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BILLBOARD HOT 100

 

Week ending March 12, 2022 | Tracking period: 2/25–3/3

 

TW LW PP WC Artist – Song

 

01 02 01 59 Glass Animals ‒ Heat Waves

02 01 01 10 Carolina Gaitan, Mauro Castillo, Adassa, Rhenzy Feliz, Diane Guerrero, Stephanie Beatriz & Encanto Cast ‒ We Don't Talk About Bruno

03 03 03 15 GAYLE ‒ abcdefu (BIGGEST SALES GAIN)

04 05 04 17 Kodak Black ‒ Super Gremlin

05 06 01 34 The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber ‒ Stay

06 04 01 21 Adele ‒ Easy On Me

07 07 07 23 Justin Bieber ‒ Ghost

08 08 04 25 Ed Sheeran ‒ Shivers

09 09 02 36 Ed Sheeran ‒ Bad Habits

10 10 07 26 Elton John & Dua Lipa ‒ Cold Heart (PNAU Remix)

 

11 11 09 24 Lil Nas X ‒ Thats What I Want

12 12 08 38 Doja Cat ‒ Need To Know

13 20 13 15 Imagine Dragons x JID ‒ Enemy (BIGGEST AIRPLAY GAIN)

14 14 07 08 Gunna & Future feat. Young Thug ‒ Pushin P

15 16 02 69 Dua Lipa ‒ Levitating

16 15 01 32 Lil Nas X & Jack Harlow ‒ Industry Baby

17 21 17 19 Latto ‒ Big Energy

18 13 08 10 Jessica Darrow ‒ Surface Pressure

19 42 19 02 Lil Durk ‒ Ahhh Ha

20 19 01 61 The Weeknd & Ariana Grande ‒ Save Your Tears

 

21 24 21 31 Doja Cat ‒ Woman

22 22 06 17 Post Malone & The Weeknd ‒ One Right Now

23 23 16 10 Muni Long ‒ Hrs And Hrs

24 17 15 03 Becky G x Karol G ‒ MAMIII

25 28 07 13 SZA ‒ I Hate U

26 31 22 30 Jordan Davis feat. Luke Bryan ‒ Buy Dirt

27 25 25 21 Cody Johnson ‒ 'Til You Can't

28 29 28 06 Charlie Puth ‒ Light Switch

29 27 01 42 Olivia Rodrigo ‒ Good 4 U

30 26 20 09 Stephanie Beatriz, Olga Merediz & Encanto Cast ‒ The Family Madrigal

 

31 35 03 37 Walker Hayes ‒ Fancy Like

32 33 11 35 Doja Cat & The Weeknd ‒ You Right

33 30 30 33 Morgan Wallen ‒ Sand In My Boots

34 34 26 24 CKay ‒ Love Nwantiti (Ah Ah Ah)

35 32 04 26 Drake feat. 21 Savage & Project Pat ‒ Knife Talk

36 39 19 09 Lauren Spencer-Smith ‒ Fingers Crossed

37 49 37 12 Luke Combs ‒ Doin' This

38 41 09 34 Wizkid feat. Justin Bieber & Tems ‒ Essence

39 36 36 23 Kane Brown ‒ One Mississippi

40 37 21 25 THE ANXIETY: WILLOW & Tyler Cole ‒ Meet Me At Our Spot

 

41 18 18 02 Jack Harlow ‒ Nail Tech

42 52 42 10 Dierks Bentley, Breland & HARDY ‒ Beers On Me

43 ** 43 01 Tyga x Doja Cat ‒ Freaky Deaky (HOT SHOT DEBUT)

44 47 28 35 Chris Stapleton ‒ You Should Probably Leave

45 38 27 09 Diane Guerrero & Stephanie Beatriz ‒ What Else Can I Do?

46 51 46 14 Parker McCollum ‒ To Be Loved By You

47 40 05 17 Silk Sonic (Bruno Mars & Anderson .Paak) ‒ Smokin Out The Window

48 55 48 07 Cole Swindell & Lainey Wilson ‒ Never Say Never

49 48 11 08 The Weeknd ‒ Sacrifice

50 53 50 08 Walker Hayes ‒ AA

 

51 46 36 09 Sebastian Yatra ‒ Dos Oruguitas

52 44 02 04 Nicki Minaj x Lil Baby ‒ Do We Have A Problem?

53 57 53 16 Kelsea Ballerini feat. Kenny Chesney ‒ Half Of My Hometown

54 68 54 05 Em Beihold ‒ Numb Little Bug

55 65 55 03 Dove Cameron ‒ Boyfriend

56 56 53 10 Sam Hunt ‒ 23

57 62 52 04 Tate McRae ‒ She's All I Wanna Be

58 63 58 08 Nardo Wick, Lil Baby & Future ‒ Me Or Sum

59 59 14 11 Lil Durk feat. Morgan Wallen ‒ Broadway Girls

60 50 23 20 NEIKED x Mae Muller x Polo G ‒ Better Days

 

61 70 61 05 Fireboy DML & Ed Sheeran ‒ Peru

62 45 05 15 Adele ‒ Oh My God

63 43 23 08 Dr. Dre feat. Snoop Dogg ‒ Still D.R.E.

64 66 51 05 Gucci Mane feat. Lil Durk ‒ Rumors

65 74 65 06 Yung Bleu & Kehlani ‒ Beautiful Lies

66 67 66 10 Ari Lennox ‒ Pressure

67 58 56 15 Eric Church ‒ Heart On Fire

68 69 57 05 The Chainsmokers ‒ High

69 76 63 08 Maren Morris ‒ Circles Around This Town

70 54 46 03 Fivio Foreign, Kanye West & Alicia Keys ‒ City Of Gods

 

71 60 48 09 Stephanie Beatriz ‒ Waiting On A Miracle

72 75 24 07 Gunna feat. Drake ‒ P Power

73 85 73 05 Tiesto & Ava Max ‒ The Motto

74 61 61 02 Gunna ‒ Banking On Me

75 64 21 03 Ed Sheeran feat. Taylor Swift ‒ The Joker And The Queen

76 ** 76 01 Labrinth & Zendaya ‒ I'm Tired

77 79 77 05 Miranda Lambert ‒ If I Was A Cowboy

78 82 65 11 Acraze feat. Cherish ‒ Do It To It

79 ** 79 01 YoungBoy Never Broke Again ‒ I Hate YoungBoy

80 80 71 07 The Walters ‒ I Love You So

 

81 ** 81 01 Kodak Black ‒ Usain Boo

82 83 58 14 Rod Wave ‒ By Your Side

83 78 43 04 Juice WRLD ‒ Cigarettes

84 73 34 03 Future ‒ Worst Day

85 87 85 08 Carly Pearce & Ashley McBryde ‒ Never Wanted To Be That Girl

86 81 66 15 Moneybagg Yo ‒ Scorpio

87 88 68 06 ERNEST feat. Morgan Wallen ‒ Flower Shops

88 RE 81 02 Thomas Rhett ‒ Slow Down Summer

89 77 71 07 Stephanie Beatriz, Olga Merediz, John Leguizamo, Adassa, Maluma & Encanto Cast ‒ All Of You

90 ** 90 01 Kodak Black ‒ I Wish

 

91 90 90 03 Alesso & Katy Perry ‒ When I'm Gone

92 93 71 07 Chris Brown ‒ Iffy

93 94 88 07 Russell Dickerson ‒ Home Sweet

94 72 20 03 Nicki Minaj x Lil Baby ‒ Bussin

95 ** 95 01 JNR CHOI & Sam Tompkins ‒ To The Moon!

96 89 83 03 Mary J. Blige ‒ Good Morning Gorgeous

97 86 40 04 King Von & 21 Savage ‒ Don't Play That

98 96 89 03 Saweetie feat. H.E.R. ‒ Closer

99 92 85 07 Blake Shelton ‒ Come Back As A Country Boy

100 ** 100 01 Lil Shordie Scott ‒ Rocking A Cardigan In Atlanta

 

OUT 71 17 20 Nardo Wick feat. G Herbo, Lil Durk & 21 Savage ‒ Who Want Smoke??

OUT 84 45 20 Jimmie Allen & Brad Paisley ‒ Freedom Was A Highway

OUT 91 91 01 Yeat ‒ Poppin

OUT 95 95 01 Jessie Murph ‒ Pray

OUT 97 38 06 Rod Wave ‒ Cold December

OUT 98 68 17 Doja Cat ‒ Get Into It (Yuh)

OUT 99 01 15 Taylor Swift ‒ All Too Well (Taylor's Version)

OUT 100 100 01 HARDY ‒ Give Heaven Some Hell

 

Bubbling Under

 

TW LW Artist – Song

 

01 02 Yeat ‒ Money So Big

02 ** DaBaby & YoungBoy Never Broke Again ‒ Neighborhood Superstar

03 ** Kodak Black ‒ Let Me Know

04 ** Zach Bryan ‒ From Austin

05 ** Kodak Black ‒ On Everything

06 04 Rauw Alejandro & Chencho Corleone ‒ Desesperados

07 06 Parmalee ‒ Take My Name

08 RE Kodak Black ‒ Love & War

09 09 Ruth B ‒ Dandelions

10 08 The Rare Occasions ‒ Notions

11 22 Gabby Barrett ‒ Pick Me Up

12 11 Russ ‒ Handsomer

13 24 Russell Dickerson & Jake Scott ‒ She Likes It

14 ** Kodak Black ‒ Back For Everything

15 10 Los Lara ‒ Fumando Mota

16 ** Kygo feat. DNCE ‒ Dancing Feet

17 ** Kodak Black feat. Lil Durk ‒ Take You Back

18 ** Scotty McCreery ‒ Damn Strait

19 23 Crowder ‒ In The House

20 ** Kodak Black ‒ Smackers

21 ** Sebastian Yatra ‒ Tacones Rojos

22 ** Elley Duhe ‒ Middle Of The Night

23 13 Playboi Carti ‒ Sky

24 03 Christian Nodal ‒ Ya No Somos Ni Seremos

25 05 Romeo Santos ‒ Sus Huellas

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Glass Animals’ ‘Heat Waves’ Completes Record Run to No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100

By Gary Trust | 03/07/2022

 

A song released in 2020, and about late nights in the middle of June, reaches No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in March 2022.

 

Glass Animals‘ “Heat Waves” hits No. 1 on the Hot 100, completing a record-breaking rise to the summit, leading in its 59th week on the chart. It shatters the prior mark of 35 weeks on the survey needed to reign, set by Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You” in December 2019.

 

Over its unprecedented run, “Heat Waves” has ruled multiple radio formats and become prominent on TikTok and streaming services.

 

“Heat Waves,” released on Wolf Tone/Polydor/Republic Records, becomes the 1,134th No. 1 in the Hot 100’s 63-year history. It’s the first leader (and entry) on the chart for the quartet, which comprises Dave Bayley, Edmund Irwin-Singer, Drew MacFarlane and Joe Seaward. The band is nominated for the best new artist Grammy Award this year; it formed in Oxford, England, in 2010 and first appeared on Billboard‘s charts in 2014.

 

Here’s an in-depth look at the song’s record-rewriting Hot 100 coronation.

 

Airplay, streams & sales: “Heat Waves” drew 66.7 million radio airplay audience impressions (down 3%) and 14.8 million U.S. streams (up 1%) and sold 2,900 downloads (down 4%) in the Feb. 25-March 3 tracking week, according to MRC Data.

 

The single holds at its No. 2 high on the Radio Songs chart, rebounds, 6-5, to its best rank on Streaming Songs and dips 23-25 on Digital Song Sales, where it reached No. 13.

 

Record run to No. 1: “Heat Waves” tops the Hot 100 in its 59th week on the chart, soaring past the prior mark for the lengthiest climb to No. 1.

 

Longest Climbs to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100

59 weeks, “Heat Waves,” Glass Animals, hit No. 1 March 12, 2022

35 weeks, “All I Want for Christmas Is You,” Mariah Carey, Dec. 21, 2019

33 weeks, “Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix),” Los Del Rio, Aug. 3, 1996

31 weeks, “Amazed, Lonestar, March 4, 2000

30 weeks, “All of Me,” John Legend, May 17, 2014

27 weeks, “With Arms Wide Open,” Creed, Nov. 11, 2000

26 weeks, “Everything You Want,” Vertical Horizon, July 15, 2000

25 weeks, “Red Red Wine,” UB40, Oct. 25, 1988

 

All eight songs above except for “With Arms Wide Open” and “Everything You Want” logged their journeys to No. 1 over interrupted runs. “Heat Waves” debuted on the Jan. 16, 2021-dated Hot 100; after two weeks off the chart, the song returned on the Feb. 6 survey and has remained on since.

 

Put in further perspective, “Heat Waves” is just the 23rd title to have even spent 59 or more weeks on the Hot 100 overall, regardless of peak position; that’s out of around 30,000 entries in the chart’s archives.

 

On the Nov. 13, 2021, Hot 100, “Heat Waves” wrapped a record 42-week trek to the top 10, while on the Jan. 15, 2022, chart it completed a record 51-week rise to the top five. The song has made its steady progress as a crossover airplay hit, having topped the Alternative Airplay chart for three weeks in March-April 2021 and Pop Airplay and Adult Pop Airplay for two weeks each this January and February. Dating to its release in June 2020, the song also gained prominence on TikTok, playing off its “all I think about is you” lyrical hook. It trended especially strongly on the platform in late summer 2021, including via a clip from the band. (Activity on TikTok itself does not factor into any Billboard charts.)

 

“Glass Animals have songs that have real longevity in them, because they’re brilliant songs and Dave [bayley] is a brilliant songwriter, but there’s a lot of nuance in them,” the group’s manager, Amy Morgan, told Billboard in January. “Heat Waves” “has a lot of interesting chords underneath the main melody, and there’s a lot of complexity in what sounds, from the outside, quite simple. And those songs – those that are not straight out-of-the-box, obvious songs – take a while to grow.”

 

Single writer & producer at No. 1: Glass Animals’ Dave Bayley solely wrote and produced “Heat Waves,” making it the first Hot 100 leader written and produced by a single talent since Pharrell Williams wrote, produced and performed “Happy,” which reigned for 10 weeks beginning eight years ago this week (March 8, 2014). Before that, will.i.am wrote and produced, and is featured on, Usher’s “OMG,” which led for four weeks in May-June 2010.

 

The last group to top the Hot 100 with a song solely written and produced by one of its members before Glass Animals? Boston, whose “Amanda” led for two weeks in November 1986. The band’s frontman, Tom Scholz, wrote and produced the rock ballad.

 

Started from the bottom: As “Heat Waves” debuted on the Jan. 16, 2021-dated Hot 100 at No. 100, the track completes a rare 100-to-1 odyssey on the Hot 100.

 

Here’s a recap of all 11 singles that have summited the chart after starting on the first step (an eclectic list whose previous two entries, coincidentally, belong to Wiz Khalifa).

 

Hot 100 No. 1s That Debuted at No. 100

“Heat Waves,” Glass Animals, hit No. 1 March 12, 2022

“See You Again,” Wiz Khalifa feat. Charlie Puth, April 25, 2015

“Black and Yellow,” Wiz Khalifa, Feb. 19, 2011

“Kiss Kiss,” Chris Brown feat. T-Pain, Nov. 10, 2007

“Can’t Help Falling in Love,” UB40, July 24, 1993

“The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia,” Vicki Lawrence, April 7, 1973

“When a Man Loves a Woman,” Percy Sledge, May 28, 1966

“Go Away Little Girl,” Steve Lawrence, Jan. 12, 1963

“Michael,” The Highwaymen, Sept. 4, 1961

“Teen Angel,” Mark Dinning, Feb. 8, 1960

“Kansas City,” Wilbert Harrison, May 18, 1959

 

Notably, the soundtrack to Disney’s Encanto crowns the Billboard 200 albums chart for an eighth week. As the set debuted at No. 197, this week marks the first in which the Hot 100’s top song is a title that bowed at No. 100 and the Billboard 200’s top album is one that began as low as No. 197. That marks an extreme outlier in an era in which titles regularly debut at No. 1 on both charts; of the 58 singles ever to have launched atop the Hot 100, 23 have done so since April 2020, while on the Billboard 200, 23 releases premiered at No. 1 in 2021, after 29 did so in 2020 and 37 did in both 2019 and 2018.

 

Alternative route to No. 1: “Heat Waves” also marks an uncommon Hot 100 No. 1 that previously led Billboard‘s Alternative Airplay chart. The song is the first to have topped both tallies since Billie Eilish’s “Bad Guy,” which led the Alternative Airplay charts dated Aug. 10 and 17, 2019, and the Hot 100 dated that Aug. 24. Before Eilish, Lorde led both lists with “Royals” in 2013.

 

Until this week, no group had ruled Alternative Airplay and the Hot 100 with the same song since fun., with “We Are Young” in 2012. (That track topped the Hot 100 before Alternative Airplay; “Heat Waves” is the first song by a group to lead Alternative Airplay and, subsequently, the Hot 100 since Nickelback’s “How You Remind Me” in 2001.)

 

Meanwhile, “Heat Waves” is just the 10th Hot 100 No. 1 to have topped Alternative Airplay, dating to the latter list’s launch in September 1988. (The elite 10 Hot 100 No. 1s are among 413 total Alternative Airplay leaders to-date, placing “Heat Waves” in the company of just 2% of all Alternative Airplay No. 1s to achieve such a double domination.)

 

Hot 100 No. 1s That Have Also Led Alternative Airplay

“Heat Waves,” Glass Animals, 2021-22

“Bad Guy,” Billie Eilish, 2019

“Royals,” Lorde, 2013

“We Are Young,” fun. feat. Janelle Monae, 2012

“Somebody That I Used to Know,” Gotye feat. Kimbra, 2012

“Viva La Vida,” Coldplay, 2008

“How You Remind Me,” Nickelback, 2001-02

“Butterfly,” Crazy Town, 2001

“One Week,” Barenaked Ladies, 1998

“Nothing Compares 2 U,” Sinead O’Connor, 1990

 

“Heat Waves” concurrently crowns the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs and Hot Alternative Songs charts, both of which use the same multi-metric methodology as the Hot 100, for a 24th week each.

 

British acts at No. 1: Glass Animals continue a recent trend of British artists leading the Hot 100. Half of the last six No. 1s, dating to October, include British acts, as “Heat Waves” follows Adele’s “Easy on Me,” which reigned for 10 weeks, and “My Universe,” by England’s Coldplay and South Korea’s BTS, a one-week No. 1.

 

Fellow British acts Ed Sheeran, Elton John and Dua Lipa join Glass Animals and Adele in the current Hot 100’s top 10 (see all other ranks below).

 

“Breaking in the U.S. is as important and coveted as ever,” mused Martin Talbot, CEO of the U.K.’s Official Charts Company, in November. “The U.S. is where blues and then rock n’ roll were born, and many of the heroes of music fans and creators hail from America’s rich music culture.”

 

Glass ceiling: Thanks to Glass Animals, the word “glass” shines atop the Hot 100 in an act’s name for the second time: Looking Glass led with “Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl)” nearly 50 years ago, on the Aug. 26, 1972, chart.

 

Let’s also not gloss over the three songs with “glass” in their titles to top the Hot 100: “Judy in Disguise (With Glasses),” by John Fred and the Playboys, in 1968; “Heart of Glass,” by Blondie, in 1979; and “Raise Your Glass,” by P!nk, in 2010.

 

Meanwhile, chart-watcher Paul Nelson notes that another Glass-named animal act almost hit No. 1 on the Hot 100: Glass Tiger leapt to No. 2 with “Don’t Forget Me (When I’m Gone)” in 1986. Nelson also points out that Martha & the Vandellas’ “Heat Wave” hit No. 4 in 1963, while Linda Ronstadt’s cover rose to No. 5 in 1975. Plus, famed R&B group Heatwave notched three Hot 100 hits in 1977-78: “Boogie Nights” (No. 2), “Always and Forever” (No. 18) and “The Groove Line” (No. 7).

 

This week also marks the first in which a song with the word “heat” in its title is hottest on the Hot 100. (The word “hot” last appeared in a Hot 100 No. 1 thanks to Mims’ “This Is Why I’m Hot” in 2007.)

 

Below “Heat Waves,” “We Don’t Talk About Bruno,” from Encanto, slips to No. 2 on the Hot 100 after five weeks at No. 1, the longest reign ever for a song from a Disney film. The track, by Carolina Gaitán, Mauro Castillo, Adassa, Rhenzy Feliz, Diane Guerrero, Stephanie Beatriz and the Encanto Cast (all singing as the characters that they voice in the movie), tops Streaming Songs for a ninth week (26.3 million, down 12%) and rises 5-4 on Digital Song Sales (6,100, down 8%), while gaining by 12% to 8.9 million in all-format radio audience.

 

Meanwhile, as “Bruno” was written by Lin-Manuel Miranda and “Heat Waves” by Dave Bayley, the Hot 100 sports back-to-back solo-penned No. 1s for the first time in nearly 22 years: Vertical Horizon’s “Everything You Want,” written by the group’s Matt Scannell, and Matchbox Twenty’s “Bent,” authored by the band’s Rob Thomas, led consecutively in July 2000.

 

GAYLE’s breakthrough hit “abcdefu” holds at its No. 3 Hot 100 best. It spends a third week at No. 1 on Digital Song Sales (10,500 sold, up 27%), keeps at its No. 5 high on Radio Songs (61.3 million, up 6%) and lifts 9-8 on Streaming Songs (12.8 million, down 4%).

 

Kodak Black’s “Super Gremlin” hits a new No. 4 Hot 100 high, as it leads the multi-metric Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts for a seventh week each. As previously reported, parent album Back For Everything opens at No. 2 on the Billboard 200.

 

The Kid LAROI and Justin Bieber’s “Stay” rebounds 6-5 on the Hot 100, after seven weeks at No. 1, and Adele’s “Easy on Me” drops 4-6, after 10 weeks on top. The latter leads Radio Songs for a 15th week (67.8 million, down 8%), extending Adele’s longest stay atop the tally. It’s also one of only six titles to have ruled Radio Songs for at least 15 weeks, dating to the list’s December 1990 inception; The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights” reigned for a record 26 weeks in April-October 2020.

 

The rest of the songs in the Hot 100’s top 10 repeat their ranks from a week earlier, with Justin Bieber’s “Ghost” at its No. 7 highpoint (as it becomes his fifth No. 1 on Adult Pop Airplay) and Ed Sheeran’s “Shivers” at No. 8, after hitting No. 4, and “Bad Habits” at No. 9, after reaching No. 2.

 

Rounding out the Hot 100’s top 10, Elton John and Dua Lipa’s “Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)” is steady at No. 10, after rising to No. 7. John expands his span of top 10s to 51 years, one month and two weeks, dating to his first frame in the top 10 with “Your Song” (Jan. 23, 1971), the longest such span among all acts not involving holiday titles. “Cold Heart” leads the multi-metric Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart for a 21st week.

yay finally for Heat Waves

Not sure why 'Still D.R.E.' has been allowed to stay in the chart despite a big drop out of the top 50? :unsure:

 

:clap: to Jnr Choi indeed breaking the barrier to get the first UK drill Hot 100 hit. Oh and I guess Glass Animals doing quite well too x

by virtue of sounding very American no doubt, I had no idea he was British.

 

shame the US still sleep on Dave (not drill IK).

He is technically Gambian but based in the UK. (And yeah the song is a pretty blatant Pop Smoke ripoff lol but still)
Not sure why 'Still D.R.E.' has been allowed to stay in the chart despite a big drop out of the top 50? :unsure:

 

The fact that its less than 20 weeks on the chart? Wasn't big at all first time around.

 

 

pure madness! :deadbanana:

 

a [formerly] niche indie band #1 on the Billboard chart :deadbanana: all it took was a few boosts from TikTok and a Dream slash fanfic

 

Catalogue songs are usually treated as recurrent regardless of how many weeks they have on the chart, although tbf I can't think of many examples where that is being tested on the way down rather than the way up (i.e. older Christmas songs needing to make the top 50 to appear on the chart even if they've never charted before). Closest I can think of is DMX - Ruff Ryders' Anthem which did fall straight off the Hot 100 again the week after its re-entry (coincidentally that also peaked at #93 on its original release, same as 'Still D.R.E.') although in fairness I have no idea if it would have done well enough to have a 51-100 position that week anyway.

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