Five Key Stories: 1/5/26 – 1/11/26

The first full week of 2026 is in the books and it was a busy one across the hockey world with several extensions completed.  Unfortunately, it also saw the passing of a pair of Hall of Famers.  Here’s a rundown of the key stories of the week.

Blues Sign Two: Early in the week, St. Louis inked winger Alexey Toropchenko to a two-year, $5MM extension.  The 26-year-old has been a valuable energy player over his five-year career and the move ensures the two sides won’t go to arbitration this summer.  Then, on the weekend, GM Doug Armstrong took care of another pending RFA, reaching a six-year, $48MM extension with defenseman Philip Broberg.  Acquired via offer sheet in 2024 from Edmonton, the 24-year-old has blossomed into an impactful defender and is averaging nearly 23 minutes per game this season.  The deal buys out two RFA years plus an additional four years of team control while making him their highest-paid defender moving forward.  Unfortunately for the Blues, Broberg suffered an upper-body injury on Saturday just hours after the deal was announced and didn’t make it through the game.

Sharks Swap: With the Sharks now squarely in the playoff battle (they sit third in the Pacific Division heading into today’s action), they’ve made a move to add some goaltending depth and a young defender.  They acquired goalie Laurent Brossoit, defenseman Nolan Allan, and a 2028 seventh-round pick from Chicago for blueliner Jake Furlong, Ryan Ellis’ LTIR contract, and a 2028 fourth rounder.  Brossoit, now healthy, gives San Jose another experienced option in the system while getting a look at Allan, a 2021 first-round pick who had been passed over on Chicago’s depth chart.  They also free up more than $2.5MM in cap space by removing Ellis off their books to get them closer to exiting LTIR.  The Blackhawks, meanwhile, upgrade a future draft pick and save considerable cash with the bulk of Ellis’ deal being covered by insurance.

Five For Dvorak: When Christian Dvorak signed a one-year, $5.4MM contract with the Flyers in the summer, it raised some eyebrows with Philadelphia seemingly overpaying to get a short-term agreement.  But it has worked out rather well with the 29-year-old well on his way to a career year offensively.  As a result, the team has rewarded him for his efforts, signing him to a five-year, $25.65MM extension, a small dip in the AAV ($5.15MM) in exchange for a long-term agreement.  After being more of a middle-six player in Montreal (and Arizona before that), Dvorak has taken over the top center spot with the Flyers and is now set to be part of their long-term core group.

Hamilton Scratched: With the Devils getting defenseman Johnathan Kovacevic back from his season-long knee injury, someone had to sit.  That player was veteran Dougie Hamilton.  Soon after reports emerged that he’d be sitting, his agent J.P. Barry released a statement critical of the team, suggesting that his benching was business-related instead of performance-related amid reports that the team would like to move him.  However, Hamilton has been quiet offensively this season with five goals and five assists in 40 games, not a great return on a $9MM price tag.  Barry stated that Hamilton is willing to consider moving to teams that are on his no-trade list so we’ll see if this ultimately expedites the trade process.

More Issues For The Rangers: It was a rough first half of the season for the Rangers who have underachieved.  Now, their push for the playoffs just got a lot more difficult with two of their top players being injured as goaltender Igor Shesterkin went on injured reserve with a non-contact lower-body injury while defenseman Adam Fox landed on LTIR with a lower-body issue of his own.  Despite the team’s struggles, Shesterkin remains in the top ten in the league in save percentage and now veteran Jonathan Quick is tasked with keeping them afloat.  Meanwhile, it’s Fox’s second stint on LTIR, taking their top offensive weapon from the back end out of the lineup for at least 10 games and 24 days, hardly ideal for one of the lowest-scoring teams in the league.

Photo courtesy of Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images.

Bruins Sign Jonathan Aspirot To Two-Year Extension

The Boston Bruins have signed defenseman Jonathan Aspirot to a two-year, $1.775MM contract extension. Aspirot made his NHL debut at the start of the season. He has since played in 25 games, locking in the 2025-26 season as his rookie year in the NHL. Aspirot has three points, a plus-15, and 17 penalty minutse through those contests.

Aspirot took the long route to the NHL. He went undrafed after three years in the QMJHL but showed off enough shutdown defense to earn an AHL contract with the Belleville Senators in 2019. Aspirot stuck with the AHL Senators for the next four seasons, routinely rivaling 15-to-20 points and a positive plus-minus while rotating through Belleville’s lineup. He seemed to have his pro legs under him after the 2022-23 season, when he recorded 16 points, a plus-four, and 65 penalty minutes in 43 games.

That performance prompted a move to bigger shoes for the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers. Aspirot stepped up as a top-four option for the Wranglers and set career-highs in points (33) and penalty minutes (80) through his first 66 games with the club. He continued to make a mark through last season, when he racked up 29 points and 54 penalty minutes in 65 games in Calgary. Once again, his strong showing pushed Aspirot into a bigger role with a new team, this time on a deal with the Providence Bruins signed last summer. Hopes were high for the 6-foot, 212-pound defenseman and he answered the bell, netting three points and four penalty minutes in his first five games with Providence.

That was enough to earn a call-up to the Bruins – only the second NHL call-up of his career, after a call-up to the Flames in 2024 that resulted in no games played. This time, Aspirot made sure the move would stick. He has appeared in 25 of Boston’s 35 games since being recalled and even earned time on a pairing with star defenseman Charlie McAvoy. Aspirot’s career is taking off at the age of 26. Boston will keep that momentum rolling for the undrafted free agent, locking him into a cost-effective deal through the 2027-28 season.

Blues’ Philip Broberg Leaves Game With Upper-Body Injury

A good day turned sour for the St. Louis Blues and a top defenseman. Philip Broberg was forced out of the team’s Saturday loss to the Vegas Golden Knights after getting checked against the boards by Vegas winger Mark Stone. Broberg was designated with an upper-body injury. The injury occured just 1:35 into the contest and came hours after Broberg put pen-to-paper on a six-year, $48MM contract extension with St. Louis.

Broberg recorded a primary assist on St. Louis’ first goal – scored by Robert Thomas 53 seconds into the game – before exiting. That mark brought the 24-year-old defenseman up to 15 points in 46 games this season, the second-most points on the blue-line behind Justin Faulk (21). Broberg has offered that hint of offense while continuing to command play outside of the offensive zone. Broberg uses his physical strength and an active stick to pinch opponents and control possession for St. Louis. His reliable, two-way status has stuck through his second year with the Blues. He ranks second on the defense in expected-goals-against (2.38) and third in takeaways (12) per MoneyPuck.

Broberg’s full-ice impact has earned him the Blues’ top left-defense spot this season. That could be a tough role to replace if Broberg is knocked out of the lineup. St. Louis’ only other left-shot defenders are Tyler Tucker, frequently a bottom-pair enforcer, and Cam Fowler, an aging veteran. Promoting Fowler to the top pair would reunite a pairing with Colton Parayko that worked incredibly well for the Blues last season.

St. Louis could mend the hole at the bottom of their lineup by icing extra defenseman Matthew Kessel on his off-hand, or by recalling first-round pick Theo Lindstein or veteran defender Calle Rosen from the AHL. Rosen leads the Springfield Thunderbirds’ defense in scoring with 15 points in 25 games. Lindsteim has eight points in 34 games. Neither has played in the NHL this season – but could end up the beneficiaries of another opening in the St. Louis lineup.

Red Wings Sign Dominik Shine To Two-Year Extension

The Detroit Red Wings signed depth forward Dominik Shine to a two-year, two-way contract extension on Saturday. Shine is playing through his 10th season with the AHL’s Grand Rapids Griffins. He ranks second on the club in scoring with 14 goals and 27 points in 26 games. This contract will carry Shine through his age-34 season in 2027-28.

Shine has settled in as a core piece of Grand Rapids’ lineup over his professional career. He was a grinder-style in his junior hockey days, marked by nearly 500 total penalty minutes across four years in the USHL. His bruising game carried over to four years at Northern Michigan University, where Shine was able to develop a more robust offensive game too. He scored 60 points in 67 games across his final two years at NMU, enough to earn an AHL contract with the Griffins in 2017.

Since then, Shine has stepped into any role the Griffins need. He ranks fifth in club history with 577 penalty minutes, and fourth with 89 goals and 211 points. Shine has reached those totals in 509 games with Grand Rapids, the third-longest tenure of any player with the club. The Griffins’ team record for games played belongs to Travis Richards, who appeared in 655 between 1996 and 2006. Shine could have a chance to rival that mark if he can earn one more season after playing through this new extension. Despite the years of impact in the AHL, Shine didn’t make his NHL debut until last season, when he racked up one assist and 15 penalty minutes in nine games with the Red Wings.

Grand Rapids rewarded Shine’s longtime reliability with the captaincy this summer. Now, in the midst of a career-year, the Red Wings will award him with a carved out role in the Griffins lineup. That could be the motivation he needs to break his career-high of 46 points set last season and push his way back into the NHL.

Wild’s Joel Eriksson Ek Day-To-Day With Undisclosed Injury

The Minnesota Wild lost key centerman Joel Eriksson Ek to injury in Thursday’s game against the Seattle Kraken. Eriksson Ek sustained the injury after getting tangled up with another player near his bench, but avoided the worst case scenario, head coach John Hynes told Sara McLellan of the Star Tribune. Eriksson Ek will be questionable for Saturday’s game against the New York Islanders.

Minnesota will be noticeably shorthanded without Eriksson Ek in the lineup. His veteran, two-way presence has served as a pillar of the Wild’s center depth, allowing more offensively-inclined centers like Danila Yurov and Ryan Hartman a bit more room to play downhill. Eriksson Ek has offered that support while putting up strong scoring of his own – 11 goals and 32 points in 45 games, good for fourth on the team in total scoring. He is one of six Wild players to appear in every game so far this season, a streak that could change on Saturday night.

The Wild will need to push extra forward Tyler Pitlick into action if Eriksson Ek has to sit. Pitlick is back in the NHL this season after spending the entirety of the 2024-25 campaign with the AHL’s Providence Bruins. He has had a quiet showing in Minnesota, so far with only one goal and 24 penalty minutes in 23 games. Pitlick will fill a minimal, fourth-line role in the lineup while Marcus Foligno and Hartman earn a bump in minutes. Hartman has three points in his last five games and could bring a spark to the top-six in Eriksson Ek’s place. That is what the Wild will have to hope for as they look to snap a scoring funk. Three of Minnesota’s last five games have gone to overtime, with two ending in shootout losses.

Blackhawks Activate Connor Bedard, Recall Kevin Korchinski, Drew Commesso

1:43 p.m.: The Blackhawks announced they’ve activated Bedard from injured reserve. They also recalled defenseman Kevin Korchinski and goaltender Drew Commesso from AHL Rockford to account for their game-time decisions tonight. Korchinski, the seventh overall pick in 2022, would be making his season debut if he draws into the lineup. He hasn’t exactly been lighting up the AHL, but has 19 points and a -12 rating in 32 showings for Rockford. Commesso, on the other hand, has been a strong starter with a .909 SV% and 2.72 GAA in 19 games.


12:00 p.m.: The Chicago Blackhawks will have their lineup star back from injury when they host the Washington Capitals on Friday night. Connor Bedard confirmed that he will return to the lineup after missing the last 12 games due to a shoulder injury to Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times. Bedard skated on the top power-play unit at Friday morning’s practice.

Bedard was injured in the final second of Chicago’s Dec. 12th loss to the St. Louis Blues. He was on a scoring tear before his injury, with five goals and 11 points in his last seven games. Those marks brought Bedard up to 19 goals and 44 points in 31 games on the season.  That ranked the Blackhawks youngster third in points and fourth in goals in the NHL.

Naturally, Chicago hit a skid once Bedard fell out of the lineup. Their average goals per game fell from 2.9 to 2.1 over their remaining eight games in December, leading to a 1-6-1 record to end 2025. Surprisingly, the young roster snapped out of that struggle in the New Year. Chicago is currently riding a four-game win streak, capped off by a 7-3 win over the Blues on Wednesday. That win was spurred by young forwards Oliver Moore, Nick Lardis, Landon Slaggert, and Ryan Greene.

With that quartet now clicking down the lineup, Chicago will be in a perfect position to add their top scorer back to the lineup. Bedard spent most of his time next to Greene and Andre Burakovsky prior to his injury. That line outscored opponents 13-to-6 at even-strength, the most of only four Blackhawks lines with a positive goal-differential. The chances that Bedard returns to that line on Friday could be slim, though, as Greene has taken on the second-line center role with Frank Nazar also injured.

Chicago will need to spread their depth after forwards Nick Foligno and Ilya Mikheyev, goaltender Arvid Soderblom, and head coach Jeff Blashill all missed Friday’s morning skate. The team isn’t yet sure which of those four will be available for Friday night’s game, per Charlie Roumeliotis of WGN Radio. The four seem to have fallen victim to a flu bug making its way through the Blackhawks locker room right now. The injury-ridden Blackhawks have two extra forwards – Sam Lafferty and Landon Slaggert – but had to call upon famous emergency backup goaltender Scott Foster to backup at practice. They would be eligible for an emergency recall should they need to fill an additional spot.

Should Blashill need to sit on the side, Chicago would likely ask Anders Sorensen to fill the head coach spot. Sorensen coached the AHL’s Rockford IceHogs from 2022 to 2025, then earned a promotion to an interim head coach role partway through last season. He remains with Chicago as an assistant coach this year.

Sabres Pushing To Host 2026 NHL Draft

The NHL Draft could be returning to Buffalo, New York this year. The Buffalo Sabres have made an earnest push to host the First Round of the 2026 NHL Draft, sources told Mike Harrington of The Buffalo News. A potential return to draft day in Buffalo was first teased by broadcaster John Buccigross on Thursday.

Buffalo has hosted three other NHL Drafts. It became the third American city to serve as host in 1991, seven years after the NHL moved away from a yearly trip to Montreal. The Quebec Nordiques drafted centerman Eric Lindros first-overall in Buffalo, but the future Hall-of-Famer refused to sign with the club, prompting a trade to Philadelphia in 1992. Meanwhile, the NHL Draft didn’t return to Buffalo until 1998, when the Tampa Bay Lightning drafted Vincent Lecavalier with the top pick. By then, the league had begun traveling to a new city every year for the Draft, which kept the league from returning to Buffalo again until 2016, when Auston Matthews landed with the Toronto Maple Leafs at first-overall.

The 2026 Draft will be unlike any previously held in Buffalo, though. NHL general managers voted to decentralize the NHL Draft beginning last season. This format is more in-line with other professional sports leagues, like the NFL, and saw NHL management teams stay in their home city while draft prospects were greeted on stage by league personnel. The change in format was criticized by fans and media after the 2025 Draft wrapped up but NHL managers voted to uphold it headed into 2026.

That places a unique challenge on the next host to try and spark a format that landed flat last year. The heap of talent set for the first-round in 2026 could make that task a bit easier. The hockey world is in the midst of debating the first-overall chair after hopefuls Gavin McKenna, Ivar Stenberg, Keaton Verhoeff, and Chase Reid dueled out at the 2026 World Junior Championships. Stenberg – a standout in Sweden’s top pro league – earned the last laugh of the tournament with a Gold Medal win. Whether that trend will continue through June – and into host city Buffalo – is yet to be seen.

Luke Schenn Reportedly Open To Trade

The Winnipeg Jets have been arguably the NHL’s most disappointing team this season, as last year’s Presidents’ Trophy winners have fallen to last place in the league standings.

Owners of a 10-game losing streak, the Jets look increasingly unlikely to return to the postseason this Spring, and as a result, increased focus is being paid to whether or not the Jets might look to trade away some veteran assets to help re-tool their roster.

While it appears highly unlikely that Winnipeg would pursue major roster surgery — much of the lineup that got 56 wins and 116 points last season remains intact — it could be that the club looks to replenish some of its lineup by trading away a few pending free agents that it may not have interest in re-signing. One name that looks poised to be a trade candidate is that of 1,100 game veteran Luke Schenn.

Schenn, 36, is playing out the final year of the $2.75MM AAV free agent contract he signed in 2023 with the Nashville Predators. David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period reported that while Schenn hasn’t requested a trade, “there is some word” that he “wouldn’t mind a change of scenery.”

Schenn is Winnipeg’s most sparingly-used defenseman, averaging just 13:32 time on ice per game. While he’s still playing a role on the penalty kill (1:44 per game) his usage is well below where it was in Winnipeg (17:28 per game) last season. Schenn has also been a healthy scratch at times this season, including four times in the team’s last eight games.

The Athletic’s Chris Johnston listed Schenn No. 8 on his third trade board of the season today, writing that the veteran will “carry value as a right-shot defenseman ideally suited for third-pairing duty.”

The Jets surrendered two draft picks (second and fourth-round choices) to acquire Schenn, and it’s unlikely, as Johnston noted that they’d be able to get that kind of value back in any Schenn deal.

But even if they won’t end up getting a huge amount back in a trade, a Schenn deal could accomplish two key, useful objectives for the club.

Firstly, if Schenn indeed would prefer a deal away from Winnipeg, trading him would be doing right by a well-respected veteran player. Clubs are always striving to build a reputation as a place that treats its players well, and the Jets would be able to enhance their reputation in that area by giving Schenn the chance to compete for another Stanley Cup ring elsewhere.

Secondly, trading Schenn would not only clear the pro-rated portion of his $2.75MM cap hit off their books, it would also open up a roster spot, and some ice time, for some of the other Jets blueliners. 21-year-old Elias Salmonsson, for example, could benefit from the additional ice time.

In addition, the Jets have a few other defensemen playing at the AHL level that could stand an increased chance at getting an NHL look if Schenn is traded. 6’4″ right-shot blueliner Tyrel Bauer, for example, plays a similar style to Schenn on the Moose and plays a regular role on their penalty kill. The Jets have yet to test him at the NHL level, though he has nearly 200 games on record for the Moose.

He’s a pending restricted free agent, and trading Schenn could allow the Jets to give Bauer a look at the NHL level, which could go a long way in informing what kind of deal they’re prepared to offer him in his upcoming restricted free agency.

Ultimately, while the Jets certainly aren’t in the on-ice position they hoped, or expected, to be in 2025-26, there are still steps they can take to make the most of what has thus far been a miserable NHL season. Trading Schenn, who would be open to a deal per Pagnotta, could be the start of a set of moves in Winnipeg designed to reboot the roster.

Photos courtesy of James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images

Oilers’ Adam Henrique Out Long-Term, Placed On IR

Edmonton Oilers forward Adam Henrique is set to miss nearly two months of action after sustaining an undisclosed injury in Tuesday’s game against the Nashville Predators. The Oilers placed Henrique on IR and announced that he is expected to return after the NHL’s break for the Winter Olympics, which ends on February 24th.

When Henrique sustained his injury isn’t entirely clear. Henrique did block a shot from Predators’ winger Filip Forsberg with his wrist in his final shift of the game but didn’t appear to be in pain for the rest of his time on the ice. Whether that caused his injury or not, the veteran forward will now be forced to miss the next 14 games, at least.

Henrique has had a quiet year on the scoresheet. He only has 10 points and 12 penalty minutes in 43 games this season – a career-low scoring pace. The 35 year old has made up for that lack of scoring away from the puck. He leads Edmonton’s forwards with 57 shot blocks, ranks second among the club’s usual centers with a 54.8 faceoff percentage, and ranks fifth on the offense with 24 hits. He’s continued to fill a core, bottom-six role in Edmonton that will be hard to fill.

The Oilers will bring Trent Frederic back into the lineup in Henrique’s spot. Frederic has had a year much quieter than his rich extension would suggest, with only three points and a minus-10 in 41 games. He has posted 103 hits, though, good for second on the team behind Vasily Podkolzin. Edmonton also has Andrew Mangiapane, who has 11 points in 40 games, in the press box. They oculd also recall Quinn Hutson, who leads the AHL’s Bakersfield Condors with 35 points in 27 games.

Edmonton could be afforded a chance to figure out Henrique’s replacement by Kasperi Kapanen‘s return from a three-month long injury absence. Kapanen scored two points in Edmonton’s 6-2 win over the Predators on Tuesday. That win ended a three-game losing skid and brought Edmonton up to a 6-4-0 record in their last 10 games. Comfortably in a playoff position, Kapanen’s return could help buoy the offense while they address a new hole on the fourth line.

Blackhawks Legend Glenn Hall Passes Away At Age 94

Tragic news has come through the hockey world. Legendary goaltender Glenn Hall has passed away at the age of 94, per an NHL press release. Hall played four seasons with the Detroit Red Wings, four seasons with the St. Louis Blues, and 10 seasons with the Chicago Black Hawks. He won two Stanley Cups and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1975.

Few hockey careers were as prolific as Hall’s. He earned the monichre ‘Mr. Goalie’ by the end of his career, in part thanks to how consistent of a presence he was in net. Hall rarely missed a game, setting an NHL record for 502 consecutive starts (552 including playoffs) between the start of his career in 1955 and his eighth season in 1962. That stretch spanned a move from the Red Wings to the Black Hawks and saw Hall play more than 30,000 minutes of hockey.

Even more impressive, Hall acheived the record without wearing a mask, which wasn’t popularized until Montreal Canadiens’ goaltender Jacques Plante took up the protective gear in 1959. Hall wouldn’t wear a mask until November 1968, at the age of 37. He allowed a goal on one of the first shifts of the game and earned an ejection on the very next shift. Ironically, Plante was the one to replace Hall. The duo of Hall-of-Fame goaltenders would go on to combine for 13 shutouts and collectively win the Vezina Trophy that year.

Hall earned attention for much more than his propensity for playing every game, and not wearing a mask. His career began with the Humboldt Indians and Windsor Spitfires of Ontario’s early junior leagues. He signed with the Red Wings in 1949, while in juniors, and spent his first pro year in 1951 assigned to the AHL’s Indianapolis Capitals. Hall played 68 games for the Capitals and earned a call-up to fill Detroit’s backup position behind Terry Sawchukin the 1952 playoffs. He didn’t appear in a single game but still had his name placed on the Cup by the Red Wings.

Hall, already decorated a champion, finally usurped Sawchuk in 1955, when the latter was traded to the Boston Bruins. His rookie season was when Hall’s run of consecutive games kicked off. He recorded 30 wins and a .925 save in 70 games that season – enough to take home the 1955 Calder Trophy. Those numbers grew to 38 wins and a .928 save percentage, both league-bests, in his second season. He was named a first-team all-star – then, a way of being named the top goalie.

Despite that status, the Red Wings aimed to find a way to bring back Sawchuk, prompting one of the NHL’s great blockbusters. Detroit sent Hall and forward Ted Lindsay – a veteran of 14 seasons in Detroit – to the Black Hawks in exchange for Bill Preston, Forbes Kennedy, Johnny Wilson, and Hank Bassen.

Hall’s status as one of the league’s best goaltenders continued through his days in Chicago, though his stat line took an initial hit on a club near the bottom of the standings. Hall recorded the most losses in the league in 1957-58, with 39, but still finished the season fifth in Hart Trophy voting. He reduced that to 29 losses in 1958-59, though did lead the league with 208 goals allowed that year. Despite a rocky first two seasons, Hall climbed back to a save percentage north of .915 in his third year, sparking a run of all-star bids that would stretch through the next 11 seasons, save for one year.

Hall became the core piece of a true turnover in Chicago. He began with the club as a proven 26-year-old playing next to a rookie Bobby Hull and bruisers like Eric Nesterenko. 10 seasons later, he was backing the likes of Stan Mikita, Phil Esposito, and Dennis Hull (and, still, Nesterenko). That run came to a close in the 1967 NHL Expansion Draft, when Chicago protected 28-year-old Denis DeJordy over Hall. The veteran would go to the St. Louis Blues with the third-overall pick, after Sawchuk and Bernie Parent were selected with the first two picks.

The Blues would go on to make the Stanley Cup Finals in their first three seasons, largely thanks to Hall’s continued dominance. That run ended in one of the most iconic moments in NHL history, when legendary defenseman Bobby Orr scored his famous “flying goal” on Hall to clinch the 1970 Stanley Cup in overtime. Hall played one more season but called his career to a close in 1971. He ended with 906 games played, 407 wins, a .918 save percentage, and a 2.50 goals-against-average.

Like many goalies of his era, Hall’s career is remembered with deep admiration. The city of Humboldt, where he began his career, erected a monument to Hall in 2005. He was named a Top 100 hockey player of all-time by The Hockey News in 1998, a status that the league cemented in their inagural top-100 list in 2017. Hall is a true great of the sport who’s name, shutdown ability in an old era, and lack of mask will ring on for many years to come. Pro Hockey Rumors sends our condolences to Hall’s family, friends, and many fans.

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