
WIMBLEDON NEWS & NOTES
*Brits Cash-Glasspool were the 2025 champions at the All-England Club as the #5 seeds, capping off an almost perfect grass court swing at 17-1. They defeated unseeded pair Hijikata-Pel 6-2, 7-6 in the final as massive 1.23 (-434) favorites. Since the untimely demise of best of five in doubles at Wimbledon, that 2025 result marked the second time in three years that the final went down in straight sets.
*Given their current form, it seems unlikely that Cash-Glasspool will have much shot at the repeat in 2026. Still, they’ll start that quest to become the first repeat champs in London since Daniel Nestor and Nenad Zimonjic in 2008-2009. Mektic-Pavic were the closest to fulfilling the repeat feat since then, losing out in that colossal championship match in 2022 when they fell 7-6(2) in the fifth set.
*The Hijikata-Pel run to the final last year as an unseeded pair was one of the more remarkable runs we’ve seen here with that pair playing in their first tournament together. They were the THIRD alternate entry and barely knew each other’s names prior to the tournament. That said, it was the second straight season that an unseeded pair made the final with 2024 champs Heliovaara-Patten not holding a seed when they took the hardware. Those unseeded appearances in the final have been totally against the grain with the last unseeded finalist at Wimbledon prior to 2024 being Benneteau/Roger-Vasselin back in 2016.
*Unseeded pairs have still steadily infiltrated the quarterfinals in recent times. Last year, Hijikata-Pel were one of two unseeded pairs to make the quarters. There have been multiple unseeded teams in the “elite eight” at Wimbledon in eight of the last nine runs at the All-England Club. I’ll focus on the pairs who could be in the hunt for a quarterfinal spot this year out of the unseeded field below in the Unseeded Menaces section.
*Three setters scattered throughout the draw with 19 total out of the 62 completed matches. By percentages, the best rounds to hunt these down in 2025 were the round of 16, where four of eight matches went the distance, the quarterfinals where two of four went three sets and the semifinals that saw one of two go all the way. The total was up from just 15 three set matches in 2024. 2023 had the most three setters in the last three years since the end of best of five at Wimbledon. The quarterfinal round has been the consistent producer in that stretch with all three years seeing at least two of the four matches that round go the distance.
*Dog scores numbered 16 last year at Wimbledon. Half of those came in round one with the largest at 3.27 (+227) courtesy of Hijikata-Pel beating (14)Goransson-Verbeek. Five more dog wins came in round two. The largest hit of the tournament came in the semifinals when Hijikata-Pel outlasted (1)Arevalo-Pavic as 5.37 (+437) underdogs. 2023 had 15 dog wins, while 2024 saw 17 dogs score victories. There is no “formula” to finding these really, but do know that in the last six runs of Wimbledon, a top five seed has gone down in round one or two five of those six years with four of those seeing multiple top five seeds ousted in those rounds.
*So what’s the story on the men’s side? The #1 ranking. Heliovaara-Patten are there currently and have enjoyed a hugely successful season with five titles and seven finals in all. They have not claimed a Slam title in 2026 however, while the current #2 team, Granollers-Zeballos, are in London after winning the French Open for the second straight season. They have made the final here twice with the last trip coming in 2023. They are 370 points behind Heliovaara-Patten to start the tournament. Bolleli-Vavassori and Harrison-Skupski stay within striking distance with both a little more than 1200 points out of that top spot. Last year’s champs Cash-Glasspool could desperately use a big run as they sit outside the top eight at #10, but they continued to stumble this year going just 2-2 in grass prep. That’s a far cry from their dominant run through this swing last year.

Are there any unseeded duos ready to make it three straight years with an unseeded pair in the final? Let’s take a look at some who could have the best shot.
Pavlasek-Rikl
If you follow me, you know I love these guys. Their pairing has been a pleasant addition to the tour with the Czechs racking up 17 wins this year since first pairing in Bucharest in April. They had a solid showing in Paris, making the round of 16 and have gone 4-2 in this grass swing. They’ll likely have to go through Heliovaara-Patten to get anywhere, but this duo looks dangerous.
Hijikata-Polmans
Why not says Rinky Hijikata who has now played in two Grand Slam doubles finals, winning that amazing run with Jason Kubler in Australia back in 2023. He’s paired with fellow Aussie Marc Polmans with these two having won a Challenger event back in 2025 in one of just two tournaments they’ve played together. Polmans had his own magical Aussie run earlier this year with Kubler as they made the Australian Open final, losing to Harrison-Skupski. They have a tough route, but they could bid for a quarterfinal with a likely date against the top seeds to get to that point.
Frantzen-Haase
These guys play A LOT of tight matches. This year alone, they have seen 22 out of 40 matches going the distance. The problem has been getting consistent wins, but they did spring to life last year at the U.S. Open with a round one upset over Heliovaara-Patten that propelled them to a quarterfinal. They’re in a section with both Andreozzi-Guinard and Arribage-Olivetti as seeds. Both those pairs have had some big results on grass, but they’ve also yet to make their marks at Grand Slams. This is a pair that I think will be a fascinating watch if they can stay on the right side of those “slim margins” we talk about with doubles results.
Stevenson-Willis
If you want a true Cinderella story, the British wildcards could be it. If you follow me, you know I have talked up these two during the grass prep tournaments. They have taken sets off of Heliovaara-Patten each of the last two years and have two wins over Nys/Roger-Vasselin on grass, the same pair that made the quarterfinals last year. It’s a mountain to climb to make the deep run, but they’re usually highly competitive on grass and are going to be a scary site if they escape Behar-Salisbury in round one.
Griekspoor-van de Zandschulp
These two, better known for singles, are usually a tough out in doubles. They’re in the Cash-Glasspool section, so there could be an opportunity to do some things. They will open against Arends-Pel who beat them during their Hertogenbosch title run, but that could serve as motivation. An upset in round one and this pair could be on the radar as realistic dark horses to make a quarterfinal at least.
Paul-Seggerman
If you want to look at a dartboard shot, look at this Swiss/American combo that comes in off a clay court Challenger title in their second tournament together. They got their feet wet on grass in Stuttgart, a super tie break loss to Kyrgios-Bublik, so take that for what it’s worth. Still, these are two seasoned doubles players in their mid 20s who have Slam experience. Paul made the 3rd round in Paris this year, while Seggerman is in his 6th main draw at a Grand Slam, still seeking to go farther than round two.
ONE AND DONE WATCH

The last two years combined have seen seven seeds fall in round one, so there have been some upsets. A top ten seed has fallen in the opening round for the last 21 runs of Wimbledon. Yes, TWENTY-ONE. So chances are you’re going to see a relatively good seed go down early. Who are the likeliest culprits in 2026? Let’s look.
(4)Bolelli-Vavassori
Wimbledon has always been a slog for the Italians with this being their fourth go as they still seek to move past round two. They’ve only lost their opener once in the previous three trips, but there’s the penchant for playing tie breaks on grass that leaves them open to the opposition stealing sets if they can hold serve. It’s British wildcards Jones-Paris up in round one. They won the Birmingham Challenger on grass to start this swing, but come in with three straight, albeit tight losses in a row. They’ll have some support at home and I think this one could be more of a fight than most expect.
(6)Arevalo-Pavic
This year’s Queen’s Club champions come to London feeling like they can win the titles and there’s no doubt that the 2025 semifinalists could make a deep run. So why are they on the list you say? Kyrgios-Bublik in round one. Huh? Yes. I couldn’t believe they got a wildcard entry, but I suspect they’re in to sell tickets. At their best, they’re going to be a painfully tough pair to break and on grass that means they can win. Of course just as easily, they may never even take the court. Still, if they do, this may wind up being a triple tie break type of match where one or two key points decides it.
(11)Cabral-Miedler
This is not the 2025 version of this duo that made the Halle final and won a match here at Wimbledon. They’ve struggled when paired in 2026 to a 11-9 record with more than half those wins coming in the Australian swing. They’re on a four match losing skid coming in, including two on grass. First-time pair Hidalgo-Vocel provide the oppposition in round one. Hidalgo found some success on grass at the Challenger level last year with Trhac and it was surprising not to see them paired up here. Vocel is 30-16 this year, but a lot of that came in the first few months of the season. Still, if these two gel, Cabral-Miedler don’t appear unbeatable.
(13)Doumbia-Reboul
Kirkov-Stevens are the foes in the opening round and this match-up on paper looks more like a 50-50 call than anything. Kirkov-Stevens have a vast amount of experience together over the last two seasons, while Doumbia-Reboul have been a regular pairing since 2019. This is their first year with no grass prep since 2022 when they fell in round one in London. The caveat here is Kirkov-Stevens have only played grass once and that was a 7-6, 6-4 loss to Cash-Glasspool last year in round one. Do they know this surface well enough to win?
(14)Krajicek-Mektic
Nothing about Melo-Molteni across the net on grass would scream out upset here, but the seeds have been hovering around .500 all year. I thought grass would help them find more consistency, but they went 0-2 in the grass prep tournaments. Mektic actually had better success with Cabral as his partner to start the swing in Stuttgart. Melo-Molteni are 0-4 in their short time together this year, but at least found a competitive edge in their lone grass court match in losing to Frantzen-Haase 12-10 in a super tie break in Mallorca. Just a gut feeling here more than anything that this could wind up being close with the seeds not having found their rhythm this year.
(15)Arends-Pel
This year David Pel knows his partner and maybe that’s not for the best? I kid. I kid. These two did play well at home in Hertogenbosch in a title run and also showed well with a quarterfinal at last month’s French Open. They did lost in Mallorca in their only match outside of their native Netherlands this swing. It’s a Dutch delight in round one against countrymen Griekspoor-van de Zandschulp who I already shined up earlier in the preview. Arends-Pel got the best of them in the Hertogenbosch semis, but revenge could be a dish best served at a Grand Slam.
(16)Schnaitter-Wallner
The Germans are playing this grass swing for just the second time and are still trying to find their footing with losses in three of four heading into the tournament. They draw Hijikata-Polmans in round one. I already talked up the Aussies as an Unseeded Menace, so this is one on my radar at first glance. Odds makers seem to agree with the seeds actually installed as the slight underdogs in this one, so it would not be much of an upset at the end of the day if it does happen.
DRAW PREVIEW
Click HERE for the doubles draw
TOP HALF
First Quarter
Top seeds Heliovaara-Patten lead the way. Like last year, they come to Wimbledon with solid grass court prep after making the final at Queen’s Club. The 2024 champs lost that tough quarterfinal battle with Cash-Glasspool last year and will be keen to keep their top spot in the rankings and rack up another Slam title. There are some tricky matches on tap en route to just making a quarterfinal. They could see Halys-Herbert in round two, but the Frenchmen have really only found their best results at France-based tournaments. The round of 16 is where I suspect the top seeds will find their toughest test with the likes of Pavlasek-Rikl, Hijikata-Polmans or (16)Schaitter-Wallner looking the likeliest to be opposite of them in that spot.
Pavlasek-Rikl are intriguing as they’ve looked the part of a contender in most tournaments played. The Czechs made the semis in both Hertogenbosch and Mallorca on grass. That included a win over Schnaitter-Wallner and also one of the in-form grass court pairs in Arribage-Olivetti. I do look to the survivor of that opening match between the seeded Germans Schnaitter-Wallner and Hijikata-Polmans as a real player in this section too. If Pavlasek-Rikl advance, that’s going to be a banger in round two no matter who is there. Don’t sleep on any of the pairs coming through this section with regards to them challenging Heliovaara-Patten for that quarterfinal spot.
In the other half of this quarter, (8)Andreozzi-Guinard and (10)Arribage-Olivetti are the seeds. I’ll start with the ten seeds who come in having won Halle and Mallorca back-to-back. The question is going to be how they fare against the better quality they’ll see the longer they can stay in this draw. I do think they grab their first Wimbledon win against Luz-Matos in round one. The Brazilians just have not been the same pair we saw through the first few months of late. That should set up the ten seeds against Frantzen-Haase or Ho-Jebens. I like the experience of Frantzen-Haase in that one and that should set up an absolute war against Arribage-Olivetti. Arribage-Olivetti are 3-0 head to head in that one, but all three have come indoors and four of the six sets played went to tie breaks. It’ll be a tight one if we see it.
Andreozzi-Guinard look to have a better set up suited to an easier path to the round of 16. They flashed their danger on this surface in Eastbourne with a run to the finals that saw them beat Bhambri-Venus and Harrison-Skupski before losing a super tie break final to Nys/Roger-Vasselin (10-8). They’re proving to be all-surface threats and although there are some tests waiting them with Romboli-Smith looking particularly lively in this section, the seeds will be expect to make their may to the round of 16. Do watch for Romboli-Smith. Their record (3-7) doesn’t speak to their toughness with two of their three grass prep matches going the distance. I think they’re the proverbial fly-in-the-ointment type if Andreozzi-Guinard fail to get through this part of the draw.
Heliovaara-Patten are obvious favorites due to their success this season and here at the All-England Club in the past. I do think it’s a tenuous hold on that title of favorites though with the seeds in the bottom half of the quarter, Andreozzi-Guinard and Arribage-Olivetti, looking particularly threatening. You also have unseeded menaces hanging around with Pavlasek-Rikl and Hijikata-Polmans plus Frantzen-Haase are always a tough out. The top seeds may well get through unscatched, but I expect they are going to find themselves in a few battles along the way.
Second Quarter
This quarter sees (4)Bolelli-Vavassori and (5)Harrison-Skupski as the lead seeds. Wimbledon has long been an albatross for the 4th seeded Italians with a career mark of just 2-3 in three trips. That said, this might be the best early draw they’ve had in London. Jones-Paris, the British wildcards, could get a boost from the home crowd, but this is a step up in level for them. They did show well by winning the Nottingham Challenger on grass, but this will be the toughest pair they’ve faced in their careers. The match opposite this sees grizzled veterans Golubev-Nedovyesov battling youngsters De Jong-Royer. The vets have the experience, but they’ve never paired on grass togther. De Jong-Royer play their first match together in round one. That’s still a tough ask for two guys who don’t play a lot of doubles. If Bolelli-Vavassori fail to get to the round of 16, they have nobody to blame but themselves with this set up.
In the bottom portion of this top half, it’s (14)Krajicek-Mektic as the seeds. I talked about their struggles in 2026, but this is a pair that certainly has had plenty of success with OTHER partners on this surface. Can they get it together … together? Melo-Molteni is a pair that I believe they should beat nine times out of ten on this surface in this situation. The seeds may have also caught a break as one of the singles pairs I thought could be a challenge in this section may have to withdraw. That is Bonzi-Rindeknech. I put the Frenchmen on my Unseeded Menaces list because they’ve got the talent to be pests on this surface, but with Bonzi retiring in the 5th set of his singles match on Tuesday, it would seem they may withdraw. I am still looking at this half though and thinking that this certainly is the opportunity Bolelli-Vavassori have been waiting for at Wimbledon to make a run.
The other half sees Harrison-Skupski arrive in good form with back-to-back semifinal showings at Queen’s Club and Eastbourne. This is probably their best stretch of play since March. I think they’ll be fine in their opener, but round two looks intriguing with Johnson-Zielinski or Paul-Seggerman waiting. If they’re going to get got early, that’s the round I am looking at it happening. Johnson-Zielinski still haven’t quite clicked and locked in, but there’s something there if they can harness everything consistently for a week. The other side sees opportunity for 12th seeded Americans Cash-Tracy. They’ve had a mostly middling 2026, but have a path to perhaps squeezing into round three. Barrientos-Borges will be a test in round one even though they’ve never paired. Both have seen plenty of doubles success, so I am expecting that team to have some juice to it. Round two could be either the Gonzalezes who are just 1-3 or first timers Kokkinakis-Kovacevic. Kokky can go in doubles, it’s not just when he’s paired with Kyrgios, but I’m not sure what Kovacevic brings to the table. Either way, this looks like a golden opportunity for Cash-Tracy to find a decent result IF they escape that tough one in round one.
I think there’s a lot to like about the draws for the two top seeds in this quarter, but there’s also plenty of pitfalls. I still look at (14)Krajicek-Mektic as a sleeper, but I’m not sure they’ll be activated to make a difference. Bonzi-Rinderknech are an intriguing singles pairing, but that may not matter after Bonzi retired in singles on Tuesday. I still believe the Johnson-Zielinski/Paul-Seggerman survivor is going to be a threat in the Harrison-Skupski half.
TOP HALF FORECAST
You still go against Heliovaara-Patten at your own peril. Out of eleven tournaments in 2026, only one has fallen short of a quarterfinal and they’ve racked up seven finals trips. They have however lost their last two finals, but that’s a story for the final if they get there. Arribage-Olivetti are the ones I am keen to see. I have often talked them up, but keep pointing out that their best results have usually come at 250s or more muted 500-level fields like Halle this year. Can they step up finally on the big stage? The surface obviously suits them, so this is their time to shine or shrink back to being Kings of the Lesser draws. The other seed that could feasibly sneak into the business end of this tournament is (8)Andreozzi-Guinard. They have some similar questions to Arribage-Olivetti though as this will mark just their second Grand Slam event together and they are still searching for win number one. I think this half is a lot more interesting than some may think.
QUARTERFINAL PIX
(1)Heliovaara-Patten vs (8)Andreozzi-Guinard
(14)Krajicek-Mektic vs Johnson-Zielinski
SEMIFINAL PIX
(1)Heliovaara-Patten vs (14)Krajicek-Mektic
BOTTOM HALF
Third Quarter
The third quarter houses defending champions (3)Cash-Glasspool who come to London this year in a much different spot than 2025. Last year, they were the IT team on grass. This year? They’ve had trouble winning consistently on all surfaces. If they can’t get past Navone-Vallejo in round one, this season could spiral wildly out of control. In fact, the draw is kind enough to where they have no excuses not to get through to the round of 16. That’s where I can see the challenges beginning.
Arends-Pel are the 15th seeds in this half and they have shown they can win on grass after taking the titles in Hertogenbosch. They’ve also proven themselves worthy on the big stage after making the quarterfinals at the French Open, including a win over Arevalo-Pavic. They get a repeat against singles pair Griekspoor-BVDZ in their opener after beating them during that Hertogenbosch run. You can make the case that this time the result will be the other way around with very slim margins. The match opposite in round one should be a good one with Goransson-King battling Nouza-Oberleitner, another French Open quarterfinal pair. They went 0-2 in grass prep, but three of the four sets went to tie breaks. Expect some of the same. Goransson-King went 4-3 in their Wimbledon prep with five of those going the distance, including their Eastbourne finals loss to Arribage-Olivetti.
Checking out the top half of the quarter, (6)Arevalo-Pavic lead the way as they seek to follow up on their Queen’s Club title run. They’ve made the quarters and semis back-to-back at Wimbledon with both runs ending in a third set tie break. We could see something like that if Kyrgios and Bublik are serving to their full capabilities in round one. The odd couple have played all three of their career matches together on grass at 2-1. This is a hard-to-call opener because it could be a serve fest. This is the match that could serve, pun intended, as the catalyst to another big run for the sixth seeds should they survive. The winner will battle either British wildcards Stevenson-Willis or Behar-Salisbury. Salisbury was forced to switch it up when Rajeev Ram got injured in Eastbourne. This is a tough opener with Stevenson-Willis having plenty of chemistry and success on grass. Either way, the winner will provide another test for a pair like Arevalo-Pavic.
The other portion of this half sees the surging Nys/Roger-Vasselin arrive with momentum after taking the Eastbourne titles. It was their first ATP-level title of 2026 and couldn’t have come at a better time. The #9 seeds proved tough here a year ago in making the quarterfinals. Could they get the revenge shot at Arevalo-Pavic who knocked them out last year? If they carry their form over, it’s a possibility as they have Evans-Searle to start and then maybe Bhambri-Venus who can be tough at times. Those are winnable matches, but Nys/Roger-Vasselin haven’t exactly been a model of consistency this year. I still like their path more than Arevalo-Pavic who look to have a tough couple of rounds waiting just to move into another tough match-up potentially in round three.
If not now, when for Cash-Glasspool? The clock is ticking on their season if they want to make a move to get into contention for the Tour Finals. This set up gives them a great shot to get to the quarterfinals, but that opening loss in Eastbourne to Cerundolo-Ugo Carabelli could well be a huge red flag against their chances this tournament. Given their relatively mediocre form, I would not be surprised to see someone else make the quarters in this spot. Arends-Pel certainly have a chance and I really do think the survivor from the Goransson-King/Nouza-Oberleitner match will have a say. The other spot may come down to Arevalo-Pavic or Nys/Roger-Vasselin. Arevalo-Pavic are 4-1 in the head to head, including a win in Rome this year. This looks like fun quarter.
Fourth Quarter
(2)Granollers-Zeballos are the highest seeds in this quarter and you have to really like their chance to make a fifth straight Wimbledon semifinal. The other seeds in this quarter don’t inspire a ton of confidence heading into the event with Krawietz-Puetz, Cabral-Miedler and Doumbia-Reboul all coming to London with zero wins on grass this swing. I’ll touch on the 7th seeded Germans more in a second, but let’s focus on (13)Doumbia-Reboul first who are the first in the path of Granollers-Zeballos. The 13th seeds have not played together since the French Open and have only passed the second round once in four career trips here. Kirkov-Stevens will pose a risk right away in round one and survival won’t mean it gets easier.
Hanfmann-Struff could be waiting in round two with the Germans going 3-1 in grass prep with titles in Stuttgart. I would be mostly surprised if Doumbia-Reboul face Granollers-Zeballos in round three. I’m not penciling in Granollers-Zeballos as they do face Galloway-Peers first, a pair that made the semis in Halle. They would also see one of two veteran pairs in Balaji-Demoliner or Gille-Verbeek in round two. Both have been competitive on grass. The now three-time Grand Slam champs do have a habit of taking care of business early, so we will see if that holds for Granollers-Zeballos with this set up.
To the top half of the quarter where it’s Krawietz-Puetz looking to break out after middling results in the year’s first two Slams. Normally they arrive here with good results from the German grass prep tournaments, but that’s not the case with a loss in their lone match this year in Halle. Round one MAY have gotten better for them after Bergs-Blockx withdraw later and were replaced by Escobar-Stalder. Those are two vets, but vets who have not played. Then again, that sounds like Hijikata-Pel, right? Round two looks even better and the draw really opens up nicely with (11)Cabral-Miedler the seeds opposite of them. The 11 seeds have lost four straight, including both their grass court prep matches. Keep an eye on Hidalgo-Vocel as a mild sleeper to make a mini-run perhaps in that section.
The problem for Krawietz-Puetz is that even if they do get it rolling here and I honestly think a quarterfinal is fairly attainable, they’re 0-4 against Granollers-Zeballos. That includes straight sets loses to them at Wimbledon in 2023 and 2024. That’s why I expect if we see the usual focus from the two seeds in this quarter, they’ll be headed to that fifth straight Wimbledon semifinal. Should somebody pick them off early though, it could be game on for the Germans Krawietz-Puetz.
BOTTOM HALF FORECAST
Granollers-Zeballos have earned the right to be the firm favorites in this half given Cash-Glasspool’s fall in 2026. That said, the Brits did ease past them 6-3, 6-4 in the semifinals here a year ago. If they find their best, the Brits certainly can do it again. Arevalo-Pavic you say? 1-4 against Granollers-Zeballos, but that one win was at a Slam in the 2024 French Open semifinals. Granollers-Zeballos are also 3-0 against Nys/Roger-Vasselin, so this really does set up nicely for them outside of Cash-Glasspool getting their shiz together and finding that Grass Gods level again. Could it happen? Sure. But it seems a little far fetched given their 2026 season.
QUARTERFINAL PIX
(9)Nys/Roger-Vasselin vs Goransson-King
(7)Krawietz-Puetz vs (2)Granollers-Zeballos
SEMIFINAL PIX
(9)Nys/Roger-Vasselin vs (2)Granollers-Zeballos

Wimbledon has not failed lately to have a signature doubles match or three on the men’s side albeit nothing rivals how great this tournament was when doubles was still best of five. Still, last year had two quarterfinals decided in third set tie breaks and a semifinal. 2024 had the classic final between Heliovaara-Patten and Ebden-Purcell that featured three tie break sets. Wimbledon has become a breeding ground for first-time grass Grand Slam success over the years. The Bryans back in 2013 were the last pairing to win here with a previous championship at the All-England Club under their belts. Chances are we’re going to see a pair that has never won here before, so sorry for the Heliovaara-Patten fans out there if that holds true. Granollers-Zeballos are my top choice. Am I doomed for failure again liking Krajicek-Mektic as a seeded sleeper? Probably, but they’ve been tough outs at both Slams this year. They just happen to have come up on the wrong side of tie breaks where luck can change with one net cord. My other seeded sleeper is that team I keep bringing up, Andreozzi-Guinard. This is probably not their time on grass, but they’re another pair that is too good to be held down from making a big run at some point at one of these events.

Granollers-Zeballos
Krajicek-Mektic
Andreozzi-Guinard
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