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On Tuesday we delivered #30-#21, and yesterday #20-#11. Now, we are proud to present our selections as the top 10 Blue Jay prospects for 2007. Youth will be served.


10. Marc Rzepczynski, LHP
Born August 8, 1985. Selected in the 5th round of the 2007 amateur draft.

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2005 19 NCAA 16 3 35
10.29 0.00 5.40 8.23 7.71
2006 20 NCAA
16
8
52
11.01
0.52
4.30
8.43
4.47
2007 21 NCAA
12
11 73 7.80 0.00 3.10
10.40
2.72
2007 21 A-
11 7
46
6.50 0.39
3.35
9.66
2.76

The solid lefty with the silent R in his last name delivered in Auburn precisely what was advertised when he was drafted out of UCRiverside in the 5th round this year. He has improved his control, keeps the ball down and has a nice 4 pitch mix. The elbow soreness that troubled him early in 2007 seems to be gone. The next step is full-season ball in 2008, and if all goes well, perhaps he will get a preview of the double A test late in the year.


9. Kyle Ginley, RHP

Born September 1, 1986. Selected in the 17th round of the 2006 amateur draft.

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2006 19 R+ 8 1 26.2 7.56 1.03 3.78 14.43 4.73
2006 19 A- 2 1 10.0 4.50 0.00 4.50 5.40 0.00
2007 20 A 26 26 121.2 10.54 0.82 3.04 9.58 4.73

Kyle Ginley made twenty six starts for Lansing and was the Lugnuts number one pitcher. Ginley was twenty years old until the season's last week and pitched very well for a young player. Ginley struck out 129 hitters in 121 innings. Ginley's strongest pitch is mis mid-90's fastball that he can spot down in the zone. Ginley also sports a slider and a change-up but he is not confident in those pitches and relies on the fastball when he is in trouble. Ginley allowed more than a hit per inning, hitters had a .378 BABIP this season, a sign that if hitters sat on a fastball, and got one to handle, they were able to put the ball in play.

Ginley needs to develop his off-speed pitches to succeed at higher levels. Ginley will pitch in Dunedin next season.


8. David Purcey, LHP
Born April 22, 1982. Selected in the 1st round (16th overall) of the 2004 amateur draft.

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2005 23 A+
21
21 94
7.63
0.76
5.34
11.07
3.63
2005 23 AA
8
8
43
6.70
0.42
5.23
9.42
2.93
2006
24
AA
16
16
88
10.29
0.92
4.48
8.25
5.60
2006
24
AAA
13
13
51
8.54
1.22
6.62
7.74
5.40
2007
25
AA
11
11
62
9.73
0.58
2.32
7.98
5.37

At first glance 2006-2007 would seem to be lost years for the big lefty. ERAs over 5 and then a trip to the surgeon normally do not bode well for a 25 year old pitcher, but, in Purcey's case, there seems to be a silver lining. He started off the season in 2007 pitching exceptionally well before his arm problems arrived, and his control was there. There is reason to believe that he could be a very effective reliever once he gets healthy. His stuff (91-93 mph fastball, good curve, change) is fine, his control is more than a rumour, and he has the look. The first step is for him to get healthy. After that, he will likely need to de-emphasize the curve in his repertoire post-surgery.


7. Ricky Romero, LHP

Born November 6, 1984. Selected in the 1st round (6th overall) of the 2005 amateur draft.

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2005 20
NCAA 18 18
134
6.85
0.40
2.28
9.34 2.89
2005 20 A-
1
1
2
9.00
0.00
4.50
9.00
0.00
2005 20 A+
8
8 30.2
10.56
0.59
2.05
6.46
3.82
2006 21 A+
10
10
58.1
7.41
0.77
2.16
9.41
2.47
2006
21
AA
12
12
67.1
8.69 0.94
3.48
5.48
5.08
2007
22
A+
1
1
4.2
7.71
0.00
1.93
3.86
3.86
2007
22
AA
18
18
88.1
9.98
0.92
5.20
8.15
4.89

Think of your typical left-handed major league starter and compare them to Romero. Moving fastball around 90-92 mph, check. Above average change-up, check. A couple of breaking balls, check. Romero has the tools to pitch in the major leagues, as you would expect from a first round draft choice, it will be how he uses those tools that will determine his future success. 2007 was a disappointing season for Romero, a 4.89 ERA in New Hampshire capped by Romero's pitching poorly as the Fisher Cats chased a playoff spot late in the season. Romero did strike out 80 in 88 innings but allowed 51 walks and more than a hit per inning. Romero is still learning how to pitch and to have confidence in his pitches. Romero veered between pitching away from contact to pitching too much in the middle of the plate. Romero has to learn how to command his pitches to maximum advantage to be successful. Before the season it looked like Romero could possibly reach the major leagues in mid-2008, now it looks as though September 2008 will be his earliest debut.


6. John Tolisano, 2B

Born October 7, 1988. Selected in the 2nd round of the 2007 amateur draft.

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2007 18
R 183
5
0
10
26
40
7
1
.246
.336 .437

John Tolisano was once named the best 14-year-old baseball player in America by Baseball America in its annual Baseball for the Ages feature. However, the Estero High graduate wasn't drafted in the second round because of an old reputation, but rather because the Jays believe they've found a promising infielder. Tolisano played SS in high school, but has been converted to a 2B and had a solid defensive season, considering he had never played the position before. A standout baseball player in high school, Tolisano has played in several wooden bat tournaments and perhaps this is part of the reason he got off to a faster start than the other high school draftees from this year's draft.

Tolisano's line looks much more impressive once you remove his first few weeks of play, when he hit .161 and struck out frequently. If you remove his first 31 at-bats Tolisano's batting average is .263 and his slugging percentage jumps to .473. Also, he only struck out 27 times in his last 152 at-bats. He was taught to switch his by his dad, who played at the University of Connecticut, at a young age and is fairly adept at both sides of the plate, although better as a left-handed hitter. Tolisano added muscle coming into his senior year of high school and it showed in Rookie ball, as he hit 10 home runs, which led the team. He's not a speedster, but he showed some baserunning ability going 7 for 8 in stolen base attempts. If you missed it when it was originally linked you can read a very good article by Scott Hotard on Tolisano and the daily grind of the GCL here.


5. Yohermyn Chavez, OF

Born January 26, 1989. Signed as an amateur free agent in 2005.

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2006 17 R+ 105 9 0 0 9 23 1 2 .276 .371 .362
2007
18
R
176
12
2
6
20
50
7
2
.301
.389
.494

The Jays dropped their Appy League team after last season so Chavez had to drop a level this season. Nevertheless, he showed a lot more in the power department finishing 9th in the GCL in both slugging % and OPS. After a slow start to the year Chavez picked up the pace hitting 13 of his 20 extra base hits in his final 76 ABs. The bat is Chavez's strength, although he's a little pull conscious at this point, and will be what carries him up through the minors. An assignment to Lansing next spring will be an indication that the Jays view him highly and are ready to challenge him.


4. Robinzon Diaz, C
Born September 19, 1983. Signed as an international free agent in 2000.

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2005 21
A+
388
17
6
1
15
28
5
2
.294 .325
.376
2006 22
A+ 418
21
1
3
20
37
8
1
.306
.341 .383
2007 23
AA
301
17
1
3
11
16
5
0
.316 .344 .409
2007 23 AAA
65
3
0
1
1
6
0
0 .338
.358 .431

If Gene Rayburn and his funky microphone were still with us, he'd say Robinzon Diaz is so old. Cue the studio audience, "How old is he?" He's so old that he began his professional career with the... blank. Cue Match Game music here. The answer is the now defunct Medicine Hat Blue Jays. That's where Diaz played in 2002 after signing as a free agent from the Dominican Republic as a 17 year-old. Passed by Curtis Thigpen in the race for Jays catcher of the future after spending a second season in Dunedin in '06, Diaz made the leap all the way to Syracuse this season and received consideration for a call up to the bigs when the rosters expanded last month. He boasts an impressive minor league resume which includes All-Star appearances in the Appalachian, Florida State and Eastern League games, two appearances in the Futures Game ('04 & '07, going 2-for-2 this year), an Appy League batting title (.374 with Pulaski in '03) and a minor league career average of .305.

Diaz has an uncanny ability to put the bat on the ball as evidenced by his low strikeout rate and is able to pilfer the odd base by going 16-for-19 over the last three seasons. However, the big knocks on Diaz are he doesn't draw enough walks and doesn't hit for power. His slugging percentage this season finally went north of .400 for the first time since 2003. He's also been criticized for his work behind the dish and his inability to work well with the hurlers. However, strides were reportedly made in both areas in 2007 and his fielding percentage was above .990. If he's unable to don the tools of ignorance on a permanent basis in the bigs, he may develop into a supersub as he has made appearances at second and third. Diaz is on target to make it to the Rogers Centre sometime next season.


3. Kevin Ahrens, 3B/SS

Born April 26, 1989. Selected in the 1st round (16th overall) of the 2007 amateur draft.

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2007 18
R 165
6
0
3
25
47
3
0
.230
.339 .321

Ahrens became the second high schooler the Jays spent their first round pick on in as many years, following the selection of Travis Snider in 2006. However, the 18 year-old switch hitter out of Houston didn't come close to matching Snider's debut season when he was named the MVP of the Applachian League. Ahrens showed good plate discipline by drawing a healthy amount of bases on balls but he didn't for average or for power, striking out around 25 percent of the time. He batted just over .160 at the end of June but he did much better in August when his monthly average went up just over 100 points. The light started to come on for Ahrens in the late going as he batted .314 in his last 10 games with 2 homers and 9 runs batted in. He batted over .300 against lefties but only hit above the Mendoza Line against righties.

Initial scouting reports indicate Ahrens needs to work on his lefthanded swing, which is said to be loopy. However, he is reported to have an advanced approach at the plate with quick hands and is projected to hit for power, drawing comparisons to Chipper Jones. Drafted as a shortstop, Ahrens played half of his games at third in the Gulf Coast, where his range is apparently better suited. The question is will Ahrens follow in the footsteps of Snider and begin next season in Lansing? The Jays brass may well decide to hold him back in extended spring training and allow him to work on his game in the GCL or he may be bumped up to Auburn. Time will tell.

2. Brett Cecil, LHP
Born July 2, 1986. Selected in the Supplemental round (38th overall) of the 2007 amateur draft.

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2005 19 NCAA
18 4
43.0 8.58 0.00
2.72
8.37 3.77
2007 21
NCAA
30
2
62.1 8.95 0.43 2.74
8.95 3.32
2007 21 A- 14
13
49.2 6.52 0.18 1.99 10.15 1.27

Of last year's Top 10 prospects, three graduated to the majors, two missed the whole year due to injury, one was traded, three others were ineffective or injured for significant parts of the season and one became the unanimous number one prospect. Therefore, it's no surprise to see a fourth 2007 draftee among this year's top 10. Although not the first player drafted by the Jays in the 2007 draft, Cecil impressed everyone with his stint in the NY-Penn League and earned his spot at number two. The fact Baseball America named him the best prospect in the NY-Penn League is a further demonstration of how far his stock has risen since draft day.

A closer for Maryland in college, many projected that Cecil would be turned into a starter once drafted and that's precisely what the Jays did with him. They increased his stamina over the season so that by the year's end he was able to go seven innings, as he did to win the clinching game of the playoffs for Auburn. His stamina isn't exactly where the Jays want it to be yet, as there are reports he wears down as the game progresses and is unable to sustain his fastball's mid-90's velocity in the later innings. His University of Maryland biography describes the pitcher as having an "intimidating mound presence" and an "intense work ethic." If his success in short-season ball is anything to go by it seems that both are accurate descriptions. Cecil's best pitch is likely his slider, which reportedly he throws in the mid-80's and which was described as a "major league pitch right now" before the draft. Cecil also throws a changeup, which he has been developing as a weapon to use especially against right-handed batters, who he can't simply pound with his fastball-curve combination. The one caveat is that Cecil is slightly old for Low-A ball and his experience is a significant advantage. Whether of not the Jays promote Cecil straight to Dunedin or send him to Lansing for a bit, it's likely that Cecil will spend the majority of 2008 in High-A, as the Jays continue to work on improving his stamina and developing his secondary pitches.


1. Travis Snider, OF
Born February 2, 1988. Selected in the 1st round of the 2006 amateur draft.

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2006 18 R+
194 12
1
11
30
47
6 3
.325 .412
.567
2007 19
A 457
35
7
16
49
129
3
10
.313
.377 .525

At first glance a .902 OPS doesn't look like anything too out of the ordinary. However, Travis Snider is far from ordinary. This year the Midwest League played as the most extreme pitcher's league among the full season leagues. As a 19 year old in the Midwest League Travis Snider ranked:
  • 2nd in batting average
  • 6th in on-base percentage
  • 1st in slugging
  • 1st in OPS
Even more impressive than just being the league leader in slugging and OPS is that Snider didn't just lead in those categories, he led by a wide margin. His .525 slugging percentage led the league by 49 points over the next player and his .902 OPS led by 44 points. Snider doesn't exhibit any real platoon splits hitting similarly against righties and lefties.

If you want to quibble a bit about Snider, you might point to his base running or his fielding but that's dwarfed by his bat. Simply put, Snider is the best hitting prospect in the Jays system since Carlos Delgado and will be a fixture in the middle of the Jays lineup beginning no later than 2010.


The minor league year in review continues with our 10 Prospects to Watch tomorrow, and Gerry's interview with Dick Scott on Monday.
Top 30 Prospects- #10-#1 | 22 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
MatO - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 09:58 AM EDT (#174997) #

Great work again.  My only quibble is Farina not making the list.  I know he had only 11IP in the regular seson but Mills only had 18 and Farina went out in style in the playoffs.  In 2 games his line was 5.0  2   0   0   0   12.

Ahrens only learned switch-hitting fairly recently thus causing his struggles from the left side.  Usually that side becomes the stronger side over time.

Rzepczynski's numbers are even more impressive considering that he started slowly.  Down the stretch he had some spectacular games.  Gotta love lefty sinkerballers who K guys.

I would add the high K rate as a slight concern for Snider.  I'm also concerned about whether the Jays teach plate discipline in their system.   I haven't seen any evidence of it except in the GCL this past season.

Did I miss Purcey having surgery?  Isn't he in the AFL this fall?

Mike Green - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 10:14 AM EDT (#174998) #
Purcey's surgery was apparently to remove cysts in his forearm and triceps.  He will be pitching in the AFL.
Farina was in our top 45.  He will not be profiled tomorrow, but he is a prospect to watch.

Snider's K rate is not great, but you have to account for the league average of 7.36/game.  All of the great 19 year old hitters who passed through the Midwest League in the last few years (Cameron Maybin, Justin Upton, Jay Bruce) have struck out a lot, albeit a little less than him.  Snider has hit for more power than any of them.

Marc Hulet - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 10:33 AM EDT (#174999) #
I'm a little surprised Aaron Mathews did not make the list, given his success over Patterson, Butler and Smith. Both Smith and Mathews project as fourth outfielders... was it the power that gave them the edge or consistency?
TimberLee - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 11:36 AM EDT (#175000) #

Thanks for the work involved in this. It looks like there is reason to expect the arrival of a few helpful players , starting maybe in late 2009, but no one to really contribute in Toronto before that. Would that be about right?

 I expect to see more personnel movement this winter than the GM has talked about, so some of these youngsters may be gone.

Gerry - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 12:17 PM EDT (#175002) #

Marc:

Mathews just missed the list.  This top 30 is a compilation of five lists and Mathews only made two lists, mine being one of them.  I think the outfielders lined up like this:

Patterson - former top 10 prospect who had injury issues this season, still gets a semi-mulligan for 2007 based on the injury issues

Smith - not a previous top 30 guy who was arguably New Hampshire's top hitter this year.  Smith changed his hitting approach this season and aslo improved his defense and it seems to have paid off.  The Dick Scott interview of next week is also very complimentary towards Smith.   When I saw New Hamsphire play this season, small sample size, I thought Smith was the best looking of the three NH outfielders.

Mathews - had three good months and two average months.  The issue is which is the real Mathews.  Mathews is somewhat like Reed Johnson, maybe an inch or two taller and wider around the shoulders, and I put him on my top 30 because I beleived the first three months of the season was a new performance level.  Others might not have agreed.

Butler - I did not have Butler on my list but the others did.  He has not moved quickly through the system and he has a career minor league BA of .260.  He also turned 24 this year.  But others in our group saw something they liked with his power.

Thomas - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 12:33 PM EDT (#175003) #
Marc, as someone who left Mathews off his list but had all 3 other outfielders, I'll just explain my reasoning briefly. Gerry basically covers Patterson. He was highly rated before and gets somewhat of a mulligan this year. Smith hit better than Mathews did and I'd heard the same thing Gerry observed regarding his approach changing (perhaps I even heard it from him). As for Butler, he's a year younger than Mathews, but at one level lower. Mathews had been a bit more impressive over the course of his career, but Butler had an 87 point advantage in slugging percentage this year and led the Florida State League in home runs. That, and Mathews's end-of-season slump, was what led me to put Butler on my list. Mathews would have been in my Top 35 and, as has been stated before, beyond the top 15 or so the players on the list are fairly interchangeable.

In regards to next year, the only prospects from the Top 30 one could reasonably expect to see before September are Diaz, Banks and Gronk. Some others might arrive because of injuries or unforeseen success (see: Brian Wolfe), but those are the three that are most likely to appears in the Rogers Centre in 2008.

Mike Green - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 01:37 PM EDT (#175006) #
In regards to next year, the only prospects from the Top 30 one could reasonably expect to see before September are Diaz, Banks and Gronk. Some others might arrive because of injuries or unforeseen success (see: Brian Wolfe), but those are the three that are most likely to appears in the Rogers Centre in 2008.

I agree.  As for 2009, it is too early to tell.
ayjackson - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 02:10 PM EDT (#175007) #

I think Vermilyea might be closer to a role next year than any other.  Of course, he's not on the Top 30.  He projects to be a middle inning reliever, much like Gronk.  Unlike Gronk, however, the prime of his career is still behind him.  Whatever you think of Gronk, it's hard to consider a 29 year-old a prospect.  Vermilyea is four years his junior and projects to the same role.

ayjackson - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 02:12 PM EDT (#175008) #
erm....I guess I meant still ahead or not behind.
China fan - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 02:24 PM EDT (#175009) #

    I do enjoy the "unforeseen success" category.  Wolfe is one example, but so is Litsch, who is way ahead of any projections.  The Jays have to hope for a few more of these.  It's not impossible.

Mike Green - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 02:40 PM EDT (#175010) #
Here are BA's top 20 FSL prospects.  Unsurprisingly, the Yankees and Devil Rays figure prominently.
subculture - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 03:42 PM EDT (#175011) #

I was one of many who while liking Romero, thought Cameron Maybin (or Tulowitski) would have been a better fit for the Jays in the 2005 draft.  Yes, his signing bonus was higher, but he would be at or very near the top of this list I think....  how good would they look in a Jay's uniform now?

I'm not saying JP doesn't draft well... I just wish the batter's box could have made that particular pick :)

slitheringslider - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 04:38 PM EDT (#175013) #
How nice would Troy Tulowitzki's .291/24/99 line form the SS position look in our line up this year, while playing gold glove defence at short. I can only dream...
MatO - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 05:01 PM EDT (#175014) #
Actually Tulowitzki's line is exaggerated (like most of the Rockies) because he plays in Denver.  His road OPS was .719 (nothing special) but he's still young with room for improvement.
ayjackson - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 05:07 PM EDT (#175015) #

I don't mind JP's drafting so far either.  However, for all his rhetoric about first round high school pitchers, the four college arms he's taken (Jackson, Purcey, Romero and Cecil) have yet to pitch a meaningful game in the majors.  I realize that the jury is very much still out.  Maybe he's also averse to taking Righthanders as well.

I heard that we had a pre-draft agreement with Jeff Francis in 2002.  When he went to Colorado unexpectedly at 9, we went for Adams.  If we didn't have both Adams and Hill in the system in 2005, perhaps we would have drafted Tulowitzki instead of Romero.  It would be nice to have Francis and Tulo right now as opposed to Adams and Romero.  Granted, this is speculation and conjecture.

Thomas - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 06:46 PM EDT (#175017) #
I think Vermilyea might be closer to a role next year than any other.  Of course, he's not on the Top 30.  He projects to be a middle inning reliever, much like Gronk.  Unlike Gronk, however, the prime of his career is still behind him.  Whatever you think of Gronk, it's hard to consider a 29 year-old a prospect.  Vermilyea is four years his junior and projects to the same role.

Well yes, Vermilyea's not in the Top 30, so he wasn't considered. If he was, he probably would have been listed as someone with a reasonable chance of contributing in 2008. Don't get me wrong, as I like a lot of what Vermilyea brings to the mound.

But, I disagree that he's closer to a role than Gronk. The Jays goal in 2008 and 2009 has to be to win now. Based on the way the team is constructed, you can't argue otherwise. Now, that "win now" mentality shouldn't come at the sake of trading prospects like Snider and Cecil for marginal contributors or anything like that, but the Jays have to put their best foot forward in the coming years. That means they need the best players playing for Toronto in the coming years. Gronkiewicz had better numbers than Vermilyea at Syracuse this year (7.67 K/BB vs. 1.60 K/BB; 9.27 K/9 vs. 6.65 K/9, etc...). As the stats go, Gronkiewicz is the better pitcher now. If there was a lot of value in giving Vermilyea exposure to the big leagues a case could be made that giving Vermilyea experience outweighs Gronkiewicz's statistical advantage. However, we're dealing with middle relievers here and neither pitcher looks to have a future as a starter or closer, so what the Jays need is whichever pitcher is going to pitch the best in 2008. And the evidence points to Gronk over Vermilyea.
ayjackson - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 07:06 PM EDT (#175018) #
It may be worthwhile noting, that Curtis Thigpen will still be considered a prospect when Baseball America does their lists, if their criteria is the MLB rookie standard of 130 ABs.
Anders - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 07:27 PM EDT (#175019) #
Thigpen was called up in June, and as such has spent more than 45 days on the 25 man roster, which I believe means he has exhausted his rookie 'eligibility'.
ayjackson - Thursday, October 04 2007 @ 09:22 PM EDT (#175020) #

LHP's abound...is Kyle Ginley the Great Right Hope??

HollywoodHartman - Friday, October 05 2007 @ 12:22 AM EDT (#175022) #
What is an accurate projection for Travis Snider as a big leaguer? If you could compare him to another player.
Mylegacy - Friday, October 05 2007 @ 02:21 AM EDT (#175023) #

Firstly, great work. Well done, kudos!

These ten guys are going to be fun to watch!

Overall, 30 very interesting prospects and none of them were named Graham Godfrey, Edward Rodriquez, Chase Lirette or Seth Overbey. All would have been on this list in years past. To me the only glaring error is that Seth Overbey had to make it. Surely our system is not so good that someone with his great year doesn't make the cut? If the system is so good he doesn't - this is one VERY GOOD system!

chips - Friday, October 05 2007 @ 10:12 AM EDT (#175025) #

If JP didn't bank on Adams maybe he would have picked the SS blue chip stud "Tulowitzki". He is playing like a veteran and it is reported he is one of the clubhouse leaders. If (2005) pick Romero doesn't pan out, and because of the over-evaluation of Adams, it may turn out to be a big franchise mistake.

Top 30 Prospects- #10-#1 | 22 comments | Create New Account
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