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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/25/2023 in all areas

  1. With the World Championships wrapped up and the College season about 6 weeks away, it is time to start revving the NCAA engine a little. Let's start by looking at All-Americans. And let's get this out of the way up front. Yes, I include the top 8 seeds from the cancelled 2020 tournament. So sue me. AA Trivia There have been 190 schools with at least one All-American. A total of 5,590 All-American honors have been shared by 3,307 wrestlers (or perhaps fewer if I have some mis-spellings). In 1981 there were only 79 All-Americans as there was no 8th place awarded at 134. Oklahoma State, at 480 AA's, is a full 32.6% ahead of Iowa's 362. The longest active streak of consecutive years with at least one All-American belongs to Iowa at 52 years. The longest dry spell is Army at 15 years. They last had an AA in 2008 (Matt Kyler, 141). The Top 5 At each team's current pace (average of 2022 and 2023): Iowa will overtake Oklahoma State for the all time lead in 2057. Penn State will overtake Iowa in 2101. Cael Sanderson will be 121 years old and still wondering if Christian Pyle has a plan. AA's By Total Wrestlers with 5 AAs: 6 Wrestlers with 4 AAs: 171 Wrestlers with 3 AAs: 447 Wrestlers with 2 AAs: 852 Wrestlers with 1 AAs: 1,830 Probability of AA by Year We are used to 33 man brackets with 8 AA's per bracket (~24%), but it wasn't always that way. Using the rules that existed at the time and @Jason Bryant's participation stats by year, the most difficult year to AA was 1970 when only 15% of wrestlers earned AA status. Where the AA's Come From Not every AA was a top 8 seed to begin with. Below is the percentage of AA's by seed (left column) and broken into the seeding eras. What Is A Top 8 Seed Worth? Seven of the past nine years have been hard on Top 8 seeds. From 2014 to present, only 2017 and 2019 saw them perform above trend.
    5 points
  2. Wow…here’s a topic no one has though to bring up. Yes. Greco should be an Olympic sport. The popularity and/or success in the US is not the requisite. To have the reaction to say that after the Greco tournament we just witnessed, says more about the viewer than the sport.
    3 points
  3. amazing work as usual. thanks brother
    2 points
  4. You bring up a very good point, except for one small problem: Iran, Georgia, Azeribijan, Serbia, Hungary, Turkey, and Armenia all finished in the top ten in both styles. Iran was second in both. Azerbijan, the greco champ, finished 5th in FS. US, the champ in FS, finished...........22nd in greco. I realize the resources in these countries make the United States of America look like Somalia, but we might be able to find a dollar or two if we really wanted to put forth the effort, instead of just scrapping it because we aren't good.
    2 points
  5. Once again are you showing everyone how dumb you are for trying to make a correlation here, but also showing how big of an a-hole you are for using someone's cancer diagnosis as a way to try and "get back at them"....for doing what was the right thing to do...seriously....just cancel yourself!! F'ing idiot!!
    2 points
  6. Bet on the takedown color and/or number. Huge bonus if the takedown is on the Green 0. Think of the parlays, trifectas, and other possibilities. Now all fans who have a bet pending on the match can throw the brick to get a video review of the actual takedown location. Bet limit: $194.
    2 points
  7. The final medals were awarded at the 2023 World Championships on Sunday which put a bow on the marquee event on the Senior level calendar for this year. The United States men’s freestyle team took the title, while the women’s team finished as runner’s-up to Japan. Each team earned seven world medals (four of which were gold). A handful of the active legends on the American team added more hardware to their already impressive legacy. Tallying their career medal count led us to do so for each of the medalists at the 2023 World Championships; in all three styles. Below, you will find the milestones that each wrestler hit with their performance in Belgrade. Some became multi-time champions, while others multi-time medalists, or perhaps first-timer’s. Wrestlers have been grouped according to their career medal haul; with champions coming before medalists. For the ease of this exercise, we have combined Olympic and world medals. For instance, the first wrestler below, Yui Susaki won her fourth world title last week, to go along with a 2020(1) Olympic gold medal, so she’s alone in the 5x champion category. 5x Champion Yui Susaki (Japan) - 50 kg women’s freestyle 4x Champions Zaurbek Sidakov (Russia) - 74 kg men’s freestyle David Taylor (USA) - 86 kg men’s freestyle 3x Champions Eldaniz Azizli (Azerbaijan) - 55kg Greco-Roman Haruna Okuno (Japan) - 55 kg women’s freestyle Tsugsumi Sakurai (Japan) - 57 kg women’s freestyle Aisuluu Tynybekova (Kyrgyzstan) - 62 kg women’s freestyle 2x Champions Amit Elor (USA) - 72 kg women’s freestyle Akari Fujinami (Japan) - 53 kg women’s freestyle Rafig Huseynov (Azerbaijan) - 82 kg Greco-Roman Akzhol Makhmudov (Kyrgyzstan) - 77 kg Greco-Roman Luis Orta Sanchez (Cuba) - 67 kg Greco-Roman Nonoka Ozaki (Japan) - 65 kg women’s freestyle Zholaman Sharshenbekov (Kyrgyzstan) - 60 kg Greco-Roman Amir Zare (Iran) - 125 kg men’s freestyle First Time Champions Leri Abuladze (Georgia) - 63 kg Greco-Roman Rizabe Aitmukhan (Kazakhstan) - 92 kg men’s freestyle Vito Arujau (USA) - 61 kg men’s freestyle Ali Cengiz (Turkey) - 87 kg Greco-Roman Ibrahim Ghanem (France) - 72 kg Greco-Roman Yuka Kagami (Japan) - 76 kg women’s freestyle Stevan Micic (Serbia) - 57 kg men’s freestyle Amin Mirzazadeh (Iran) - 130 kg Greco-Roman Iszmail Muszukajev (Hungary) - 65 kg men’s freestyle Zain Retherford (USA) - 70 kg men’s freestyle Gabriel Rosillo-Kindelan (Cuba) - 97 kg Greco-Roman Akhmed Tazhudinov (Bahrain) - 97 kg men’s freestyle Buse Tosun (Turkey) - 68 kg women’s freestyle Akhmed Usmanov (Russia) - 79 kg men’s freestyle Qi Zhang (China) - 59 kg women’s freestyle 12x Medalist Riza Kayaalp (Turkey) - 130 Greco-Roman 10x Medalists Taha Akgul (Turkey) - 125 kg men’s freestyle Artur Aleksanyan (Armenia) - 97 kg Greco-Roman Adeline Gray (USA) - 76 kg women’s freestyle Geno Petriashvili (Georgia) - 125 kg men’s freestyle 9x Medalists Helen Maroulis (USA) - 57 kg women’s freestyle Kyle Snyder (USA) - 97 kg men’s freestyle Hassan Yazdani (Iran) - 86 kg men’s freestyle 7x Medalist Zhan Beleniuk (Ukraine) - 87 kg Greco-Roman 6x Medalist Kyle Dake (USA) - 74 kg men’s freestyle 5x Medalists Eldaniz Azizli (Azerbaijan) - 55kg Greco-Roman Kenichiro Fumita (Japan) - 60 kg Greco-Roman Sarah Hildebrandt (USA) - 50 kg women’s freestyle Yui Susaki (Japan) - 50 kg women’s freestyle David Taylor (USA) - 86 kg men’s freestyle Yuliya Tkach (Ukraine) - 59 kg women’s freestyle Nugzari Tsurtsumia (Georgia) - 55kg Greco-Roman Aisuluu Tynybekova (Kyrgyzstan) - 62 kg women’s freestyle 4x Medalists Odunayo Adekuoroye (Nigeria) - 57 kg women’s freestyle Mohammadreza Geraei (Iran) - 67 kg Greco-Roman Rafig Huseynov (Azerbaijan) - 82 kg Greco-Roman Vanesa Kaladzinskaya (Belarus) - 53 kg women’s freestyle Koumba Larroque (France) - 68 kg women’s freestyle Oscar Pino Hinds (Cuba) - 130 kg Greco-Roman Mohammadhadi Saravi (Iran) - 97 kg Greco-Roman Zholaman Sharshenbekov (Kyrgyzstan) - 60 kg Greco-Roman Zaurbek Sidakov (Russia) - 74 kg men’s freestyle Amir Zare (Iran) - 125 kg men’s freestyle 3x Medalists Leri Abuladze (Georgia) - 63 kg Greco-Roman Malkhas Amoyan (Armenia) - 77 kg Greco-Roman Zhamila Bakbergenova (Kazakhstan) - 72 kg women’s freestyle Otgonjargal Dolgorjav (Mongolia) - 50 kg women’s freestyle Arsen Harutyunyan (Armenia) - 57 kg men’s freestyle Rei Higuchi (Japan) - 57 kg men’s freestyle Iryna Koliadenko (Ukraine) - 62 kg women’s freestyle Akzhol Makhmudov (Kyrgyzstan) - 77 kg Greco-Roman Murad Mammadov (Azerbaijan) - 63 kg Greco-Roman Miwa Morikawa (Japan) - 72 kg women’s freestyle Iszmail Muszukajev (Hungary) - 65 kg men’s freestyle Mate Nemes (Serbia) - 67 kg Greco-Roman Mohammad Nokhodilarimi (Iran) - 79 kg men’s freestyle Osman Nurmagomedov (Azerbaijan) - 92 kg men’s freestyle Haruna Okuno (Japan) - 55 kg women’s freestyle Nonoka Ozaki (Japan) - 65 kg women’s freestyle Irina Ringaci (Moldova) - 68 kg women’s freestyle Tsugsumi Sakurai (Japan) - 57 kg women’s freestyle Buse Tosun (Turkey) - 68 kg women’s freestyle Khetik Tsabolov (Serbia) - 74 kg men’s freestyle 2x Medalists Zelimkhan Abakarov (Albania) - 57 kg men’s freestyle Myles Amine (San Marino) - 86 kg men’s freestyle Ali Arsalan (Serbia) - 72 kg Greco-Roman Grace Bullen (Norway) - 62 kg women’s freestyle Selcuk Can (Turkey) - 72 kg Greco-Roman Ali Cengiz (Turkey) - 87 kg Greco-Roman Azamat Dauletbekov (Kazakhstan) - 86 kg men’s freestyle Amit Elor (USA) - 72 kg women’s freestyle Yaroslav Filchakov (Ukraine) - 82 kg Greco-Roman Hasrat Jafarov (Azerbaijan) - 67 kg Greco-Roman Yuka Kagami (Japan) - 76 kg women’s freestyle David Losonczi (Hungary) - 87 kg Greco-Roman Abasgadzhi Magomedov (Russia) - 61 men’s freestyle Magomedkhan Magomedov (Azerbaijan) - 97 kg men’s freestyle Givi Matcharashvili (Georgia) - 97 kg men’s freestyle Aiperi Medet Kyzy (Kyrgyzstan) - 76 kg women’s freestyle Stevan Micic (Serbia) - 57 kg men’s freestyle Amin Mirzazadeh (Iran) - 130 kg Greco-Roman Sakura Motoki (Japan) - 62 kg women’s freestyle Anastasia Nichita (Moldova) - 57 kg women’s freestyle Luis Orta Sanchez (Cuba) - 67 kg Greco-Roman Jasurbek Ortikbekov (Uzbekistan) - 55 kg Greco-Roman Zain Retherford (USA) - 70 kg men’s freestyle Sanan Suleymanov (Azerbaijan) - 77 kg Greco-Roman Jacarra Winchester (USA) - 55 kg women’s freestyle Amir Yazdani (Iran) - 70 kg men’s freestyle Demeu Zhadrayev (Kazakhstan) - 77 kg Greco-Roman First Time Medalists Rizabe Aitmukhan (Kazakhstan) - 92 kg men’s freestyle Feyzullah Akturk (Turkey) - 92 kg men’s freestyle Arman Andreasyan (Armenia) - 70 kg women’s freestyle Vito Arujau (USA) - 61 kg men’s freestyle Islomjon Bakhramov (Uzbekistan) - 60 kg Greco-Roman Enes Basar (Turkey) - 63 kg Greco-Roman Anastasia Blayvas (Germany) - 55 kg women’s freestyle Liguo Cao (China) - 60 kg Greco-Roman Poya Dad Marz (Iran) - 55 kg Greco-Roman Mariana Dragutan (Moldova) - 55 kg women’s freestyle Delgermaa Enkhsaikhan (Mongolia) - 68 kg women’s freestyle Davaanasan Enkh Amar (Mongolia) - 72 kg women’s freestyle Ziqi Feng (China) - 50 kg women’s freestyle Robert Fritsch (Hungary) - 72 kg Greco-Roman Vladimeri Gamkrelidze (Georgia) - 79 kg men’s freestyle Ibrahim Ghanem (France) - 72 kg Greco-Roman Aues Gonibov (Russia) - 82 kg Greco-Roman Othelie Hoeie (Norway) - 59 kg women’s freestyle Mimi Hristova (Bulgaria) - 65 kg women’s freestyle Macey Kilty (USA) - 65 kg women’s freestyle Lili (China) - 65 kg women’s freestyle Shamil Mamedov (Russia) - 65 kg men’s freestyle Abdellatif Mohamed (Egypt) - 130 kg Greco-Roman Alireza Mohmadipiani (Iran) - 82 kg Greco-Roman Vasyl Mykhailov (Ukraine) - 79 kg men’s freestyle Semen Novikov (Bulgaria) - 87 kg Greco-Roman Artur Omarov (Czech Republic) - 97 kg Greco-Roman Antim Panghal (India) - 53 kg women’s freestyle Jennifer Page (USA) - 59 kg women’s freestyle Mason Parris (USA) - 125 kg men’s freestyle Shota Phartenadze (Georgia) - 61 kg men’s freestyle Ramazan Ramazanov (Bulgaria) - 70 kg men’s freestyle Tatiana Renteria (Colombia) - 76 kg women’s freestyle Sebastian Rivera (Puerto Rico) - 65 kg men’s freestyle Gabriel Rosillo-Kindelan (Cuba) - 97 kg Greco-Roman Daichi Takatani (Japan) - 74 kg men’s freestyle Vazgen Tevanyan (Armenia) - 65 kg men’s freestyle Georgij Tibilov (Serbia) - 63 kg Greco-Roman Akhmed Usmanov (Russia) - 79 kg men’s freestyle Zahid Valencia (USA) - 92 kg men’s freestyle Lucia Yepez Guzman (Colombia) - 53 kg women’s freestyle Qi Zhang (China) - 59 kg women’s freestyle Taiyrbek Zhumashbek (Kyrgyzstan) - 61 kg men’s freestyle
    2 points
  8. Just because you can use a big word doesn't mean your advice is any better. Your argument reeks of someone who lets his emotions get in the way. All the more reason not to take your advice.
    2 points
  9. Repechage is nonsensical in the way it is practiced at the World Championships. We have multiple wrestlers in the repechage who have a shot at 3rd place who are 0-1 in the championship bracket. Meanwhile, there are wrestlers in the same bracket that are 3-1 with no chance to advance beyond 7th place. There has to be a better way. In large brackets like 65kg and 86kg there is no good reason to include 0-1 wrestlers in the repechage simply because they had the good fortune to lose in the first round to a finalist. And that is what it is, fortune. The point of these tournaments is about earning, not fortune.
    1 point
  10. Well, minus the “crime” part, but yes. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
    1 point
  11. lol. well played. however, i AM NOT asking for more oversite. i'm asking for personal accountability and accepting your clearly defined penalties. and btw - i promise you i'm about as big a Nelson Brands' fan that exists outside of the state of Iowa. i think a ton of him. but he did the crime. and i think he understands that too.
    1 point
  12. Depends on which three games. The university chose the first three because they are the most meaningless, warm up, non-conference games. They did not want to wait on the NCAA to decide, because by then the games might actually be meaningful. Agreed on point two. But also think the penalty chosen here is wrong. I am a god damn whiny republican. You are the one arguing for regulation and big goverment. I am arguing for personal rights. Don't tread on me.
    1 point
  13. Ban: posts jibberish compulsively Also Ban: 'you guys are obsessed with me'
    1 point
  14. I did not make the statement based on last years performance but more so Eggum's full body of work. The expectation for the Gophers should be to be a top 5 team semi-regularly. Year Coach Duals Big Ten NCAA 2000-01 J Robinson 19-1-0 1st 1st 2001-02 J Robinson 19-0-0 1st 1st 2002-03 J Robinson 17-5-0 1st 2nd 2003-04 J Robinson 12-6-0 2nd 8th 2004-05 J Robinson 9-9-0 2nd 5th 2005-06 J Robinson 20-1-0 1st 2nd 2006-07 J Robinson 20-1-0 1st 1st 2007-08 J Robinson 14-7-0 2nd 10th 2008-09 J Robinson 15-8-0 5th T-14th 2009-10 J Robinson 12-5-0 2nd 7th 2010-11 J Robinson 15-4-1 3rd 7th 2011-12 J Robinson 14-3-0 2nd 2nd 2012-13 J Robinson 16-2-0 T-2nd* 3rd 2013-14 J Robinson 14-1-0 3rd* 2nd 2014-15 J Robinson 12-3-0 3rd 8th 2015-16 J Robinson 10-8-0 9th 17th 2016-17 Brandon Eggum 7-5-0 5th 7th 2017-18 Brandon Eggum 10-8-0 7th 17th 2018-19 Brandon Eggum 14-3-0 4th 8th 2019-20 Brandon Eggum 9-8-0 8th Canceled/Covid 2020-21 Brandon Eggum 7-2-0 5th T-7th 2021-22 Brandon Eggum 4-6-0 6th 11th 2022-23 Brandon Eggum 12-3-0 6th 15th
    1 point
  15. Obviously a lot rides on a solid bounceback this year for the Pokes... but IMO he is not in a hot seat. Last two NCAAs have been rough but look at the context. 7 top ten finishes at NCAAs in the last ten years with multiple AAs and multiple NCs and a 7-year streak of winning the Big 12 Championship. Pulls in consistently high recruiting classes. Embraced NIL and the portal this offseason. Built a new locker room last year and is actively fundraising for future facility upgrades. Hired two new assistant coaches and brought several senior level athletes into the new RTC (Cowboy Wrestling Club) this last year. Changed up training routines. He has several years left regardless of NCAA results.
    1 point
  16. WKN - Great stuff (as most of yours is). HOWEVER, most of it is useless/wrong! The reason: NCAA DI wrestling didn't begin until 2009-2010.
    1 point
  17. 1 point
  18. I am interested in the second derivative?
    1 point
  19. Ban would've replied with 3 paragraphs so clearly not the hijack. Looks like Vak went the summer school route.
    1 point
  20. I did it above based on two years (Iowa passes Oklahoma State in 2057, PSU passes Iowa in 2101). Based on five years PSU never overtakes Iowa. Iowa average 6.6 to PSU's 6.4 in the last five years. Oklahoma State only has 3.6 per year for the prior five.
    1 point
  21. there are clearly two distinct arguments being made in this thread and they're getting mashed together A) what the rules are B) what you think they should be (this is not directed at any one individual)
    1 point
  22. You aren't actually the turdbiscuit you portray yourself to be in this thread. Not nearly. You actually provide good feedback in a more or less non-biased nor in a trollinese sort of manner... typically. Why must you fly those colors here? Is it the ole 'What happens in Vegas' sort of Mantra? 'What happens in this thread...' It makes me sad. So now you say "Read it only the way I tell you to or you are wrong." You said it wrong to begin with, man. Give it a break. Either pay your debt or move on. The only reasonable conclusion through all of this is that you're a wiffle-waffling wine-ass that punches nuns and eats babies and shit. I don't want to believe that.
    1 point
  23. For the most-part, freestyle and Greco take place from March into July (end of high school folkstyle through Fargo). Summer Olympics reflect the correct period when that is the consideration for the Northern Hemisphere.
    1 point
  24. * we do all realize it is always winter in Michigan
    1 point
  25. Fetterman, whose net worth is somehow ~$2M while living off his daddy's income into his 40s and bought a ~240K condo from his sister for $1, is the leading critic. The party of hard work, right? The party of Maxine Waters, Nancy Pelosi, and Brandon Biden... The party that earns their money the ethical way, right?
    1 point
  26. Once again..."hey, this virus is bad to a specific demographic of people...and a comparatively a small percentage of the population, so let's mask our kids, shut down our schools, cancel once in a lifetime events, close businesses, don't let people say goodby to dying love ones, etc"....yep, that is the bass ackward way some of you think. Where was/is "trust the science"??
    1 point
  27. Yes...it is. The Summer Olympics, which is held one month earlier in August, is also summer now.
    1 point
  28. I really have not reasons to argue any of these on an individual basis. That said, other than Arujau dropping to get a spot it's exactly the same as this year's team. Just feel like there's a surprise or two coming. Taylor to me is the closest to a lock. Parris - Gable return? Gwiz maybe?. Snyder - J'Den?. Dake and maybe even Taylor -young blood hitting their peak?. Lee - Is this the class we have most change routinely? Yianni, Zain drops, McKenna, Alirez?. Vito - the cut. Look forward to seeing it play out and to the USA having a great showing in Paris.
    1 point
  29. Kevin Jackson Iowa State
    1 point
  30. Pssst....there's wrestling around the world outside of the USA scholastic wrestling season. In some of those places.....it's a big sport, and they're pretty good.
    1 point
  31. I would say the seat is getting hot for Eggum at Minnesota.
    1 point
  32. ILLINIWrestlingBlog - That's freaking hilarious! Thank you.
    1 point
  33. Greco is the original from the first Olympiad. Freestyle didn't emerge until the 19th century.
    1 point
  34. Poll is reopened, I guess it had an expiration, let's get to 51 votes for guilty to shut this thread down.
    1 point
  35. Did they play Living La Vida Loca?
    1 point
  36. You can literally cheat. Steroids. Lie about it and not miss as much. on the other hand. Folks like to bring up this behavior (gambling) may cause you do do bad things down the road if you get stuck. So a situation where literal cheating is a lesser slap on the wrist so you can potentially stop potential cheating down the road is a more severe penalty. Does not seem to be fair. Yes It is a rule. I’ll bet they knew that as well. There should be a penalty. But it shouldn’t be this severe.
    1 point
  37. A little too early to be drinking, isn't it?
    1 point
  38. It’s been a minute, and a craaaaszy ass week of wrestling. So we kept it simple and let the youngin hone his skillz a little…
    1 point
  39. I've also started announcing it as Turkiye starting at the 2021 World Championships in Oslo. Czechia also gets the same treatment.
    1 point
  40. Here is my small collection, always looking for some that are reasonably priced.
    1 point
  41. That's actually not a bobblehead, it's a scale statue.
    1 point
  42. Maybe he is fishing for an NIL deal from an online casino? I think Pete Rose does endorsements for casinos.
    1 point
  43. I'm more surprised that he has a father/uncle as a coach and was stupid enough to tweet that out, geez. Does this count as consenting to have his name released? Will we actually see a statement from Iowa naming him?
    1 point
  44. These are known rules/regs. Look at what the NCAA did to Dez Bryant and his team and he broke no rules. The NCAA has never been consistent.
    1 point
  45. Widely being considered the best player in the NFL right now, and an actual fan of watching wrestling. I know there was a past thread on here talking about how he stopped wrestling before high school so this may seem counterintuitive, but we need to accept that many guys that actually have NFL potential will stop wrestling to focus on football as they get older. However I believe he has credited wrestling for helping him develop some of the traits that make him so dominant. Anyone have a link to a recent interview/article where he does this? Was hoping to send to a friend :) But you can add him to the list of people in the NFL (Sean McDermott another) praising wrestling as helping develop elite football players. So even if wrestling loses some that truly have NFL or at least D1 football potential where you can’t really blame them, if more coaches and parents see the link between wrestling and football, wrestling could gain more younger participants.
    1 point
  46. I’ve done a ton of these. I call them “Wroppelgangers” on my own page/site. Carson Kharkla (SP?) of Ohio State = Biff from Back To The Future. Tom/Terry= the T-1000 Terminator from Terminator 2! Austin Desanto of Iowa= Christopher Moltisanti from The Sopranos! Austin Moltisanto! Hayden Hidlay of NC State= Billy Idol Cael Sanderson = Sling Blade Aaron Brooks of PSU= Skee-Lo Brennan Swafford of Iowa = white Mike Tyson Dalton Doud of Ottumwa HS = Nick Suriano of many places. Cobe Siebrecht of Iowa = Jim Morrison of The Doors Danny Stephani (2X Sup HWT State Champ out of Iowa in the ‘80s) = Jack Black Nelson Brands of Iowa = 2023 NBA Slam Dunk Champ, Mac McClung of the 76ers! Kaleb Young of Iowa = The bad guy from the movie “The Mask.”
    1 point
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