Rangers fans had to see that in 2001, when Sather sent fan favorite Adam Graves to San Jose for Mikael Samuelsson.Although Samuelsson turned into a decent NHLer (after the Rangers traded him away as well), the thought of having to see Graves in another uniform was a lot for Ranger fans to swallow. As mentioned earlier, July 1, 2007 brought another player to town that makes this list His name is Chris Drury. His first two seasons here were decent but not awe inspiring That's not the type of player Drury is. He was brought here to be a winner, and frankly, he hasn't.His contract of five years, $35 million is killing the Rangers this season. His numbers have fallen off the table dramatically, and he's been left to center the fourth line. 
It was just a case of a decent player being on a great team during the final year of a contract. 2. The trade deadline of 2004 dramatically re-shaped the Rangers for years to come, as the team dumped high-priced salaries in return for youth and draft picks. One of the victims was Brian Leetch, arguably the best Ranger to ever put on the red, white, and blue.Leetch played his entire career with the Rangers until the day Sather sent him to Toronto in exchange for Max Kondratiev and Jarkko Immonen, both of whom had zero success with the Rangers. To make matters worse, it was on Leetch's 36th birthday.If this trade helped the organization in anyway, I'd be for it.

But it did not, and we had to see Leetch sit on the opposing teams bench. 1. With so many blunders to choose from, it was hard to decide what should be number one. In the end, I had to choose the signing of defenseman Wade Redden to a six-year, $39 million contract. Redden, 31 at the time, had seen his production in Ottawa fall dramatically, so the idea of giving him a deal that would keep him a Ranger well into the twilight of his career seemedludicrous. In his first full season in New York, the man the Rangers brought in to quarterback their powerplay tallied just three goals and 26 points in 81 games, making him the target of the Blue Seats game in and game out for years to come.. First-time PC buyers will also boost spending on software, services & security,says AMI studyKOLKATA, India(Business Wire)Nearly 22 of SBs (small businesses, or companies with up to 99 employees) inIndia have plans in the next 12 months to invest in computers for the firsttime. This will also boostspending in other IT categories such as software, services, security, etc,according to a recent study by New York-based Access Markets International (AMI)Partners, Inc.
"In the current economic downturn, businesses are looking at cutting costs, andas a result PC-owning SBs are extending the life-cycle of existing PCs," saysDipendra Mitra, Analyst at AMI-Partners. "The non-PC owning businesses hold thekey to growth in India. Even if a fraction of the 2.5 million non-PC owningbusinesses buy a PC, it will provide a considerable boost to the Indian ITindustry." SMBs are a vital part of the Indian economy and a major contributor to IndiasGDP. Yet, only a little more than a third of all SBs actually own and use a PC.One key reason for this is the lack of awareness of the benefits of PCs amongSBs.