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UConn Women’s Basketball Elite Eight Pregame Quotes

 UConn coach Geno Auriemma listens as guard Bria Hartley answers a question at a press conference during the NCAA Tournament at the Pinnacle Bank Arena Sunday.

Here are the 2014 Elite Eight pregame quotes from UConn Huskies women’s basketball head coach Geno Auriemma and some of his players from Sunday’s media conference.

Geno Auriemma, UConn Head Coach
Opening Statement

“These are pretty much standard. You win a game. You don’t have time to celebrate the really good win that we had yesterday. And already you are thinking about what you have to do tomorrow night. That’s really one of the great challenges of this tournament. You don’t have time to dwell on what just happened. It’s a quick turnaround to play a completely different team tomorrow night than we played last night. And I know we put a lot of minutes in. These five guys played a lot of minutes yesterday. I think we’ve seen enough during the last four to five months that regardless of what happens tomorrow, we’ll be ready.”

On the Elite Eight being a gut-check game

“It’s just always been my experience. I don’t know how it is for anybody else. I like to read books obviously. As coaches, we have a lot of airplane time and bus time whatever. It’s like when you read about people who climb Mount Everest. You know? They get to where it’s 500, 600 feet away from the top and that’s when most accidents happen. That’s when most people die. That’s because you can see the end. You can see the result of all of your hard work. But now is when you have to be the most careful. So here you are, you are one game away from the Final Four. That’s every kid’s dream, you know, when you go to college. You’re right there. You are right on the edge. And it affects people in different ways. That’s why I think it’s difficult.”

On what his team needs to look out for tomorrow night

“Yesterday’s game plan probably won’t work. Our first play yesterday was we were going to have (Breanna Stewart) take an uncontested shot that she had no chance of making. And I think she was aiming for Hamson’s back of her head, maybe to get her out of the game for a couple times because it didn’t hit anything on the way to the floor. Starting the game in a way that from a conference standpoint, you get exactly the shots you want. And that’s so crucial I think at this time of the year. Right in those first five minutes you get shots that you normally get during the course of the year and you get off to a good start and your confidence is high. You can do different things defensively when you are making shots. I’m sure it’s the same thing with Texas A&M. At this time of the year, everyone’s biggest fear is making shots, because as you get closer and closer to the Final Four, kids are usually just carefree and line up threes and knock them in. It doesn’t work that way in the final eight. You saw those BYU kids in the first half. Hey, you know, this is like we are playing Gonzaga or playing Pacific. This is cool.

And then the last 15 minutes of the game they realize they are in the NCAA Tournament and playing for the national championship and those shots don’t go in anymore. I think every coach’s biggest fear is how do your players respond on the offensive end. The defensive end is the defensive end. You’re not going to shut anybody out at this time of the year. Bria (Hartley) said it right. We do a really good job of not fouling. I think we led the country this year in fewest fouls. So if tomorrow is a foul fest, if tomorrow all of a sudden becomes 20 fouls on them and 20 on us, we are going to lose.”

On if foul trouble concerns him with only six players playing significant time

“You usually get down to seven or eight max at this time of year. I think for teams that play 10 this time of year, it’s going to be a struggle. You really don’t have the kind of continuity that you want to have when you play that many players. Six is probably not enough. I remember in Minneapolis in 1995, we played six. And in the first half, we had three All-Americans on the bench with fouls. Then the officials went in the locker room and probably looked at each other and said ‘we are the dumbest people on the floor today. Not the players.’ And in the second half we didn’t foul and you win the game. I think any time you are playing in the NCAA Tournament, fouls are a huge issue, because the teams you are playing against are good enough that if you have a couple really good players on the bench, you can’t cover for that because the other team is really good. Like yesterday, BYU – a couple of their really good players got in foul trouble and they couldn’t make up for that. And it would be the same for us. Playing really intelligent basketball at this time of the year is probably the most important thing. Everybody’s tired. Everybody’s either in great shape or not. Everybody’s got strengths. Everybody’s got weaknesses. But generally speaking, the teams that are the most intelligent with their talent aren the teams that move on.”

On instilling discipline

“You start out with getting players that are really coachable. You heard Jeff talk about how we had the best players in the country. And I’m sure Gary will bring it up more than once in the next couple days about how we have the best players in the country and woe is me. I wonder how these other players feel when they’re coach is telling them they suck and that our players are really good. So it starts out with us getting the best players that ever lived. And then we try to just coach them a little bit. We try to recruit players that are coachable. And then we talk to them in practice about we’re going to work really, really hard. But the minute you smack somebody, all of your hard work is negated. So why would you want to work that hard on the defensive end and then be stupid and smack somebody for no reason whatsoever. And after a while they get to understand that if I want to stay in the game, I can’t foul. If I foul, I’m going to sit down. I don’t care who you are. You know? Somebody asked me yesterday, ‘were you mad at Bria?’ I said, ‘no. I wasn’t mad at Bria. Bria gets two fouls in the first half.’ They understand that if I foul, I’m not going to play. So if that’s part of your culture, then it just kind of becomes who you are year after year after year. It’s like teams who take bad shots. They take bad shots every year. They just come down and whatever shot they feel like taking, they take it. And that becomes who you are as well. I think it’s not necessarily that our players are better than everybody else, which in a lot of cases they are. But if we allow them to do some of the dumb stuff that other players do, they wouldn’t be any better. I don’t know. I just think that’s called coaching. You recruit coachable players and then you coach the hell out of them.”

On UConn’s recent history against Texas A&M

“I don’t know. When we played them there last year, it was really early in the season. They were playing a lot of young guys and a lot of those young guys have grown up a little bit. They are a year older this year. You can see the maturity in their team. I’ve always admired Courtney Walker. I think she’s one of the best guards in America today that a lot of people don’t even talk about. I liked her in high school and I like her even more now. They had Kelsey Bone and I think that their offense was maybe more geared to players in the post and I think their guards are more in charge now and I think it’s made them an even more dangerous team. The fact that we won by a lot down there last year, I don’t know that it has any significance this time of year. I think they are playing really, really well. Really good players have short memories. I bet if you ask them what the score was last year, they probably don’t even remember.”

On if he recruited any of Texas A&M’s players

“We got Moriah Jefferson. That was kind of unusual in the sense that we don’t get a lot of players from that part of the world for whatever reason. I think kids that grow up down that way; I think they think they need a passport to go to Connecticut. I’m not sure they realize we are all in the same Union here. So they tend to stay down south. (Jefferson) was an exceptionable situation, but generally speaking we haven’t had a lot of success down there. And from what I understand, she had committed to Oklahoma earlier. By the time I really got a chance to see her up front and center, she had kind of already made a decision about where she wanted to go. We were involved with Kelsey Bone a little bit. She went to South Carolina and then back to A&M, so that’s the neat thing about college basketball nowadays. There’s a lot of good players all over the country. And if you can keep the ones that grow up in the area close to you, then you have a chance to have a really good team and Gary (Blair) has done a really good job of that.”

On what he expects to see from Texas A&M style-wise

“They’ll probably play 40 minutes of zone. You know? You coach a certain way, that’s how you are going to play. I don’t think you change how you coach and change how your team plays at this time in the season. If they are a man-to-man team, which they are, that’s what they are going to do. They are going to play the way they’ve played most of the season. I think it’s a bad message to send to your team if you say ‘look, we are a really good man-to-man team, but not against these guys. We can’t play man-to-man. We are going to have to play zone.’ Then all of a sudden, the kids start to think, ‘oh, boy. Our best defense isn’t any good against their offense?’ I think you have to go with what your strength is and go to where you feel most comfortable. We’re going to do the same thing. We are going to play the same way we’ve played all year long. That’s why some matchups are better than others. Going into the BYU game, I thought this wasn’t an easy matchup for us for a lot of different reasons. But you can’t all of a sudden make a change in one day and go, ‘we defended the ball screen this way for four months and now we are going to defend it this way today.’ We guarded down screens this way and now we are going to do it this way.’ You can’t. You have to go with what your strengths are and we know what their strengths are. We know what they are. We know what our strengths are. They know what they are. We make a lot of money as coaches, so we have to make things sound complicated. But, basically speaking, when they shoot it and it goes in and we shoot it and it doesn’t go in, they are going to win. And if we make more shots than they do, we are going to win. The perfect example is yesterday. The NCAA Tournament is about making shots. We know each team has guys that can make shots.”

On Arkansas hiring Jimmy Dykes

“That’s funny. That was a topic of conversation this morning. As a matter of fact, I’ve known Jimmy for a long time. When I saw it, I was like ‘wow. How many Jimmy Dykes do I know?’ And I realized it was the same one. Hey, it’s certainly thinking outside the box, isn’t it? Like I said, I don’t know much about the University of Arkansas’ athletic program basketball-wise. I remember when Gary (Blair) was there and they went to the Final Four and had a lot of success. Tom (Collen) had a moniker of success there until recently. But I think changing conferences and going to the SEC, I think that changed a lot for them. Back in the day, even before Gary got there, I think they had a really high profile, and I think when Gary got there and they started playing Tennessee all the time and playing Georgia and you are playing all these really good teams, I think the expectations are really high there now. Jimmy certainly has an awful lot of basketball in his background. None of it with women. It will be interesting. That will be one I’m sure a lot of people will be watching pretty closely.”

Reporter: “Coach, you mentioned something about matchups and how teams do that. Gary’s going to say you have McDonald’s All-Americans and he’s got Burger King’s…”

Auriemma: “Actually that’s not really true, but that’s how those guys talk.”

On why Blair is able to win

“I think they start out from a defensive standpoint. They play pretty good defense night in and night out, so they give themselves a chance to win. They recruit pretty good athletes. They have their share of All-Americans that get better. They take advantage of their strengths, you know? I think he’s pretty good at getting his players to buy in to what he thinks is important. They rebound the ball. They do all the things that good teams do. They generally don’t beat themselves. They don’t come out do things that make you scratch your head. Like what are they doing? When you’re solid and you do fundamentally good things, then that transfers no matter what school you are at. You get a certain kind of kid, which he does, and his teams at Stephen F. Austin, at Arkansas, at Texas A&M – they all look the same. He has a philosophy and he sticks to it.”

On the DFW Elite

“I remember watching them when they had that run for three or four years it seemed like. And without question, they were one of the more dominant programs in America. So it’s no surprise that those kids have gone on to play at a really high level. They work at it all year round. They take it seriously. There’s probably more good players two hours in the Dallas vicinity than there are in all of New England. It’s no surprise what they did when they were in high school and it’s no surprise what they are doing now. It’s a credit to their program and the way they operate. Then right down the road in Houston, you have one that’s almost just as good. There’s an awful lot of All-Americans that are growing up in Texas. If you’re not getting them, don’t come crying to me.”

UConn Student-Athletes
Moriah Jefferson, UConn Sophomore Guard

On being recruited by Texas A&M

“I remember (Coach Gary Blair) is a funny guy. I was recruited by them starting in eighth grade and I went on a couple trips up there. It was a nice program, but I think UConn just fit me.” On her familiarity with the Texas A&M players “We played together in eighth grade through the rest of high school. We played on the same AAU team, but we’ve talked a couple of times since I’ve been here, but it’s strictly business now.”

Stefanie Dolson, UConn Senior Center

On preparing for a team that is more guard-oriented like Texas A&M

“We just have to make sure that we do a good job of containing their dribble penetration, making sure we make it difficult for them to get into the lane. Even though they’re different from BYU, they have Karla Gilbert, they have a really big man and they can rebound. They’re going to be extremely physical with us so we have to be ready for that. Today in practice we’re just going to focus on executing our offense and making sure we go out and execute our game plan.”

Senior Guard Bria Hartley, UConn Senior Guard

On the challenges of facing a physical team like A&M

“I think like Stephanie said, you really want to contain their dribble penetration, have really good help defense. I think it is important to go out there and play defense without fouling. With teams that like to attack, sometimes you get caught up and have a touch foul here or there. I think we really have to work on that and concentrate on that. I think our team does a really good job of communicating and helping each other out. We have to go out there, be aggressive and force them to make tough plays.”

Locker Room Quotes

Kiah Stokes, UConn Junior Center

On playing in the Regional Final fairly close to home

“It’s been great. It’s easy for my family to come out and drive a few hours out here instead of traveling all the way to the east coast. It’s great to have them here. We’re just excited and looking forward to the game tomorrow.”

On the team’s performance heading into the Regional Final

“I think we’re playing pretty well together. Obviously, yesterday was a good test for us, and I think we needed that. It’s not always going to be easy, so it was a good test. We’ve been playing pretty well, so we just need to keep it up and focus on a game at a time.”

On playing against a physical Texas A&M team

“I know they need me to come in and be a big defensive presence. It’s something I’m good at and something I can do, so I’m looking forward to it. It’ll be a great game for sure. It’ll be a different type of game than we played on Saturday, so we’re really excited for it.”

On Texas A&M

“They’re very aggressive, and they’re going to play physical. With fighting to get to the Final Four, it’s going to be intense. We can’t be afraid of contact, because there will be fouls on both ends. It’s going to be physical and aggressive, so we need to be ready.”

On being one win away from the Final Four

“We know it is crunch time. They’re playing to get to the Final Four just like we are, so it’s going to be tough. They want to be the ones to beat UConn, so we have to be focused and ready.”

Saniya Chong, UConn Freshman Guard

On finding a way against BYU on Saturday

“Yesterday wasn’t our best, but we played much better in the second half. We didn’t hit shots in the first half, but our defense was good which pulled us together. The second half was much better.”

On the lessons learned from Saturday’s challenging game

“Some of our other games have been blowouts. Yesterday kind of opened our eyes to how it’s going to be for the rest of this season. It also taught us that if our shots aren’t falling, still work hard and always get back on defense.”

On what they know about the Aggies

“They have pretty good scorers on their team. They go to the basket hard and are very aggressive. We have to be more aggressive than they are, and we need a good 40 minutes.”

On her freshman season with the Huskies

“Being a part of this team is so remarkable. They’re my family, so it’s great to be a part of this.”

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Quotes courtesy of UConn Athletic Communications

photo credit: cloe poisson – hartford courant

Boston Red Sox @ Baltimore Orioles Pitching Matchups: 3/31-4/3

Boston Red Sox @ Baltimore Orioles pitching matchups

Note: Pitching matchups are subject to change

Monday, March 31 @ 3:05 PM

Jon Lester, LHP (-, 0.00) vs Chris Tillman RHP (-, 0.00)

TV: NESN, ESPN2, WatchESPN, MLB.tv

Radio: Red Sox Radio Network, MLB Gameday Audio

Wednesday, April 2 @ 7:05 PM

John Lackey, RHP (-, 0.00) vs Ubaldo Jimenez, RHP (-, 0.00)

TV: NESN, MLB.tv

Radio: Red Sox Radio Network, MLB Gameday Audio

Thursday, April 3 @ 7:05 PM

Felix Doubront, LHP (-, 0.00) vs Wei-Yin Chen, LHP (-, 0.00)

TV: NESN, MLB Network, MLB.tv

Radio: Red Sox Radio Network, MLB Gameday Audio

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/30

UConn Huskies Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball teams as well as the other sports the student-athletes engage in. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

It’s game day for the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team as they’ll take on the Michigan State Spartans for the right to go to the Final Four in Dallas. Tip is scheduled for 2:20 p.m. and the game will be broadcast nationally on CBS. You can also watch it on your mobile device or tablet on the March Madness app. If you can’t watch the game and live locally in Connecticut you can listen to Joe D. and Wayne Norman on the UConn IMG Radio Network.

To open the links up in a new tab or window, use Control+click

UConn Men’s Basketball links

UConn Men’s Elite Elight Pregame Quotes [sox & dawgs]

Video: UConn Men Prepare For Elite 8 [sox & dawgs]

UConn Vs. Michigan State: Taking The Train, ‘Not Backing Down,’ Notes, Quotes and Thoughts From The Garden [dom amore – hartford courant]

UConn’s Postgame Tradition, A Tweet from LeBron James, Kevin Ollie Explains His Samuel Slap [david borges – new haven register]

Huskies vs. Spartans; How game will play out [ed daigneault – the republican-american]

UConn prepares for tough test (video) [gavin keefe – the day]

Shouldn’t be much flack over smack [neill ostrout – journal inquirer]

Filling shoes, making Final Fours [neill ostrout – journal inquirer]

Playful smack causes stir for Huskies [william paxton – ct post]

Better get the Huskies early [john silver – snyuconn.com]

UConn has to check Payne, Dawson [john silver – snyuconn.com]

Huskies To Face Michigan State In The Elite Eight On Sunday [uconnhuskies.com]

Napier knows UConn in for ‘dogfight’ against Michigan State [ct post]

Dual point guard attack working for UConn [ct post]

UConn is back where UConn has long been [ct post]

UConn Men After Final Four Berth; Michigan State Stands In Way [hartford courant]

Sophomore Struggles Helped Transform Shabazz [hartford courant]

Young Cancer Victim Becomes Family To Spartan Star [hartford courant]

Ollie’s Bond With His Players Allows For Playfulness [hartford courant]

Last time UConn faced Michigan State, a tradition was born [new haven register]

UConn men play for trip to Final Four today [the day]

Ollie’s coaching career began with win over Spartans [the day]

Michigan State vs. UConn: Joe Rexrode’s scouting report [detroit free press]

To make Final Four, Michigan State will need to contain UConn’s Shabazz Napier [detroit free press]

Shabazz Napier helps UConn move past punishment [detroit free press]

Ollie-wood lights glow from Calhoun’s shadow [ny post]

Take UConn, trust me on this [ny post]

Elite Eight versions of Michigan State, UConn quite different from ones that met in Germany last season [mlive.com]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Video: UConn Women Survive Challenge From BYU To Advance To Elite Eight [sox & dawgs]

Video: On To The Elite Eight For the UConn Women [sox & dawgs]

Mosqueda-Lewis, Huskies pull away late [carl adamec – snyuconn.com]

Auriemma, Jefferson didn’t count on violation [carl adamec – snyuconn.com]

Warde Manuel Thrilled About UConn’s NCAA Run [john altavilla – hartford courant]

UConn Survives BYU And Advances [john altavilla – hartford courant]

Mosqueda-Lewis Plays Tough In Win Over BYU [rich elliott – ct post]

Blair With Plenty To Say About UConn … Already [rich elliott – ct post]

A&M’s Gary Blair on facing UConn: “It might happen.” [jim fuller – new haven register]

Mosqueda-Lewis delivers again for UConn [jim fuller – new haven register]

UConn’s Hartley rebounds after quiet first half [jim fuller – new haven register]

Game report: UConn women survive early scare, beat BYU [ct post]

Tested by BYU, UConn finds a way to pull away [ct post]

UConn Rallies To Beat BYU, 70-51 [hartford courant]

Texas A&M Advances To Face UConn Women In Regional Final [hartford courant]

Notebook: Twin Elite Eights Another Chance To Be Noticed [hartford courant]

Huskies thwart pesky BYU, advance to Elite Eight [new haven register]

UConn women survive slow start and beat BYU 70-51 [the day]

With a Star Back in Form, UConn Shakes Off B.Y.U.  [new york times]

UConn passes test from BYU [espnW]

UConn Football links

Video: UConn Football Spring Practice No. 7 Highlights [sox & dawgs]

Video: Highlights From UConn Football Coach Bob Diaco’s Press Conference [sox & dawgs]

Blood screenings, better diet help UConn football players get fit [ct post]

Huskies Measuring Up Under Diaco’s Training Program [hartford courant]

Other UConn related links

M. Soccer. Chivas USA Carlos Alvarez — Latinos Are Baby Making Machines … Of Course We’re Taking Over California [tmz.com]

Baseball. Rutgers Tops UConn In Completion Of Halted Game, 7-5 [uconnhuskies.com]

Baseball. Melley and Marzi Lift UConn Past Rutgers, 11-4 [uconnhuskies.com]

M. Track. Huskies Tally Nine First-Place Finishes at UConn Spring Invite [uconnhuskies.com]

Softball. UConn Softball Picks Up First Conference Win [uconnhuskies.com]

W. Lacrosse. UConn Takes Down Temple, 15-9, In Big East Opener [uconnhuskies.com]

W. Track. UConn Wraps Up Competition at Raleigh Relays [uconnhuskies.com]

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

2014 Boston Red Sox Opening Day Roster

Barring a bad report on the hamstring of Shane Victorino, who tweaked his hamstring on Saturday, this should be the 25-man roster for the Boston Red Sox to start the 2014 season.

Boston Red SoxPitchers (12)

Starters (5) – Clay Buchholz, Felix Doubront, John Lackey, Jon Lester, Jake Peavy

Bullpen (7) – Burke Badenhop, Chris Capuano, Andrew Miller, Edward Mujica, Junichi Tazawa, Koji Uehara, Brandon Workman

Position Players (13)

Catchers (2) – A.J. Pierzynski, David Ross

Infielders (5) – Xander Bogaerts, Jonathan HerreraWill Middlebrooks, Mike Napoli, Dustin Pedroia

Outfielders (5) – Mike Carp, Jonny Gomes, Daniel Nava, Grady Sizemore, Shane Victorino

DH (1) – David Ortiz

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Wolf Pack Pick Up First Shutout in 4-0 Win Over Sound Tigers

Hartford, CT, March 29, 2014 – David LeNeveu had the Hartford Wolf Pack’s first shutout of the season Saturday night at the XL Center, making 22 saves, and Ryan Bourque scored twice, as the Wolf Pack defeated the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, 4-0.

Hartford Wolf PackConor Allen also had a goal and an assist for the Wolf Pack, and Danny Kristo scored his 21st goal of the season.  Danny Syvret had two assists.

“The way that they switched (the lines) up today seemed to work,” Bourque said.  “We had some good chemistry going, with all four lines and the defense, and I think the mentality was a lot different too.  We just tried to get the puck to the net as much as we could.

“To get off to a good start like we did, and get not only the first goal but the second goal as well, definitely gave us a big pep in our step.”

The Wolf Pack came out of the first period with a 1-0 lead, after a goal that was awarded to Bourque only after a video review.

After Allen banged the puck at the Bridgeport net, Bretton Stamler, pressuring down from the Wolf Pack defense, had a close-in shot turned away by Sound Tiger starting goaltender Philippe Trudeau, who was making his pro debut out of the Ontario Hockey League.  The rebound went off of Bourque and slid toward the goal line, and referee Trevor Hanson initially indicated that the puck never went in.

Play was allowed to continue until the next stoppage, which came with 13:41 left on the clock, and Hanson checked the replay at that point.  After taking a look at the overhead angle, Hanson decided that puck had gone in, and the clock was reset to the 4:42 mark.

The Wolf Pack would then chase Trudeau from the game with a three-goal second period.

Bourque got his second of the game to make it a 2-0 Wolf Pack lead at 1:55 of the second, on a double deflection.  Syvret’s bid from the left point hit a Bridgeport defender, and then went off of Bourque and past Trudeau.

Allen scored off of a faceoff win by Marek Hrivik at 5:19 to make it a three-goal Hartford advantage.  Hrivik beat Andrew Clark on a draw in the circle to Trudeau’s right and drew the puck back to Allen at the point, and Allen’s quick shot went underneath Trudeau’s pads and in.

Kristo ended Trudeau’s night at 10:50 with a breakaway goal, Kristo’s 21st goal of the year.  Syvret threaded a perfect pass through the neutral zone, sending Kristo behind the defense, and Kristo’s shot hit Trudeau and slid into the net.

Kenny Reiter replaced Trudeau at that point, and Reiter prevented any further damage in the second and through the third, stopping all 14 shots that he faced.

LeNeveu, who had watched the injured Dov Grumet-Morris start the Wolf Pack’s last seven games and nine of the previous ten, did his best work in the third period, after facing a total of only ten shots in the first 40 minutes.  The Sound Tigers outshot the Wolf Pack 12-11 in the third, but were never able to penetrate LeNeveu’s defenses.

The Wolf Pack and Sound Tigers complete a home-and-home set Sunday in Bridgeport, with faceoff at 3:00 PM.  All of the action of that battle can be heard live on Fox Sports Radio 1410, and on-line at www.foxsportsradio1410.com and iHeartRadio.  Video streaming is available at www.ahllive.com.

The Wolf Pack’s next home game is Saturday, April 5, a 7:00 PM contest vs. the Providence Bruins.  Tickets for all Wolf Pack 2013-14 home games are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, on-line at www.hartfordwolfpack.com and by phone at (877) 522-8499.  Wolf Pack tickets start as low as $12 for youth 12 years old or younger.  To speak with a representative about season or group tickets, call (855) 762-6451.

Bridgeport Sound Tigers 0 at Hartford Wolf Pack 4
Saturday, March 29, 2014 – XL Center

Bridgeport 0 0 0 – 0
Hartford 1 3 0 – 4

1st Period-1, Hartford, Bourque 18 (Stamler, Allen), 4:42. Penalties-Stamler Hfd (delay of game), 5:14; McIlrath Hfd (tripping), 14:36.

2nd Period-2, Hartford, Bourque 19 (Syvret, Fast), 1:55. 3, Hartford, Allen 6 (Hrivik), 5:19. 4, Hartford, Kristo 21 (Syvret, McIlrath), 10:50. Penalties-Pedan Bri (hooking), 13:06; Johnson Bri (boarding), 18:32.

3rd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Powe Hfd (hooking), 5:16; Mayfield Bri (holding, misconduct – continuing altercation), 19:03.

Shots on Goal-Bridgeport 5-5-12-22. Hartford 9-12-11-32.
Power Play Opportunities-Bridgeport 0 / 3; Hartford 0 / 3.
Goalies-Bridgeport, Trudeau 0-1-0 (18 shots-14 saves); Reiter 10-10-2 (14 shots-14 saves). Hartford, LeNeveu 5-8-0 (22 shots-22 saves).
A-5,244
Referees-Trevor Hanson (47).
Linesmen-Mike Baker (11), Brent Colby (7).

Follow Ian on Twitter @soxanddawgs. And be sure to like us on Facebook as well.

Video: UConn Women Survive Challenge From BYU To Advance To Elite Eight

One way to be able to beat the UConn Huskies women’s basketball team is to believe that you can beat them.

 UConn forward Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis goes for a layup ahead of Brigham Young guard Kim Beeston in the first half. The BYU Cougars believed they could advance to Elite Eight over UConn. And for 20 minutes, it looked like they could possibly do just that.

After playing what may have been their worst first half all season, the UConn women recovered and took control in the second half on their way to a 70-51 win over BYU at Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, NE  to advance to the Elite Eight on Monday night.

UConn improves to 37-0 while BYU ends their season at 28-7.

Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis led the Huskies with a double-double of 19 points and 13 rebounds. Despite scoring just four points in the first half, Breanna Stewart finished with 16 points, seven rebounds and four blocked shots.

Bria Hartley added 12 points and five assists while Moriah Jefferson had 11 points. Stefanie Dolson narrowly missed out on a double-double with nine points and 13 rebounds. She also had four blocked shots.

Kim Beeston led the upset-minded Cougars with 16 points while Morgan Bailey had 14 points and seven rebounds. 6’7″ Jennifer Hamson added nine points and 13 rebounds to go along with six blocked shots (two above her NCAA-leading average).

Next up for UConn is matchup with the Texas A&M Aggies on Monday night for the right to go to the Final Four in Nashville. Tip is scheduled for 9:30 p.m.

UConn Huskies vs BYU Cougars 2014 Sweet 16 box score

Here are UConn’s postgame notes.

 

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photo credit: cloe poisson – hartford courant