Senior Bowl week is here. We’re in Day 2 of the practices, with plenty more clips and reports to come the remainder of this week. The Shrine Bowl was last week, and in a month, the NFL will descend on Indianapolis for the Combine. It’s fair to say draft season is starting to heat up, and with that, I’ve been doing final film evaluations and updating my position rankings for the 2025 NFL Draft.
Today brings the much-anticipated quarterback rankings, and while I’ve talked up the strength of this draft class in general, this group is not the reason why. It’s well-known at this point that we have a weaker quarterback class, although there are still two or three candidates to go in the first round. Most of the top 10 are Day 3 names, with maybe a couple who will go on Day 2. It’s a rough outlook for quarterback-needy teams, but that just makes the demand that much higher.
If you want to see how these rankings compare to how I ranked this class over the summer, check out the link below. Additionally, my other updated rankings can be found below as well. As always, stay tuned for more 2025 draft content, as I’ll be looking to update all my position rankings over the next few weeks.
Updated Position Rankings:
- Running Backs
- Wide Receivers
- Tight Ends
- Offensive Tackles
- Edge Rushers
- Defensive Tackles
- Cornerbacks
- Safeties
1: Shedeur Sanders, Colorado
A 6-2, 215-pound senior from Dallas, Sanders is undoubtedly the biggest name in this quarterback class. Out of high school, he committed to play for his dad, Deion Sanders, and Jackson State. He totaled 6,963 passing yards and 70 touchdowns in two seasons at the FCS level, following his father to Colorado when he the head coaching job there. As a junior, Sanders threw for 3,230 yards and 27 touchdowns to just three interceptions. He upped his game as a senior, earning consensus first-team All-Big 12 honors behind 4,134 passing yards and 37 touchdowns, this time with 10 interceptions in a stellar season.
The poise and feel Sanders has in his game is exceptional. He processes the game at an extremely high level, making complex reads and taking on a lot of pre-snap responsibility for a college quarterback. It’s no surprise that he’s a coach’s son, and you can tell Sanders grew up around the game. Sanders combines the mental side of the game with the physical — his release is stable and consistent, and he maintains his throwing platform even under immense pressure. This leads to his stellar accuracy, with a 74-percent completion rate as a senior. It’s really hard to rattle him, and he’ll keep making plays no matter the situation around him.
When Sanders wants to make a throw, he makes it. His throwing mechanics are buttery smooth and lightning fast, rifling the ball into tight windows down the field. He throws his receivers open regularly, playing with elite timing and anticipation to keep the offense humming. Again, Sanders’ mental processing is a step above everyone else, and he plays every snap with an advantage as a result. He possesses true escapability, with the necessary athleticism to keep plays alive and escape sacks to make big plays, something he does routinely.
Sanders takes a lot of sacks. As in, he was sacked 40 times just in his senior season. It’s a problem, as those kinds of sack numbers will get you benched in the NFL. It’s crippling to an offense. At Colorado, Sanders was given a lot of freedom to improvise when the play broke down, and he simply refused to let a play die. In the NFL, that will need to be coached out of him. He doesn’t have the elite arm talent or athleticism to always make the plays he did in college at the next level.
While he’s not quite the elite-level of prospect at the top of the draft we’ve enjoyed in recent years, Sanders is still a great one. I like him as a first-round pick, and he probably goes top five in this class just due to demand. He plays and carries himself like a franchise quarterback, and that swagger will endear him to some teams. He’s already been asked not to practice or throw during the pre-draft cycle by a few teams at the top of the draft, and that should tell you all you need to know about where he’s going to be taken.
2: Cam Ward, Miami
Ward started his career at Incarnate Word, rising from an unheralded recruit from Texas into a Heisman finalist in his last collegiate season. After spending two years at Incarnate Word, he transferred to Washington State, lighting up the Pac-12 as one of college football’s most exciting players. As a senior in 2023, Ward generated a fair amount of draft buzz but ultimately chose to use his final year of eligibility with the Hurricanes. It proved to be a good choice, as he racked up 4,313 passing yards, 39 touchdowns to seven interceptions, 204 rushing yards and another four touchdowns, earning first-team All-ACC and rising from a mid-round pick to a likely top-10 selection.
The combination of accuracy and velocity on Ward’s throws is breathtaking. He zips passes into tight coverage without hesitation, using a lightning-quick throwing motion and firm base to maintain his accuracy at all levels of the field. He can layer throws over linebackers and displays nice touch on his passes, even at deeper levels of the field. The timing and anticipation on his passes, particularly over the middle of the field, is NFL-caliber. He can run an NFL offense from day one, hitting routes between the hashes and gashing defenses for chunk plays repeatedly.
Creation ability is a plus-plus with Ward. It’s his best trait and what makes him such an alluring prospect. He keeps his eyes downfield when scrambling, keeping his solid mechanics when on the run or in less-than-optimal positions. It’s not that he can’t run, as he does scramble for first downs, but he’s not scrambling just to run. He’s primarily a passer, and he can spot opportunities in crazy locations and fit the ball into windows no one expects, often catching the defense by surprise.
Ward believes in himself more than anything, and you love that mindset. It can also lead to some terrible mistakes. He’ll attempt passes he probably shouldn’t, leading to avoidable turnovers. While he cut down on his insanity in 2024, you still hold your breath as Ward improvises, as it can be a rollercoaster. He may struggle with turnovers early in his pro career as he adjusts to the speed of NFL defenses and has to relearn what he can get away with.
We also need to talk about his bowl game performance. He played in the first half against Iowa State in the Pop-Tarts Bowl, setting several college football records, and sat out in the second half. Iowa State ended up winning that game, 42-41, in a hotly contested matchup and exciting finish. Ward removing himself from the game after getting his personal records won’t sit well with a lot of locker rooms — Colts QB Anthony Richardson taking himself out of a game for a single snap caused a massive uproar this season, to the point where some former players were calling for his job. That Ward chose to play for his individual numbers and abandon his team at halftime is something NFL teams will have to work through and thoroughly vet before drafting him, to be confident he can be the face of the franchise and leader of the team.
While his playmaking and laser arm will be major boons in the NFL, there are questions about his maturity and gunslinger mentality. On-field production would indicate Ward is the best prospect in this class, but the drawbacks on his profile may lead some to prefer Sanders instead. It’s a two-man race at the top of this quarterback class, but both are likely to be top-five picks, given the number of quarterback-needy teams picking highly this year.
3: Jalen Milroe, Alabama
A 6-2, 225-pound junior from Texas, Milroe might be the most controversial player in this class. After redshirting, he spent a year as current Panthers QB Bryce Young’s backup in Tuscaloosa before winning the starting job out of camp in 2023. That season was a rocky road for Milroe, with his inconsistent play finding him benched for a game early in the year before starting the rest of the season. He totaled 2,834 passing yards, 23 touchdowns and six interceptions to go with 531 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns as a junior, earning second-team All-SEC honors. As a junior, all those totals went up, with 2,844 passing yards, 726 rushing yards, 36 total touchdowns and 11 interceptions. Although he was still more inconsistent this year than he would’ve liked, he has a chance to make a major impression this week during the Senior Bowl.
The first thing on Milroe’s scouting report is his rushing ability. Some quarterbacks are rushers, some are scramblers — Milroe is both, and one of the most dangerous rushing threats to come out of the draft in recent memory. He had a whopping 20 touchdowns on the ground in 2024 alone, frequently running to move the chains and to score once in the red zone. This skill is enabled by an elite combination of speed, strength and agility on tape.
As a passer, Milroe has all the tools to succeed in the NFL. His arm is above average, capable of making every throw in the book. In flashes, he’s displayed an impressive handle on more advanced quarterbacking skills, manipulating defenders to widen throwing lanes and navigating complex reads. For the most part, he’s run a pro-style offense at Alabama, and he’s more prepared to adapt to an NFL system than most. His best trait is his creativity, as he has a knack for big plays and can rise to the occasion with some exceptional moments.
Milroe still takes too many sacks, something I noted he needed to clean up this season and he was largely unable to do. This stems from two things: a desire to make hero plays and being unable to give up on a busted play, and a lack of understanding of what he’s seeing on the field. A lot of his inconsistencies boil down to him being a step slow reading coverages or recognizing blitz patterns, leading to a frantic playstyle that lends itself to mistakes. More starting experience, and generally more time being coached up in these skills, might lead to him Milroe improving on them.
According to Senior Bowl executive director Jim Nagy, the league is currently higher on Milroe than they were on Eagles QB Jalen Hurts when he was coming out of Oklahoma in 2020. Hurts ended up going to Philadelphia with the No. 53 overall pick. Milroe’s profile matches those of recent NFL success stories, including Hurts and Packers QB Jordan Love. He’s raw and unrefined, but he has all the traits in the world and has stretches of high-end play on his tape. It might not be a popular pick to fans, whose memories of his disappointing finish to the 2024 season won’t fade quickly, but some coaches will be confident in their ability to get the best out of him. As of right now, Milroe is a second-round player, but he could improve his stock over the next several months.
4: Dillon Gabriel, Oregon
Well-traveled and a winning player at every stop, Gabriel enters the 2025 draft as one of the historical leaders in basically every college statistical category for quarterbacks. The Hawaii native started his career at Central Florida, lighting up the south before suffering a serious season-ending injury as a junior. From there, Gabriel transferred to Oklahoma, where he played for two seasons and totaled over 6,800 passing yards. His final stop was at Oregon, where he threw for 3,857 yards and 30 touchdowns, rushing for seven touchdowns as well, leading the Ducks to the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff. In terms of postseason honors, Gabriel was named second-team All-Big 12 in 2022, first-team All-Big 12 in 2023, and first-team All-Big 10 in 2024.
It’s hard to quit Gabriel as a prospect. He’s undersized, at just 6-0, 200, making his journey to the NFL an uphill climb. But he’s a veteran of the game who plays with an unshakable poise. He reads the field well, going through his progressions and manipulating defenses with his eyes. When presented with a tight-window or long throw, he showcases adequate arm talent to get the ball where it needs to be. He won’t wow in any arm strength drills, but there also isn’t an NFL throw he can’t make.
Touch and ball placement are among Gabriel’s best skills. He layers throws well, with catchable passes landing in his receivers’ arms. He knows how to help his receivers with where he places his passes, leading them upfield or away from coverage to maximize yards after the catch and help them avoid big hits. Not only that, but he might be the best timing passer in this class, hitting receivers out of their breaks on slants and out-routes for best results. Additionally, he’s more mobile than he gets credit for, with excellent pocket movement and true scrambling ability. You wouldn’t run him on a ton of designed reads, but he’s a weapon with his legs in the red zone and will punish defenses who leave him alone on third down.
That said, Gabriel won’t be an elite creator in the NFL. He lacks the physical profile and the natural athleticism to do so. If he succeeds, it will largely be as a pocket passer, and that won’t come without its challenges. As an undersized quarterback, teams will be more critical of him than they will of a quarterback with prototypical measurements. As I said, he doesn’t have quite the zip on his passes other quarterbacks do, and he can struggle to escape sacks at times. He also hesitates to attack the middle of the field at times, which is something to monitor.
When I began this exercise, I didn’t expect to have Gabriel this high. But as I continued my evaluation, I kept asking myself: what doesn’t this guy do well? Outside of being an older prospect who lacks ideal measurements, there isn’t much to critique in his game. He’s got elite ball placement and pocket movement, with the ability to make NFL throws and have some fun scrambling. The NFL has overlooked similar prospects in the past and gotten burned for it, and Gabriel could make a team very happy in the second round.
5: Quinn Ewers, Texas
The former No. 1 overall recruit and Texas native initially committed to Ohio State out of high school, spending a year there redshirting before returning home to play for the Longhorns. He flashed as a freshman in Austin, including torching the Alabama defense for a quarter before leaving that game with a shoulder injury, and ultimately missed a chunk of the season due to injury. As a sophomore, he made second-team All-Big 12, throwing for 3,479 yards and 22 touchdowns. He had similar numbers as a junior, with 3,472 passing yards and 31 touchdowns, earning second-team All-SEC in the process.
There’s a reason Ewers was such a prodigious high school recruit. At 6-2, 210 and with an absolute howitzer for an arm, he’s got the prototypical arm talent and a good enough frame to be a top-flight NFL quarterback. Ewers is at his best attacking the middle of the field, where he’s able to layer throws over zones and fire them in against tight man coverage. The velocity on his passes is noteworthy and it lets him make plays other quarterbacks wouldn’t. He can throw from different platforms and arm angles, adjusting to what’s available to him, and can make plays on the run.
A key part of Ewers’ game is his reliability with the “layup” throws. He showcases great accuracy on short and intermediate passes, leading his receivers toward open grass and delivering his passes on time and on target. There’s a baseline when Ewers is under center that not every passer in this class has, and it’s something that coaches will love about him.
Ewers’ throwing motion is bizarre, to say the least. He effectively squares up on the line of scrimmage and throws sideways, severely impacting this throwing power and accuracy. The unorthodox throwing motion makes him extremely adaptable, but he routinely misses targets more than 10 yards downfield as a result, just misfiring wildly at times. It also impacts his downfield velocity, particularly on deep balls. Over the last three seasons, Ewers has struggled to hit deep routes consistently, with both accuracy and strength a concern. His throwing motion is the main culprit.
Additionally, Ewers struggles under pressure. His footwork becomes sloppy and he is often visibly rattled, missing more throws than usual and buckling when the pressure gets to him. He checks the ball down frequently, showcasing growth from early in his career. But he often checks it down at the first sign of adversity, failing to go through his progressions or make something happen on his own.
Where you take Ewers really depends on your plans for him. He won’t be a fit for every team, and he’s certainly not ready to start in 2025. If you can sit him for two years behind a veteran and work on rebuilding his mechanics, he offers a ton of upside. His work under pressure is a problem, but I like the timing and anticipation he plays with otherwise. All the tools are there, he just needs to put them all together. He might be the project of all projects, but if he pans out, there might not be a passer in this class with a higher ceiling.
6: Will Howard, Ohio State
A 6-4, 235-pound senior from Pennsylvania, Howard spent four years at Kansas State before transferring to Ohio State for his final season of eligibility. During his career with the Wildcats, Howard threw for over 5,000 yards and 58 touchdowns, being named second-team All-Big 12 in 2023. After a disappointing finish to the 2023 season, Ohio State prioritized Howard in the transfer portal, and he responded by winning the Buckeyes a national championship. Named third-team All-Big 10 after the season, Howard finished with 4,010 passing yards and 35 touchdowns, adding 226 yards and seven touchdowns on the ground.
When watching Howard’s film, it’s easy to see how his plus frame and build impacts his game. He’s the size of a linebacker and that shows up both as a passer and a runner. With the arm to hit every NFL throw and the timing to pay it off, Howard is deadly in play-action and quick-read concepts, hitting routes with impeccable timing and firing the ball into tight windows faster than the defense can react. When Howard gets into a rhythm, he’s practically unstoppable, hitting throw after throw right on the money. Anticipation and timing are big pluses on Howard’s tape.
As a runner, Howard is big and athletic. He can truck defenders in the open field and is fast enough to beat them to the edge. I’d describe him more as a true runner than a scrambler, as he’ll do more damage on designed reads than he will ad-libbing as the play breaks down. But he’s a weapon there, particularly in the red zone, and he’ll punish defenses that don’t account for him.
Two things limit Howard as a prospect. First, his accuracy can be a little all over the place. He’ll usually get the ball there, but at times his ball placement will suffer, with inconsistent throws limiting the offense. Secondly, and more importantly, he’s not a big creator on his own. It’s why I described him as more a runner than a scrambler: when the play breaks down and his first few reads aren’t there, he doesn’t add much in terms of generating yards himself by scrambling, either to run or find an open receiver. He takes a lot of sacks, too, and that’s a tough combination.
Howard is a big riser from the first half of the season to the second. He turned himself into a legitimate draft prospect, albeit in a down quarterback class. With a big body and a cannon for an arm, Howard has traits teams will love, and in a good system he can shred defenses by being a step ahead of them at every turn. As a third- or fourth-round pick, Howard has a chance to make himself some money if he ever finds himself in the starting lineup.
7: Kyle McCord, Syracuse
A former five-star recruit in the 2021 cycle from New Jersey, McCord started his career at Ohio State, backing up current Texans QB C.J. Stroud for two seasons before getting his starting opportunity in 2023. It was not a great season for McCord, as although he was decently productive, he struggled in the big moments and was ultimately blamed for the Buckeyes’ lack of team success relative to expectations that year. He transferred to Syracuse for his senior season and exploded, throwing for 4,779 yards and 34 touchdowns, with 12 interceptions as well. That performance earned him second-team All-ACC and put him squarely on draft radars, a place no one expected him to be just a year prior.
McCord is a quarterback’s quarterback. He has tight mechanics, with a quick throwing motion and reliable footwork. The growth he showed at Syracuse this season was remarkable — he was deadly accurate on his passes, particularly in the intermediate ranges, hitting receivers in stride and in tiny windows for chunk plays. When a quarterback is hitting near-perfect throws regularly, there isn’t much a defense can do, and that was a calling card of McCord’s game as a senior.
Despite only having two years of starting experience, McCord demonstrated an advanced understanding of how to attack defenses. Pre-snap, he’s capable of adjusting protections and reading coverages, getting his team into the right play. Once the ball is snapped, he uses subtle pocket movements to avoid pressure and keep his eyes downfield, able to adapt to post-snap defensive changes and go through his progressions, finding the open man. When his offense is clicking, he’s hitting timing routes with precision, keeping everyone on schedule and making big plays.
Under pressure, McCord can struggle. His usually solid mechanics break down when a defender is in his face, leading to bad decisions and overthrows. He took a lot of sacks in college, in part because he held on to the ball for too long, and also because he lacks NFL-caliber escapability and athleticism. With a true gunslinger mentality, McCord had a lot of turnover-worthy plays in 2024, 22 to be exact. He’ll make big plays, but he’ll turn the ball over a lot, too.
As a mid-round pick, there’s a lot to like with McCord. He offers starting-caliber upside down the line between his arm talent and the timing and touch he throws with. A lot of the ways he struggled in Columbus are still present on his tape, but he’s cleaned them up in many ways and is a much-improved player overall in just a year’s time. McCord is the kind of quarterback some evaluators will really pound the table for, and he’ll have his fans in draft rooms.
8: Seth Henigan, Memphis
A four-year starter at Memphis, Henigan was a three-star recruit out of Texas and won the starting job as a true freshman. He was a second-team All-AAC honoree in 2023 and third-team in 2024. For his career, he threw for 14,278 yards and 104 touchdowns, adding 900 yards and 10 touchdowns on the ground. He was one of the most productive quarterbacks in Memphis history and takes his talents to the Senior Bowl this week.
Henigan is a natural pocket passer through-and-through, standing at 6-3, 215. When he’s comfortable, he’s one of the best readers of the field in this class. He can pick apart defenses, throwing with zip and touch on various passes and delivering on-target to all levels of the field. He’s NFL-ready in the sense that he already has experience with full-field reads and multi-tiered progressions, something not all college quarterbacks have entering the league. At all three levels of the field, Henigan is precise and varied in his passing — he can strike a seam route before a safety can come over or hit a Cover 2 sideline hole with power just as easily as he can layer a throw over a linebacker or loft a touch pass to the back corner of the end zone.
Surprisingly, Henigan displayed more mobility than I expected. He can make plays on the run, extending his time to throw by avoiding pressure and still delivering accurate passes. When faced with immediate pressure or a man in his face as he’s ready to throw, Henigan can deliver from alternate arm angles and off-platform releases. He manipulates the pocket well, stepping up to avoid pressure and dodging rushers without bailing too soon. Over the middle of the field, Henigan showcases his plus anticipation and timing, hitting tight windows on time before defenders can close.
Though he can make plays with his legs and avoid pressure, Henigan is not a quick-twitch athlete. He’s often caught by pass rushers and linebackers who are bigger and faster than he is, cutting off his escape windows. His arm, while decent, will lag behind many of his colleagues in the NFL, and he may struggle to hit some of the deep-field concepts in certain schemes. Additionally, he can get tunnel-vision at times, losing pocket awareness and keying defenses into his primary read, leading to sacks and turnovers.
I liked Henigan a lot more than I expected, and I’m curious to see what he’ll do this week at the Senior Bowl. He profiles as a career backup, but I think he can have a lot of success in that role. As a spot starter, Henigan displays the discipline and accuracy to keep an offense on schedule, something that not every quarterback thrust into duty is capable of. It’s possible he has starter-level upside in the right environment, as well, and could be a great mid-round pick this year.
9: Jaxson Dart, Ole Miss
Dart started his career at USC, getting three starts in 2021 before transferring to Ole Miss in 2022 and being the starting quarterback there for three seasons. Originally from Utah, Dart threw for 1,353 yards as a freshman in Los Angeles, totaling 10,617 passing yards in his three seasons at Mississippi, with 72 passing touchdowns in that time as well. As a senior, he was named first-team All-SEC with 4,279 passing yards, 29 passing touchdowns, 495 rushing yards and three rushing touchdowns.
At 6-2, 225, Dart isn’t undersized by NFL standards at all. With a good arm and stable release platform, he has the fundamentals and tools the league covets. He can hit all the NFL throws, providing impressive velocity at the intermediate and deep levels of the field to beat coverages. Despite doing this more frequently than he needs to, he can throw off-platform and at varying arm angles with a good degree of success. Pressure doesn’t faze him, standing tall and delivering clutch passes just before taking a big hit. He throws with anticipation, hitting timing routes and quick concepts routinely and accurately.
As a runner, Dart adds a lot more than you’d first expect. He’s fast for a quarterback, able to beat defenses to the edge and get upfield. With utility in read-options, designed runs, and as a scrambler, Dart will be a plus runner at the position in the NFL. And although he ran a gimmicky offense at Ole Miss, he does display some advanced pro-level ability to read and react to defenses, both pre-snap and during a play.
The Rebels’ offense is a tough one to evaluate. So much of Dart’s production is schemed up — it’s not that he never displays NFL-like throws and skills on his tape, it’s that the offense he ran in college looks nothing like the offense he’ll run at the next level. It makes it difficult to extrapolate how much of his performance will carry over. Dart has bouts of inaccuracy at times from inconsistent footwork, and when under pressure he makes a lot of mistakes. Turnovers and sacks are a problem for Dart, and he struggles a bit more when asked to carry the offense. These are concerning trends for his NFL projection.
Evaluators are certain to be all over the map on Dart. He has NFL traits in an offense that doesn’t ask him to use them much. He combines that with some advanced quarterbacking and a slew of concerning trends from his tape. He’s a mid-round pick for sure, but you’ll see him ranked anywhere from top five to outside the top 10 depending on where you go. I hesitate to buy in at this point, but a strong Senior Bowl week could change that.
10: Riley Leonard, Notre Dame
Originally a three-star recruit from Alabama, Leonard committed to Duke out of high school and earned the starting job as a sophomore. That year, he threw for 2,967 yards and 20 touchdowns, adding 699 rushing yards and another 13 touchdowns to earn honorable mention All-ACC recognition. Entering 2023, Leonard had considerable hype as a draft sleeper, but he struggled early in the season before a season-ending injury. Transferring to Notre Dame as a senior, Leonard rebounded, leading his team to the College Football Playoff national championship game and racking up 2,861 passing yards and 21 touchdowns, plus 906 rushing yards and an eye-popping 17 touchdowns on the ground.
At 6-4, 216 pounds, Leonard has a plus frame and arm talent for the position. The pop on his passes is visible on tape, especially when throwing deep or over the middle of the field. He can take a three-step drop and fire the ball up the seam, driving off his back foot and delivering an accurate throw. His arm lets him attack all areas of the field, and he can make every NFL throw with precision.
As a runner, Leonard is both elusive and electric. He’s big-bodied and powerful, able to drive through defenders and earn tough yards in short-yardage and goal-line scenarios. When asked to carry an offense through his rushing ability, Leonard delivered, as he’s fast enough to win the edge and can outrun defensive backs down the field. Evading pressure and scrambling for extra yards is a hallmark of Leonard’s game, as well. He’s effective both as a scrambler and a designed rusher.
For someone who spent four years in college, Leonard’s game is still fairly raw. He struggles with full-field reads, often bailing from his progressions prematurely and attempting to ad-lib something himself. His pocket awareness lapses at times, drifting into pressure or simply not clocking an incoming defender. His timing and anticipation down the field simply aren’t NFL-caliber — he is often late on throws and hesitates on timing routes, wanting to see his receiver open before throwing the ball.
Some people are going to be higher on Leonard than I am. He’s got all the NFL tools and a rushing upside that’s appealing in the modern NFL. I have concerns with his ability to run a pro-level offense, however, and he’s never really popped on tape to me. As a mid-Day 3 selection, you could do a lot worse than Leonard. It’s possible with a few seasons in an NFL system, he’ll continue to develop and in that case, you’d really have something in him.
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