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Vice President Kamala Harris, urged her supporters to ‘get out there, let’s fight for it,’ as she concluded her presidential nomination acceptance speech at this week’s Democratic National Convention.

With both major party national nominating conventions now in the books, the 2024 edition of the race for the White House enters the final sprint.

Both Harris and former President Trump, the Republican Party’s nominee, will be back on the campaign trail in the upcoming week, along with their running mates, making stops across some of the seven crucial battleground states that will likely determine the outcome of the November election.

It’s a process that will be repeated each and every week until Election Day.

The former president, his running mate Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, and their campaign and allied Republicans have repeatedly criticized Harris for not holding a major news conference or sitting for an interview since replacing Biden atop their party’s 2024 ticket over a month ago.

So all eyes will be on Harris to see if she lives up to her promise to do a national news media interview in the week left in the month of August.

There’s just one week left in August, and the end of the month will bring anticipation of the latest fundraising figures from both the Trump and Harris campaigns.

President Biden enjoyed the fundraising lead over Trump earlier this year, but the former president saw his fundraising soar in the late spring and early summer.

But after Biden’s blockbuster move to end his re-election bid and Harris replacing him as the Democrats’ standard-bearer, the campaign and the party’s fundraising surged and Harris walloped Trump in fundraising during July. 

The August numbers, which the campaigns could release as early as September 1, will be closely watched and scrutinized, as fundraising along with polling is a crucial metric.

The first and possibly the only presidential debate between Harris and Trump is scheduled for Sept. 10 in Philadelphia.

The face-off could be the most important evening in the 2024 presidential election, with the power to potentially shift or transform the current margin-of-error race between the vice president and the former president.

Need proof – just look back to the late June debate between Biden and Trump. The president’s disastrous performance fueled questions about whether the 81-year-old president had the mental and physical stamina to handle another four years in the White House. And it sparked calls from within his own party for Biden to drop out of the race. 

Less than a month after the clash in Atlanta, the president was out of the race.

There are 73 days to go until Election Day, but some voters will start casting ballots next month. 

In swing state North Carolina, mail-in voting begins on Sept. 6. And early voting begins on Sept. 16 in Pennsylvania and Sept. 26 in Michigan, two other crucial electoral battlegrounds.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Los Angeles Rams took a big hit along their offensive line just a few weeks before the start of the regular season.

Offensive tackle Alaric Jackson has been suspended without pay for the first two games of the regular season for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy, the league announced Friday.

Jackson started 15 games at tackle for the Rams last season. He’s penciled in as a starter this season but will have to sit out the first two contests.

The Rams’ first two games are on the road against the Detroit Lions and Arizona Cardinals. Jackson is eligible for reinstatement after the Rams’ Week 2 game against Arizona.  

The Rams host the San Francisco 49ers in Week 3.

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

Arizona Cardinals WR Zay Jones suspended

Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Zay Jones won’t be available for the start of the regular season.

The NFL announced Friday that Jones has been suspended for five games for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy.

Jones spent the last two seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars. The Cardinals signed the wideout in May. He’s expected to add depth to Arizona’s receiving corps.

Jones will be eligible for reinstatement on October 7 following the Cardinals’ Week 5 game versus the 49ers.

Free-agent CB J.C. Jackson suspended

Free-agent cornerback J.C. Jackson has been suspended for the first game of the regular season for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy. Jackson is eligible to sign with a team and participate in all preseason activities.

The New England Patriots released Jackson in March.

Follow Tyler Dragon on social media @TheTylerDragon.

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NHL general managers had money to spend this offseason with the salary cap rising from $83.5 million to $88 million.

That led to a busy free agency season in which USA TODAY Sports’ top 25 players moved within three days.

Though things calmed down, there still were plenty of transactions. The Columbus Blue Jackets granted forward Patrik Laine’s trade wish, the St. Louis Blues made offer sheets to two Edmonton Oilers players and the San Jose Sharks traded for a top goalie prospect.

More deals could be on the way. Stars Leon Draisaitl, Sidney Crosby, Mitch Marner, Mikko Rantanen and Igor Shesterkin are eligible to receive contract extensions. Jeremy Swayman, Lucas Raymond, Seth Jarvis and Moritz Seider are among restricted free agents needing new contracts.

Here are the top NHL transactions that have occurred during the 2024 offseason:

Aug. 23: Sharks acquire Yaroslav Askarov from Predators

The last-place San Jose Sharks addressed one of their biggest problems, acquiring touted 22-year-old goaltender Yaroslav Askarov from the Nashville Predators for goalie prospect Magnus Chrona, forward David Edstrom and the first-round pick they acquired from the Vegas Golden Knights. San Jose also get center Nolan Burke and a third-round pick.

The move comes after NHL Network’s Kevin Weekes reported Askarov wouldn’t report to the American Hockey League and was seeking a trade. Askarov, a 2020 first-round pick, was expected to be Juuse Saros’ eventual successor in Nashville, but the Predators signed the veteran goalie to an eight-year extension.

San Jose signed Askarov to a two-year, $4 million extension that kicks in next season.

The Sharks, who finished with a league-worst 3.98 goals-against average and fourth-worst .887 save percentage last season, have veterans goalies Mackenzie Blackwood and Vitek Vanecek on the roster. Askarov played only two NHL games last season but had a 1.47 goals-against average.

San Jose general manager Mike Grier has been aggressive since drafting Macklin Celebrini No. 1 overall, including signing three-time 30-goal scorer Tyler Toffoli.

Aug. 22: Penguins, Jets swap former first-round picks

The Pittsburgh Penguins acquired Rutger McGroarty from the Winnipeg Jets in exchange for Moose Jaw center Brayden Yager and signed the University of Michigan forward to a three-year entry-level deal. McGroarty (2022) and Yager (2023) were each drafted 14th overall.

McGroarty helped lead the Wolverines to the Frozen Four the last two seasons and was second on the team last season with 52 points in 36 games. He was the captain of the USA’s gold medal team at the 2024 world junior championships but hadn’t signed with Winnipeg.

Yager had signed an entry-level deal with the Penguins in July. He scored 95 points as Moose Jaw won the Western Hockey League championship last season.

Aug. 21: Blue Jackets re-sign Cole Sillinger for two years

The Columbus Blue Jackets re-signed center Cole Sillinger, 21, to a two-year, $4.5 million contract with a $2.25 million annual cap hit. He was a restricted free agent for the first time since being selected 12th overall in 2021 and didn’t have arbitration rights. Sillinger has 32 goals, 42 assists and 74 points in 220 NHL games over three seasons for the Blue Jackets, who now consider him one of their top three centers. – Brian Hedger, Columbus Dispatch

Aug. 20: Kraken re-sign F Matty Beniers to seven-year deal

The Seattle Kraken locked in their first-ever draft pick, forward Matty Beniers, on Tuesday with a seven-year, $49.98 million contract extension carrying an average annual value of $7.14 million.

A restricted free agent, Beniers, 21, was selected by Seattle, then an expansion team, with the second pick in the 2021 NHL draft.

Beniers made his NHL debut in 2022, playing 10 games and earning nine points (three goals, six assists). In his first full season, he recorded 24 goals, 33 assists in 80 regular-season games en route to winning the Calder Trophy as the league’s rookie of the year. Last season, he tallied 15 goals and 22 assists in 77 games. — Field Level Media

Aug. 20: Oilers don’t match Blues’ offer sheets

The Edmonton Oilers chose not to match the St. Louis Blues’ offer sheets to defenseman Philip Broberg (two years, $9.16 million) and forward Dylan Holloway (two years, $4.58 million) and will receive a second- and a third-round pick as compensation for the former first-round picks.

They also made a separate deal with the Blues, acquiring the rights to Notre Dame defenseman Paul Fischer and a 2028 third-round pick for future considerations.

The Western Conference champion Oilers picked up a defenseman, Ty Emberson (who previously played for coach Kris Knoblauch), and a forward, Vasily Podkolzin, in trades earlier this week. Edmonton is now about $946,000 under the salary cap, according to Puckpedia.

Aug. 20: Flyers to terminate Ryan Johansen’s contract

The Philadelphia Flyers, citing ‘a material breach,’ placed forward Ryan Johansen on unconditional waivers for the purpose of terminating his contract. He has one year left at an $8 million salary ($4 million cap hit for the Flyers). Philadelphia took on his contract last season as part of the Sean Walker trade and he never played for the team because of a hip injury.

Kurt Overhardt’s agency, which represents Johansen, put out a statement calling the Flyers’ move ‘disappointing’ and indicating it would fight it.

Aug. 19: Canadiens acquire Patrik Laine from the Blue Jackets

The Columbus Blue Jackets granted forward Patrik Laine his trade wish, and the Montreal Canadiens are adding a three-time 30-goal scorer to their young core. The Canadiens give up defenseman Jordan Harris, 24, but also receive a 2026 second-round pick and reportedly are taking on Laine’s full $8.7 million cap hit.

Laine, 26, totaled 110 goals in his first three seasons with the Winnipeg Jets and topped 20 goals twice with the Blue Jackets. But he has had injury issues recently and was in the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program last season. If he can stay healthy and regain his form, he’d boost a Canadiens forward group that includes 25-and-under players Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, Juraj Slafkovsky, Alex Newhook and Kirby Dach. Laine is signed through the 2025-26 season.

‘We want players that want to be Blue Jackets and Patrik made it clear that he thought a change of scenery was best for him,’ Blue Jackets general manager Don Waddell. ‘We were able to acquire a good young player in Jordan Harris while maintaining financial flexibility in this deal, which was very important to us.’

Aug. 19: Predators’ Yaroslav Askarov seeks trade, per report

Nashville Predators general manager Barry Trotz told The Tennesseean, part of the USA TODAY Network, that the team expects goaltender Yaroslav Askarov to report to training camp when it opens in September.

Trotz was responding to a report from NHL Network’s Kevin Weekes that Askarov asked to be traded. Weekes also reported Askarov won’t report to the American Hockey League if assigned there.

One of the best young goaltending prospects in the NHL, Askarov is next in line for the Predators’ net behind Juuse Saros. But Saros signed an eight-year contract extension on July 1. – Alex Daugherty, The Tennessean

Aug. 18: Oilers make two trades ahead of decision on matching offer sheets

The Edmonton Oilers traded defenseman Cody Ceci to the San Jose Sharks, along with a third-round pick, for defenseman Ty Emberson. They also acquired forward Vasily Podkolzin from the Vancouver Canucks for a fourth-round pick.

The Oilers have until Tuesday to decide whether to match the St. Louis Blues’ offer sheets to defenseman Philip Broberg (two years, $9.16 million) and forward Dylan Holloway, (two years, $4.58 million). Ceci, a healthy scratch in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final, has a $3.25 million cap hit and Emberson makes $950,000, so Edmonton saves $2.3 million in that deal. Podkolzin makes $1 million but spent 44 games in the American Hockey League last season.

Even with the savings, the Oilers would need more in order to match the offer sheets. But Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman has reported that Evander Kane needs surgery. Edmonton would get cap relief if Kane goes on long-term injured reserve.

Ceci, 30, gives the Sharks another veteran, as they build around top draft picks Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith.

Aug. 15: Jakub Vrana gets tryout offer from Capitals

The Washington Capitals have made a professional tryout offer to forward Jakub Vrana, who was on the 2017-18 Stanley Cup team. Vrana, 28, who will get a shot to make the team in training camp, had been traded to the Detroit Red Wings in 2021 in the Anthony Mantha deal and spent parts of the past two seasons with the St. Louis Blues.

Aug. 14: Maple Leafs name Auston Matthews captain

The Toronto Maple Leafs named Auston Matthews the 26th captain in franchise history and the first U.S.-born one.

Maple Leafs center John Tavares, named captain in 2019, said he decided it was time to pass the leadership mantle to the two-time 60-goal scorer.

‘This decision is a recognition of a maturation of a person who has shown a skill set that is special, unique and who has a relentless drive to win,’ Tavares, who’s entering the final year in his contract, said at a news conference. ‘In that, I believe Auston can become more and that he is ready for this honor and responsibility.’

Matthews, who was born in California and grew up in Arizona, is entering the first year of a four-year, $53 million contract that gives him the league’s top cap hit. He was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2016 draft.

‘To be a captain is truly special,’ said Matthews, who turns 27 next month. ‘For (Tavares) to call me and kind of let me know that he wanted to pass on the captaincy to me was very emotional.’

Aug. 14: Ryan Getzlaf joins NHL Player Safety department

The NHL Department of Player Safety said former NHL star Ryan Getzlaf is joining the staff of chief disciplinarian George Parros, his former Anaheim Ducks teammate. Getzlaf spent his entire career with the Ducks, winning a Stanley Cup in 2007, and was captain for 12 seasons. He retired in 2022 as the franchise’s leading scorer.

Aug. 13: Blues make offer sheets to pair of Oilers

The St. Louis Blues tendered offer sheets to a pair of Edmonton Oilers restricted free agents, defenseman Philip Broberg and forward Dylan Holloway, Blues general manager Doug Armstrong said.

The Oilers have an Aug. 20 deadline to match the offers. If they don’t, they will receive draft picks as compensation from the Blues.

Broberg’s offer is for two years, $9.16 million and would require a second-round pick going to the Oilers should they decline to match it. Holloway, offered two years and $4.58 million, would return a third-round pick. – Field Level Media

July 31: Evgeny Kuznetsov signs with Russian team

SKA Saint Petersburg announced it had signed forward Evgeni Kuznetsov to a four-year contract with the Kontinental Hockey League team. Kuznetsov and the Carolina Hurricanes had agreed this offseason to terminate his contract. The 2018 Stanley Cup winner with the Washington Capitals was traded to the Hurricanes at the deadline after being cleared by the NHL/NHLPA Players Assistance Program. Kuznetsov, 32, finishes his NHL career with 575 points in 743 games.

Also: The Montreal Canadiens signed defenseman Kaiden Guhle to a six-year, $33.3M contract extension.

July 30: Rangers sign Ryan Lindgren for one year

The final must-do item on the New York Rangers’ offseason agenda is complete.

They inked restricted free agent Ryan Lindgren to a one-year, $4.5 million contract, with details first reported by Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. The 26-year-old defenseman was scheduled for an arbitration hearing Friday.

The Rangers were willing to go well above Lindgren’s $3.6 million qualifying offer in order to keep the deal short, prioritizing flexibility for next summer − when young core players such as Alexis Lafrenière, K’Andre Miller and Igor Shesterkin will be due for expensive new contracts − over a slightly lesser average annual value that likely would have resulted from offering more years.

It casts doubt about whether Lindgren will stick in New York beyond this coming season, but a one-year deal was the prudent decision given the expected 2025-26 salary cap crunch. – Vince Z. Mercogliano, lohud.com

Also: The Montreal Canadiens reached two-year deals with defensemen Arber Xhekaj ($1.3 million cap hit) and Justin Barron ($1.15 million cap hit).

July 29: Wild sign Brock Faber to eight-year extension

The Minnesota Wild signed rookie of the year runner-up Brock Faber to an eight-year extension. It kicks in during the 2025-26 season and will average $8.5 million. Faber, 21, tied for first among rookies in assists (39) and led rookies in average ice time (24:58) and blocked shots (150). His 47 points broke the Wild’s previous record for points by a rookie defenseman (Filip Kuba, 30 in 2000-01). 

July 29: Hurricanes sign Martin Necas for two years

The Carolina Hurricanes and forward Martin Necas agreed to a two-year deal ($6.5 million cap hit), avoiding arbitration. Getting him signed for more than a year is a positive for the Hurricanes, who lost forwards Jake Guentzel, Teuvo Teravainen and Stefan Noesen to free agency. They also mutually agreed to terminate the contract of Evgeny Kuznetsov. Necas, 25, finished fourth on the team in goals (24) and tied for third in points (53). Carolina still needs to sign forward Seth Jarvis.

July 27-28: Blue Jackets sign two restricted free agents

The Columbus Blue Jackets and forward Kirill Marchenko avoided arbitration by agreeing to a three-year contract with a $3.85 million cap hit. The 24-year-old has topped 20 goals in his first two NHL seasons, totaling 44. A day earlier, the Blue Jackets had signed forward Kent Johnson to a three-year deal with a $1.8 million cap hit. Forward Cole Sillinger is the team’s last remaining restricted free agent.

July 26: Trade target Patrik Laine cleared by assistance program

Patrik Laine’s request to be traded by the Columbus Blue Jackets received a significant boost.

The Finnish forward was released from the NHL/NHL Players’ Association’s player assistance program, clearing him to personally speak with coaches, executives and players from around the league for the first time since entering the program Jan. 28 for undisclosed reasons.

Blue Jackets general manager Don Waddell did not comment on Friday’s news but told the Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA TODAY Network, on Tuesday he’s confident a trade for Laine can be worked out this summer. A big holdup in trade talks, according to Waddell, was Laine’s inability to speak with him or opposing GMs while in the NHL/NHLPA program. – Brian Hedger, Columbus Dispatch

July 25: Flyers’ Travis Konecny signs eight-year extension

Philadelphia Flyers forward Travis Konecny signed an eight-year, $70 million contract extension. The new deal, which is to begin in 2025-26, will make Konecny, 27, the highest-paid player on the Flyers’ roster. He had career highs in goals (33), points (68) and short-handed goals (six) in 76 games last season. He led the team in goals, assists and points. ‘There’s such a bright and exciting future with this team and I can’t wait to be a part of it for the next nine years and see what we will accomplish,’ Konecny said. – Field Level Media

July 24: Sabres agree to terms with Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

The Buffalo Sabres avoided an arbitration hearing by agreeing to terms with goalie Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen on a five-year deal with a $4.75 million cap hit. The restricted free agent gets a big bump from last season’s $837,500 after setting career highs with 54 appearances, 27 wins and a 2.57 goals-against average. The Sabres will go with a young goaltending duo of Luukkonen, 25, and Devon Levi, 22, next season as they try to end a 13-season playoff drought.

July 24: Oilers name Stan Bowman general manager

New Edmonton Oilers general manager Stan Bowman is known both for his three Stanley Cup titles and for stepping down after a 2021 report criticized how the Chicago Blackhawks handled a sexual-assault complaint during their 2010 championship run. He was recently reinstated by the league. Bowman detailed the steps he took during his absence from the NHL and said, ‘I can tell you without a doubt that those things will never happen on my watch again.’

OILERS: What Stan Bowman, others said about Blackhawks scandal

July 23: Sabres agree to terms with Beck Malenstyn

Forward Beck Malenstyn, acquired from the Washington Capitals in an offseason trade, agreed to terms with the Buffalo Sabres on a two-year contract with a $1.35 million cap hit. He had filed for salary arbitration. Malenstyn is known for his defensive work, penalty killing and physical play. He led the Capitals last season with 241 hits while recording career highs with six goals, 15 assists and 21 points.

Sabres goalie Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen also has filed for arbitration.

Also: The Toronto Maple Leafs and forward Connor Dewar agreed to a one-year, $1.18 million deal. He had filed for salary arbitration.

July 22: Blue Jackets hire Dean Evason as coach

The Columbus Blue Jackets have settled on a new head coach.

Dean Evason will run the Blue Jackets’ bench after agreeing to a multi-year contract to fill a void created by the June 17 firing of Pascal Vincent. Not counting interims, Evason, 59, becomes the 11th coach in the franchise’s 24-year history.

Evason steps into the role after veteran Todd McLellan removed himself from the search process earlier this month. Evason doesn’t have as much experience as an NHL head coach as McLellan, but handled that role with the Minnesota Wild for five years before he was fired in November. Evason went 147-77-27 in 251 games with the Wild, including four trips to the playoffs. – Brian Hedger, Columbus Dispatch

July 22: Joe Pavelski announces retirement

Joe Pavelski, who said in June he would take next season off, is retiring, he and the Dallas Stars announced. Pavelski, 40, finishes with 476 goals and 1,068 points in 1,332 career regular-season games between the San Jose Sharks and Stars. He’s the NHL’s leading U.S.-born playoff goal scorer with 74 and helped lead the Stars to back-to-back trips to the Western Conference final. Pavelski never won a Stanley Cup but he went to the Final in 2016 with the Sharks, scoring a playoff-leading 14 goals and four game-winners, and in 2020 with the Stars. He had been captain of the Sharks.

July 20: Canucks sign free agent forward Daniel Sprong

Winger Daniel Sprong’s deal with the Vancouver Canucks is for one year at a reported $975,000. He’s coming off back-to-back 40-point seasons despite averaging 11 to 12 minutes a night. He’ll add secondary scoring to a team that ranked sixth in goals per game last season. Sprong will get another chance to prove himself after the Seattle Kraken didn’t give him a qualifying offer in 2023 and the Detroit Red Wings let him go to free agency.

July 19: Red Wings, Joe Veleno reach deal, avoid arbitration

The Detroit Red Wings and forward Joe Veleno agreed to a two-year, $4.55 million contract, according to Sportsnet. He had filed for salary arbitration after getting a career-best 12 goals and 28 points in a bottom six role.

July 17: Hurricanes, Evgeny Kuznetsov agree to terminate contract

The Carolina Hurricanes placed forward Evgeny Kuznetsov on unconditional waivers for the purpose of terminating his contract. He cleared waivers and the contract was terminated, which will allow Kuznetsov to play in Russia. He had one year, at a $7.8 million cap hit, left on his contract. The Washington Capitals, who traded him to the Hurricanes last season, retained half of that, and both teams are now free of that cap hit.

The mutual decision brings another offseason change to the Hurricanes roster. They weren’t able to re-sign trade deadline acquisition Jake Guentzel and traded his rights to the Tampa Bay Lightning, where he signed. Defensemen Brady Skjei and Brett Pesce and forwards Teuvo Teravainen and Stefan Noesen left in free agency. Defensemen Shayne Gostisbehere and Matt Walker and forwards Jack Roslovic and William Carrier are among the offseason additions.

Kuznetsov spent time last season in the NHL/NHL Players’ Association assistance program and finished with only 24 points in 63 games. He scored a league-best 32 points during the Capitals’ 2018 Stanley Cup run. He also was known for his goal celebration of flapping his arms like a bird.

The Hurricanes announced later in the day that they had re-signed forward Jack Drury to a two-year contract with a $1.725 million cap hit.

July 16: Kings re-sign Quinton Byfield

The No. 2 overall pick in the 2020 draft will get five years at a $6.25 million average. The Los Angeles Kings forward was a restricted free agent. The deal follows a breakthrough last season with a jump from three goals and 22 points to 20 goals and 55 points while being moved into a top six role. If he continues that progress, the deal will look good years from now.

Also: The St. Louis Blues said defenseman Torey Krug has been diagnosed with pre-arthritic changes in his left ankle and will be evaluated in six to eight weeks. If he needs surgery, he will miss the 2024-25 season. The team said the injury is a cumulative result of a bone fracture from earlier in his career. … Vancouver Canucks goalie Arturs Silovs signed a two-year contract. He was pressed into action in the playoffs after an injury to Thatcher Demko.

July 13: Rangers, Blue Jackets sign players

The New York Rangers re-signed defenseman Braden Schneider to a two-year contract with a reported $2.2 million cap hit. The Columbus Blue Jackets and goalie Jet Greaves settled on a two-year deal and avoided arbitration. It’s a two-way deal the first year that pays him less in the American Hockey League, but the second year is a one-way deal.

July 11: Utah’s Tij Iginla signs entry-level contract

Igina, the son of Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla, was the Utah Hockey Club’s first draft pick, taken sixth overall in June. He had 84 points in 64 games last season with Kelowna of the Western Hockey League. Iginla and Detroit Red Wings selection are the 13th and 14th of June’s 32 first-round picks to sign a three-year, entry-level contract.

Also: The Lightning and defenseman J.J. Moser reached a two-year, $6.75 million contract, avoiding arbitration. He was acquired from Utah in the Mikhail Sergachev trade.

July 10: Ryan Suter signs with Blues

Defenseman Ryan Suter, 39, who was bought out for the second time in his career, signed a one-year, $775,000 contract. He can earn another $2.225 million in performance bonuses. The Dallas Stars bought out the final year of his three-year contract. He was bought out by the Minnesota Wild in 2021.

July 8: Capitals name Chris Patrick general manager

Chris Patrick becomes the seventh general manager in Capitals history after being promoted from associate GM. Brian MacLellan was promoted to president of hockey operations. Patrick is the son of Capitals chairman Dick Patrick.

The Capitals were one of the busier teams this offseason, trading for Pierre-Luc Dubois, Andrew Mangiapane, Jakob Chychrun and Logan Thompson and signing Matt Roy, Brandon Duhaime and Taylor Raddysh.

July 6: Top two NHL draft picks sign

No. 1 pick Macklin Celebrini (Sharks) and No. 2 pick Artyom Levshunov (Blackhawks) signed three-year, entry-level deals rather than return for another season at college. They could end up at different levels. Celebrini, who was the clear-cut No. 1 pick, is expected to open the season with the Sharks. Levshunov, depending on what happens in training camp, could start in the American Hockey League.

July 5: 14 players file for salary arbitration

Fourteen restricted free agents have filed for salary arbitration, the NHL Players’ Association announced.

They are (in alphabetical order): Jake Christiansen (Blue Jackets), Connor Dewar (Maple Leafs), Jack Drury (Hurricanes), Ty Emberson (Sharks), Jet Greaves (Blue Jackets), Ryan Lindgren (Rangers), Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (Sabres), Beck Malenstyn (Sabres), Kirill Marchenko (Blue Jackets), J.J. Moser (Lightning), Martin Necas (Hurricanes), Spencer Stastney (Predators), Joe Veleno (Red Wings) and Oliver Wahlstrom (Islanders).

The key one is Necas, who has been linked to trade rumors. Moser and Malenstyn were acquired in offseason trades.

Hearings will be held from July 20 to Aug. 4, though nearly all players reach a settlement beforehand.

July 3: Kraken hires Jessica Campbell as assistant coach

Jessica Campbell made history when she was hired to join Dan Bylsma’s coaching staff on the Seattle Kraken.

She becomes the first female full-time assistant coach in NHL history to work behind the bench

Campbell, 32, made similar history in the American Hockey League when Bylsma hired her as an assistant coach with the Coachella Valley Firebirds in 2022. Bylsma, a former Stanley Cup winner, is bringing Campbell with him to the NHL after being named Kraken coach in May.

‘I just know that if the team has success and my impact is a good one, it could potentially open the doors for others,’ she said.

July 1-4: Early days of free agency

The Nashville Predators were among the winners by signing Steven Stamkos, Jonathan Marchessault and Brady Skjei. The Carolina Hurricanes and Vegas Golden Knights lost key players early but have added back. On Day 3, the Detroit Red Wings signed two-time Stanley Cup winner Vladimir Tarasenko.

A look at the opening days of 2024 NHL free agency

June 24-July 1: Who was traded before free agency?

The Tampa Bay Lightning and Washington Capitals were busy on the trade front. The Lightning moved out Mikhail Sergachev and Tanner Jeannot, then acquired the rights to Jake Guentzel and signed him to a seven-year, $63 million contract. The Capitals traded for forwards Dubois and Mangiapane, defenseman Chychrun and goalie Thompson, moving out goalie Darcy Kuemper and Beck Malenstyn.

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Speaking to USA TODAY’s Mackenzie Salmon, Bledsoe, who preceded Brady as the New England Patriots’ starting quarterback, offered some praise — and a playful dig — for his longtime friend and former teammate.

‘I know he’ll do a great job at it because he’ll put in the work, he’ll put the time in,’ said Bledsoe.

With a smile, Bledeoe added, “I will be annoyed by his squeaky voice, but I know he’ll be great at it.’

This remark is not the first time Bledsoe has taken a friendly jab at Brady. He featured on Netflix’s “The Roast of Tom Brady” show in May and then jokingly called Brady the “worst backup quarterback in the history of the NFL” during Brady’s induction into the Patriots Hall of Fame in June.

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

Brady will make his broadcast debut as a Fox analyst on Sept. 8 during the Dallas Cowboys’ Week 1 matchup with the Cleveland Browns.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A 37-year-old Memphis-area man was charged with making threats against President Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Obama, the Justice Department announced Friday. 

Kyl Alton Hall, 37, allegedly posted on X several times last month, threatening to shoot, kill and assassinate Biden and crash his plane and threatening to assassinate Harris and Obama. 

Hall was federally indicted Tuesday and charged with two counts of threats to a sitting president and vice president and one count of a threat to a former president. He was arrested and booked in Mississippi July 30 by the Southaven Police Department.

He could face up to five years in prison on each count if found guilty. 

Earlier this week, an Arizona man who allegedly threatened to kill former President Trump was arrested after a manhunt as the Republican presidential nominee headed to the state for an event on the southern border Thursday. 

Trump’s ear was also grazed in an attempted assassination attempt by a 20-year-old shooter last month while the former president spoke at an outdoor rally. The shooter was killed by law enforcement. 

Multiple U.S. Secret Service agents have been placed on leave as the investigation into the failed assassination attempt continues. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to the DeSoto County Sheriff’s Office and the Justice Department for comment on the charges against Hall. 

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In this StockCharts TV video, Mary Ellen reviews the broader market’s health while highlighting big shifts into newer areas, including banks, retail, and autos. Sharing one of the reasons Tech stocks were weak, she highlights which areas as seeing renewed strength. She also looked at individual stocks that are poised to trade higher.

This video originally premiered August 23, 2024. You can watch it on our dedicated page for Mary Ellen on StockCharts TV.

New videos from Mary Ellen premiere weekly on Fridays. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

If you’re looking for stocks to invest in, be sure to check out the MEM Edge Report! This report gives you detailed information on the top sectors, industries and stocks so you can make informed investment decisions.

Tony Vitello is the highest-paid coach in college baseball after signing a historic contract following a historic Tennessee baseball season.

Vitello will earn $3 million annually after signing a record-setting five-year contract with Tennessee on Friday following the Volunteers winning the first national title in program history. He is the first college baseball coach known to make $3 million annually. The deal runs through June 30, 2029, and includes a $250,000 signing bonus based on the contract announced by Tennessee and athletics director Danny White.

‘Tony and his staff have developed the country’s top baseball program, and we are excited to announce this long-term extension to keep Tony on Rocky Top,’ White said in a school release.

Vitello is receiving a $200,000 bonus for winning the 2024 College World Series, which replaces the $140,000 bonus he was due based on his prior contract. The updated contract indicates that Tennessee and Vitello agreed to a new contract that went into effect on May 31, 2024, but that deal was never announced.

‘We wanted to take care in solidifying what we knew was inevitable, that being our athletic department and coaching staff wanting to be teammates for a long time,’ Vitello said in a school release.

Vitello, who has taken Tennessee to the College World Series in three of the past four seasons, has a 295-112 record at the school. The Vols have the most wins in the country in the past five seasons with 226 and became the first SEC team in history to win 60 games in 2024. They have a national-leading .779 winning percentage in that five-year span. They have won at least 50 games in three of the past four seasons.

Tennessee has won two SEC regular-season titles and a pair of SEC Tournament title under Vitello. It swept the conference crowns in 2022 and 2024. Vitello swept national coach of the year awards from D1Baseball, Baseball America and the American Baseball Coaches Association after Tennessee won the CWS.

Tony Vitello contract, salary details with Tennessee baseball

Vitello, 45, doubled his previous contract after leading the Volunteers to the best season in program history and will earn more annually than his entire initial Tennessee contract was worth over five years.

No SEC coach at a public school earned more than $2 million in 2024. Vanderbilt coach Tim Corbin’s salary is not subject to public record due that is a private school.

New Texas coach Jim Schlossnagle, who bolted from Texas A&M after the Vols beat the Aggies for the CWS title, signed a seven-year contract that will pay him $2.68 million annually in each of the final five years of the deal, according to the Austin American-Statesman. His salary is $1 million for the first two years of the contract, a figure set to offset the buyout Texas paid to Texas A&M to hire Schlossnagle.

Vitello agreed in July 2021 to a contract extension and raise that was set to pay him $1.5 million annually before incentives through June 2026. The contract was worth $7.5 million over five years.

Vitello received an extension and raise worth an average of $621,000 pre-incentives per season following the 2019 season. That deal was worth $3.105 million before incentives and was slated to run through the 2024 season.

His original contract in 2017 was a five-year deal with an annual average compensation of $493,000.

Tennessee hired Vitello in 2017 after a successful stint as an assistant coach at Arkansas. He also had been an assistant coach at TCU and Missouri, where he played before entering coaching in 2003. The Vols went 29-27 in his first season, then went 40-21 and reached the NCAA Tournament in 2019 to end a 14-year drought. It has been a national power in the five years since.

Tony Vitello bonus structure, buyout language

Vitello’s new deal included an increased bonus structure. He can earn a maximum bonus of $200,000 in a season, which he gets for winning the national title.

He would earn $160,000 for reaching the College World Series finals, $140,000 for getting the Vols to the College World Series, $120,000 for Tennessee hosting a super regional as a top-eight national seed, $100,000 for a super regional appearance, $80,000 for an SEC regular-season or tournament championship, $60,000 for hosting a regional as a top-16 national seed, or $40,000 for reaching a regional.

Vitello earns one of those bonuses based on the highest achievement for the team.

If Tennessee fires Vitello without cause during the term of the contract, it owes him the entire remainder of his contract. Vitello would owe the university $4 million if he leaves before June 30, 2025. That number drops by $1 million for each of the following two seasons, then to $800,000 from July 1, 2027 through June 30, 2028. It drops again to $400,000 from July 1, 2028 through June 30, 2029.

Vitello’s buyout for leaving Tennessee is cut in half if White is no longer the athletics director.

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In this edition of StockCharts TV‘s The Final Bar, Dave completes a five-part series covering ten charts to watch in August 2024, breaking down to stocks in established downtrends. What would we need to see to confirm a rotation from a distribution phase to an accumulation phase, and where should you set alerts for key charts on your watch list?

This video originally premiered on August 23, 2024. Watch on our dedicated Final Bar page on StockCharts TV!

New episodes of The Final Bar premiere every weekday afternoon. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

The future of Paramount Global is still uncertain.

Paramount’s special committee on Wednesday said it would extend by 15 days an agreed-upon “go shop” period of its merger agreement with Skydance as it reviews a competing offer from Edgar Bronfman Jr.

Bronfman initially offered $4.3 billion late Monday for Shari Redstone’s National Amusements, the controlling shareholder of Paramount, according to a person familiar with the bid. As part of the bid, Bronfman would acquire a minority stake in Paramount. However, after placing the bid, Bronfman raised more funds to support a higher bid, said the person, who asked to remain anonymous to speak about specifics of the offer.

On Wednesday, Bronfman upped the bid and submitted a revised offer of $6 billion, the person said.

The offer looks to supersede Paramount’s merger agreement with Skydance Media, which came in early July and capped off a monthslong negotiation process. The agreement included a 45-day “go shop” period during which Paramount could solicit other offers.

A representative for Bronfman declined to comment.

The special committee on Wednesday confirmed “the receipt of an acquisition proposal from Edgar Bronfman, Jr., on behalf of a consortium of investors.”

“As a result, the ‘go shop’ period is extended for the Bronfman Consortium until September 5, 2024, pursuant to the transaction agreement to which the Company remains subject,” the committee said in a statement. “There can be no assurance this process will result in a Superior Proposal. The Company does not intend to disclose further developments unless and until it determines such disclosure is appropriate or is otherwise required.”

The committee added that during the initial “go shop” period it contacted more than 50 third parties to gauge potential acquisition interest. The go-shop period will still expire before midnight Wednesday for all other parties, the committee said.

The Skydance buying consortium, which also includes private equity firms RedBird Capital Partners and KKR, agreed to invest more than $8 billion into Paramount and to acquire National Amusements. The deal gives National Amusements an enterprise value of $2.4 billion, including $1.75 billion in equity.

As part of the Skydance deal, Paramount’s class A shareholders would receive $23 apiece in cash or stock, and class B shareholders would receive $15 per share, equating to a cash consideration totaling $4.5 billion available to public shareholders. Skydance also agreed to inject $1.5 billion of capital into Paramount’s balance sheet.

National Amusements owns 77% of Paramount’s class A shares, and 5% of class B shares. If the Skydance transaction were to close, it would wholly own class A Paramount shares, and 69% of the outstanding class B shares.

Bronfman’s initial bid proposed buying National Amusements in an equity deal valued at $1.75 billion. That offer included a $1.5 billion investment into Paramount’s balance sheet, like the Skydance deal, and also included covering the $400 million breakup fee that Paramount would owe Skydance if it walked away from the deal, according to the person familiar.

The sweetened bid made on Wednesday now includes $1.7 billion for a tender offer that would give non-Redstone, nonvoting Paramount shareholders the option to receive $16 a share, the person added.

Bronfman previously ran Warner Music and liquor company Seagram and has also served as executive chairman of Fubo TV since 2020. Details of his bid were first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

The merger agreement between Paramount and Skydance has drawn scrutiny from shareholders. Money manager Mario Gabelli reportedly filed a lawsuit looking for Paramount to turn over its books related to the Skydance deal — a possible first step toward a lawsuit challenging the deal. Investor Scott Baker reportedly sued to block the deal, arguing it would cost shareholders $1.65 billion.

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Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz accepted the Democratic vice presidential nomination at the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday night.

In his speech, Walz credited a particular source of support for helping to get his family to where they are today — Social Security survivor benefits.

His father died of lung cancer when Walz was 19, leaving a “mountain of medical debt,” Walz said. Social Security benefits allowed his family, including his mother and younger brother, to “live with dignity,” he recently posted on social media.

“Thank God for Social Security survivor benefits,” Walz said during his Wednesday night speech.

‘Lots of kids … do not claim their survivor benefits’

About 3.7 million children receive Social Security benefits, according to recent Social Security Administration data.

Children can receive benefits if they are unmarried and younger than 18; between 18 and 19 and are full-time students in grades 12 or below; and age 18 or older with a disability that started before age 22.

If a working parent dies, 98 out of 100 children in the U.S. could get Social Security benefits, the agency estimates. The monthly checks are based on the earnings of a deceased parent.

The average monthly surviving child benefit is $1,103 as of July, with more than 2 million children receiving those checks, according to the Social Security Administration.

“Lots of kids all across the country do not claim their survivor benefits,” Social Security Commissioner Martin O’Malley said at a National Academy of Social Insurance event in Washington, D.C., in June.

Data suggests as many as half of orphaned children in the U.S. are not receiving the Social Security benefits for which they are eligible, according to Joyal Mulheron, founder and executive director at Evermore, a nonpartisan nonprofit focused on improving the lives of bereaved people.

“That’s … children potentially who could be lifted out of poverty as a result of accessing this benefit,” Mulheron said.

The Social Security Administration is working to figure out who those families are and to develop more targeted approaches to reach them, O’Malley said at the NASI event in June.

To date, those efforts have included sending information letters to households with potential applicants, launching a new web page on survivor benefits and working with states and communities to help raise awareness of these benefits, according to the agency. In Utah, for example, a check box has been added to death reporting forms to indicate when the deceased has a minor child.

More than half of children who receive Social Security checks have had a parent who worked and paid taxes into the program die, according to the Social Security Administration. Those children may receive up to 75% of the deceased parent’s basic benefit.

To qualify for survivors’ benefits, children do not have to live with a parent or receive financial support from them, according to the Social Security Administration. Additionally, the child’s parents do not have to have been married.

In some situations, surviving parents who care for children under 16 may also be eligible for benefits.

There are other ways in which children may qualify for benefits.

For example, they may also be able to receive benefits if they have a living parent who is retired or disabled and who is eligible for Social Security. Those children may receive up to half of their parent’s full benefits.

The amount of benefits children receive may be adjusted based on a maximum family benefit, a limit on how much a family may receive per month based on a worker’s earnings record. The formula for that varies based on whether the payments are related to disabled or retirement and survivor benefits.

When someone dies, a funeral director may send a family to Social Security, particularly since there may be a $255 lump sum death benefit available, said Jim Blair, vice president of Premier Social Security Consulting and a former Social Security administrator.

At that time, widows and widowers may be informed of the benefits available to them, as well as their children, he said. Still, it’s possible some situations may fall through the cracks.

Children may not access the benefits for which they are eligible if they switch to a different guardian, for example, who many not be able to answer all of Social Security’s questions, Mulheron said. Families may also fail to access benefits due to immigration issues, missed deadlines or administrative errors with applications, she said.

It could help for the Social Security Administration to make applications for children’s benefits more accessible online, Mulheron said.

“You don’t want to see anybody lose out on any benefits, because that’s what the benefit is there for,” Blair said.

“If you think you might even have an inkling that there might be something payable, call and ask,” he said.

The Social Security Administration can be reached at 1-800-772-1213. When applying for children’s benefits, the agency may require you to provide a child’s birth certificate, proof of birth or adoption, the parent’s and child’s Social Security numbers, and when relevant, a parent’s death certificate or medical evidence of a child’s disability.

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