9. Chicago signs G Cristobal Huet, 2008 Signed in 2008 to a four-year deal worth a hefty $22.4-million, Huet was expected to be a consistent lead goalie for an up-and-coming Hawks team. When he finally wrested the starting job from Nikolai Khabibulin, he watched as Antti Niemi emerged and helped lead the Hawks to the 2010 Stanley Cup.
Chicago then loaned him to a Swiss team to alleviate their salary cap struggles.
(Photo by Glenn James/NHLI via Getty Images)
We've entered the stretch of the NHL calendar when a few GMs inevitably lose their mind and offer somebody way more money than they're worth.
So whether they're limited by injuries or just not that good anymore, countless free agent signings never live up to the hype, or the numbers on their paycheque.
Affluent Americans may want to double-check how much of their bank deposits are protected by government-backed insurance. The rules governing trust accounts just changed.
Former NBA guard Darius Morris has died at the age of 33. He played for five teams during his four NBA seasons. Morris played college basketball at Michigan.
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Jake Mintz & Jordan Shusterman discuss the Padres-Marlins trade that sent Luis Arraez to San Diego, as well as recap all the action from this weekend in baseball and send birthday wishes to hall-of-famer Willie Mays.
Miami Heat president Pat Riley rebuked comments Jimmy Butler made about the Boston Celtics and New York Knicks, while also implying that his star needs to play more.
An annual government report offered a glimmer of good news for Social Security and a jolt of good news for Medicare even as both programs continue to be on pace to run dry next decade.
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Minneapolis Fed president Neel Kashkari said interest rates will likely stay at current levels for an "extended period" and didn't rule out a hike if inflation stalls near 3%.