The Panther
Registered User
"You can't touch this!"
Rapper M.C. Hammer is famous for two things: his 1990 Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em album, which sold 20 million copies, making Hammer (briefly) a superstar... and the fact that by 1996, he was $13 million in debt (he apparently spent something like $25 million renovating his Los Angeles home, and forgot to pay his taxes).
Since high salaries started becoming a thing in the early-70s (but mainly only for 'stars' at that time), lots of NHL-ers have earned some serious coin in their playing days. So, I'm wondering: Which former NHL players mismanaged their money badly?
I know of two examples:
-- Bryan Trottier: In the early 90s, after poor investments, Trottier was in financial trouble, despite ranking top-10 in all-time NHL scoring at the time of his first retirement. He returned to play for the Pens, briefly, before retiring again.
-- Theo Fleury: An obvious choice, but Fleury somehow earned upwards of $30 million in his playing days, but within a couple of years of retirement had to start a local business in Calgary to make ends meet. When that business failed, he turned to recording country music albums.
Rapper M.C. Hammer is famous for two things: his 1990 Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em album, which sold 20 million copies, making Hammer (briefly) a superstar... and the fact that by 1996, he was $13 million in debt (he apparently spent something like $25 million renovating his Los Angeles home, and forgot to pay his taxes).
Since high salaries started becoming a thing in the early-70s (but mainly only for 'stars' at that time), lots of NHL-ers have earned some serious coin in their playing days. So, I'm wondering: Which former NHL players mismanaged their money badly?
I know of two examples:
-- Bryan Trottier: In the early 90s, after poor investments, Trottier was in financial trouble, despite ranking top-10 in all-time NHL scoring at the time of his first retirement. He returned to play for the Pens, briefly, before retiring again.
-- Theo Fleury: An obvious choice, but Fleury somehow earned upwards of $30 million in his playing days, but within a couple of years of retirement had to start a local business in Calgary to make ends meet. When that business failed, he turned to recording country music albums.