Copa del Rey Winners: Complete All-Time List (1903–2026) | Most Successful Clubs & Recent Champions

Kamaluddin Muhammad
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Kamaluddin Muhammad
Kamaluddin Muhammad is a football writer specializing in Europe's top five leagues — the English Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A, and Ligue 1. He...
28 Min Read

Few trophies in European football carry the weight of history that the Copa del Rey does.

Since its first edition in 1903, Spain’s premier knockout cup competition has produced some of the game’s most dramatic finals, iconic upsets, and enduring dynasties.

It is older than La Liga. Older than Wembley. Older than the World Cup itself.

Barcelona have won it 32 times. Athletic Club have lifted it 24 times, including the inaugural edition.

Real Madrid, despite their global dominance, come third with 20 titles, a gap that surprises many. And every single season, smaller clubs dream of making their own history in the draw.

Whether you’re searching for the complete Copa del Rey winners list, the records, the most successful clubs, or the story of the 2026 champion, this is the definitive guide.

Everything is here: 123 years of Spanish cup football, laid out in full.

What Is the Copa del Rey?

The Copa del Rey, translated as the King’s Cup, is Spain’s primary domestic cup competition, organised annually by the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF).

Its full official name is Campeonato de España – Copa de Su Majestad el Rey de Fútbol (Championship of Spain – Cup of His Majesty the King of Football).

The competition was founded in 1903, making it the oldest football tournament in Spanish history and one of the oldest in all of Europe.

It predates La Liga by 26 years and has been contested every season since, with the only interruption being the 1937 and 1938 editions, which were cancelled due to the Spanish Civil War.

The format is a straightforward knockout competition, open to clubs across all levels of Spanish football.

La Liga and Segunda División clubs receive byes into later rounds, while lower-league sides enter in the preliminary stages.

The competition typically runs from late September through to the final in April or May.

Winning the Copa del Rey carries a significant sporting reward. The champion earns qualification for the following season’s UEFA Europa League, unless they have already qualified for the Champions League via their league position.

Both the winner and runner-up also qualify for the Supercopa de España, Spain’s curtain-raiser showpiece event.

The trophy itself, a gleaming silver cup, is one of the most recognisable pieces of silverware in world football.

The Copa del Rey has a long tradition of producing upsets. Lower-division clubs regularly knock out top-flight giants, and the single-leg format in earlier rounds gives underdogs a genuine chance. It is, in many ways, the most democratic competition in Spanish football.

Complete Copa del Rey Winners List (1903–2026)

Below is the full Copa del Rey winners list, covering every season from the inaugural 1903 edition through the 2026 final.

Note that two parallel editions were held in 1910 and 1913 due to administrative disputes between rival football federations; both are considered official by the RFEF.

The competition was not held in 1937 or 1938.

SeasonWinnerRunner-UpScoreVenue
1903Athletic BilbaoMadrid FC3–2Hipódromo, Madrid
1904*Athletic BilbaoEspañol de MadridNot played
1905Madrid FCAthletic Bilbao1–0Tiro del Pichón, Madrid
1906Madrid FCAthletic Bilbao4–1Hipódromo, Madrid
1907Madrid FCBizcaya1–0Hipódromo, Madrid
1908Madrid FCReal Vigo Sporting2–1O’Donnell, Madrid
1909Club CiclistaEspañol de Madrid3–1O’Donnell, Madrid
1910 (UECF)Athletic BilbaoVasconia SC1–0Ondarreta, San Sebastián
1910 (FECF)BarcelonaEspañol de Madrid3–2Tiro del Pichón, Madrid
1911Athletic BilbaoEspañol3–1Josaleta, Getxo
1912BarcelonaGimnástica2–0La Industria, Barcelona
1913 (UECF)BarcelonaReal Sociedad2–1 (replay)La Industria, Barcelona
1913 (FECF)Racing de IrúnAthletic Bilbao1–0 (replay)O’Donnell, Madrid
1914Athletic BilbaoEspanya2–1Costorbe, Irún
1915Athletic BilbaoEspañol5–0Amute, Irún
1916Athletic BilbaoMadrid FC4–0La Industria, Barcelona
1917Madrid FCArenas2–1 (replay)La Industria, Barcelona
1918Real UniónMadrid FC2–0O’Donnell, Madrid
1919ArenasBarcelona5–2 (aet)Martínez Campos, Madrid
1920BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao2–0El Molinón, Gijón
1921Athletic BilbaoAtlético Madrid4–1San Mamés, Bilbao
1922BarcelonaReal Unión5–1Coia, Vigo
1923Athletic BilbaoEuropa1–0Les Corts, Barcelona
1924Real UniónReal Madrid1–0Atotxa, San Sebastián
1925BarcelonaArenas2–0Reina Victoria, Seville
1926BarcelonaAtlético Madrid3–2 (aet)Mestalla, Valencia
1927Real UniónArenas1–0 (aet)Torrero, Zaragoza
1928BarcelonaReal Sociedad3–1 (replay)El Sardinero, Santander
1928–29RCD EspanyolReal Madrid2–1Mestalla, Valencia
1930Athletic BilbaoReal Madrid3–2 (aet)Montjuïc, Barcelona
1931Athletic BilbaoReal Betis3–1Chamartín, Madrid
1932Athletic BilbaoBarcelona1–0Chamartín, Madrid
1933Athletic BilbaoReal Madrid2–1Montjuïc, Barcelona
1934Real MadridValencia2–1Montjuïc, Barcelona
1935SevillaSabadell3–0Chamartín, Madrid
1936Real MadridBarcelona2–1Mestalla, Valencia
1937Not held (Spanish Civil War)
1938Not held (Spanish Civil War)
1939SevillaRacing de Ferrol6–2Montjuïc, Barcelona
1940EspañolReal Madrid3–2 (aet)Campo de Vallecas, Madrid
1941ValenciaEspañol3–1Chamartín, Madrid
1942BarcelonaAtlético Bilbao4–3 (aet)Chamartín, Madrid
1943Athletic BilbaoReal Madrid1–0 (aet)Metropolitano, Madrid
1944Athletic BilbaoValencia2–0Montjuïc, Barcelona
1944–45Athletic BilbaoValencia3–2Montjuïc, Barcelona
1946Real MadridValencia3–1Montjuïc, Barcelona
1947Real MadridEspañol2–0 (aet)Riazor, A Coruña
1947–48SevillaCelta Vigo4–1Nuevo Chamartín, Madrid
1948–49ValenciaAthletic Bilbao1–0Nuevo Chamartín, Madrid
1949–50Athletic BilbaoValladolid4–1 (aet)Nuevo Chamartín, Madrid
1951BarcelonaReal Sociedad3–0Nuevo Chamartín, Madrid
1952BarcelonaValencia4–2 (aet)Nuevo Chamartín, Madrid
1952–53BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao2–1Nuevo Chamartín, Madrid
1954ValenciaBarcelona3–0Nuevo Chamartín, Madrid
1955Athletic BilbaoSevilla1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1956Athletic BilbaoAtlético Madrid2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1957BarcelonaEspañol1–0Montjuïc, Barcelona
1958Athletic BilbaoReal Madrid2–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1958–59BarcelonaGranada4–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1959–60Atlético MadridReal Madrid3–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1960–61Atlético MadridReal Madrid3–2Bernabéu, Madrid
1961–62Real MadridSevilla2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1962–63BarcelonaZaragoza3–1Camp Nou, Barcelona
1963–64ZaragozaAtlético Madrid2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1964–65Atlético MadridZaragoza1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1965–66ZaragozaAthletic Bilbao2–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1966–67ValenciaAthletic Bilbao2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1967–68BarcelonaReal Madrid1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1969Athletic BilbaoElche1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1969–70Real MadridValencia3–1Camp Nou, Barcelona
1970–71BarcelonaValencia4–3 (aet)Bernabéu, Madrid
1971–72Atlético MadridValencia2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1972–73Athletic BilbaoCastellón2–0Calderón, Madrid
1973–74Real MadridBarcelona4–0Calderón, Madrid
1974–75Real MadridAtlético Madrid0–0* (pens)Calderón, Madrid
1975–76Atlético MadridZaragoza1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1976–77Real BetisAthletic Bilbao2–2* (pens)Calderón, Madrid
1977–78BarcelonaLas Palmas3–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1978–79ValenciaReal Madrid2–0Calderón, Madrid
1979–80Real MadridCastilla6–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1980–81BarcelonaSporting Gijón3–1Calderón, Madrid
1981–82Real MadridSporting Gijón2–1Zorrilla, Valladolid
1982–83BarcelonaReal Madrid2–1La Romareda, Zaragoza
1983–84Athletic BilbaoBarcelona1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1984–85Atlético MadridAthletic Bilbao2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1985–86ZaragozaBarcelona1–0Calderón, Madrid
1986–87Real SociedadAtlético Madrid2–2* (pens)La Romareda, Zaragoza
1987–88BarcelonaReal Sociedad1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1988–89Real MadridValladolid1–0Calderón, Madrid
1989–90BarcelonaReal Madrid2–0Luis Casanova, Valencia
1990–91Atlético MadridMallorca1–0 (aet)Bernabéu, Madrid
1991–92Atlético MadridReal Madrid2–0Bernabéu, Madrid
1992–93Real MadridZaragoza2–0Luis Casanova, Valencia
1993–94ZaragozaCelta Vigo0–0* (pens)Calderón, Madrid
1994–95Deportivo La CoruñaValencia2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
1995–96Atlético MadridBarcelona1–0 (aet)La Romareda, Zaragoza
1996–97BarcelonaReal Betis3–2 (aet)Bernabéu, Madrid
1997–98BarcelonaMallorca1–1* (pens)Mestalla, Valencia
1998–99ValenciaAtlético Madrid3–0Estadio Olímpico, Seville
1999–2000EspanyolAtlético Madrid2–1Mestalla, Valencia
2000–01ZaragozaCelta Vigo3–1Estadio Olímpico, Seville
2001–02Deportivo La CoruñaReal Madrid2–1Bernabéu, Madrid
2002–03MallorcaRecreativo3–0Martínez Valero, Elche
2003–04ZaragozaReal Madrid3–2 (aet)Lluís Companys, Barcelona
2004–05Real BetisOsasuna2–1 (aet)Calderón, Madrid
2005–06EspanyolZaragoza4–1Bernabéu, Madrid
2006–07SevillaGetafe1–0Bernabéu, Madrid
2007–08ValenciaGetafe3–1Calderón, Madrid
2008–09BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao4–1Mestalla, Valencia
2009–10SevillaAtlético Madrid2–0Camp Nou, Barcelona
2010–11Real MadridBarcelona1–0 (aet)Mestalla, Valencia
2011–12BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao3–0Calderón, Madrid
2012–13Atlético MadridReal Madrid2–1 (aet)Bernabéu, Madrid
2013–14Real MadridBarcelona2–1Mestalla, Valencia
2014–15BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao3–1Camp Nou, Barcelona
2015–16BarcelonaSevilla2–0 (aet)Calderón, Madrid
2016–17BarcelonaAlavés3–1Calderón, Madrid
2017–18BarcelonaSevilla5–0Metropolitano, Madrid
2018–19ValenciaBarcelona2–1Benito Villamarín, Seville
2019–20Real SociedadAthletic Bilbao1–0La Cartuja, Seville
2020–21BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao4–0La Cartuja, Seville
2021–22Real BetisValencia1–1* (pens 5–4)La Cartuja, Seville
2022–23Real MadridOsasuna2–1La Cartuja, Seville
2023–24Athletic BilbaoMallorca1–1* (pens 4–2)La Cartuja, Seville
2024–25BarcelonaReal Madrid3–2 (aet)La Cartuja, Seville
2025–26Real SociedadAtlético Madrid2–2* (pens 4–3)La Cartuja, Seville

* Won on penalty shootout | aet = after extra time | 1904 final not played; Athletic Bilbao awarded trophy by default | 1937–38 not held (Spanish Civil War)

Most Successful Clubs in Copa del Rey History

The Copa del Rey has been dominated by a small group of clubs across its 123-year history. Barcelona lead the way by a significant margin, while Athletic Club and Real Madrid complete the top three. Below is the comprehensive record table.

RankClubTitlesRunner-UpFinalsFirst TitleLatest Title
1Barcelona32114319102025
2Athletic Bilbao24164019032024
3Real Madrid20214119052023
4Atlético Madrid1091919602013
5Valencia8101819412019
6Zaragoza651119642004
7Sevilla54919352010
8Espanyol45919292006
9Real Sociedad4261909†2026
10Real Betis32519772022
11Real Unión31419181927
12Deportivo La Coruña20219952002
13Arenas13419191919
14Mallorca13420032003
15Club Ciclista10119091909

† Real Sociedad’s 1909 win was by Club Ciclista de San Sebastián, a predecessor club. Real Sociedad’s own recognised wins begin in 1913.

Barcelona — 32 Titles

No club in the history of the Copa del Rey has been as dominant as Barcelona. Their 32 titles represent nearly a quarter of all editions ever played, and their 74.4% win rate across 43 finals is remarkable for any competition over such a long period.

Barcelona have won the cup in every decade since the 1910s, with one notable exception: the 1930s, when the Spanish Civil War brought football to a halt.

Their greatest period came in the modern era, winning seven consecutive Copa del Rey titles between 2015 and 2021, a sequence that stands as the longest winning streak in the competition’s history.

Pep Guardiola, Johan Cruyff, and Luis Enrique are among the legendary managers who have guided Barcelona to cup glory.

For individual brilliance in finals, Lionel Messi stands alone: 9 goals in finals, 7 finals scored in, 10 final appearances, and 3 Man of the Match awards — records that may never be surpassed.

Athletic Bilbao — 24 Titles

Athletic Club’s relationship with the Copa del Rey is unlike any other. They won the inaugural 1903 edition and have gone on to lift the trophy 24 times, with a record 40 final appearances.

For much of the competition’s early history, Athletic were the dominant force, winning six consecutive titles between 1930 and 1935, a feat that has never been matched.

After that golden era, their cup success became more intermittent, but no less meaningful.

Their 2024 title, a penalty shootout victory over Mallorca, ended a 40-year wait for major silverware, with Nico Williams named Man of the Match in a win that sent the whole of Bilbao into celebration.

Athletic’s unique Basque-only player policy makes their cup haul all the more impressive. They have produced more Copa del Rey trophies than Real Madrid, with a significantly smaller talent pool.

Real Madrid — 20 Titles

Real Madrid’s 20 Copa del Rey titles are the third-most in history, but their record in this competition has always been overshadowed by their dominance in La Liga and the Champions League.

Los Blancos have actually lost more finals than any other club, 21 runner-up finishes, making their win percentage of just 48.8% the lowest among the competition’s biggest clubs.

Madrid enjoyed a productive period in the 1970s and 1980s, but their 21st-century record in the cup has been patchy.

The 2023 final, a 2–1 win over Osasuna at La Cartuja, with Rodrygo scoring both goals, was their first title in nine years and only their second since 2014.

Atlético Madrid — 10 Titles

Atlético Madrid’s 10 Copa del Rey titles place them comfortably in the competition’s top tier, though their last win came in 2013, a dramatic 2–1 extra-time defeat of Real Madrid at the Bernabéu, a result that underlined the fierce nature of the Madrid derby.

Their consistent final appearances, including the 2026 runner-up finish, confirm them as perennial cup contenders.

Valencia — 8 Titles

Valencia are Spanish football’s cup sleeping giant. Eight titles across eight decades of competition paint a picture of consistent, if infrequent, excellence.

Their most recent triumph came in 2019, when they famously upset Barcelona 2–1 at the Estadio Benito Villamarín in Seville, one of the biggest final upsets of the modern era.

Zaragoza — 6 Titles

Real Zaragoza remain the most successful club in Copa del Rey history that has never competed at the very top of Spanish football on a sustained basis.

Their 6 titles, spread across four decades from 1964 to 2004, including a dramatic extra-time final win over Real Madrid in 2004, make them one of the competition’s most celebrated giant-killers.

Clubs With Most Copa del Rey Final Appearances

ClubFinalsWonLost
Barcelona433211
Real Madrid412021
Athletic Bilbao402416
Atlético Madrid19109
Valencia18810
Zaragoza1165
Espanyol945
Sevilla954
Real Sociedad642
Real Betis532
Mallorca413
Arenas413
Real Unión431

Consecutive Copa del Rey Winners — Cup Dynasties

Only a handful of clubs have managed to successfully defend the Copa del Rey, a feat that speaks to extraordinary consistency in a competition where upsets are common, and form can be unpredictable.

The most remarkable run of consecutive success belongs to Barcelona in the modern era. Between 2014–15 and 2020–21, they won seven Copa del Rey titles in a row — a sequence that is almost certainly the greatest sustained dominance the competition has ever seen from a single club.

Athletic Club’s golden period in the early 1930s saw them claim five titles in five seasons from 1930 to 1934, effectively making the Copa del Rey their personal property during that era. They also won back-to-back titles in the 1940s (1943, 1944, 1944–45) during the early Franco era of Spanish football.

Real Madrid claimed back-to-back titles in 1974–75 and another run of two in the 1980s. But their capacity to string consecutive cup wins together has never matched either Athletic or Barcelona.

Longest Consecutive Title Streaks

ClubConsecutive TitlesSeasons
Barcelona72014–15 to 2020–21
Athletic Bilbao51930 to 1934
Athletic Bilbao31943 to 1944–45
Athletic Bilbao31914 to 1916
Real Madrid21974–75 to 1975–76 (lost one; won two across 3 seasons)

Biggest Copa del Rey Final Victories

YearWinnerRunner-UpScore
1939SevillaRacing de Ferrol6–2
1979–80Real MadridCastilla6–1
1915Athletic BilbaoEspañol5–0
2017–18BarcelonaSevilla5–0
1919ArenasBarcelona5–2 (aet)
1973–74Real MadridBarcelona4–0
2008–09BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao4–1
2020–21BarcelonaAthletic Bilbao4–0

Copa del Rey Records & Statistics

RecordHolderDetail
Most titlesBarcelona32 titles
Most runner-up finishesReal Madrid21 runner-up finishes
Most final appearancesBarcelona43 finals
Most consecutive titlesBarcelona7 (2015–2021)
Biggest final winSevilla / Real Madrid6–2 (1939) / 6–1 (1980)
Most goals in finals (player)Lionel Messi9 goals
Most finals scored in (player)Lionel Messi7 finals
Most final appearances (player)Lionel Messi / Sergio Busquets10 appearances
Most Copa del Rey titles (player)Messi / Busquets / Piqué / Gainza7 each
Most goals in a single finalTelmo Zarra (Athletic Bilbao)4 goals (1950 final)
Most consecutive finals scored inTelmo Zarra4 consecutive finals (1942–1945)
Perfect final recordDeportivo La Coruña2 finals played, 2 won (100%)
Worst final record (multi-final clubs)Español de Madrid / Celta Vigo3 finals, 0 wins
Fewest titles, most finalsMallorca1 title from 4 finals (25%)
The oldest competition in SpainCopa del ReyFounded 1903 (26 years before La Liga)

20 Fascinating Copa del Rey Facts

  1. The Copa del Rey is the oldest football competition in Spain, founded in 1903 — 26 years before La Liga began.
  2. Athletic Bilbao won the first-ever Copa del Rey in 1903, beating Madrid FC 3–2.
  3. The 1904 final was never played due to a dispute; Athletic Bilbao were awarded the trophy by default.
  4. Barcelona have reached 43 finals — more than any other club — and won 32 of them.
  5. Real Madrid have lost more Copa del Rey finals (21) than any other club in history.
  6. Lionel Messi has scored 9 goals in Copa del Rey finals — the most by any individual player.
  7. The competition was not held in 1937 or 1938 due to the Spanish Civil War.
  8. Barcelona won seven consecutive Copa del Rey titles between 2015 and 2021.
  9. Deportivo La Coruña played two Copa del Rey finals and won both — a perfect 100% record.
  10. Telmo Zarra scored four goals in the 1950 final — the most goals by a single player in any Copa del Rey final.
  11. The 1980 Copa del Rey final was contested between Real Madrid and Castilla — Real Madrid’s own reserve team.
  12. Only 15 different clubs have ever lifted the Copa del Rey despite over 120 editions.
  13. Barcelona are the only club to win a continental treble (La Liga, Copa del Rey, Champions League) in the same season — achieved in 2009 and 2015.
  14. Athletic Bilbao have appeared in 40 Copa del Rey finals across the competition’s history.
  15. The 2026 final had an attendance of 70,000 — the highest at La Cartuja for the Copa del Rey final.
  16. Real Sociedad’s 2026 win was completed without conceding a goal in open play in the shootout — goalkeeper Unai Marrero saved twice.
  17. The smallest crowd for a Copa del Rey final in modern times was 0 — the 2020 and 2021 editions were played behind closed doors due to COVID-19.
  18. Real Unión de Irún won three Copa del Rey titles (1918, 1924, 1927) — a club that no longer exists at the highest level of Spanish football.
  19. Atlético Madrid ended a 40-year wait for a Copa del Rey title when they won in 2013 — but then waited another 13 years without winning it again through 2026.
  20. Club Ciclista de San Sebastián won the 1909 edition — the strangest name in the competition’s list of champions, a club originally founded as a cycling club.

Copa del Rey Timeline — Key Milestones (1903–2026)

YearMilestone
1903First Copa del Rey held. Athletic Bilbao beat Madrid FC 3–2
1909Barcelona win their first Copa del Rey title
1929Espanyol win the cup; La Liga launches the same year
1930–34Athletic Bilbao win five consecutive titles — the longest run in history until Barcelona matched and surpassed it
1937–38Competition suspended due to Spanish Civil War
1955Final held at Bernabéu for first time; 100,000 attend
1975Competition renamed Copa del Rey following restoration of Spanish monarchy
1979–80Real Madrid play their own reserve side Castilla in the final; win 6–1
1984Athletic Bilbao beat Barcelona 1–0 at the Bernabéu — one of the great finals
2009Barcelona complete continental treble including Copa del Rey — first club to do so
2013Atlético Madrid beat Real Madrid 2–1 in Madrid derby final
2015Barcelona complete second treble; Messi scores in his 7th Copa del Rey final
2015–21Barcelona win seven consecutive Copa del Rey titles
2019Valencia upset Barcelona 2–1 in Seville
2020Real Sociedad win the final held behind closed doors due to COVID-19
2022Real Betis win third title, beating Valencia on penalties
2024Athletic Bilbao end 40-year major trophy drought with cup win over Mallorca
2025Barcelona beat Real Madrid 3–2 to claim record 32nd Copa del Rey title
2026Real Sociedad beat Atlético Madrid 4–3 on pens to win 4th Copa del Rey title

Conclusion

The Copa del Rey is more than just a trophy. It is 123 years of Spanish football history — Athletic Bilbao lifting the inaugural cup in 1903, Messi scoring in seven different finals, Barcelona’s seven-year dynasty, Valencia’s impossible upset of 2019, and Real Sociedad’s penalty shootout triumph in 2026.

Barcelona’s 32 titles make them the undisputed kings of the competition, but the Copa del Rey’s great appeal is that no title is guaranteed.

Every season, the draw brings fresh possibilities, fresh drama, and fresh chances for the unexpected. Athletic Bilbao waited 40 years to win the cup again.

Real Sociedad celebrated their fourth title with jubilant fans in a full La Cartuja stadium. That is what this competition does to clubs and their supporters.

As Spanish football evolves — with VAR, European super-competition discussions, and changing club finances — the Copa del Rey remains the most democratic and unpredictable of Spain’s three major honours.

Alongside La Liga and Spain’s involvement in the UEFA Champions League, it completes the picture of a football nation that has produced some of the finest football ever played.

For every edition played since 1903, somebody has lifted that silver cup and made history. The question for the next edition is simply: who will be next?

Explore more football history: La Liga Winners | Champions League Winners | Ballon d’Or Winners | Europa League Winners | Bundesliga Winners

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