DOMAINE LEFLAIVE



have worked in wine for 20 years and this vintage was the hardest. However, the results are surprising. 2021 was a vintage of winemakers and vignerons: we had to work very, very hard in the vines.”

“I
have worked in wine for 20 years and this vintage was the hardest. However, the results are surprising. 2021 was a vintage of winemakers and vignerons: we had to work very, very hard in the vines.”
“I
I wrote last year about the ease of Domaine Leflaive’s 2020s. What a difference a year makes – 2021 was anything but easy. Pierre Vincent’s quote on the previous page evokes 2021 as a battle in the vineyards, the main foe being three nights of dramatic frosts and snow in April, when a large part of the crop was lost, followed by an attritional campaign against mildew pressure.
The good news is that the wines are beautiful. I was going to say they defy all logic, but this was a battle won in the day-to-day intricacy of vineyard work. There is the chalky definition and acid backbone you would expect from a cool vintage but, more unexpectedly, there is also flesh and seductiveness (Bâtard-Montrachet), honeysuckle and apricot (Pucelles) and pastried density (Clavoillon). Pierre Vincent suggested 2008 as a parallel vintage, for its brightness of acidity, whilst Brice de La Morandière invoked 2020, 2017 and 2014 (sounds good to me…)
This year, Adam Brett-Smith and I had the rare pleasure of two tastings at the domaine in the space of a fortnight. The first took place on an eerily quiet early winter evening in Puligny-Montrachet. Pierre unlocked a metal gate, letting us into the Leflaive courtyard under cover of darkness. This agreeably clandestine arrival contrasted with the domaine’s cavernous new cellar, whose vast twin chambers, ecclesiastical in style and scale, are built from pristine white limestone and crowned with arched oak ceilings. The first is crammed with futuristic stainless steel, which looks capable of atomic research when not being used for producing wine. The second is totally, echoingly empty.
On this first visit, with Brice and Pierre, we tasted the domaine wines, from the Bourgogne Blanc up to the grands crus, as well as the Esprit Leflaive 2019s (to be offered separately). These calm annual glimpses of the new Leflaive vintages are a rare privilege. This year, there was the added pang of knowing how scarce these wines will be once in bottle. Quantities are down terribly, most vineyards’ crops coming in at under half the 2020 levels.
The picture is similar in the Mâconnais, which was the subject of our second tasting with Pierre, the following week. The frost and rain made for average yields of 28hl/ha here and a 50% crop loss. Pierre carried out a light fining with bentonite and pressed particularly gently. The wines will be bottled at the beginning of January 2023.
And so to the 2021 growing season, marked by frost and humidity, which threw up all manner of challenges in the vineyards. It was also a year in which, just as early harvests were becoming the new normal, the run of socalled ‘climate change vintages’ was broken. As Brice put it, “nature decides everything...”
After a winter which alternated between cool and mild temperatures, March turned out to be spring-like, even hot in the last week of the month. The buds appeared, vegetative growth began… and then, like lambs to the slaughter, the vines were hit by three days of snow and three nights of severe frost, from 6th to 8th April. Losses ranged from 30% to 80% of the harvest, with some of the great sites such as Chevalier-Montrachet being worst affected.
April and May were then cool and rainy, which slowed down vine growth. June alternated between stormy periods and heat. These erratic conditions culminated in a short heatwave from 15th to 19th June, followed by thunderstorms the following week, which saw some hail fall on the 21st in Solutré, in the Mâconnais.
Summer started… in theory, at least: July was described by Brice as “gloomy and often rainy”. Powdery mildew (oidium), which thrives in damp, low-light conditions, was a constant threat, requiring frequent intervention in the vineyards. The sun eventually re-emerged in the second half of August, along with a significant rise in temperatures. Things were finally looking up: this run of clement weather lasted throughout the first half of September, allowing the ripening process to catch up.
The return of rain in mid-September (up to 65mm in a single week) coincided with harvest, which began on the 22nd – more than a month later than in 2020, which started on 20th August... Picking lasted the usual eight days but, as Brice put it, with brutal realism, “for a half harvest”. The grapes came in with an average of 12.5% potential alcohol, both in the Côte de Beaune and the Mâconnais – no mean feat for a challenging year and a good indicator of the overall balance which has somehow been wrested from the biodynamic Leflaive vines.
2021 is a vintage in which you have to detach the growing season trauma from what greets you in the glass. The Leflaive 2021s are a case study in finding beauty in adversity. Like a high-performance engine, exactly how it works remains a mystery. A vague notion of top quality materials, big brains and hard work may explain 99% of it. But I suspect there is 1% magic here too.
GUY SEDDON Head of Fine Wine Buying December 2022Hectares Years Planted
Mâcon-Verzé (Les Cassons, En Perret, Escolles, Les Muse) 12.05 1930 - 2010
Mâcon-Verzé Les Chênes 3.43 1935 (0.45 ha); 1973 - 2002 (2.98 ha)
Mâcon-Verzé Le Monté 0.94 1964 - 1965
Mâcon-Igé 0.82 1986 - 1989
Bourgogne Blanc (Les Parties, Les Houlières and La Plante des Champs) 4.31 1979 - 2003
Puligny-Montrachet 4.70 1955 - 2003
Chassagne-Montrachet 1er Cru La Maltroie 0.17 2005 - 2006
Meursault 1er Cru Sous le Dos d’Âne 1.26 1995 - 2004
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Clavoillon 4.79 1959 - 1988
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Folatières 1.60 1962 - 1999
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Combettes 0.73 1963 - 1972
Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Pucelles 2.75 1957 - 1985
Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet Grand Cru 1.15 1958 - 1959
Bâtard-Montrachet Grand Cru 1.72 1962 - 1989
Chevalier-Montrachet Grand Cru 1.79 1955 - 1980
Le Montrachet Grand Cru 0.08 1960
Please note these wines are sold on the clear understanding that they will be stored and delivered in the UK only. Due to high demand outstripping available quantities, many of these wines are on allocation. We ask for a balanced order as it is simply not possible nor fair to other customers to give an allocation of just the grands crus for example. For further advice please speak to your usual salesperson or ring our Fine Wine Sales Team on 020 7265 2430.
Domaines Leflaive (with an ‘s’) is the Domaine’s operation in the Mâconnais. We have offered the Mâcon-Verzé since its inaugural 2004 vintage. In the 2017 vintage, two single vineyard cuvées were isolated, now joined by the Mâcon-Igé and Mâcon-Solutré-Pouilly.
This is the original Mâcon that has now sired four single vineyards as the Domaine, each year gains a greater feel of the area’s potential. It’s a joy in 2021, despite a low 28 hl/ha yield with a ripe, creamy white and gold fruit nose, a supple, silken density on the palate and fresh, clean finish. Dances very well this one.
Corney & Barrow Score 17
Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2026
£350/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £390/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
This plot lies on clay/limestone soil, north, north-west of Le Monté. This is more refined, leaner than le Montémore Puligny if you like - with golden fruit on the nose, a dense but elegant palate and really nice length.
Corney & Barrow Score 17 Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2025
£415/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £455/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
Not always offered but last year I called this the Folatières of the Domaine’s Mâconnais wines and that heart-onsleeve quality is there in 2021. This lies on cooler, stony ground and offers a piercing buttery, fresh fruit nose, a palate that combines nice tension with silky richness and a kick of acidity on the finish.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 - 18Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2027
£365/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £405/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
The most overt and open of the Mâcon stable whose vineyard, at the bottom of the valley, shares the same rich, alkaline clay soil as Pouilly-Fuissé. Seductive golden and white fruit on the nose. The palate is quite rich, with a sexy, toasty sweetness, fine balancing acidity and really nice length. Just four barrels made (around 120 dozen!).
Corney & Barrow Score 18Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2027
£375/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £415/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
Nine hectare plot, the rarest of the single vineyard wines and, I suspect, Pierre Vincent’s favourite for its “silex minerality”. Slightly fuller in colour than Les Chênes, this has an insinuatingly rich nose, a fuller palate (think Clavoillon) and more flavoured golden fruit flavours with fine length. Good wine.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5
Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2026
£415/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £455/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
These two wines stem from Domaine Leflaive’s longstanding relationships with a small number of quality growers in the Côte de Beaune.
Sourced from five biodynamically farmed, minute plots (Les Equinces, Bluses, Le Pré la Dame, Les Femelottes, Champ Perrier) and owned by two sisters who have a particularly close relationship with the Domaine, this is quite a result in 2021. Lovely nose of really refined and rich Puligny-like fruit. The palate is dry and flavoury, subtly generous and with a lovely grip to the finish
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5
Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2026
£595/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £635/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
Lying between Meursault and the rather beautiful village of St-Romain, you will see a lot more of this traditionally cool (climate) appellation as global warming exacts its influence. Full, gold-white colour. Lifted white fruit on the nose with a hint of spicy leather, both mineral and rich. Lovely, supple flavours on the palate, with a surprisingly clenched power to the fruit and fine, fresh acidity on the finish. Frost caused 60% loss in this vineyard resulting in a yield of just 15 hl/ha and seven barrels made… worth it though.
Corney & Barrow Score 17 - 17.5
Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2027
£495/Case of 12 bottles, in bond UK £535/Case of 6 magnums, in bond UK
It is strongly advised, that you call or email your order in. All contact details are at the end of the offer.
Sourced from three very small plots (Les Houlières, Les Parties and La Plante des Champs) this is a PulignyMontrachet by any other name, the smart buy, the blind tasting ringer, the in-laws schmoozer, the wine that the grand cru Grandees ignore at their peril. It’s a beauty in 2021, intricate, delicate but highly tensile. Light gold in colour, the nose is still slightly reductive (compressed) but zesty and with a pure, light, golden fruit perfume. The palate is generous, succulent, even, but with clean, fresh flavours, well-balanced and with really nice length. A crowd-pleaser perhaps, and why not after the trauma of this growing season?
Corney & Barrow Score 17
Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2026
£375/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £415/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
Last year I thought the 2020 Puligny-Montrachet was possibly the best I had ever tasted at the Domaine. The 2021 doesn’t quite match that – how could it for Heaven’s sake – but from its seven plots (Les Tremblots, Les Brelances, Les Nosroyes, La Rue aux Vaches, Les Grands Champs, Les Reuchaux and Les Houlières), the oldest vines go back to 1955. This wine is a joy. Yellow, gold colour. Beautifully clean, light sabre (well that’s what I wrote in the margin), subliminally rich nose, yet ethereal, even haunting. The palate is beautifully balanced between sweetness and tension, with a delicate kick of acidity and super length. Lovely wine.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5
Recommended drinking from 2023 - 2026
£645/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £685/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
There wasn’t much global warming in 2021 but there is a fascinating contrast in the naturally cool hollow of this vineyard (close to Blagny – see map) and the gleaming richness of this wine in 2021. White-yellow colour. This has a beautiful nose, very pure, very tense, buttery, golden-fruited but elegant too. The palate is proper, so Meursault; weightier, fuller, creamier than any Puligny could possibly be. For all that, there is incisive acidity threaded through all this seduction and fine length as well. You’d have to be very puritan indeed not to love this…
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5++
Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2027
£875/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £915/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
I think that it was in the 2015 vintage that I suggested that this vineyard had graduated from clogs to ballet pumps, by which I meant that the Domaine who own 85% of the total vineyard had finally shrugged off the ubiquity that this near-monopoly had given it. Since that time, Clavoillon has soared and the 2021 is a joy. Medium gold in colour. The nose offers that characteristic white fruit perfume, subtly ripe, fresh, very pure. The palate is more grounded, planted, than the nose suggests, quite rich and creamily flavoured, nicely balanced and with super length.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5
Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2027
£875/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £915/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
Curiously, there is an umbilical link between this and the 2020 vintage of the same wine in contrast to the wildly different growing season. How the older vines (the oldest from 1962, the youngest from 1999) shrug off more casually the traumas of 2021 I haven’t the faintest idea, but it’s a beautiful wine; more Catherine Deneuve than Sophia Loren, perhaps… but a gem. Firm, yellowgold colour. Uncharacteristically shy on the nose at first with only flashes of Folatières’ “peacock’s tail” perfume and with a hint of walnuts and golden fruits. The palate has a lovely elegance, with a cool sensuality (Deneuve), subtly rich flavours, perfect balance and length. Plays the vintage quite beautifully.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 - 18 Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2028
£1,525/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £1,565/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
Our tasting notes provide full details but, at your request, we have also introduced a clear and simple marking system. We hope these guidelines assist you in your selection. For the benefit of simplicity, wines are scored out of 20. We will often use a range of scores (e.g. 16.5 to 17) to indicate the potential to achieve a higher mark. When a ‘+’ is shown it adds further to that potential. Wines from lesser vintages will, inevitably, show a lower overall score.
Wines are judged, in a very broad sense, against their peers. Why? Well, you cannot easily compare a Ford with an Aston Martin, other than they are both cars and have wheels. It is not that different with wine. A score is a summary only. The devil is in the detail, so please focus on the tasting notes and, as always, speak to our sales team.
This is the smallest holding of the 1ers crus (just 0.73 hectares) and with the oldest vines – dating back to 1963 with the youngest from 1972. I have always called this beautiful wine a Grand Cru by any other name, separated geographically (see map) and in style from the other 1ers Crus. Variously and hopelessly, I have compared this vineyard to beautiful, enigmatic older women – Lady Dedlock in Bleak House, the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier, Romy Schneider as the Empress Elizabeth in Visconti’s Ludwig – you get the picture, as it were, and its rarity due to the tiny production inevitably contributes to its desirability…
The 2021 is a triumph. Cool, yellow-gold colour. The nose is perfectly open, with elegantly refined old vine fruit, creamily ripe, utterly at ease. The palate is almost perfect, fluid, supple, sensuously flavoured, subtly sweet with a delectable flare of acidity on the finish. A pleasure giver. Too much too early? Who cares? It willl last.
Corney & Barrow Score 18 - 18.5
Recommended drinking from 2024 - 2028
£2,150/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £2,190/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
This is the vineyard that is perhaps most synonymous with the Domaine. It is not the largest – that privilege goes to Clavoillon but it is closest to the grands crus (see map) and is perhaps the most perfect example of the Domaine’s high tensile, successfully elegant style. Similar colour to Combettes. As almost always it is as tight as a drum on the nose; lean, compressed, reductive and then, finally emerges that characteristic biscuity rich but austerely mineral perfume. The palate is intriguingly lush and compressed, chrysalis-like, with subdued, latently generous flavours, surprisingly rounded and of fine length.
Corney & Barrow Score 18Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2029
£2,495/Case of 6 bottles, in bond UK £2,535/Case of 3 magnums, in bond UK
Old, old vines here (1958 and 1959), and a single patch of just 1.15 hectares offer a quite lovely wine in 2021 and another world from the 1ers Crus. There is what I can only describe as a calmness about this wine despite or perhaps because of the tumult in which it was born. The nose is compressed at first then after a few seconds shows intricate white fruit perfume, nutty and biscuity but without oak. The palate by contrast is more relaxed, subtly dry in its richness – a nod almost towards Chevalier – and then that characteristic flare of tension and acidity on the finish.
Corney & Barrow Score 18 Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2029
£2,375/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £1,625/Case of 1 magnum, in bond UK
I cannot remember when this great wine was ever not “the heart on sleeve” and most showy of the four Grands Crus. In 2021 there is a joyousness about its flair and exuberance from its golden colour and golden, silken, even succulent richness on the nose. The palate is full, with subtle, dense fresh yellow fruit flavours, really rather magnificent, but before it all becomes too much, there is that delectable burst of freshness and acidity on the finish and huge length. I am Bâtard after all…
Corney & Barrow Score 18.5
Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2029
£2,550/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £1,740/Case of 1 magnum, in bond UK
The difference between the grands crus and the 1ers crus is frequently most marked in more difficult vintages. Between Chevalier and Bâtard, the volume may be turned down but the intensity is absolute. Mineral, taut, reductive nose, elusively perfumed, with rich, old fruit and that Chevalier minerality. The palate echoes the nose, full, flavoured, drily rich, with contained power and excellent length. “Chevalier has casually cast off the skin of this vintage”, I scribbled in the margin. Great wine.
Corney & Barrow Score 18.5+ Recommended drinking from 2025 - 2031
£3,195/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £2,170/Case of 1 magnum, in bond UK
P l a n du D om a i n e
P l a n du D om a i n e
G R A N DS C R U S 4 , 8 H A
G R A N DS C R U S 4 , 8 H A
Montrachet Chevalier-Montrachet Bâtard-Montrachet Bienvenues Bâtard-Montrachet
P R E M I E R S C R U S 1 0 , 8 H A
Puligny-Montrachet Les Pucelles Puligny-Montrachet Les Combettes Puligny-Montrachet Les Folatières
Puligny-Montrachet Le Clavoillon
Chassagne-Montrachet La Maltroie Meursault Sous le Dos d ’Âne
P U L I G N Y- MO NT R A C HE T V I L L A G E 4 6 H A
Montrachet
4 8 H A
Chevalier-Montrachet Bâtard-Montrachet
Montrachet
Les Tremblots
La Rue aux Vaches
Bienvenues Bâtard-Montrachet
Chevalier-Montrachet Bâtard-Montrachet Bienvenues Bâtard-Montrachet
P R E M I E R S C R U S 1 0 , 8 H A
P R E M I E R S C R U S 1 0 8 H A
Puligny-Montrachet Les Pucelles
Les Brelances
Les Grands Champs
Les Nosroyes
Les Reuchaux
Puligny-Montrachet Les Combettes
Puligny-Montrachet Les Pucelles
Puligny-Montrachet Les Combettes
B O U R G O G N E B L A N C 4 H A
Puligny-Montrachet Les Folatières
Puligny-Montrachet Le Clavoillon
Puligny-Montrachet Les Folatières
Les Parties
Chassagne-Montrachet La Maltroie
Puligny-Montrachet Le Clavoillon
Les Houlières
Meursault Sous le Dos d ’Âne
Chassagne-Montrachet La Maltroie Meursault Sous le Dos d ’Âne
P U L I G N Y- MO NT R A C HE T V I L L A G E 4 , 6 H A
Les Tremblots
La Rue aux Vaches
La Plante des Champs
REVISED DRINKING DATES 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Chevalier-Montrachet 2010 2009 2012 2013 2012 2014 2017 2017
Bâtard-Montrachet 2010 2009 2012 2011 2012 2013 2016 2017
Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet 2010 2009 2012 2012 2012 2013 2016 2017
Pucelles 2009 2009 2010 2011 2010 2012 2015 2016 Folatières 2009 2009 2010 2010 2010 2011 2015 2016 Combettes 2009 2009 2010 2010 2010 2012 2015 2015
Clavoillon 2009 2007 2010 2009 2010 2011 2015 2015
Puligny-Montrachet 2009 2006 2009 2009 2009 2010 2013 2013 Meursault Sous Le Dos d’Âne 2009 2009 2010 2009 2009 2011 2013 2013 Bourgogne Blanc 2007 2006 2009 2008 2008 2010 2013 2011
For your interest and reference we have included our original recommendations made at the launch of the new vintages below.
ORIGINAL DRINKING DATES
Chevalier-Montrachet
Bâtard-Montrachet
Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet
Pucelles
Folatières
Combettes
Clavoillon
Puligny-Montrachet
Meursault Sous Le Dos d’Âne
Bourgogne Blanc
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
From 2008 From 2008 From 2011 2013-2019 2012-2016 2014-2017 2015-2018 2013-2017
From 2008 From 2007 From 2010 2012-2018 2012-2015 2013-2016 2013-2016 2013-2018
From 2008 From 2008 From 2010 2012-2017 2012-2014 2012-2016 2013-2016 2013-2018
From 2007 From 2007 From 2009 2010-2015 2011-2013 2011-2015 2012-2015 2013-2017
From 2005 From 2006 From 2008 2008-2013 2010-2011 2010-2013 2011-2013 2012-2015
From 2006 From 2006 From 2008 2010-2015 2010-2012 2011-2014 2012-2014 2013-2016
From 2005 From 2006 From 2007 2008-2012 2010-2011 2010-2012 2011-2014 2012-2016
From 2005 From 2005 From 2007 2009-2012 2009-2010 2009-2012 2011-2013 2012-2016
From 2005 From 2005 From 2007 2009-2012 2009-2011 2010-2012 2011-2013 2012-2016
From 2004 From 2005 From 2006 2007-2010 2008-2009 2009-2011 2010-2013 2011-2014
We are regularly asked for more specific drinking dates for white Burgundies, in particular the great domaines.
Here therefore, are specific recommendations of drinking dates for every recent vintage. Of course taste is an extremely personal thing and these dates are conservative, but having tasted and analysed these wines extensively over the last few years, we absolutely believe that opening these wines at the dates indicated will ensure maximum enjoyment.
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018* 2019* 2020*
2020 2021 2021 2023 2018-2026 See below See below 2021-2030 See below See below See below
2020 2021 2021 2022 2016-2025 2017 -2024 2018-2028 2018-2025 See below See below See below
2020 2021 2021 2022 2016-2025 2019-2024 2020-2025 2020-2026 See below See below See below
2020 2021 2021 2021 2017-2024 2018-2024 2019-2025 2021-2025 See below See below See below
2018 2018 2018 2020 2017-2024 2017-2024 2018-2023 2019-2024 See below See below See below
2021 2018 2020 2020 2017-2024 2018-2024 See below 2019-2023 See below See below See below
2019 2017 2017 2019 2016-2024 2017-2024 2019-2025 2019-2024 See below See below See below
2018 2017 2017 2019 2016-2026 2017-2023 2018-2023 2019-2023 See below See below See below
2018 2017 2018 2019 2016-2024 2017-2023 2018-2023 2019-2023 See below See below See below
2017 2016 2017 2019 2016-2022 2017-2023 2018-2022 2019-2022 See below See below See below
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
2017-2020 2018-2022 2017-2021 2019-2023 2018-2022 2019-2029 2020-2029 2021-2028 2022-2027 2022-2028 2024 -2030
2016-2019 2017-2021 2017-2020 2018-2022 2016-2022 2017-2023 2018-2024 2019-2025 2022-2026 2023-2026 2024 - 2030 2016-2019 2017-2021 2017-2020 2018-2022 2018-2022 2019-2023 2020-2024 2020-2025 2021-2026 2023-2026 2024 - 2028
2015-2020 2016-2020 2016-2019 2017-2021 2017-2022 2018-2023 2019-2023 2021-2024 2020-2025 2023-2026 2024 - 2028
2015-2017 2014-2017 2016-2018 2016-2020 2017-2021 2017-2022 2018-2022 2019-2023 2021-2023 2022-2025 2023 - 2027
2013-2019 2015-2018 2016-2019 2017-2020 2017-2020+ 2018-2023 2019-2023 2020-2024 2021-2024 2022-2025 2023 -2027
2013-2017 2014-2016 2015-2017 2015-2019 2016-2021 2017-2022 2018-2022 2019-2023 2021-2023 2022-2025 2023 - 2026
2013-2017 2014-2016 2014-2017 2016-2019 2016-2021 2017-2022 2018-2022 2019-2022 2020-2023 2021-2024 2023 -2025
2013-2016 2014-2016 2015-2018 2015-2019 2016-2021 2017-2022 2018-2022 2019-2022 2020-2023 2022-2024 2023 -2026
2012-2015 2013-2015 2014-2017 2015-2018 2016-2020 2017-2021 2018-2020 2019-2021 2020-2022 2021-2024 2023 - 2025
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