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Former St. Louis Blues forward Brandon Saad is finalizing a contract with the Vegas Golden Knights, a source told ESPN's Kevin Weekes.
The Blues and Saad mutually terminated his contract after he was put on waivers on Wednesday.
The Blues had tried to trade Saad over the last several months, sources told ESPN, but did not find any partners.
Saad, 32, has just 16 points (seven goals, nine assists) in 43 games this season, along with a 9.3 shooting percentage -- the second worst mark of his 14-year career.
Saad was in his fourth season with the Blues. During the prime of his career, he helped Chicago win the Stanley Cup twice: in 2013 and 2015.
Information from ESPN's Emily Kaplan and The Associated Press was used in this report.

Wrexham have announced the signings of former England striker Jay Rodríguez and forward Sam Smith, with sources telling ESPN that the deal for Smith is a club-record.
Rodríguez, 35, joins Wrexham from Burnley after undergoing a medical on Friday. He won his sole England cap in 2013.
Smith's arrival from Reading was confirmed by Wrexham on Friday, and sources have told ESPN the deal is comfortably a club record for a transfer and has broken the 1 million ($1.2m) barrier. Smith has signed a three-and-a-half year deal.
"I'm excited to be a part of the journey now and I want to try to help the club achieve its ambitions," Smith said.
Manager Phil Parkinson added: "Sam is a player we've been pursuing for a while.
"He's a striker who's done really well over the last few seasons and he's at a great age."

Aston Villa are interested in signing Marcus Rashford before the transfer deadline, sources have told ESPN.
Rashford is available after being frozen out by Manchester United head coach Ruben Amorim.
It is not yet known whether Rashford would be open to a move to Villa Park, although sources have told ESPN that there is little optimism on all sides that a deal could materialise.
A source has told ESPN that the 27-year-old's preference is to move to Barcelona. However, the LaLiga side's financial constraints have made a deal complicated.
Borussia Dortmund have also expressed interest in Rashford, but his weekly wage of around 350,000-a-week is proving to be a major stumbling block.
The Premier League could offer the England forward Champions League football in the second half of the season after they finished in the top eight of the league phase table.
Villa are looking at options to bolster their attacking line after agreeing to let striker Jhon Durán leave for Al Nassr.
They have made enquiries about the possibility of signing Rashford, who has not featured for United since the 2-1 win over FC Viktoria Plzen on Dec. 12.
Tom Brady stardust comes to cricket with Birmingham Phoenix acquisition

NFL legend Tom Brady could soon be seen at Edgbaston after Knighthead Capital Management LLC, where the former New England Patriots and Tampa Bay quarterback has a business partnership, picked up a stake in Hundred franchise Birmingham Phoenix. ESPNcricinfo has learned that Knighthead made a winning bid of 82 million on Thursday, the opening day of the ECB's sale of the eight Hundred franchises.
The amount Knighthead bid was equivalent to 100% value of the franchise, which means they will pay close to 41 million for the 49% stake in Phoenix. None of the stakeholders, including the ECB, Warwickshire - Phoenix's host county - and Knighthead have made any comment.
Brady's association with Knighthead could prove a shot in the arm for the Hundred if he can draw interest - both from fans and commercially - to cricket, a sport that has been attempting for several decades to widen its footprint. Brady already has a presence in Birmingham after he bought minority ownership in Birmingham City, a third-tier football club in England.
Knighthead are understood to have declared the winner through the sealed bid exercise which was put in place by ECB for franchises with only two investors on the shortlist. While global fund manager CVC Capital were meant to be originally on the shortlist to buy a stake in Phoenix, it could not be confirmed if they made a bid.
Knighthead bought Birmingham City in 2023 and have proved popular with the club's supporters despite their relegation to League One last season. Tom Wagner, Knighthead's co-founder and the club's chairman, has pledged to invest over 2 billion in a new "sports quarter" in the city and has bought a new 48-acre site for a new stadium.
RIL were also on the shortlist for Manchester Originals. It is understood that RIL had successful conversations with Surrey management, the host county for Invincibles, with both parties agreeing to synergise cricketing decisions. Another significant factor was Invincibles, who have won the men's Hundred competition for last two seasons, being serial contenders for the title, something RIL has placed at the forefront of its investments in the T20 franchise circuit.
The losing bids from CVC and the tech consortium could not yet be confirmed. As part of the virtual auction bidders gave themselves a code name. Though the amount has not been revealed, the base price was determined by ECB from the floor valuation bids submitted by the shortlisted investors in the second round of the sale process in December. During the live auction, each bid was separated by 15 minutes with incremental bids in steps of 3 million.
The next step for the winners will involve them sealing the agreement withing eight weeks after the ECB's auction process, which is scheduled to finish on February 10. This process will include deciding whether to pay the money upfront or in instalments spread across five years.
Buttler: Rana for Dube 'not a like-for-like' concussion sub

"It is not a like-for-like replacement. We don't agree with that," Buttler said after India completed a 15-run win. "Either Shivam Dube has put on about 25mph with the ball or Harshit has really improved his batting. It's part of the game and we really should have gone on to win the match, but we disagree with the decision.
"Like I said, it was not the whole reason why we did not win the match. We had our chances to win the game which we could have still taken. But I'd like to have a bit more clarity on that."
Dube scored a half-century after walking in at 57 for 4 and stitched together an 87-run partnership for the sixth wicket with Hardik Pandya. It allowed India to post 181 for 9. On the penultimate ball of the innings, Dube was hit on the helmet by Jamie Overton's 141.5kph bumper.
"He [Rana] is not the like-to-like replacement for Shivam Dube," Pietersen had said on air. "You ask anyone in the world, and they will say the same thing. Dube is not a genuine pacer, but Rana is." Knight also echoed these thoughts.
"It goes to the powers above me - match referee makes the decision. We can only take the name forward and from there it is out of our hands."
Rana, who was playing his first T20I, was brought into the attack in the 12th over and he struck with his second ball. He got a short-of-good-length ball to bounce extra to take the outside edge of Liam Livingstone, who had looked to guide it through third. Rana bowled his full quota of overs and picked up three wickets. He also was at short third to catch out England captain Jos Buttler, who walked back fuming and had a few words with head coach Brendon McCullum, perhaps regarding the approval of Rana as the concussion substitute.
"Two overs into the chase, I was told [about being the concussion substitute]," Rana said after the match. "I have been preparing for a while, not just for this series. I have been waiting for this moment [his debut] to prove myself. When I got the chance, I did not think of the circumstances and just thought about delivering. I have experience of bowling at the death [for KKR in the IPL] and relied on that."
Welsh Fire secured by Washington Freedom owners in 67.5 million valuation

ESPNcricinfo understands that the winning bid valued 100% of the Fire at 67.5 million, implying Govil will pay just over 33m for his minority share in the team.
He will now enter a period of exclusivity with Glamorgan, the Fire's host county. The two parties will negotiate contractual details with the help of the ECB and their advisors over the next eight weeks. Glamorgan told their members earlier this month that they intend to retain their 51% controlling stake in Welsh Fire.
Govil is the chairman of two tech companies in the US: Infinite Computer Solutions, a leading technology services company, and Zyter, a health technology services company. Two years ago, he made his first substantial cricketing investment by buying Washington Freedom in Major League Cricket and the franchise won the title in their second season, with Ricky Ponting serving as head coach.
The Fire have failed to reach the play-offs in the first four editions of the men's Hundred, but their women's team have been more successful and were losing finalists last year. They are expected to be the team with the lowest valuation of the eight, having attracted relatively small crowds to date.
The valuation means that the ECB has brought around 278 million into the English game with the sale of 49% stakes in four Hundred teams over the past two days. The revenue will be split between the 18 first-class counties, MCC and the recreational game in England and Wales, and is designed to "future-proof" the county game for at least the next two decades.
The ECB declined to comment, while Glamorgan were also contacted for comment.
Arch's march? Texas QB opens as Heisman fave

Arch Manning is looking to do something neither of his famous uncles ever did: win a Heisman Trophy.
The Texas quarterback has opened as the favorite to win the 2025 Heisman Trophy at ESPN BET, sitting atop the oddsboard at +750.
A rising redshirt sophomore, Manning was the top recruit of the 2023 high school class and was the backup quarterback to Quinn Ewers for his first two seasons in Austin. Manning is widely expected to be the Longhorns' starter next season. The team is +500 to win the National Championship, trailing only reigning champion Ohio State (+450).
LSU quarterback Garrett Nussmeier is second on ESPN BET's oddsboard at +800. He aims to follow in the footsteps of Jayden Daniels (2023) and Joe Burrow (2019) to become the third Tigers quarterback to win the award in seven seasons.
Three more quarterbacks round out the top five: Tennessee's Nico Iamaleava (+1100), Clemson's Cade Klubnik (+1200) and Penn State's Drew Allar (+1200).
The first non-quarterback on the board is Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith (+1500), who dazzled during the Buckeyes' championship run in his freshman season. Another non-QB doesn't appear until Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love shows up at +6000.
While quarterbacks have won 20 of the past 25 Heisman awards, Colorado CB/WR Travis Hunter broke the mold for the 2024 season with his spectacular play on both sides of the ball, while Boise State RB Ashton Jeanty finished as the runner-up after a historic rushing season.
Hunter's triumph resulted in a big loss for sportsbooks.
Welcome to the Duke-UNC rivalry, Cooper Flagg: It's unlike anything you've seen

The Duke Blue Devils host the first of two regular-season meetings with longtime rival, the North Carolina Tar Heels, on Saturday in a Sonic Blockbuster matchup on ESPN (6:30 p.m. ET).
North Carolina native Ryan McGee penned an open letter to the star freshman on behalf of his home state, where the two programs on either side of college basketball's storied rivalry are separated by only 11 miles.
Dear Cooper Flagg,
Congratulations on what has been a ridiculously great freshman season at Duke. At a basketball program that has long been an assembly line of legends, you have already managed to carve your name into the wooden framework of Cameron Indoor Stadium after only 20 collegiate games played.
You came to Durham with nearly unprecedented hype, as the nation's top recruit and already the presumptive No. 1 pick in the 2025 NBA draft. But you have lived up to the hype from the start, driving lanes, tossing up fallaway 3-pointers and throwing down backboard-rattling dunks in a campaign that will likely end with a truckload of Player of the Year awards sent back to your hometown of Newport, Maine.
But before we can cement your legacy, there is the matter of Saturday's scheduled contest against a neighboring team that wears a lighter shade of blue, making the 11-mile trek north from Chapel Hill to Durham. Yes, North Carolina, the flagship school of the state in which you now reside -- and the measuring stick by which your Duke days shall be forever assessed.
Forget that you turned 18 barely a month and a half ago. How you perform against the team from the other end of Highway 501 will tailgate you through every birthday you celebrate from now on.
And to be crystal clear here, kid, this isn't overtyped sportswriter hyperbole. Just ask those who once stood in your sneakers on that same court, most of them long -- very long -- before you were born.
"It's been 40 years since I played a college basketball game," Michael Jordan said. (Perhaps you've heard of him, Cooper?) "To this day, before people ask me about our national championship or our three ACC championships or ACC tournament wins, any of that, they ask, 'How did you did you do against Duke?'"
After pausing to make room for a Grinch-like evil grin while reflecting on his UNC days while at a NASCAR event (he's now a team owner) late last fall, the GOAT added: "By the way, the answer is that we did very well."
Very well, as in six wins to one loss -- which brings us, Cooper, to the other lonelier end of that yardstick.
"That one loss for Michael was the first win for me," Jay Bilas said. You definitely know that name, don't you, Cooper? He's the guy who is always talking about you on "College GameDay." He's also the fellow 6-foot-9 big man in all those photos wallpapering the museum in the Cameron Indoor lobby. No. 21, Bilas traded in SoCal for the South to be a member of Duke's ACC power-shifting 1986 Final Four team. (Though, in your defense, you might not recognize him in those team pics because he had hair back then.)
"I don't remember the score of many games I played in," Bilas continued. "But I remember the score of that one in 1984. It was the ACC tournament and North Carolina was ranked No. 1, but we won 77-74. I will always remember that score because when we got back to Durham, every car in town had a bumper sticker that read: DUKE BLUE 77, CAROLINA BLUE 74.
"That's how rare it was for Duke to beat Carolina back then. I remember us saying this shouldn't be such a big deal. This needs to be a normal occurrence."
Bilas, like MJ, grinned.
"And it has been."
Indeed, Cooper, it has. UNC leads the all-time series with 145 wins to Duke's 117, but that includes a 16-game winning streak that took place a century ago. Since 1978, the series has stood as Duke 57, UNC 49. Since 2003, it's Duke 26, UNC 23. And so far this decade, the scorecard reads UNC 6, Duke 5.
The only non-regular-season game among those came in the 2022 Final Four, when the Heels ended Mike Krzyzewski's unparalleled coaching career in the biggest conceivable way.
But Mr. Flagg, what you need to understand before Saturday evening's tipoff has nothing to do with records, stat sheets or series winning streaks (though it's worth noting that UNC has won two straight). This game is much bigger than that. This is about emotion. About bragging rights. About the ripples sent forth from the Triangle throughout the Old North State, from the Appalachians to the Outer Banks, its epicenter being the numbers that you and your teammates do or do not stamp onto those stat sheets in your two wintertime meetings with the Heels.
Duke-Carolina is about old men sitting in booths at barbecue joints, the Methodist dressed in one shade of blue asking the Presbyterian donned in that other Azul hue, "Well now, what the hell happened to y'all Saturday night?" Then promptly pushing the check across the vinegar-stained Formica, as tradition demands.
Be forewarned, dear freshman Flagg, that a countless roster of your fellow first-year players have been thrust into the Duke-Carolina spotlight, both willingly and accidentally.
Zion Williamson was a freshman the night of Feb. 20, 2019, when 36 seconds into the UNC game at Cameron, his right Nike sneaker exploded like it had been rigged by a Hollywood special effects unit. In 2007, when Duke's Gerald Henderson's elbow broke Tyler Hansbrough's nose, it further opened the fracture between Durham and Chapel Hill. The image of the UNC center's blood-covered face is the Old North State's equivalent to Rocky Balboa screaming "Adrian!" -- but it was Hansbrough vowing revenge on Henderson, who was, yes, a freshman.
And those old-timers in their barbecue booths still tell the tale of Feb. 4, 1961, the day often singled out as the moment the rivalry became more than just a basketball contest. UNC's Larry Brown -- do an internet search for that name, Cooper, he became a very big deal among hoops coaches -- was driving the length of Cameron court in the closing seconds, trailing Duke 81-75. He was guarded by Blue Devil ace Art Heyman, who spit at Brown and grabbed at him for a purposeful foul. Brown reacted by throwing the ball at Heyman and then throwing fists.
The UNC bench, then located along the baseline, reacted by jumping Heyman en masse. The Duke bench reacted by running across the building to protect their All-American while students poured onto the floor, punching anyone in pale blue. Among those later found guilty of making it all much worse much faster were, yes, freshmen players from both teams, in attendance as fans during a time when they weren't allowed to play yet.
Also, Mr. Flagg, it would behoove you to not pay much attention to the current win-loss records of your respective teams. Yes, Duke has lost only twice and will host Saturday night's game as the second-ranked team in the land. And yes, North Carolina is scuffling at 13-9, ranked seventh in the ACC after dropping three of its past four, and there is increasing noise from those who sport Tar on their Heels that it might be time to part ways with UNC hoops hero Hubert Davis after four seasons at the helm of his alma mater.
But Davis himself will be happy to explain how "throw the records out when these two get together" is no mere sports cliché when, well, these two teams get together. During Davis' junior year of 1990, twice the Tar Heels faced Duke as the higher ranked team -- and lost both times. Then they met in the ACC tourney title game, where Duke was ranked ahead of Carolina ... and lost.
"People remember the game when we lost to them in the 1984 ACC tourney, but we had to play our asses off not to have lost to them just the week before," Brad Daugherty recalled. "We were No. 1 in that game, too, and they pushed us to two overtimes before we finally put it away. I think it had been nearly 20 years since Duke had won in Carmichael [UNC's longtime arena] and I remember seeing all the old lettermen there that night looking at us like, 'Y'all better not be the ones that blow this streak!' Thank goodness we didn't."
And, Coop, before you take the court for the latest installment of this rivalry do yourself a favor and dig out the game film of this same contest in this same building almost exactly two decades ago, not too long before you entered this big blue world.
It was Feb. 2, 1995. Duke was bad. Like, the only real blemish on Krzyzewski's post-earliest-seasons kind of bad. The Blue Devils went 2-14 in the ACC. It was all so awful that when Coach K had to miss a chunk of the season for back surgery, he decided not to return at all. But in very typical Heels-Devils fashion, it might be the best game ever played in your new home. Rasheed Wallace, Jerry Stackhouse and the No. 2 Heels unleashed a dunk contest to take a 17-point lead, but Duke rallied to force overtime. At the end of the first OT, with the nation scrambling to find the brand-new ESPN2 on their cable systems, Jeff Capel -- yes, the coach at Pitt -- smoked a desperate heave from midcourt to force double OT and ignite Durham into delirium.
UNC won the game. But Capel won your new school's hearts forever and ever, amen.
Who knows, Cooper Flagg? Perhaps you have your own Capel moment. Or Hansbrough moment. Or MJ ... or JJ Redick ... or Austin Rivers ... or fill-in-the-blank with your all-time favorite blue note.
Just know this, Mr. Maine Man. Whatever you think you know about college basketball's greatest rivalry, forget it. Because all of those who dribbled before you thought they knew, too.
"The only thing you really need to know is that this is bigger than you think, and it is certainly bigger than you," said Christian Laettner, perhaps the most simultaneously loved and loathed hoopster who ever hit the court for this series. A series that, despite all of his otherworldly success (see: Four Final Fours, two national titles and the Dream Team), he posted a 5-6 record against UNC.
"To say you played in the Duke-Carolina game is the most amazing privilege," Laettner added. "To say you won it, and won it several times, that's the gift that keeps on giving for the rest of your life. And the ones you lost, you still replay in your head."
We'll see what mark you leave on this rivalry come Saturday, Coop.
Sincerely,
Everyone in the state of North Carolina
Rozier in 'great headspace' despite betting probe

MIAMI -- Terry Rozier declined to answer questions Friday about the investigations by federal prosecutors into unusual betting patterns surrounding his play in a game when he was with the Charlotte Hornets in 2023.
Rozier, now with the Miami Heat, is linked to the same probe that led to former Toronto Raptors player Jontay Porter being banned for life from the NBA, facing criminal prosecution and eventually pleading guilty to committing wire fraud.
Porter is awaiting sentencing. There has been no indication that Rozier is under criminal investigation, and he has not been charged with a crime.
"On advice from counsel, I can't answer any questions about that matter," Rozier said Friday. "So, I won't."
The Wall Street Journal on Thursday first reported the investigation surrounding the Hornets-New Orleans game involving Rozier on March 23, 2023. Rozier left the game after 9 minutes and not only did not return -- foot discomfort was the reason cited -- he did not play again for the Hornets that season.
The NBA said it has previously looked into the Rozier situation and did not find that any league rules were broken. It confirmed Thursday that there is an investigation by the U.S. attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York, and the league said it is "cooperating with that investigation."
Rozier -- averaging 12.1 points per game this season -- will continue to play for the Heat, per usual. Miami opens a road trip at San Antonio on Saturday.
"His status is still the same," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said when asked about Rozier's place with the team on Friday.
Rozier said he's "in a great headspace" and that he does not anticipate any issues being able to focus on playing, even with the investigation now having been revealed publicly.
"It's kind of always been easy. It's kind of been my life," Rozier said. "You know, once I get in between them lines, I can block out anything. So, it'll be pretty easy for me. I'm around a great group of guys. We've got a great locker room, great staff, so it's easy for me."
In that March 23, 2023, game, Rozier finished with five points, four rebounds and two assists in that opening period -- a productive quarter, but well below his usual total output for a full game.
Posts still online from that date show that some bettors were furious with sportsbooks that evening when it became evident that Rozier was not going to return to the Charlotte-New Orleans game after the first quarter, with many turning to social media to say that something "shady" had gone on regarding the prop bets involving his stats for that night.
Some sportsbooks offered Rozier prop bets -- his totals for that night were generally set around 21.5 points, six assists and four rebounds -- that day, then took them down hours before the start of the Charlotte-New Orleans game. It was not clear why that happened, and some bettors wondered aloud why that unusual move had taken place. Rozier was not listed on the team's injury report going into the game.
Prop bets are wagers where bettors can choose whether a player will reach a certain statistical standard or not during a game
Rozier, 30, is in the third year of a four-year, $96.3 million contract.
Porter's ban came after a similar investigation into his performance and prop bets. The Porter investigation started once the league learned from "licensed sports betting operators and an organization that monitors legal betting markets" about unusual gambling patterns surrounding Porter's performance in a game on March 20, 2024, against Sacramento.
The league determined that Porter gave a bettor information about his own health status prior that game and said that another individual -- known to be an NBA bettor -- placed an $80,000 bet that Porter would not hit the numbers set for him in parlays through an online sportsbook. That bet would have won $1.1 million.
Pistons' Stewart suspended on bobblehead night

Detroit Pistons center Isaiah Stewart has been suspended one game without pay after picking up his sixth flagrant foul point of the season, the NBA announced on Friday.
Stewart received a flagrant foul 2 and was ejected with 8:45 remaining in the second quarter of the Pistons' 133-119 loss to the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Wednesday. Stewart entered the game with four flagrant foul points.
Stewart will serve his suspension when the Pistons host the Dallas Mavericks on Friday.
Coincidently, the Pistons had planned to honor Stewart by giving away a bobblehead of his likeness to fans attending Friday's game. The Pistons told TMZ Sports they plan to go through with the giveaway, as the promotional schedule is locked in once the schedule is released.
Stewart was also fined $50,000 for making inappropriate and objectionable gestures following his ejection. Stewart also stands to lose $86,207 in salary for missing Friday's game, according to ESPN's Bobby Marks.
The 6-foot-8, 250-pound Stewart is averaging 5.4 points and 5.8 rebounds.