NHL Notes: ‘Canes sign 1st-round pick Noah Hanifin

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RALEIGH, N.C. -- The Carolina Hurricanes have signed first-round draft pick Noah Hanifin to a three-year, entry-level contract.

Under terms of the deal announced Saturday, the defenseman will make $832,500 at the NHL level or $70,000 in the minor leagues through the 2017-18 season. Hanifin also receives a $277,500 signing bonus.

The signing was announced after the team concluded its summer development camp for prospects.

General manager Ron Francis says Hanifin "had a great week" at the camp and "fits the mold for the type of player and person we want in a Hurricanes uniform."

The Hurricanes selected the 18-year-old with the No. 5 overall pick in last month's draft. He had five goals and 18 assists in 37 games as a freshman at Boston College this past season.

Red Wings: Crews implode former historic hotel
DETROIT -- A 13-story historic former hotel that stood for 90 years in Detroit was reduced to rubble in less than a minute on Saturday.

It took about 15 seconds for the one-time Park Avenue Hotel to come crashing down after the first of the charges could be heard going off. Officials said 200 pounds of dynamite were used to bring down the structure, which was built in the 1920s.

The implosion was part of Olympia Development's ongoing construction project that will bring a new hockey arena and entertainment district to an area north of downtown. The $450 million, 20,000-seat arena is expected to open in 2017. The NHL's Red Wings now play at Joe Louis Arena, which has been around since 1979.

Imploding the building "helps us, because it allows us to take it down in one time and not have to have this be a very prolonged (process) and affect the neighbors and everyone else," said Sean Hollister, senior project manager with general contractor Barton Malow-Hunt-White.

People gathered on the tops of nearby parking garages and high-rises to catch a glimpse of the implosion, which produced a sizable dust cloud that advanced toward some of the onlookers.

Hollister said crews will wash the windows of nearby homes and businesses, and trucks are at the ready to clean area streets. It will take weeks to clear away all the debris from the implosion, he said.

The Detroit Historic District Commission voted last month to raze the vacant ex-hotel.

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