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Dejan Bodiroga retires!
#1
From http://www.wikipedia.org

Dejan Bodiroga (Serbian: Дејан Бодирога, born March 2, 1973 in Zrenjanin) is a retired Serbian basketball player. Many basketball observers consider him the best player never to play for a National Basketball Association team.

He is famous for his leadership, basketball IQ and all-around game. One of the smartest, if not the quickest players to come along in decades, Dejan dominated European courts and won everything there is to be won, both on club and national team levels.

Early Early Days in Zrenjanin

Dejan Bodiroga first started playing structured basketball at the age of 13. He enrolled in Zrenjanin's Masinac (Servo Mihalj) basketball section under Rade Prvulov's supervision. One growth spurt later he sprung up to 2.05m and was at 15 quickly incorporated into Masinac Zrenjanin first team squad coached by Miodrag Sija Nikolic, former OKK Beograd and Yugoslav national team player in the 1960s.

Early Days in Zadar

Dejan's professional career began in earnest when, at only 17, he got noticed by the former Yugoslav great Kresimir Cosic who persuaded Bodiroga's family to allow their son to move away to Zadar. This was not the usual route for basketball talents in Serbia, most of whom at this stage of their development fancy a closer move to one of the big two clubs from the capital city - Partizan or Red Star. Whether it was the case of Cosic's reputation prevailing or Belgrade blindness to the huge talent sitting in their back yard, it didn't matter much - Dejan was on his way to Zadar.

Once there he trained twice a day under KK Zadar's youth team coach Josip Pino Grdovic. The training regiment consisted of a morning 3-hour practice (7am - 10am) and a 4-hour evening one (8pm - Midnight). Soon, Zadar's head coach Slavko Trninic was giving Dejan occasional first team minutes.

Bodiroga's stay on the Dalmatian coast came to a premature end since the conflict that pitted Croats and Serbs against each other soon inflamed. Country was breaking up, war was raging and basketball quickly became an afterthought. Being a player from Serbia in a Croatian city was becoming increasingly uncomfortable for Dejan, so his mentor Cosic (coaching AEK at the time) began to work on the 'escape plan' that would be satisfasctory to both sides.

Trials were arranged with AEK and Olympiakos. Both clubs offered Dejan a contract on condition that he take naturalized Greek citizenship. Bodiroga refused and hopped northward to Trieste, Italy where an emerging team coached by Bogdan Tanjevic and financially backed by Stefanel clothing empire was moving up the ranks.

Italy

It was in Trieste that Bodiroga first captured the attention of wider basketball public. Shortly after his arrival in the summer of 1992 he made immediate impact averaging 21.3 points per game over 30 league matches and leading his team to playoffs where they were quickly disposed of in first round by the more experienced Pallacanestro Cant? (S. Clear).

He had another stellar season for Pallacanestro Trieste in 1993/94 - this time leading his team to a deeper playoff run. They overcame the first hurdle in Bologna's Fortitudo (Filodoro) to make the semi-final where Victoria Libertas (Scavolini) from Pesaro were waiting. The series was never a contest as Carlton Myers put on a show for a 0-3 sweep. Trieste also began flexing its muscle in Europe - reaching Korac Cup final where they surrendered to PAOK Thessaloniki starring Zoran Savic, Walter Berry and Bane Prelevic. With this the Trieste chapter of Dejan's career came to an abrupt and unexpected end. During summer the team lost Stefanel's backing. The clothing giant threw its money into Olimpia Milano - all of which sparked an exodus of Trieste players and coaches to Lombardy.

Coach Tanjević, Bodiroga and pretty much every other core Trieste player (Gregor Fucka, Alessandro De Pol, Ferdinando Gentile) moved to Olimpia, which coupled with the sponsorship of Stefanel made it appear as though the entire club relocated to a new city the way NBA franchises do.

The 1994/95 season in new surroundings went as planned for Dejan. He was scoring; he contributed with rebounds and assists. Slowly but surely he was growing into the all-round role he would soon become famous for. In European competition, Olimpia reached Korac Cup final, a familiar sight for most of these players. However they couldn't pull the trigger and lost out to ALBA Berlin coached by Svetislav Pe?ić, who would come to play a big role later in Dejan's career. On the home front team made it to playoff semi-final but lost 3-2 to eventual champions - Virtus (Buckler) Bologna, led by another Serbian superstar Predrag Danilović. Two Serbs turned the series into a personal duel with Danilović's experience prevailing in the end.

Summer of 1995 was an important milestone.

Bodiroga became part of the great Yugoslavia squad that was making its comeback after years of international exile. Team was loaded with stars like Aleksandar Djordjevic, Vlade Divac, Zarko Paspalj, Predrag Danilovic, and Zoran Savic and of course Dejan, all hungry to prove to Europe that Yugoslavia was still the continent's top basketball nation. Together they won European gold in one of the most spectacular finals in Eurobasket history against a Lithuania team that featured stars and legends like Arvydas Sabonis, ?arūnas Marčiulionis and Rimas Kurtinaitis.

Also that summer Bodiroga was drafted by the Sacramento Kings in the second round (overall #51). One year later, the Kings selected his younger countryman Peja Stojakovic. However, unlike Stojaković, Bodiroga declined the offer to play in the NBA, choosing instead to remain in Europe.

In the following 1995/96 season Olimpia continued its quest for trophies and Bodiroga & friends finally obliged. Italian Cup trophy was bagged in quick fashion. Then came the dreaded Korac Cup; again they made the final and again the trophy was taken from under their nose - this time by Efes Pilsen Istanbul. This loss made Olimpia all the more hungry for Scudetto and the coming playoff run. Bodiroga led the way with 23.3 points per game in 32 regular season matches. Then came the playoffs. They first returned the favour to Virtus (Buckler), beating them 3-1 in playoffs semi-final (although the task had somewhat gotten easier since Danilovic moved to NBA the previous summer) and then with Bodiroga taking charge triumphed over powerhouse Fortitudo (Teamsystem) Bologna led by Aleksandar Djordjevic, Carlton Myers and Alessandro Frosini.

By now an established international, Bodiroga took his place in the Yugoslav national team for the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta and brought home a silver medal. The American Dream Team featuring Shaq, Charles Barkley, Scottie Pippen, Hakeem, David Robinson still wasn't ripe for picking but Yugoslav squad with Paspalj, Divac, Djordjevic, Bodiroga, Danilovic and friends gave them a game for about 30 minutes before running out of steam.

Spain

There were two big reasons why Bodiroga decided to join Real Madrid in the summer of 1996: offer of $1 million per season and madridista coach Zeljko Obradovic whom Dejan got to know very well through national team. The squad also featured veteran Joe Arlauckas as well as established internationals Alberto Herreros and Mikhail Mikhailov. They easily made the playoffs, progressing all the way to the final. The opponent was a Barcelona team boasting Aleksandar Djordjevic, Jerrod Mustaf, Artūras Karni?ovas. An evenly matched series ensued, eventually going the distance. Barcelona prevailed 3-2, winning the deciding 5th game 82-69 on Real's home court. It was a bitter pill to swallow for Bodiroga and Real who had to find consolation in the European Cup trophy which was their only piece of silverware in 1996/97 season.

On the national team front, Yugoslavia ploughed over the competition with considerable ease en route another Euro gold in 1997, with Bodiroga again playing an integral role. More eventful than semi-final and final games which were entirely dominated by Yugoslavs was the round robin clash vs. Croatia. It was the first meeting between two nations since the breakup of old Yugoslavia. The game carried all kinds of political tension and was a jittery, low-scoring affair until Djordjevic won it for Yugoslavia with a dramatic 3-point buzzer beater.

Next Real season started without coach Obradovic who moved on to Pallacanestro Treviso (Benetton) and it offered no improvement over previous one. Playoff run ended a round earlier at the hands of Basquet Manresa (TDK) which signaled the end of Madrid period for Bodiroga. Although he consistently put up strong numbers and delivered key points, the team never found proper chemistry and winning rhythm. The only personal consolation was that he earned league MVP honours for the 1997/98 season.

That summer's national team duty was markedly happier as it brought another World championship title for Yugoslavia and a first one for Bodiroga. Now 25, Bodiroga was, together with Djordjevic and Rebraca one of the team leaders in every sense. And he needed to be since Danilovic didn't even make it to Athens '98 due to injury while Djordjevic played reduced minutes because of knee problems.

Greece

Same summer of 1998 also saw Bodiroga move to Greek powerhouse Panathinaikos where club chairman Pavlos Giannakopoulos began assembling a team to conquer Europe. The greens finally won the national title that June, after 14-year wait, so sights were set on Euroleague for the coming 1998/99 campaign. Bodiroga was to be the final piece of the jigsaw that already included Dino Rađa, Fragiskos Alvertis and coach Slobodan Subotic. Unfortunatelly, everything didn't go according to master plan as Panathinaikos won the national league easily but fell short in Euroleague.

It was more than club president was willing to take so out went Radja and coach Subotic and in came coach Zeljko Obradovic who brought along Zeljko Rebraca, his center in Treviso (Benetton). In fact, $15 million was poured into the team for the coming season. It proved to be enough as PAO captured both the 1999/2000 national league and Eurolegue trophies - the latter coming in a final versus Maccabi Tel Aviv.

This was the beginning of Bodiroga's undisputed reign atop Europe. At 27 he was reaching the pinnacle of his career and was simply dominating. What made it all the more strange is that in an era of quick, physical players he was almost a throwback to the older times. He wasn't terribly fast nor muscular yet he had an uncanny feel and knowledge of the game. Although always strong, his statistics were never jawdroping, but his impact on the game could never be expressed through mere numbers. What made him truly outstanding was his ability to break games and make key shots. When match is on the line, ball would invariably go into Bodiroga's hands.

By this time he also became the undisputed leader in the national team, too. This was most evident in 2001's European Championship in Turkey and 2002 World Championship in Indianapolis both of which Yugoslavia won. The ball was always in his hands when important games were being decided like the now famous Indianapolis final. Yugoslavia couldn't find the rhythm all night and was down by 8 points to Argentina with little more than 2 minutes to go. After finally beating the Dream Team in quarterfinals, Yugoslavs were seeing their dream of back to back Worlds wins slowly fly away. However, Bodiroga had other ideas: on a night when nothing seemed to click in Yugoslav offensive setup due to excellent Argentine positional defence, he began to play 1 on 5 with Argentina, singlehandedly making up the difference and sending the game into overtime. It was an injection of confidence and energy Yugoslavs were looking for all night - the outcome of the overtime period was never in doubt.

Bodiroga literally wrested the trophy from Argentine hands.

Spain again

In the summer of 2002, Bodiroga came back to the Spanish league, with a FC Barcelona managed by Svetislav Pesic and with players like ?arūnas Jasikevičius, Gregor Fucka and Juan Carlos Navarro. He won the Euroleague with it (one and only time Barcelona has made it so far), and two times the Spanish league. He is one of few players who have won the Euroleague with clubs from three different countries and also who have won the national leagues of Italy, Greece and Spain.

Italy again

In the summer of 2005, Bodiroga came back to Italian league, this time with Virtus Roma re-joining coach Svetislav Pe?ić who, no doubt had a lot to do with Bodiroga's arrival. The team played in ULEB Cup in addition to domestic league and Cup.

After getting eliminated from ULEB Cup at the round of 16 stage, and losing the Cup final narrowly (83-85) to Carpisa Napoli in February 2006, Virtus concentrated on domestic league and finished the season in 6th place with a 22-12 record. Bodiroga finished with 15.7 points-per-game regular season average.

The playoff first round pitted them against favourites Mens Sana Siena. After dropping the first game, the now customary Bodiroga clutch time takeover saw Virtus win three straight games with Bodiroga scoring 24, 17, and 24 points, respectively (all three team highs). In the end of the following season howewer, Roma again met Siena but this time lost after 4 games. After the fourth and final game Bodiroga announced his retirement from professional basketball, on 8 June 2007.

Titles

Club level

1995/96 Italian League (Lega Basket) Champion with Olimpia (Stefanel) Milano.

1995/96 Italian Cup (Coppa Italia) Winner with Olimpia (Stefanel) Milano.

1996/97 European Cup Winner with Real Madrid.

1998/99 Greek League (A1 Ethniki) Champion with Panathinaikos.

1999/00 Greek League (A1 Ethniki) Champion with Panathinaikos.

1999/00 Euroleague Champion with Panathinaikos.

2000/01 Greek League (A1 Ethniki) Champion with Panathinaikos.

2001/02 Euroleague Champion with Panathinaikos.

2002/03 Spanish League (ACCool Champion with FC Barcelona.

2002/03 Euroleague Champion with FC Barcelona.

2002/03 Spanish Cup (Copa del Rey) Winner with FC Barcelona.

2003/04 Spanish League (ACCool Champion with FC Barcelona.

Yugoslavia/Serbia-Montenegro National Team

1995 Eurobasket Champion

1997 Eurobasket Champion

1998 FIBA World Championship Champion

2001 Eurobasket Champion

2002 FIBA World Championship Champion

Additionally, Bodiroga has an Olympic silver medal from the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia, and a bronze medal for a 3rd place finish at 1999 Eurobasket.

Individual Honours & Awards

Spanish League MVP: 1997/98

World Championship MVP: 1998

Yugoslav Athlete of the Year: 1998

2-time Greek League MVP: 1998/99 and 1999/00

Euroleage Top 16 stage MVP: 2001/02

World Championship Final MVP: 2002

2-time Euroleague Final Four MVP: 2002 and 2003

3-time All-Euroleague 1st Team choice: 2001/02, 2002/03 and 2003/04

Spanish Cup (Copa del Rey) MVP: 2003

Spanish League Finals MVP: 2004

His career:

1989/90 Proleter Zrenjanin

1990/91 KK Zadar

1991/92 KK Zadar

1992/93 Pallacanestro Trieste (Stefanel)

1993/94 Pallacanestro Trieste (Stefanel)

1994/95 Olimpia (Stefanel) Milan

1995/96 Olimpia (Stefanel) Milan

1996/97 Real Madrid

1997/98 Real Madrid

1998/99 Panathinaikos

1999/00 Panathinaikos

2000/01 Panathinaikos

2001/02 Panathinaikos

2002/03 FC Barcelona

2003/04 FC Barcelona

2004/05 FC Barcelona

2005/06 Virtus (Lottomatica) Rome

2006/07 Virtus (Lottomatica) Rome
Respect and thanks for everything:

Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.
[Image: vspa.jpg]

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#2
I feel lucky i had one last chance to watch him play live.



Sex, droga i Bodiroga.



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[Image: dejan1.jpg]
Respect and thanks for everything:

Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.
[Image: vspa.jpg]

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#3
One of a very few that totally deserve respect from rival fans. It is said that he will work as an assistant or a youth team coach though (like David Rivers).
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#4
No, he said he will not coach as he thought about it and it is not something he wants anymore, although he was thinking of it.

He will become something like an agent or something if i understood correctly. Indeed, one of the last ones. Only two others. Tomasevic and Rebraca.

Did you know what he and Drazen Petrovic were cousins?
Respect and thanks for everything:

Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.
[Image: vspa.jpg]

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#5
Yup, read that somewhere some days ago. Another great thing is he stopped in the right time and never went to terrible clubs just to earn some more money!
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#6
He could play for a top Euroleague club for one more year, at last.

But obviously, money is not everything for him. I wish he would play one more last time in Eurobasket in Spain. It was a kind of sudden and we didn't have the time to get used to it.
Respect and thanks for everything:

Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.
[Image: vspa.jpg]

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#7
Bodiroga Calls It A Career

11.06.2007

By Cindy Garcia-Bennett, PA Sport

Serbian great Dejan Bodiroga has confirmed his retirement from basketball.

A World Champion with Yugoslavia in 1998 and 2002, the 34-year-old Bodiroga made the announcement in Rome at noon on Monday.

"It has been a difficult choice but I have thought a lot about it," Bodiroga said.

"I am calm and proud of what I have achieved in my career."

Bodiroga played his final game with Lottomatica Roma last Thursday in the Italian Lega A playoffs against Montepaschi Siena.

The Romans lost that game, 70-49, crashing out of the playoffs in a 3-1 series defeat.

Bodiroga will remain involved in the game, he said, but not on the sidelines.

"I will be an executive either in Belgrade or in Rome but I will not be a coach," he said.

Bodiroga began his career in the former Yugoslavia with KK Zadar in 1991 and moved to Italy for the 1992-93 campaign.

He spent two years at Olimpia Milano and after the 1994-95 campaign was selected 51st overall in the NBA Draft by the Sacramento Kings.

Many of his compatriots like Vlade Divac, Sasha Djordjevic and Peja Stojakovic decided to play in the NBA with the now-retired Divac and currently active Stojakovic establishing long and successful careers in the United States.

Bodiroga elected to remain in Europe, however, and remained one of the continent's biggest stars while becoming the face of the all-conquering Yugoslavian National Team.

Bodiroga signed a two-year deal with Real Madrid ahead of the 1996-97 season.

After leading Yugoslavia to gold at the 1998 FIBA World Championship in Greece and being named Most Valuable Player of the event, he began a spell at Panathinaikos, winning the Euroleague with the Greek giants in 2000 and 2002.

In 2001, Yugoslavia and Bodiroga won the European title in Turkey and at the 2002 FIBA World Championship in Indianapolis, he was an all-tournament selection as his team defended its gold medal with an overtime triumph against Argentina in the final.

The following season, Bodiroga and his National Team coach, Svetislav Pesic, moved to Barcelona.

They immediately won a Copa del Rey, Euroleague and ACB treble with the Catalan outfit, and just as he had been the year before with Panathinaikos, Bodiroga was named MVP of the Euroleague Final Four with Barca.

That would end up being the peak of his career.

Bodiroga and Yugoslavia finished sixth at EuroBasket 2003.

He did win a second straight Spanish title with Barcelona in 2004, but afterward captured no more trophies.

Bodiroga and his country, who by now was playing as Serbia & Montenegro, failed to make an impact at the 2004 Olympics and at EuroBasket 2005, where they suffered huge embarrassment on home soil by losing to France in the elimination round.

Bodiroga joined up with Pesic again at Lottomatica Roma in 2005 and helped the Italian team qualify for the 2006-07 Euroleague.

This year, he again led Roma, this time under coach Jasmin Repesa, to a fourth-place finish in the Lega A regular season and to qualification for next season's Euroleague.

Bodiroga will always be remembered as one of his country's finest players, and a great in Europe.

But he will never know how he might have fared in the NBA.

"It has been a difficult choice, but I have thought a lot about it. I have no regrets," he said.
Respect and thanks for everything:

Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.
[Image: vspa.jpg]

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#8
One of the top European players of all time no doubt. Agreat career. Truly a legend. It would be nice if he would have ended his career with a title this season. I wouldn't write down the possibility of him being a coach even if he says so. Maybe some top EL team will need a coach in a few years and would offer him good conditions like that happened with Djordjevic when Armani Jeans signed him in the middle of the season.
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#9
We love you Dejan! <3 Thanks for everything!
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#10
[Image: 58f38790069547e7996f826fd9.jpg]
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#11
Of one the greats ever, no doubts. His retirement surprised me, I think he would still have been able to play a couple of seasons more.
Die Liebe wird eine Krankheit, wenn man sie als eine Heilung sieht.
: BASKET-SPOT : - Global Basketball
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#12
I was taken aback when I heard he's retiring. I thought he'd come to play in Athens next year, cause it's the 100 years after PANATHINAIKOS Athens was born
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#13
Fresh news for you all, Dejan Bodiroga has probably accepted Roma's offer to be their new General Manager!

He had another offer from Partizan to become the General Manager there but he didn't want to move from Rome.

Announcements are expected in the following days.
Respect and thanks for everything:

Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.
[Image: vspa.jpg]

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#14
That's good news, a guy like him should keep connected to basketball, much to gain from him.
Die Liebe wird eine Krankheit, wenn man sie als eine Heilung sieht.
: BASKET-SPOT : - Global Basketball
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#15
Quote:Fresh news for you all, Dejan Bodiroga has probably accepted Roma's offer to be their new General Manager!

He had another offer from Partizan to become the General Manager there but he didn't want to move from Rome.

Announcements are expected in the following days.

Really good news, as rikhardur said he should keep connected to basketbaal
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#16
what a player he was! truly a legend. I hate him but I always enjoyed his play Rolleyes His playing style was su unique, he was very smart player and excellent shooter :ball: Thup
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#17
i remember bodiroga all life ,great euro style player....
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#18
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1JfhOQNDkmw

sex droga bodiroga Laugh
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#19
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQEzmPKd
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