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The Art of Winning: Lessons from My Life in Football

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An Avid Reader Press book. Simon & Schuster has a great book for every reader.

304 pages, Hardcover

Published May 6, 2025

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Bill Belichick

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5 stars
340 (30%)
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433 (39%)
3 stars
266 (24%)
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49 (4%)
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11 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 130 reviews
Profile Image for Jayne.
1,033 reviews675 followers
June 7, 2025


Touchdown!

In his memoir, former New England Patriots Coach Bill Belichick touches down on his winning strategies in football and life.

Even though I never met Bill Belichick, his presence has dominated this New England boy-mom's home on Sunday afternoons for many, many years.

His memoir contains no surprise strategy reveals.

Belichick's winning strategies were legendary and widely publicized: no distractions, practice like hell, contingency planning, study the competition, and keep on studying the competition.

What did surprise me:
1) Bill Belichick is a 72-year-old man who is currently dating a scantily clad 24-year-old female.
IMHO, she is a major distraction for his new role and a flagrant violation of his "no distractions" rule.

His girlfriend was one of the first individuals he acknowledged in his 15-minute acknowledgement of over 200 people at the end of the book.

2) Tom Brady was seldom mentioned.
After Brady left the team, Brady played in another Super Bowl, and the Patriots did not.

3) The Patriots stopped winning in 2019. No commentary was offered on why.

4) Owner Robert Kraft was never mentioned, nor was Aaron Hernandez.

5) The Patriots played in nine Super Bowls under Belichick.

Players were not permitted to share a hotel room with spouses, families, significant others, or girlfriends during their Super Bowl stay. (Huh?)

When one unnamed player was caught with a woman in his room, he was sent home. His family stayed (in separate rooms) to watch the game.


I listened to the audiobook, expertly narrated by the author.

It's always a treat when authors read their memoirs, and Belichick's narration was a win.
Profile Image for Tommy Vaughn.
3 reviews
May 16, 2025
First of all, the haters in the review section are entitled to their own opinions. That doesn’t mean they aren’t hating.

In my opinion, this book was excellent. No, it doesn’t spill unnecessary drama from the decades Belichick spent working for one organization. Go read a tabloid if you’re looking for that.

This book is great for young people that are trying to find a spark in whatever profession they have. This book has personal and professional “pillars” that cannot be denied - Belichick’s sustained winning proves that there was a method to his madness. As an avid football fan (Chargers), I appreciated Belichick’s ability to sound human in his writing.

I enjoyed every page of this book and will encourage anyone that has a growth mindset to read it as well. Thanks for a great read.
Profile Image for Meredith.
144 reviews1 follower
May 12, 2025
This is a self-help book more than it is a football one. If you’re looking for a memoir- first person insights into some of the most memorable moments from Belichick’s life and career- you won’t get very much of that. Super Bowl 49 isn’t even mentioned, and the closest you’ll get to hearing the name Robert Kraft is one sentence in the final chapter: “In retrospect, putting the priorities of the football team ahead of ownership goals led to a fractured relationship in Foxborough.”

Instead, you’ll mostly get tips for how to be an effective manager, with an occasional quick anecdote to support it. Lots of love for Bill Parcells and Steve Belichick, lots of platitudes on how to run a tight ship, and an occasional sprinkling of specific trips down memory lane.
10 reviews
May 31, 2025
A great read about life and football told by the greatest mind in sports. Worth the read for anyone looking to win more at life.
Profile Image for Kelly Veach.
80 reviews2 followers
June 18, 2025
…………. i actually quite liked this book
Profile Image for Ashley.
35 reviews3 followers
September 19, 2025
I am usually not one for Non-Fiction; but times are about to be changing. I’ve grown up loving the sport that is football. My father was a sports writer for the local newspapers (plural because we moved a bit) so football was always something I’d get to enjoy with the family. Dad loves the Raiders, Mom pulled for The Packers and I decided I was in love with The Pittsburgh Steelers.

None of those three teams were coached by Bill Belichick; but I wanted to provide a little backstory on why a book about Winning In Football would be of interest to me. Well, for starters, he’s the only coach with 6 Super Bowl rings, he’s been in the game for 50 years strong (NFL,Media & now College at North Carolina.) He is surrounded with controversy but you cannot deny the man is an absolute LEGEND. In this book he tells you his stories while providing guidance and details of what works and what doesn’t. From his upbringing, watching his Dad at Navy, being the kid telling players they’re off the team because they were cut, his stint with the Browns and comparing their move to Baltimore to the conquistador known as Hernàn Cortes & his solders landing in Mexico. (I found that absolutely brilliant!) He also speaks of adversity and channeling confidence, we get the Brady stories, how Rob Gronkowski was in the scouting days, his love for Mark Bavaro and a plethora of coaches and figures that have helped shape him into the coach he is today.

The fun part that I loved about this book, even though it is centered around football, is that you can apply all these tips and tricks to your everyday life. He discusses this as well. Whether it be your job, schooling, planning, coaching, everyday life, any group activity really….the message he gives drives home with any of these scenarios. Not to mention Bill BELICHICK is actually pretty funny!

It’s these reasons alone & many more I could give if I had the space on here….that I give The Art of Winning by Bill Belichick 5 ⭐️s. I ATE this up! I’m inspired, I’m ready for self development & improvement. The game never ends. It always starts over. “IF COMPETITION DOESN’T GET YOU GOING, EMBRACE JEALOUSY.”
Profile Image for Buddy Book.
2 reviews
June 1, 2025
I grew up in New England and like any good Irish Catholic boy, I went to church every Sunday, and counted down the minutes until it was over so I could grab a couple of donuts and head home to watch the Patriots. The whole religious thing didn’t really stick for me, that is until I found the new Holy Trinity or du-inity, bi-god, in, Bill Belichick and Tom Brady.

Belichick represented everything I believed in. Love for the game of football, history, teamwork and winning. When he traded away Drew Bledsoe or cut Layer Milloy or traded Jamie Collins I questioned him and every time he proved me wrong.

He divinely zigged while everyone zagged, he did things his own way all while being crucified by the media at every turn, and having Satan aka Roger Goodell and the owners try to tear him down. Bill Belichick is my guiding light. The man I pray to. This book, however, isn’t the Bible.

It’s got a few nice tidbits, some interesting stories, but ultimately the problem is it’s not for die-hard football fans or Patriots’ fans and it’s also not really a self-help book for the average person. It’s somewhere in between. But the man brought us 6 championships, so he can do no wrong in my eyes. I give this book a 6 out of 5, a star for each Super Bowl he brought us.
Profile Image for Altan Cermik.
15 reviews
July 16, 2025
Bill Belichick was one of my childhood role models so I had to get this book. It’s basically a self help book with football references from his time on the Patriots. I’d recommend if you care about football, if you don’t, it’s not worth the read

Here’s what I mean from a quote that I liked

"epiphenomenon." It refers to something that happens at the same time as, or as a result of (the "epi"), some other thing happening (the "phenomenon"). I'll give you a football
example: if we establish the run, our play-action game will work better. Those two things happen in concert, but one depends on the other, and the relationship doesn't go both ways.

Confidence is an epiphenomenon. It doesn't exist in a vacuum or independently of everything else. It's relational. And yet these days confidence has become a product people think they can pick up off a shelf. I've heard it all over the years: confidence at work, confidence in dating, confidence in everything. Come on down and pick up your confidence, no strings attached.

Profile Image for Don LeClair.
305 reviews
May 24, 2025
Bill Belichick has written a nice book on teamwork. He tells all the stories from his experience as a player and coach, and naturally includes many anecdotes from his time with the Patriots, Giants, and Browns.

Despite this, this book is not really a football book. In many ways it is written like a classic management training book. He uses his experience to help the reader be a better team member and leader. Belichick is aware that the basic nature of football is not like a typical business. In many cases he includes comments on how the tenets of his approach apply in non-football settings.

The book is well organized and highly readable. As a small touch he selection of specific page numbers to tell the stories of people, such as 199 for Tom Brady, were kind of amusing.
Profile Image for Chase Lesinski.
10 reviews
August 25, 2025
Flipped the last page and looked for the closest brick wall to run through. Diving under the hood of a man who’s dedicated the better half of his life to perfecting the process was fascinating. 10% about football, 90% about life. Think anyone and everyone could learn a lesson from Bill. Thankful the chapter on relationship advice didn’t make the cut.
Profile Image for Liam Ledwith.
6 reviews
May 21, 2025
The greatest NFL coach of all time gives insight on what he learned from coaching and how you can apply it to your life. Also gives some stories about the dynasty that you can’t find anywhere else.
225 reviews
July 4, 2025
Belichick's creative muse as he called her got him to write a organizational model for a winning organization and many will use it. I am 1 of that many!
Profile Image for Don Markland.
28 reviews2 followers
May 14, 2025
This was a decent enough book. Good principles. Nothing EARTH shattering but interesting insights for sure. Some concepts I found quite interesting from a football and leadership perspective.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Jorgensen.
Author 4 books168 followers
May 30, 2025
This is a book about sustained high performance and winning. It exhausted me.

The most interesting thing I learned was that swag stands for stuff we all get.

The first chapter is what I have heard my sister refer to as "average every day" -- it's not the same plan but the same planning. It's the idea that when the big moments happen, it should be like every other day. Bill also talked about putting distractions in a drawer for later and how his job is to prepare his team to excel.

At the end of each chapter is a summary written on black pages with capitalized white font. It was hard to read and I didn't visually find them appealing.

Chapter two is on motivation and he says this comes down to sharing the problems and how to fix them. "An individual's contribution to a win starts with caring more than the other guy" (page 33). And you have to know about what the players care about in order to motivate them: reputation, honor, shame, collective punishment, and what Bill is motivated by: winning, competition, being his best.

Page 56 was dedicated to Lawrence Taylor. It was so odd to have this page just randomly there. And then it happened again on page 106: a dedication to his dad, Steve Belichick who would be 106 years old today. And on page 172 for Bill Parcells who won 172 regular season games as a NFL head coach. Just odd additions not connected to the book ... these felt like pages he needed to add to fill space.

I wish my former employer would have taken Bill's advice (on page 59): "Treat your employees with the same love and respect on the way out the door as you do on the way into the organization."

Some passages that resonated with me: "...the winner will be best prepared" (page 125) "[They] do their job well so that they would be asked to do more and make a bigger contribution..." (page 127).
"[Confidence is] something you exhibit when you strive for something in the right way" (page 226).

In the "Handling Success" chapter he says that the key is "finding the balance between knowing what works and trying something new" and that "the process begins with embracing dissatisfaction in pursuit of perfection" (page 77)

When he hires, he wants to know if they love football, work hard and are intelligent. He writes, "good players become great players when they match with a system that enhances their ability to be productive" (page 93).

This book exhausted me. Here's some sentences that give you a sense of why: "People who want to improve listen to instructions, work efficiently, and immediately own up to mistakes in the spirit of course correction. People who want to improve take the initiative whenever they might have it, however rare, and if they're asked to do the same thing every day, they find ways to do it better and faster." (Page 150) ... "absolutely go-go-go work" (155) ... "By focusing on what comes next, I naturally put myself in a position to do more, period" (page 171). "Assume change and constantly adapt" (page 189). "The point of the time-saving should be that it permits us to work more, not to work less" (page 251).

He also writes about giving 1% of his time to savor or enjoy or leisure or what we would call fun.

I kept wondering how I could apply this to my life, if I'm working with people who don't "love the game" and if I don't get to curate my roster. What if my job isn't about competition/winning? This is a book about football and about Bill's career in football. That was the biggest downfall of this book: It doesn't apply to my life.

To his credit, it was neat to get insights into players' mentalities and specific games, but I just wanted more about how this relates to me, just an average teacher girl in the Midwest trying to do a good job. Obviously this book isn't for me, but for football coaches or rising football stars.
1,597 reviews41 followers
October 17, 2025
disclaimer that I find the author borderline insufferable, think he cheated on the regular, and have felt schadenfreude (sp?) as Patriots took a downturn after Tom Brady left, whereas Brady won another Super Bowl in Tampa Bay (a rare controlled study to help answer sports debate). This book ends with Belichick's having decided to go to UNC but before they got off to a (very) slow start.

Anyway, if it's not a hate read for you, you might well rate it more highly. I could do without all the "here's how this applies to your job" stuff that seems to be on trend for books by famous coaches, most of which seemed unremarkable: explaining his slogan "Be attentive", for instance, he notes that "If you aren't attentive, then it's only a matter of time before everyone knows how inattentive you are. And they won't be happy about it." [p. 267]. So true. And if you can't fathom how "do your job" or "work hard" or that planning is important might apply to your own context, I'm not sure you're ready for a responsible position of any kind.

A lot of the hagiography of his Dad and other Naval Academy coaches, Lawrence Taylor, Bill Parcells, Tom Brady, Gronk, etc. is well-known, but I hadn't known that Belichick attended, and played football for, Phillips Andover Academy. Not something I would have associated with his brand.

some interesting Patriots anecdotes, and he definitely has a near-photographic memory for players and plays. Not sure he has much of a writing background, though. He alludes to being inspired by Ray Dalio, author of "Principles" and says "by the way, I acknowledge right here that Ray has given me permission to borrow his term, "principles," which I will use in this book" (p. 5). Pretty sure that would be covered by fair use, Bill. In case not, I hereby give you permission to use the term "fair use" in future writings.
Profile Image for Abigail.
99 reviews1 follower
Read
May 27, 2025
I don’t know how to rate this book because I was very engaged with it until the last two chapters when I realized there were a few things I was not going to get out of it, like managing a crisis and the tragedy and human losses surrounding Aaron Hernandez. I also felt that those last two chapters repeated a lot of the concepts that he had already covered.

It seemed obvious to me that someone advised Bill to keep pointing out how each of these chapters and concepts could apply even to mainstream business situations when I really felt that the reader would have easily made that leap themselves. So it felt awkward to me at times that he was seeking out examples outside of football to make the book more of a leadership manual, than one primarily focused on managing a sports enterprise.

I will say that I enjoyed it when Bill was somewhat self-deprecating as he often came across as gruff and all-knowing, especially in front of the press. And I also appreciated all the pressure and the 5 days a week that he had to do press related activities. Also him being the Belichick Travel Agency was a humorous and somewhat humbling but crucial task that he took on and saw how important it was to the overall team’s well-being where he made sure the players and their families got all of their special requests for the bigger Championship and Super Bowl games.

So based on the fact that I did indeed learn a lot from this book that I didn’t already know, but still think it could be a better book, I would give it a 3.5. But as an audiobook, I can only imagine how hard that could be to ingest this same material lol.
Profile Image for Mike Cheng.
457 reviews9 followers
July 26, 2025
Imo Bill Belichick is the GOAT of coaches in the NFL, if not of all professional sports. This book is a summation of Coach Belichick’s philosophy about what it takes to succeed (win), with various examples taken from his time on the sideline, obviously most often as a Patriot but with some as a Brown and Giant. The advices extolled therein - the price of success must be paid in advance, winning is a perpetual process and not a fixed point, hard work and smart preparation are what conquer the day - seem consistent with how he is portrayed in books (Belichick by Ian O’Connor [3/5 stars] It’s Better to be Feared by Seth Wickersham [4/5 stars] War Room by Michael Holley [3/5 stars] The TB12 Method by Tom Brady [3/5 stars], and Relentless by Julian Edelman) as well as football documentaries (Do Your Job; Belichick, a Football Life; The Art of Coaching). What’s probably most enjoyable about this book is the war stories that are seminal moments in Patriots Lore: Beating a heavily favored St. Louis Rams team in SB XXXVI; missing out on the perfect season; “We’re on to Cincinnati"; and 28-3. There are also descriptions of his former players and some of the character traits that made them great: Brady; Bruschi; Dillon; Edelman; Gronk; Harrison; Hightower; McCourty; Vrabel, to name a few. Overall, an engaging read which felt genuine.
Profile Image for Manouane Beauchamp.
218 reviews4 followers
July 29, 2025
Bien qu’il puise beaucoup d’exemples de l’univers du football, le livre de Bill Belichick, « The Art of Winning » est un guide de travail sur les façons de réussir, et ce, quel que soit le domaine.
J’ai particulièrement apprécié trois idées dans ce livre.

Le processus plutôt que le résultat : Pour atteindre un objectif ultime, il faut maîtriser un processus, pas seulement le résultat. Les grands moments ne sont pas fondamentalement différents des autres, mais le résultat d’une préparation minutieuse et une discipline rigoureuse.

"Do Your Job" : Puis, une fois au travail, il faut diminuer les distractions et se concentrer à faire son travail. Le concept de "Do Your Job" est central, encourageant les individus à se concentrer uniquement sur leur tâche, sans se laisser distraire par des éléments non essentiels.

Apprendre de ses erreurs : Belichick insiste sur le fait que gagner n'est pas une question de perfection, mais d’une croissance rendue possible en analysant ses erreurs pour s’améliorer.

En somme, "The Art of Winning" est un livre sur le leadership, la stratégie et l'exécution, utilisant le football comme métaphore. Il met en lumière l'importance de la discipline, de l'adaptabilité, de l'apprentissage continu et de la construction d'une culture d'excellence.
Profile Image for Marc Gerstein.
600 reviews203 followers
August 24, 2025
Run-of-the-mill self help book. Lots of platitudes that sound fine individually. But I don’t think any human is superior enough to follow consistently.

That includes the author. Usually, we know little if anything about self-help authors beyond their books. That isn’t so with Belichick. We had year’s worth of opportunities ro observe him doing his job.And we saw quite a few bad instances; his childishly extreme feud with Eric Mangini, spygate, deflategate, his refusal to let Malcolm Butler play in a super bowl the Patriots lost, his way-too-early efforts to get rid of Tom Brady, his increasing friction with his bosses (the Kraft) his ridiculous decision to make two unqualified people,Joe Judge and Matt Patricia co-offensive coordinators, his having allowed the offense to deteriorate badly in later years through bad decisions in drafts he controlled.

I’m not saying that overrides his many successes. But those were in football, not self-help authorship. In this field, he could have taken accountability as he advises readers to do. Bad job.

An average at best book in a middling genre.
30 reviews
July 2, 2025
If you imagine a book written by one of the winning-est and successful coaches of all time (which it was), you have imagined this book.

Many of the lessons in this book are ones you’ve heard all the time if you’ve played any semblance of a team sport. Words of sacrifice, winning, culture, etc.

It wasn’t a hard read but also wasn’t one I was super passionate about finishing. I loved the anecdotes and inside stories that Belichick revealed; from an outsider’s perspective, it’s hard to understand the magnitude and gravity of certain lessons and how it relates to your own life unless you are given examples.

The main takeaway I got was that winning is the fuel behind success. That doesn’t necessarily mean a particular score or a championship, but it often does. The most memorable thing I read was that plans should change, but planning should not. Consistency in highs and lows are what gives you the reps to face adversity or a big game and treat it like any other game.

3/5 - Insightful, but not super emotionally investing
354 reviews1 follower
December 11, 2025
Strong 3, verge 4

I had a lot of the same thoughts and opinions on Bill as many other people but this made me respect him more. He’s surprisingly self aware in what he could’ve done better in his career and has a growth and team mindset.

His memoir has a lot of fun stories from his time coaching and while he does have a certain persona that the media sees a lot of, you can tell he very much respects the people and players he works with. And you really can’t fault him for being in the position of having to make the tough calls for whats best for the team although he does admit that he could have handled some of those situations better in hindsight.

This book was a nice balance of high level football and leadership principles. Would definitely recommend the audiobook which Bill narrates himself.

“It could be the right thing to do but the wrong way of doing it”
“If someone better doesn’t exist yet, become that better person”
“Preparation is never wasted despite outcome”
“You only need to win 51% of the points for a 100% win”
194 reviews1 follower
July 22, 2025
As the title implies it's a book about winning as presented by legendary NFL football coach Belicheck. The lesson are through decades of coaching from the bottom to the top, culture and others. Each of these chapters and more provide insight and interaction between players, coaches, administration, media and others. He uses players or games to highlight the message he conveys. This is a good book for players, coaches and business leaders. It is not an X's and O's book.

Several points brought out that need to be highlighted, going into the Patriots facility was, "DO YOUR JOB, WORK HARD, BE ATTENTIVE and PUT THE TEAM FIRST". Leaving it read "IGNORE THE NOISE, MANAGE EXPECTATIONS, SPEAK FOR YOURSELF and DON'T BELIEVE OF FUEL THE HYPE." Follow these points and you can be successful.
Profile Image for Paul-André.
10 reviews
August 25, 2025
Throughout his book The Art of Winning, Bill Belichick used his 280 pages to give you many life lessons, most of them focused on helping you in your professional career. However, I felt like Bill fumbled the ball misinterpreting what we wanted out of his book. 


The best parts of the book is, by far, the little stories, the gems he slips in from his coaching career. When he tells stories from the behind the scenes of some moments of his career, I found these fascinating. I loved these parts, but there were too few of them.


Bill could of cut this book by 80 pages and we would have pretty much the same content. His weird choice of excluding certain parts and people of his career is evident. 


However, even with all that, it's still special to read what Bill Belichick has to say when reading this as a Pats fan. I will never reread it, but I enjoyed my time throughout it.
222 reviews9 followers
June 7, 2025
This book was surprisingly excellent. I thought it would be more about war stories from Belichick's Patriot and Giant days. Or some dialogue on what it takes to win. It isn't. At its core, this is a managerial book and how to implement a system and culture of winning. And it delivers.

I haven't read many books from coaches so I am not sure how much this deviates from the standard - I suspect a lot. The chapter on hiring and firing is excellent. The chapters on culture, star talent, etc are similarly great. Make no mistake about it, Belichick is a CEO that happens to coach football. And many of his lessons are directly applicable to running a business.

Simply put, I loved this book.
Author 2 books2 followers
July 8, 2025
As a Bill Belichick fan (not a New England Patriot fan), I was anxious to read this book when I saw it was available. The book was engaging and interesting. There were a lot of good takeaways as well.

Unfortunately, Belichick repeated himself over and over from one chapter to the next. After 200 pages of the same material, it became tiresome and boring. Thus, only 3 stars, for what could (and should) have been a 5-star book if the material was not so repetitive.

Belichick provided a lot of valuable information on discipline, success, preparation, improvement, and developing a workplace culture. But had he only said it once, the book would have only been about 100 pages. But it would have been a better book.
Profile Image for Kendall Kaut.
9 reviews
July 9, 2025
This book does not chronicle the explosive battles I wanted to read through. While the author would claim, “I didn’t write that book,” sometimes the decision to forego the book everyone wants jumps out when you read the one the author picked.

There are some valuable insights and lessons. Small-details like how the kicker’s hotel room was a smoking room, and how Belichick knew that change was important, are the anecdotes many would enjoy.

Still, a man writing about how to win should include how the dynasty came crumbling. Belichick doesn’t write about Robert Kraft—a decision likely inspired by the owner’s betray of his former prized hire.

What’s left can often be interesting, but few of the stories or lessons stayed with me later.
Profile Image for Romulo Perez-Segnini.
170 reviews5 followers
July 25, 2025
FULL DISCLOSURE: I’m a NY Jets fan and Coach Belichick is on the top of my Most Hated List. However, I recognize that he deserves and will be enshrined in the NFL Hall of Fame on his first ballot due to his eight Super Bowl rings and being the SECOND winningest coach in the NFL.

This would have been a great book is he had retired after the 2019 season with his 8th SB ring, but he did not and went four seasons with a losing record which got him fired and no one gave him a job so he will start coaching at the college level.

The tone is very arrogant. He tries to not take all the credit but somehow he manages to do so. Who won all those SBs Brady or Belichick? Let’s see Brady won another one when he left for Tampa and Belichick got fired.
1,403 reviews
August 28, 2025
Bill Belichek’s shows us a book that is about “winning.” And the winning is about “art.” And he gives the material of many things in a lot things in this book.

He tells us that page three shows about “I was born into football” in page 3. And the book in many ways to understand not only the book but also and the materials that come from the book. It’s “art” and “sports.”

And in Chapter 6, there’s “There are players who love the game and then there are players who are just …….really good football.” (p. 34) And there several themes about the “art” and “winning.”

The themes have lots of things about ART in a different way. And the things about FOOTBALL come to it.


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