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The assistant U.S. attorney who is accused of limiting questions related to President Biden during the federal investigation into Hunter Biden is expected to be deposed at the House Judiciary Committee on Thursday morning, all while the whistleblowers who made the allegations against her testify at a separate committee.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Lesley Wolf was subpoenaed last month for a deposition. She is expected to sit behind closed doors at the House Judiciary Committee at 10 a.m. on Thursday.

Over at the House Ways and Means Committee, the whistleblowers who put Wolf’s work under the microscope will sit for a closed-door hearing during the committee’s executive session on Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. Gary Shapley, who led the IRS’ portion of the Hunter Biden probe, and Joseph Ziegler, a 13-year special agent within the IRS’ Criminal Investigation Division, are expected to speak to the panel.

Shapley and Ziegler have alleged political influence surrounding prosecutorial decisions throughout the Hunter Biden investigation, which began in 2018.

Shapley alleged that Wolf sought to block investigators from asking questions related to President Biden throughout the years-long federal investigation into his son, Hunter Biden.

Specifically, Shapley alleged that Wolf worked to ‘limit’ questioning related to President Biden and apparent references to Biden as ‘dad’ or ‘the big guy.’

Wolf allegedly said there was ‘no specific criminality to that line of questioning’ relating to President Biden, which Shapley said ‘upset the FBI.’

In October 2020, Wolf reviewed an affidavit for a search warrant of Hunter Biden’s residence and ‘agreed that probable cause had been achieved,’ Shapley testified. However, Shapley said Wolf ultimately would not allow a physical search warrant on the president’s son.

Shapley said Wolf determined there was ‘enough probable cause for the physical search warrant there, but the question was whether the juice was worth the squeeze.’

Wolf allegedly said that ‘optics were a driving factor in the decision on whether to execute a search warrant,’ Shapley said, adding that Wolf agreed that ‘a lot of evidence in our investigation would be found in the guest house of former Vice President Biden, but said there is no way we will get that approved.’

Wolf also allegedly tipped off Hunter Biden’s legal team ahead of a planned search of his storage unit.

The whistleblowers’ testimony before Ways and Means and Wolf’s deposition at Judiciary comes as part of the House impeachment inquiry against President Biden.

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith, R-Mo., Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., are leading the investigation as the House gathers evidence and considers whether to draft articles of impeachment against President Biden.

The committees are investigating the alleged politicization of the federal probe into Hunter Biden. They are also investigating the Biden family’s foreign business dealings and whether the president was involved or benefited directly from those ventures.

President Biden has repeatedly denied having any involvement in his son’s business dealings.

Hunter Biden defied his subpoena to appear for a deposition at the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday. Instead, he made a public statement on Capitol Hill, blasting the Republican impeachment inquiry and saying his father was ‘not financially involved’ in his business dealings.

Comer and Jordan have threatened to hold Hunter Biden in contempt of Congress.

Hunter Biden’s public statement Wednesday came just days after he was charged out of Special Counsel David Weiss’ investigation.

Weiss alleged Hunter Biden was engaged in a ‘four-year scheme’ when the president’s son did not pay his federal income taxes from January 2017 to October 2020 while also filing false tax reports. Weiss filed the charges in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

The charges break down to three felonies and six misdemeanors concerning $1.4 million in owed taxes that were since paid.

Weiss also indicted Hunter Biden in September with federal gun charges, to which the president’s son has pleaded not guilty. Biden’s defense attorney, Abbe Lowell, this week moved to dismiss those charges altogether.

Weiss’s investigation is ongoing.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

FIRST ON FOX: Hunter Biden previously claimed he didn’t ‘stand to gain anything’ from his role on the board of Ukrainian energy firm Burisma despite it leading to him making millions of dollars.

He made the claim in a May 15, 2014 email recovered from his infamous abandoned laptop, which revealed he was considering writing an op-ed to push back on what he perceived were misleading reports about his then-new role on the Burisma board. However, emails from weeks earlier and the millions of dollars he would later make contradict his claim.

‘So you think it makes sense for me to write some sort of op/ed explaining my role as an independent director with no equity interest in the company. The objective would be to clarify that I don’t ‘work’ for Burisma and that I don’t stand to gain anything as I am not an equity shareholder in the company,’ Hunter wrote.

‘My decision to join the board was made in the context of lending support and ‘western’ corporate governance standards to a vital Ukrainian company and industry under siege from pro-Putin/ Russian forces,’ he added.

Despite Hunter’s claims, the wheels were already in motion for then-Vice President Biden’s son to make a lucrative salary from Burisma. One day before Hunter’s email, a top Burisma executive sent an email that said they planned on paying ‘monthly fees’ to the directors as previously discussed, referring to Hunter Biden and his now-former business partner Devon Archer, among a couple others. A follow-up email noted that the wires were ‘received’ for Hunter and Archer.

An email Biden sent a month earlier to Archer shows Hunter was actively strategizing how the pair could capitalize on their board memberships and expand their business. In one section, Hunter appears to be attempting to leverage his connections with his father, then-Vice President Joe Biden, in order to boost his potential pay, including saying that his contract with Burisma should include ‘a retainer in the range of 25k p/m [with] additional fees where appropriate for more in depth work to go to [law firm Boies, Schiller, Flexner] for our protection.’ Hunter’s pay per month ended up being more than double that proposed figure.

Another Hunter email exchange with Archer from May 2014 with the subject line ‘Notes from the 13 hr plane ride’ to China shows that Hunter expected to make millions in the Burisma role. After doing some deductions and talking about expenses the email says, ‘That would bring us to roughly 4.85M jointly from Burisma. If that actually happens we should consider two things: 1- making a 200-250K RSB investment into Counsyl and 2- I INVESTED $200K OF MY PA IN THIS ROUND. I WOULD DO MORE.’

Citing bank records, the House Oversight Committee investigating Biden’s foreign business dealings said Hunter and Archer reached a deal with the firm to be paid $1 million per year, which the committee said equated to approximately $83,333 per month. 

A couple of these payments rolled in mid-April 2014 and then more payments arrived on May 15, 2014, the same day Hunter said that he didn’t ‘stand to gain anything.’ Hunter and Archer each received a $83,333 payment to Rosemont Seneca Bohai and would continue to receive identical payments until late 2015 when Hunter’s payments were switched to his corporate account, Owasco P.C.

The committee reported that the two men received approximately $3.32 million in 2014 and 2015 alone, and $6.5 million total, according to FBI whistleblower testimony.

Other emails showed Biden thanking a top Burisma executive for birthday gifts he described as ‘far too extravagant’ less than two months before the top Ukraine prosecutor investigating the energy company was infamously fired.

‘V- Thanks so much,’ Hunter wrote in the email to Vadym Pozharskyi, an adviser to Burisma’s board, asking him to thank ‘Nikolay’ for the gifts, appearing to refer to Burisma’s founder and former president, Mykola Zlochevsky, who also went by ‘Nikolay.’

‘Let Nikolay know how much I appreciate his friendship and loyalty. I truly believe in what we are doing and I’m proud to say I am a part of this organization. And I am so glad you and I are on the same team,’ Hunter wrote.

The committee has also been investigating whether President Biden was involved in Hunter’s business dealings, something the latter denied Wednesday during a press conference outside the U.S. Capitol ahead of what was supposed to be his appearing for a deposition as a result of a congressional subpoena.

‘My father was not financially involved in my business,’ Hunter said. ‘No evidence to support that my father was financially involved in my business because it did not happen.’

Hunter’s recent indictment last week in California, which includes 9 new tax-related charges, talks about how he ‘earned handsomely’ while serving on Burisma’s board and his involvement with CEFC China Energy Co Ltd, a Chinese energy conglomerate, but failed to pay over $1M in federal income taxes over the course of a ‘four-year scheme.’ 

Fox News Digital has reached out to representatives of Hunter for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Federal Trade Commission announced a new rule Tuesday intended to stop auto dealers from using hidden fees and bait-and-switch price tactics on buyers.

The agency says such fees and tactics cost people in the U.S. $3.4 billion a year and add 72 million hours to their time spent shopping for vehicles.

The FTC calls the new regulation the Combating Auto Retail Scams Rule.

Read more on this story at NBCNews.com and watch “NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt” tonight at 6:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. CT.

The agency says the rule bans misrepresentations about price, cost and other key information. It also requires dealers to provide the actual price consumers have to pay for vehicles, to disclose that additional items like extended warranties aren’t mandatory and to state the full monthly payment consumers are accepting upfront.

Stacy Lupo of Winter Haven, Florida, said she and her son were victimized by those kinds of sales tactics when she bought a car for him at a Toyota dealership in 2021. They were offered an extended warranty and turned it down, but Lupo was concerned about the way the financing manager behaved afterward.

She said she later reviewed the lease paperwork and found a charge from an extended warranty company.

“The total amount that my son would finance was different on the printout paper than we had signed on the computer. It was all of a sudden almost $4,000 more,” she said.

Lupo also confirmed that her daughter, who had bought a nearly identical car the week before and hadn’t dealt with that financing manager, was paying less than her son.

FTC Chair Lina Khan said in an interview, ‘This rule by the FTC is really going to help ensure a more fair and honest marketplace so that Americans can buy cars without worrying about getting tricked or deceived.

‘Every year for the last four years, we’ve gotten over 100,000 complaints from consumers who have gone out to buy a car, one of the most expensive purchases that Americans make, and have found in that process that they’ve been saddled with all sorts of unnecessary products or services that were somehow snuck into the paperwork that they had to sign,’ Khan said.

The FTC says the rule also bans add-on items that it described as providing no value to consumers, like duplicative warranties, software and audio subscriptions for cars that can’t support such services or service contracts for oil changes on electric vehicles that don’t need motor oil.

Another provision prohibits dealers from trying to trick members of the military by falsely suggesting that the dealerships are affiliated with the military.

“It’s been an issue for a very long time, but it got significantly worse during the pandemic, which is where the pressure for this rule came from,” said Sean Tucker, a senior editor for the auto research company Kelley Blue Book. “It became a bigger issue when everybody had to pay over MSRP for their car.”

Tucker added that some fees charged by auto dealerships are legitimate but that others are scams.

“My all-time favorite one is nitrogen in tires,” he said. “They’ve done tests and determined that it has the exact same amount of nitrogen as in ambient air. It’s entirely fake,” he said, comparing nitrogen-filled tires with tires that are inflated with regular air.

Last month, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau accused Toyota’s credit division of deceptive behavior and ordered it to pay $60 million. That included a $12 million fine, as well as refunds to consumers.

Lupo said that after numerous phone calls, she was able to cancel the extended warranty on her son’s car but that it took a lot of work. And her son is stuck with higher monthly payments over the life of the lease.

‘I sold my car a while back, and I still haven’t bought a new one, because I’m scared to death to go into a dealership because of being taken advantage of. It’s a horrible feeling,’ she said.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped to a record Wednesday as the Federal Reserve signaled it would cut rates several times next year, satisfying investors who hoped the central bank would finally start to acknowledge the slowing trend of inflation with a less-aggressive monetary stance.

The 30-stock Dow added 512.30 points, or 1.40%, to close at 37,090.24. This marks the first time the benchmark closed above the 37,000 mark — exceeding a previous record set in January 2022. At its session high, the Dow touched 37,094.85.

The S&P 500 jumped 1.37% to finish the session at 4,707.09 — crossing 4,700 for the first time since January 2022 — while the Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.38%. to 14,733.96. All three major averages hit fresh 52-week highs.

The central bank held the benchmark overnight borrowing rate steady in the 5.25% to 5.5% range as expected, but more importantly it forecast three rate cuts in 2024, which were more than it had previously indicated. Investors have been increasingly hoping for the Fed to give a clearer signal that it would start cutting rates next year with recent inflation data easing.

The Fed’s meeting statement acknowledged that inflation “has eased” over the past year and the central bank formally lowered its inflation forecast for 2024, seeing a 2.4% rate down from 2.6%.

“The Fed has given the market an early holiday gift today when, finally, for the first time, they have commented positively about inflation,” said Gina Bolvin, president of Bolvin Wealth Management Group. “It appears that the Fed is moving in the market’s direction, rather than the market moving towards the Fed. The Santa Claus rally may continue.”

The Dow retreated from previous record levels in early 2022 as the Fed embarked on its policy tightening campaign to fend off inflation. Last year, the 30-stock benchmark dropped 8.8% — its biggest annual decline since 2008.

Since the start of the fourth quarter however, the Dow has surged more than 10% as hope of easier policy grew.

The gains Wednesday brought the Dow’s year-to-date rise to 11.9%. The broader market has seen even bigger gains, with the S&P 500 up 22.6% so far in 2023. The Nasdaq Composite is up 40.8% year-to-date.

The market got more encouraging inflation data earlier on Monday, with the producer price index unchanged in November. That follows Tuesday’s consumer price index release, which showed prices slowing to a 3.1% annual rate last month.

The 10-year Treasury yield, a benchmark for mortgage rates and other loans, dropped to 4.03% following the Fed’s rate forecast release, the lowest levels since August.

Shares of Bank of America and Wells Fargo, banks that stand to benefit if the Fed orchestrates a so-called soft landing, jumped 4% and nearly 3% Wednesday, respectively. Home Depot, whose sales could be boosted by a revival in the housing market, gained 3%.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

They call him a “chess detective.”

For more than a decade now, University at Buffalo computer science professor Kenneth Regan has been one of the world’s foremost experts in a niche subject: The detection of chess cheating. He spends much of his time monitoring games at top-level tournaments and identifying potential cheats, rooting out deceit with the help of what he describes as a “fairly garden-variety predictive analytic model” that compares the moves of a player to those suggested by chess-playing computers.

Regan acknowledges that, without those computers, known as chess engines, his model would not work.

Of course, without those same engines, many players would struggle to cheat in the first place.

“It is true that I am fighting fire with fire,” Regan concludes.

It’s a familiar refrain across the world of sports. As cheaters and dopers employ new forms of technology in their schemes, looking for innovative ways to gain an advantage and hide their misdeeds, anti-cheating authorities like Regan often use the same tools to catch or thwart them.

In elite distance running, electronic chips in runners’ bibs can detect unusual changes in their pace or, in some cases, whether they attempt to cut the course. In Major League Baseball, officials recently introduced a wireless communication system called PitchCom as a potential antidote to the sign-stealing scandal carried out by the Houston Astros in 2017, when they won the World Series. And in Olympic sports, science has become an invaluable weapon wielded by dopers and anti-doping authorities, trying to stay one step ahead of one another.

“It’s like an arms race,” University of Colorado professor Roger Pielke Jr. said. “A never-ending arms race.”

In his 2016 book titled “The Edge: The War against Cheating and Corruption in the Cutthroat World of Elite Sports,” Pielke writes that we are collectively “overdue to open a discussion of technology in sport.” He argues that technology is not only used to cheat and catch cheaters but also, perhaps more importantly, to establish rules around what, exactly, constitutes cheating in the first place.

Do carbon-plated running shoes and high-tech swimsuits give their athletes an unfair advantage? What about an MMA fighter shaving down the bones in his face, to reduce the chances that he might get cut and bleed when hit?

Perhaps most importantly: What new forms of cheating might we see next?

‘Toiletgate’ to checkmate

Regan first earned his reputation as a chess detective not by catching an accused cheater, but rather by helping to absolve one.

At the 2006 world chess championships, Bulgarian player Veselin Topalov indirectly accused his opponent, Vladimir Kramnik, of accessing a chess engine while he was in the bathroom. In a news release, Topalov’s team noted that many of the Russian grandmaster’s moves corresponded with the computer’s suggestions, while calling attention to the frequency with which Kramnik used the bathroom during their match.

The saga became aptly known as “Toiletgate.”

Kramnik denied the allegations and ultimately wound up winning the match. Meanwhile, Regan, who was an accomplished chess player in his youth, decided to crunch the data using his model. He found that in many of the situations in Kramnik’s games, there was really only one strong move to choose from.

“When the best move is singular … chances are a strong player will find the same move as a computer,” Regan explained.

Though sometimes not considered a sport in the traditional sense, chess has had its fair share of cheating scandals − almost all of them involving the assistance of chess engines. Perhaps the most infamous one to date occurred just last year.

After a shocking loss at a top-tier tournament in St. Louis, five-time world champion Magnus Carlsen refused to play American grandmaster Hans Niemann and later accused him of cheating ‘more – and more recently – than he has publicly admitted.’ Niemann acknowledged cheating in online games as a teen but denied cheating at in-person tournaments. He later sued the Norwegian, among others, for defamation; the lawsuit was dismissed in June.

In the past decade alone, at least four elite players have been caught consulting a chess engine on a cell phone hidden in the bathroom at a tournament.

In a handful of other cases, players like Borislav Ivanov have been accused of receiving advice on a move via a wireless device. In Ivanov’s case, the allegation was that he had a buzzer in his shoe. (Regan’s model determined the odds of him playing the moves he played in a 2012 tournament without computer help were ‘almost a million-to-one.’ Ivanov denied cheating but was disqualified from a separate tournament after refusing to take off his shoes. )

“I categorically will not take off my shoes,” he told the tournament director, according to another player who told chess website ChessBase that he witnessed the incident. “My socks smell.”

‘It’s a real cat-and-mouse game’

Regan estimates there are between five and 10 cheating cases per year in upper-level amateur and professional chess tournaments. Unfortunately, he says, this is nothing new. When he was growing up, cheaters would secretively consult chess books rather than computers. Only the technology has changed.

Over the past century, the devices and techniques at the center of other sports cheating schemes have ranged from the incredibly simple to the highly technical and sophisticated.

At the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, for example, it was the automobile that Fred Lorz used to win the marathon, riding comfortably for 11 of the race’s 26.2 miles.

In more recent history, it was the center-field cameras that the Houston Astros used to zoom in on opposing catchers’ signs, enabling their hitters to know ahead of time which pitches they were about to face.

In between, there was the electrically-modified fencing épée that pentathlete Boris Onischenko used at the 1976 Olympics. The capsule of fake blood that Tom Williams popped in his mouth, to feign injury at a critical juncture in a rugby match. Tiny electric motors hidden in the seat tubes of bicycles. A powder sprinkled into a boxer’s gloves that hardens when wet, turning sweating fists into anvils. And a long list of technological advances used by dopers to avoid detection − from micro-dosing to more comical attempts, like the cyclist who tried to pass a drug test by running someone else’s urine from a condom under his armpit through a tube in his sleeve. (That cyclist, Michel Pollentier, was quickly caught.)

‘It’s a real cat-and-mouse game,’ said Matt Fedoruk, the chief science officer at the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. ‘We’re always, through sound and evidence-based scientific research, trying to develop and refine (our) techniques in order to stay ahead of the dopers.’

Science has perhaps played a more significant role in the doping world than any other cheating arena in sports. Fedoruk pointed to the use and detection of erythropoietin, more commonly known as EPO, as just one example.

A hormone that ramps up the production of red blood cells in the body, EPO has been banned in sports since the early 1990s, according to the World Anti-Doping Agency. But before the 2000 Sydney Olympics, anti-doping authorities didn’t have a test that could detect it. Several high-profile cyclists, including Lance Armstrong, wound up testing positive for the substance over the next dozen years.

And yet as more athletes were caught with EPO, new synthetic versions of the hormone began to appear. Fedoruk said they’re now seeing third- and fourth-generation EPO molecules, which are structured differently than their predecessors and therefore require different types of tests.

‘As the drugs evolve, the tests have to evolve as well,’ he said. ‘Because it’s not a one-test-fits-all type of approach.’

Perhaps this is why, in a 2022 survey conducted by USADA, 53% of the nearly 1,000 U.S. athletes questioned said they believe the science used to detect performance-enhancing substances is behind or far behind athletes’ ability to dodge a positive test.

‘If you’re going to be cheating in doping, you always have the upper hand,’ Pielke added.

‘This is the double-edged sword, right? You come up with a better method of detecting, and the people who hold that knowledge also hold the key to knowing how to be a better doper.’

What comes next?

Some advances in sports technology simply raise questions of cheating, rather than accusations of it.

In 2008, several swimming world records fell in quick succession after Speedo unveiled its new LZR swimsuit, which was designed to reduce resistance as swimmers traveled through the water. The suits were later banned by World Aquatics, the international federation that oversees the sport. Track and field dealt with a similar controversy in 2017, following the release of Nike’s Vaporfly shoes − the first of what are now colloquially known as ‘super shoes.’

The future of sports cheating is likely to be riddled with more cases like these, in which athletes find and benefit from supercharged equipment before governing bodies are able to react. But experts like Fedoruk and Pielke believe the next major frontier is gene doping, or human enhancement more broadly.

‘The questions of doping are going to seem quaint compared to the ability to do human enhancement going forward,’ Pielke predicted.

It is already commonplace for athletes to repair or replace parts of their bodies to improve their performance. Just think of every baseball player who has gotten Lasik eye surgery in hopes of picking up a curveball more easily, or MMA fighters like Nick Diaz, who turned to plastic surgery in an attempt to ensure they won’t bleed when hit.

But gene doping goes a step further. The idea is that an athlete could hypothetically alter their genes to produce more of a hormone that would help them in competition, or less of one that would hinder them.

Fedoruk said that, while nobody has been caught attempting this kind of gene doping, it has ‘become a threat.’ A synthetic type of EPO, for example, can be found in testing, but EPO produced by a manipulated gene cannot.

‘The idea would be: Could this be undetectable?’ he asked.

It is likely only a matter of time before an athlete, or their accomplice, is able to use new scientific advances to turn the idea of gene doping into reality. In the meantime, Fedoruk and his colleagues will continue to use their own scientific tools to ward it off. Like everywhere else in sports, the proverbial cat-and-mouse game continues.

‘So really,’ Pielke said, ‘science and technology are both the problem and the solution.’

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It didn’t take Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green very long to cross the line on the court again.

Green was ejected from Tuesday night’s game against the Phoenix Suns after he struck Suns center Jusuf Nurkic in the head with his hand.

The incident occurred with 8:23 to go in the third quarter. Green was battling for position with Nurkic when he spun suddenly and popped Nurkic on the side of the head with enough force to drop the 7-foot center. Green was assessed a Flagrant Foul 2, which is handed out when it is determined a player made ‘unnecessary and excessive contact’ with an opponent. A Flagrant Foul 2 call results in an automatic ejection.

Tuesday night was just Green’s sixth game back since he served a five-game suspension for what the NBA called his ‘unsportsmanlike and dangerous’ actions when he put Rudy Gobert in a headlock during a scuffle between the Warriors and Timberwolves last month.

‘What’s going on with him? I don’t know. Personally I feel like that brother needed help,’ Nurkic said after the game. ‘I’m glad he not try to choke me,’ Nurkic cracked, but he added: ‘At the same time, ain’t nothing to do with basketball, man. I’m just out there trying to play basketball, he’s out there swinging. I think we saw that often. I hope he … whatever he got in his life, it gets better.’

Green maintained the hit was unintentional. Green said Nurkic was pulling his hip and that he swung his arms in an attempt to get a call.

‘As you know I’m not one to apologize for things I meant to do, but I do apologize to Jusuf … because I didn’t intend to hit him,’ Green said. ‘I sell calls with my arms. I don’t fall to sell the call, I’m not a flopper. So I was just selling the call.’

Green said he’d seen a replay, but said that replays are ‘never going to look good.’

‘I know my intentions and my intentions were to sell the call. But I also don’t think I’m an accurate enough puncher to do a full 360 and connect with someone. So, it’s unfortunate,’ Green said.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr said he hadn’t seen a replay of Green’s swing, so he declined to comment on it, but he did say Green needs to ‘find a way to keep his poise and be out there for his teammates.’

‘Draymond’s still a hell of a player, he’s still a really good player. So, we need him. If we’re going to be a really good team, we need him,’ Kerr said.

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The St. Louis Blues fired Stanley Cup-winning head coach Craig Berube just hours after Tuesday’s 6-4 loss to the Detroit Red Wings, which dropped St. Louis to 13-14-1 on the season.

Drew Bannister, the head coach of the team’s AHL affiliate, has been named the Blues’ interim coach.

Berube, a longtime NHL tough guy, was elevated to the head coaching role in November 2018 and oversaw the Blues’ stunning turnaround that season. St. Louis went from last place to capturing the first Stanley Cup in team history with a Game 7 victory against the Bruins in Boston. Berube was named a Jack Adams Award finalist for coach of the year after posting a 38-19-6 record.

He guided the Blues back to the playoffs the next three seasons, but their best showing was a second-round exit in 2022 vs. the eventual Stanley Cup champion Avalanche. St. Louis became sellers at last season’s deadline — captain Ryan O’Reilly and longtime winger Vladimir Tarasenko were shipped out of town — and the team missed the playoffs after posting a 37-38-7 record.

Another uneven start to this season, punctuated by a current four-game losing streak, cost Berube his job.

He ends his Blues tenure with a 206-132-44 record over parts of six seasons.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

And now the manner he’ll be compensated has shattered another norm.

Ohtani is deferring $680 million of his $700 million salary from the Los Angeles Dodgers, earning the relatively pauper’s sum of $2 million per year for 10 seasons before receiving the remaining compensation from 2034 to 2043, when Ohtani will have his 50th birthday, and not his first World Series title, in his sights.

The maneuver has inspired amazement and scorn, admiration and trepidation, what with both player and club going to great lengths to create the biggest guaranteed contract in sports history – while enabling the Dodgers much greater flexibility within Major League Baseball’s competitive balance tax.

Yet Ohtani and the Dodgers aren’t necessarily blazing a new trail – they’re just destroying the scale of deferred compensation that fans and the industry have grown accustomed.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

A look at the precedent for Ohtani’s contract and how it may impact the future:

Dodgers: Deferred cash, instant offense

Perhaps the Ohtani deal came together more easily because deferring salary for superstars is now old hat for the Dodgers.

In L.A., Ohtani will join Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman to join one of the most daunting lineup trios in recent baseball history. And Betts and Freeman also landed at Chavez Ravine thanks to their willingness to defer significant salary – a combined $172 million.

The Dodgers’ Ohtani splurge has created consternation that another big-market team is trying to buy a championship. But the Dodgers’ luxurious spending is not constant – they fell short of the tax threshold three consecutive seasons from 2018-2020.  

And in building a foundation with Betts and Freeman, they’ve simply leapt at the opportunity created when other big-market teams hesitated to lock up those players.

When Betts and the Boston Red Sox could not reach agreement on a long-term extension, the Red Sox – who reside in the same revenue neighborhood as the Dodgers – traded Betts to L.A. in February 2020 for three players no longer with the organization.

It seemed Betts was intent on playing out his last year before free agency, but he and the Dodgers agreed on a 12-year, $365 million extension in July 2020, still the third-largest guarantee in baseball history. But Betts agreed to defer $115 million in salary and, like Ohtani, will receive the payouts between 2033 and 2044, per Cots Baseball Contracts. The MLB Players’ Association calculated that deferrals reduced the present-day value of the contract to $306 million.

Two years later, another opportunity presented itself. Freeman, after leading the Atlanta Braves to the 2021 World Series title, remained unsigned after the MLB lockout was resolved in March 2022. Before he and the Braves could seriously reengage in talks, Atlanta traded for All-Star first baseman Matt Olson.

Freeman was without a home. And the Dodgers swooped in on another Hall of Fame-caliber distressed asset.

They guaranteed him a sixth year on his contract, for $162 million – but with $57 million in deferred money. Freeman will receive $4 million or $5 million annually between 2028 and 2040.

The upside of the deferrals, both for the Dodgers and the competitive desires of Ohtani, Betts and Freeman?

Their salaries will now count $95.7 million toward the CBT, instead of $118.5 million. That nearly $24 million difference is roughly the annual cost of a solid No. 2 starter.

Nationals: Still paying for a championship

Well before the Dodgers got deferral-happy, the Washington Nationals used the device both to snag a loitering free agent and lock down one of their own – although the practice has its limits.

In January 2015, Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer still needed a job, agent Scott Boras frustrated by his limited market but willing to wait. The Nationals, flush with starting pitching at the time, capitalized.

They landed Scherzer with a seven-year, $210 million package, at the time second in value only to Clayton Kershaw among starting pitchers. Yet Scherzer’s limited market meant accepting a whopping $105 million – half the value of the contract – in deferred money.

Scherzer’s contract expired after the 2021 season, but he’s still getting paid annually by the Nationals – $15 million a year from 2022 to 2028.

They were just getting started.

With original ace Stephen Strasburg headed for free agency, the club agreed with him on a seven-year, $175 million extension in May 2016 – with $70 million deferred.

It was money well spent: Strasburg and Scherzer formed the core of a pitching staff that won the 2019 World Series, the only title in franchise history.

When Strasburg exercised an opt-out clause in his deal after that season, they re-upped him again: Seven years, $245 million – and $80 million deferred, with 1% interest. It’s been a cursed deal – Strasburg pitched in just eight games between 2020-22, and injuries have likely ended his career.

Yet the Nationals’ aggressive deferrals enabled them to stay under the luxury tax threshold while winning a championship in 2019. They also paid less than $4 million in luxury taxes while barely exceeding the threshold in 2017 and ’18.

But not all players want to wait for their money.

When franchise player Bryce Harper hit free agency after 2018, the club did make a preemptive attempt to re-sign him. But the 10-year, $300 million deal included $100 million in deferred money; the Washington Post reported that the payments stretched past Harper’s 60th birthday, and that MLB expressed concern over the amount and length deferred.

Harper understandably balked – and months later accepted a 13-year, $330 million contract from the Philadelphia Phillies – a lower average annual value, but also no deferrals, retaining the deal’s present-day value.

To each his own.

Bobby Bonilla: The gold standard

Sports fans have long been accustomed to astronomical salaries for their heroes. But something about deferred money seems to make them lose their mind.

When the Mets wanted to buy out the final year of the six-time All-Star’s contract in 2000, they agreed to defer the $5.9 million, stretching it until Bonilla turns 75.

And that’s always had fans agog.

The concept that the Mets will in 2035 be paying a player whose last major league game came in 2001 is either sad, campy or business as usual, based on your perspective. And Bonilla set a standard that has since been shattered: He is receiving 8% interest on his deferred money, turning his $5.9 million investment into an estimated $30 million.

Nowadays, teams don’t add any interest, or, in some cases, around 1%.

Still, the game’s biggest stars often tuck a little bit away for later.

Christian Yelich, Brewers All-Star? His club-record $215 million deal includes $30 million deferred.

The Baltimore Orioles may not scrape together more than $13 million for a free agent this year – but they’re paying retired slugger Chris Davis $42 million between 2023 and 2037.

When the Boston Red Sox finally did lock down a homegrown star, they insisted third baseman Rafael Devers defer $75 million of his $313.5 million extension – paying him through 2043.

And should Mets fans tire of Bobby Bonilla Day, they can celebrate Francisco Lindor Day: The $341 million shortstop is deferring $50 million – or $5 million of his $32 million annual salary – and will get paid through 2041.

Turns out what’s new is almost always old in baseball. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Survive and advance. The late Jim Valvano popularized the phrase while speaking about the NCAA basketball tournament, but it’s just as applicable to fantasy football.

You only need to beat your opponent this week. Then you can start thinking about taking the next step toward winning a championship. To help you keep your focus, here’s how the players stack up in their upcoming games.

START OR SIT? 15 players on the borderline for your Week 15 lineups

Fantasy football rankings for Week 15 are based on the point-per-reception (PPR) scoring used in most seasonal and daily fantasy football formats. One point is awarded for every 10 rushing and receiving yards and one point for every 20 passing yards. Six points are awarded for touchdowns scored, four points for passing TDs and one point for receptions.

Rankings are compiled by Daniel Dobish, TheHuddle.com. 

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

(*-check status before kickoff)

Fantasy football quarterback rankings for Week 15

C.J. Stroud remains in the concussion protocol after leaving last week’s game early. If he can’t go, Davis Mills would get the start.Derek Carr (rib/shoulder) still has a questionable tag after playing a full game last week despite the injuries.Easton Stick will be the Chargers’ starting quarterback for the rest of the season after Justin Herbert underwent surgery for a broken index finger on his passing hand.Sleeper pick: Jake Browning has thrived after taking over for Joe Burrow in Cincinnati. Minnesota is no pushover on defense, but Browning has handled the challenge admirably so far.

Fantasy football running back rankings for Week 15

Isiah Pacheco (shoulder) didn’t play last week and remains questionable.Josh Jacobs (quadriceps) has yet to practice this week after leaving Sunday’s game early. Zamir White and Amir Abdullah would split time if Jacobs has to sit out.Alexander Mattison (ankle) isn’t practicing yet while dealing with a low-ankle sprain.Sleeper pick: D’Andre Swift is primed for a rebound few will see coming after the Eagles’ past two tough games against Dallas and San Francisco.

Fantasy football wide receiver rankings for Week 15

Ja’Marr Chase is dealing with an ankle injury that will limit his practice participation this week. He hopes to be able to play on Saturday vs. Minnesota.In that same game, Justin Jefferson is questionable with a chest injury that knocked him out of last week’s game after just 13 snaps. If he does play, he’ll have a new quarterback in Nick Mullens throwing to him.Sleeper pick: Odell Beckham Jr. looks fully healthy, with 97 receiving yards and a touchdown last week vs. the Rams. He’s facing a Jaguars defense that gives up the eighth-most fantasy points to wideouts.

Fantasy football tight end rankings for Week 15

Dalton Kincaid (shoulder) was limited in Wednesday’s practice. He’s also dealing with a thumb injury.Taysom Hill (foot/hand) did not play last week and has yet to return to a full practice.

Fantasy football kicker rankings for Week 15

Fantasy football defense/special teams rankings for Week 15

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Juan Soto, the New York Yankees’ newest prized possession, didn’t mind the questions.

Certainly, he welcomed everyone’s interest.

He respects the curiosity.

But no, he did not drop a single hint on Tuesday, share any thoughts, or come close to suggesting his stay in New York will last longer than a year.

He seemed genuinely excited to be with the Yankees, saying it was surreal to put on a Yankee cap before starting his 30-minute zoom call, but kept every last thought of his future strictly to himself.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

“Any contract stuff,’’ Soto said, “they know where to call, who to talk to. I’m just here to play baseball…

“My mindset is coming here to play baseball and try to win a championship.’’

While agent Scott Boras was also on the call, he remained silent.

But let’s be honest here. There’s a better chance of the Kansas City Royals and Pittsburgh Pirates meeting in the 2024 World Series than Soto signing an extension before he hits free agency.

The Yankees’ advantage now is that have the next 10 months to prove to Soto this is the place he wants to play for perhaps the rest of his career.

And, if they want him, they’re certainly going to have to pay him.

Soto, who already turned down a deferred 15-year, $440 million contract extension two years ago from the Washington Nationals, is determined to become the richest baseball player in history.

Certainly, he wants to crack the $500 million barrier, and break Shohei Ohtani’s record with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Ohtani signed a 10-year, $700 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers, but with $680 million deferred, the contract is worth about $460 million, MLB officials say.

But while Ohtani is baseball’s greatest two-way player, and twice has been a unanimous MVP, Soto is a three-time All-Star, four-time Silver Slugger, but has never won the award. He twice finished in the top five, including second in 2021, his last full season with the Washington Nationals.

He was on a loaded team in San Diego, surrounded by Manny Machado, Xander Bogaerts and Fernando Tatis, but the Padres never came close to winning the division during his stay, and missed the postseason in 2023.

Now, he’s on a team with former MVPs and home run champions Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton, with Judge expected to play in center field and Soto in either left field or right field.

“It’s going to be amazing,’’ said Soto, who was on the call from his Miami home. “It’s going to be really fun. I’m going to be more than excited to share the field with him. He seems like a great guy. One of the guys that reached out to me when I got traded.

“It’s going to be fun to see him play, hitting and play the outfield. I’ll try to pick his mind when I’m there, and try to enjoy the moment while I’m there.’’

The Yankees didn’t trade five players to the Padres for Soto and outfielder Trent Grisham just to help Soto’s free-agent stock. They believe he could be the missing piece on a team that finished just 25th in runs last season, missing the postseason.

“We understand that he’s a free agent at the end of this term, and we understand that it’s a possible short-term situation,” Yankees GM Brian Cashman said last week. “I just know he’s just going to make our team significantly better.”

Soto, who was playing Nintendo with friends when he got the news of the trade, wasn’t exacty throwing his joy  stick up in the air in excitement. He wanted to stay in San Diego for at least one more year. He loved playing with the Padres, and believed that last year was a fluke, believing they could bounce back and take control of the division.

He will never know.

All that matters now, at least in the Bronx, is that he gets the Yankees back to being the Yankees, the beast of the AL East.

This is the bat the Yankees badly need for a sagging offense, with an outfield that produced only a 2.9 WAR, the sixth-weakest in baseball. Soto, with his career .946 OPS, should remedy that, along with the acquisition of outfielder Alex Verdugo from the Boston Red Sox.

While the short porch in right field at Yankee Stadium is a left-handed hitter’s dream, letting folks imagine they are going to have another rendition of Aaron Judge, Soto wants everyone to calm down. Simply, he is not a pull hitter. He hit 196 balls into the air last season, according to Statcast, and just 49 balls (25%) were hit to right field.

He is not going to change his swing just because he’ll be playing 81 games at Yankee Stadium.

“We all know there’s a really short porch there, and it’s got to be on your mind,” Soto said. “But definitely, I’m going to try to stay in the same approach I’ve been doing. That’s what has taken me all the way to where I am right now, so there’s no reason to change anything.”

Soto, who played left field last season for the Padres, says it doesn’t matter whether he plays left field or right field. He prefers to hit third, which would be ideal to protect Judge, but wherever they want to put him in the order, he’s fine.

Soto, with uncles and friends who live in New York, knows there will be distractions. This is New York, not San Diego or Washington. He will constantly be asked about free agency wherever he goes.

And he will consistently provide no clues.

“I mean, I’ve been doing it for six years,” he said. “I think it’s not going to be that hard, because I have one of the best agents in the league. So. I put everything on him and let him do his magic.’’

Playing in New York can be grueling on the psyche. It can chew up and spit out the weak. But it also can provide the ultimate high. And now Soto will be able to play in front of a Dominican community, where he’ll be worshipped.

“It’s definitely just a great vibe, a great feeling to be playing in New York and in that stadium,’’ Soto said. “It’s going to be really fun to see how much energy they bring to the ballpark.’’

The way Soto envisions it, he’ll have a monster season, the Yankees will flourish, and they’ll be playing through late October, all of the way until November.

“In a perfect season,’’ he said, “we’ll win a championship.’’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY