out of gas,” according to coach Jon Scheyer, they fumbled away a 15-point lead and went into the break up just one on North Carolina.

Scheyer’s message when the team hit the locker room: “This is great.”

For a team that had won five of its past six games by at least 30 points entering Saturday night’s regular-season finale against the rival Tar Heels, Scheyer was more than happy to see Duke deal with some adversity — something the Blue Devils did down the stretch, thundering to an 82-69 win over UNC to secure the No. 1 seed in next week’s ACC tournament.

“We never want to be the hunted,” Scheyer said. “Sometimes, when you talk too much about what a team is trying to do, you become the hunted. We want to be the hunters. We have to continue to do that. From here on out, it’s end-of-season time if you lose. We have to be ready to go.”

That adversity showed up with three early fouls on Flagg, including a charge that sent him to the bench for the final 3:18 of the half. With their centerpiece sidelined, the Blue Devils struggled to get stops, and UNC chipped away at a massive deficit to pull to within a point.

The second half opened with more scoring from the Tar Heels, who went up by seven with 15:44 left, but that’s when the adversity found a proper adversary in an emotional Flagg.

Flagg played the second half with three fouls and still dominated on defense, racking up four blocks to key the Blue Devils’ comeback. He finished with 15 points, nine rebounds and six assists. After several key plays down the stretch, including a monster dunk, he flexed and played to the hostile crowd.

“It’s just about getting into a rhythm, getting into the game,” Flagg said. “I think I’m at my best when I’m playing with energy, playing with a high motor. Having those energy plays, being high for my teammates, for myself, having that energy is contagious. I was trying to bring that in the second half.”

UNC rarely attacked Flagg early in the second half, something he said was surprising.

“It would’ve been smart,” Flagg said.

And yet, it might not have mattered. Scheyer said he’d have played Flagg regardless, telling his freshman to be aggressive but not “handsy.”

“You worry about him playing hesitant and not being himself,” Scheyer said. “For him to get four blocks while having the three fouls was big time. He was ready to play. He just wanted it almost too much.”

Afterward, Scheyer made the case for Flagg to win national player of the year honors, noting the myriad ways he impacts a game — something that was on display throughout Duke’s second-half run Saturday.

“I don’t think we’ve seen that in college in a long time,” Scheyer said, “and that’s what he does. But that’s not what Cooper plays for.”

Duke also got help from Maliq Brown, who delivered two big 3-pointers after missing three weeks because of a shoulder injury, and Caleb Foster, whose layup with 10:19 to go ignited a Duke run.

For Scheyer, the combination of bench production during Flagg’s first-half exit and overcoming the second-half deficit proved again that his team can find ample ways to win.

For the Tar Heels, the loss ensures they’ll be a hunter in the ACC tournament. After a 17-point loss to Duke at Cameron Indoor Stadium on Feb. 1, the Heels won seven of their next eight to return to the NCAA tournament bubble. But Saturday’s loss likely has UNC on the outside looking in, needing to win at least a couple of conference tournament games — and maybe the whole thing — next week.

“I’ve been proud of how this team has reacted,” Tar Heels coach Hubert Davis said. “I don’t think that’s going to change at all. We’ll regroup and be ready to go.”

If he wants the Blue Devils to remain the hunters, Scheyer will likely need to avoid looking at the standings. Duke secured the ACC’s regular-season title with the win, but combined with Auburn’s 93-91 loss to Alabama on Saturday, it’s likely the Blue Devils will also enter the conference tournament as the No. 1 team in the country.

“We’ve never talked about being No. 1 … other than when this thing is all said and done,” Scheyer said. “Just my luck to be No. 1 going into the postseason. But we make it about finishing what’s right in front of us, doing our best in the moment, and if we do that, by the end, we want to be 1 when it’s done.”

NEW YORK — The crowd of UConn fans at Madison Square Garden was starting to get loud.

After jumping out to a 22-point lead against the two-time defending champion, St. John’s looked to be giving it all away. In four minutes, the Huskies cut the lead to nine, forcing Rick Pitino to call a timeout.

But before the coach could get a word in, Zuby Ejiofor chimed in.

“We got in a huddle, and Zuby said, ‘Look, we’ve battled injuries. We don’t wilt. We’ve been there before. We know what to do,'” Pitino said.

The Red Storm immediately pushed the lead back to double digits, where it would stay the rest of the game, cruising to an 89-75 win.

It was a far cry from what unfolded almost a year ago to the day, when St. John’s had fallen at home to Seton Hall in a 68-62 loss Feb. 18, 2024. After that loss, Pitino unloaded on his players, calling the season “the most unenjoyable experience I’ve had since I’ve been coaching.”

“We recruited the antithesis of the way I coach, with speed, quickness, fundamentals, strength and toughness,” Pitino went on to tell the media that day. “It’s a good group, they try hard, but they’re just not very tough.”

But much like the turnaround in that late-February win over UConn, the Red Storm have tapped into their spirit of relentlessness to go from the middle of the Big East standings to winning their first outright regular-season title since 1985 — and emerging as a legitimate Final Four contender between Pitino’s first and second seasons with the program.

There have been false dawns for the revival of St. John’s basketball before, but this campaign has felt different. One season removed from missing the NCAA tournament altogether, the Red Storm have achieved their highest national ranking (No. 6) since Lou Carnesecca, clad in his signature sweaters, took them to No. 5 during the 1990-91 season. And they’re doing it in a distinctly “New York basketball” kind of way — with Brooklyn native Kadary Richmond leading on the court, another Hall of Fame coach walking the sideline, and aggressiveness and relentlessness on both ends.

It’s the type of team longtime Johnnies fans have embraced in the past, the type they were desperate to see again at the Garden, with Pitino as their white whale.

Now the question is: Can this year’s St. John’s team do what even the teams led by Carnesecca and Chris Mullin could not and win a national championship?

Pitino sat at a conference table in his office in late October 2023, a couple of weeks before his first season at St. John’s was set to begin. It didn’t take long for him to express concern about the defense.

“The tough thing, though, is teaching 12 or 13 guys who were all the best offensive player on their team and they don’t know how to play defense,” Pitino told ESPN at the time. “Got the best player at VMI, the best player at Penn, the best player at Harvard, the best player — or a terrific player — at UMass, all really good offensive players. Can’t guard anybody. So they’re all good offensive players, but their forte is not defense.”

His assessment was right: St. John’s allowed more than one point per possession in 20 of its 33 games last season. (This season’s team has allowed only eight opponents to hit that mark.)

In Pitino’s 16 seasons at Louisville, the Cardinals ranked top-10 nationally in adjusted defensive efficiency 10 times, including No. 1 three times. His final team at Kentucky (1997) also ranked first overall at that end of the floor, while each of his three teams at Iona (2020-23) ranked first or second in the MAAC in defensive efficiency.

Those teams were predicated upon length, athleticism, pressuring the ball, turning teams over and blocking shots. They made teams uncomfortable.

Red Storm associate head coach Steve Masiello — a walk-on at Kentucky under Pitino and, later, one of his assistants at Louisville from 2005 to 2011 — said the urgency in building an entirely new roster in Pitino’s first offseason at St. John’s meant that certain things sometimes went overlooked.

“When we took the job, we tried to take the best players available … check as many boxes. Those guys were terrific, but we didn’t check enough boxes,” Masiello told ESPN. “We had our deficiencies defensively, and as we were going through the year, we said we had to address those deficiencies.”

Masiello went down to Houston in the offseason to watch Kelvin Sampson’s team for a few days, just to get some new ideas and potential tweaks from what has been one of the nation’s best defenses for the past several years. And when the Red Storm coaches looked at players to add, they had two main aims, Masiello said: “Length and athleticism. Those have to be two of the most important things we identify in this transfer portal.”

Instead of pursuing low- and mid-major transfers, Pitino and his staff focused on players who had already proved they could handle the physicality and speed of high-major basketball. Richmond, who spent three years at Seton Hall, was one of the best players in the Big East; Deivon Smith had played in the SEC, ACC and Pac-12; Vince Iwuchukwu transferred from USC; and Aaron Scott was a proven 3-and-D player from North Texas.

“I think the coaching staff did a really great job of just bringing new pieces to this team that were going to be really bought in,” Ejiofor told ESPN. “And the core guys, the returning guys from last year, were just basically preaching how important defense is and exactly what it takes, and you see exactly what it shows when everybody’s connected on the defensive end.”

Returning players have enjoyed the natural jump that comes with being in Pitino’s program for a full season. RJ Luis has improved defensively en route to emerging as one of the best players in the Big East, while Ejiofor has developed into a switchable frontcourt defender who can hold his own against a variety of positions.

“Players, when they’re here in a short window, they think offense is going to get them to where they want to go,” Pitino told ESPN. “And I’ve convinced this team that — we use the term about getting on Broadway. I said if you want to showcase your skills, winning is the only thing that does that. You’ll never get the opportunity. You’ll always be off-Broadway, and nobody will see you play.

“If you get on Broadway, then it’s just a matter of, are your skills good enough? But until that point, the only way you can get there is through your defense and winning.”

St. John’s has developed into one of college basketball’s elite defenses as a result of these season-over-season adjustments, with Pitino often using the word “relentless” to describe his team’s personality at that end of the floor. The Red Storm lead the Big East in scoring defense and field goal percentage defense, with opponents scoring fewer than 66 points per game and shooting below 40% from the field. The Johnnies also rank inside the top 20 nationally in defensive turnover percentage, 2-point percentage defense, block percentage and steal percentage.

In the Feb. 23 matchup with UConn, the Red Storm scored 24 points off 18 turnovers for the Huskies, leaving Dan Hurley searching for answers.

“The pressure is one thing,” Hurley said after the game. “Obviously it’s disconcerting to start your possession just surviving to get the ball inbounds versus the pressure. But then I don’t even think it’s the full-court pressure with them. I just think it’s the positionless switching that they’re able to do, on-ball, off-ball, the veer switching. And then what makes it obviously work is just having all these big wings that are grown men, physiques, these guys are physical, and then Ejiofor. When Ejiofor gets out on guards, it’s hard to take advantage of that, his movement and his ability to stay on the ball.

“They remind me of Houston, just what they do to you defensively and on the glass.”

Then Hurley asked the question that most threatens St. John’s title hopes: Is an elite defense and strong offensive rebounding enough to win a title, given St. John’s shooting woes?

Rick Pitino and Dan Hurley share their thoughts after St. John’s road win against Connecticut.

“They’ve got a championship-level defense,” Hurley said. “I think they have championship-level offensive rebounding, and obviously how their season goes from here is going to, in large part, come down to being able to make enough shots.”

On the season, the Red Storm are seventh in the Big East in offensive efficiency — they rank last in 3-point shooting percentage and next-to-last in 2-point percentage and free throw percentage. They also rank near the bottom of Division I in nearly every perimeter shooting category: 3-pointers per game, 3-point percentage, 3-point attempt rate, percentage of total points from 3-pointers.

“I feel like we still have yet to show our offensive power,” guard Simeon Wilcher said. “We just need to click. It is going to click at the right time.”

“I would just say that we stick to what we’re good at,” Ejiofor added. “We’re not a bad shooting team at all. We got really some of the best shooters in the Big East, and it shows in practice and the team development workouts as well. So once we get spacing right and pace right, I think we’re going to be a really special team, especially on the offensive end.”

For its part, St. John’s has shown flashes of improvement from 3-point range in recent weeks. The Red Storm made 11 shots from deep against Villanova and nine against DePaul, then went 8-for-16 from behind the arc in the first half against UConn.

And Pitino does have experience taking teams that struggled shooting the 3 on deep runs in the NCAA tournament. His 2012 Louisville team shot just 31.8% from 3 and still reached the Final Four. His 2013 team shot 33.3% and ranked 13th in the Big East in percentage of total points from 3s and still won its since-vacated national title. And his 2015 team ranked in the 300s nationally in 3-point percentage and still advanced to the Elite Eight.

In fact, the two closest efficiency profiles to this St. John’s team at BartTorvik are 2012 Louisville and 2015 Louisville.

“I think we’re going to get better shooting the basketball,” Pitino told ESPN. “I think we’re coming out of that slump.

“I’m not concerned about the 3-point shot. I am concerned about our free throw shooting, because in the NCAA tournament, it comes down to free throw shooting a lot of times.”

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Opposing coaches aren’t writing off the Johnnies simply based on their shooting, either.

“There’s so many different factors that go into winning, and there’s so many factors that go into losing. Shooting is one that people pay a lot of attention to because it’s so obvious. But if there’s 50 of those factors and shooting is one of them, they’re really good at the other 49,” Marquette’s Shaka Smart said after the Golden Eagles lost to St. John’s. “They do a terrific job of playing to their strengths and understanding that in the paint is where they’re going to have a huge advantage and on the glass, and they did a great job pressing that advantage.”

The late-February win over UConn at the Garden felt like a full-circle moment for the Rick Pitino era at St. John’s.

In the Northeast, the Garden has become known as “Storrs South” for the way UConn fans fill the arena whenever the Huskies play there. In February 2024, when the Red Storm hosted UConn during the regular season, the fans were split. The Huskies rolled past St. John’s by 13, continuing their recent dominance of the Red Storm.

This matchup was different. It wasn’t Storrs South. Red-clad fans filled the seats, and chants aimed at Dan Hurley were heard throughout the game. There was no confusion: It was a St. John’s home game. The Red Storm led by 22 en route to an 89-75 win, the first time since 1999-2000 they have completed a regular-season sweep of UConn.

“I can assure you we had most of the fans tonight,” Pitino said afterward.

Perhaps more than anything, it was another sign St. John’s is back — one of the 10 winningest programs of all time, but a program that hasn’t had an NCAA tournament win since 2000, a Final Four appearance since 1985 or a Big East title since 1992.

“This is just what Coach P does,” Wilcher said.

ESPN

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Men’s Tournament Challenge

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The all-time series is led by Bradley 94-74, with the Braves holding a 9-6 record against the Bulldogs in the MVC Tournament, including a 4-5 record all-time in the championship game. The Braves are led by a trio of double-digit scorers in Duke Deen, Zek Montgomery, and Darius Hannah, who all average over 12 points per game this season. Duke Deen continues to climb the MVC career made three-point record list with 260 career made threes, trailing only Jeremy Crouch’s 262 for most all-time. Off the bench, Jaquan Johnson continues to make an impact, recording his 50th steal of the season, moving just four steals behind Billy Wright’s freshman record of 54.

Drake is led by MVC Player of the Year Bennett Stirtz, who averages 19 points per game, 5.8 assists per game, and 4.4 rebounds per game. The game will be available to watch on CBS with Kevin Harlan and Dan Bonner on the call. Tipoff is set for 1:15 PM CST from the Enterprise Center.

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