Author Archives: ianbethune

Video: UConn Women Win Inaugural AAC Title

UConn Huskies 2014 American Athletic Conference Tournament Champions

After falling to the UConn Huskies women's basketball team last Monday night on their Senior Night, the Louisville Cardinals said they would be out for retribution the next time the two teams met.

As we all thought, that next matchup would come in finals of the American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament. And let's just say, the Cardinals didn't exact revenge. They really didn't even come close.

 UConn forward Breanna Stewart shoots in the second half of the American Athletic Conference tournament championship game for two of her game-high 20 points at the Mohegan Sun Arena Monday. UConn got out of the gates quickly with the first eight points and never looked back in a 72-52 win over Louisville in front of 8,034 at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, CT to win the inaugural AAC Tournament and earn an automatic NCAA bid on Monday night.

The Huskies will enter the NCAA Tournament at 34-0 while Louisville will wait to see if they'll be a No. 1 or No. 2 seed after finishing at 30-4. Three of those four losses were to UConn.

Breanna Stewart, who picked up AAC Most Outstanding Player of the Tournament award, had a great game with 20 points, nine rebounds, six assists, four blocked shots and two steals. Bria Hartley added 16 points and six assists while Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis had 13 points.

Stefanie Dolson rounded out the Huskies in double digits with a double-double of 10 points and a season-high 16 rebounds.

Shoni Schimmel paced the Cardinals with 20 points and had seven rebounds. Asia Taylor added seven points and eight rebounds while Jude Schimmel and Tia Gibbs both had six points.

After UConn got out to that early lead, the Cardinals battled back to make it 13-8. The Huskies countered with a 14-2 run to go up by 17 points but their was no quit in Louisville as they went on a 10-1 run of their own to cut the lead back to eight.

Apparently Stewart had seen enough of Louisville being close as her old fashioned three point play kicked off a 12-2 run to close out the half with UConn enjoying an 18 point lead.

The Cardinals never really threatened the Huskies in the second half.

There's the real possibility that these two teams could meet up in the NCAA Regionals if Louisville isn't given a No. 1 seed because of one of the regionals will be on the Cardinals home court at the KFC Yum! Center. We all know Geno Auriemma doesn't want this and I'm sure Jeff Walz won't either.

Hopefully, the NCAA will either give the Cardinals a No. 1 seed or send UConn to a different bracket. It would be better for the game of women's basketball if that were to happen.

Both teams will found out their destination next Monday (3/17) during the NCAA Selection Show.

UConn Huskies vs Louisville Cardinals AAC Tournament Finals 3/10/14 box score

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn head coach Geno Auriemma and Louisville head coach Jeff Walz.

Here are UConn's postgame notes as well as Louisville's.

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

photo credit:  the american; cloe poisson – hartford courant

Former UConn Men’s Coach Jim Calhoun To Co-Host Better Connecticut

If you're around on Tuesday afternoon, you might want to turn your television to WFSB Channel 3. If you're not going to be around set your DVR to tape "Better Connecticut" as former UConn Huskies men's basketball coach Jim Calhoun will co-host with Kara Sundlun.

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Video: UConn Football Coach Bob Diaco on His Returning QBs

The UConn Huskies football team technically returns three starters at the quarterback position, a rare thing in these days of college football.

Chandler Whitmer started the first four games and was 0-4 under former head coach Paul Pasqualoni. True freshman Tim Boyle followed in the next four and was also 0-4 under interim head coach T.J. Weist. Casey Cochran was under the center for the final four games under Weist and finished up 3-1, with the three wins coming in the final three games of the season.

Now with a new head coach in Bob Diaco along with a new offensive philosophy, those three along with Kivon Taylor are vying to be the starter for UConn during the fall 2014 season.

For now though, Diaco isn't worried if one of them doesn't emerge as the starter after the 15 spring practices. He was also very pleased with their performances in their first spring practice in the new system.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=h41ScjeMvjQ?rel=0

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

For Grumet-Morris, It’s All About “the Process”

Dov Grumet-Morris

By Bob Crawford

Even with their 3-2 loss Sunday in Manchester, the Hartford Wolf Pack have played better than .650 hockey over a span of 19 games (12-6-0-1), exactly a quarter of an AHL season, and no single factor has been more responsible for that run than the goaltending of Dov Grumet-Morris.

With his 33-save performance in the Wolf Pack’s 4-3 win over the Albany Devils Saturday at the XL Center, Grumet-Morris improved to 10-1-1 in his last 12 decisions, dating back to January 24.  In 22 total appearances since being acquired by the Wolf Pack from the San Antonio Rampage December 13, the ninth-year pro is 12-5-4, with a 2.32 goals-against average and a fine 92.5% save percentage.

Before Sunday’s game, in which he backed up David LeNeveu, Grumet-Morris spoke about the team’s recent surge, which has taken the Pack from last overall in the AHL to within two points of 11th place in the Eastern Conference standings.

“I think that this game is about momentum, both within a game itself, in between periods or during periods, and then also within a season,” the recently-turned-32-year-old said.  “You can see the power of the negative, downward momentum, and I think that’s what happened to the team in November, and now you see the effects of the positive, upward momentum.  Right now we’re not really focused on the points, we’re focused on appreciating and enjoying the process, because points happen when you take the proper steps.  And when you focus on the steps, the points usually just come.”

Saturday’s game against Albany featured several momentum swings, the most abrupt of which came in the seventh minute of the third period.  After giving up the first goal of the game in the second period, the Wolf Pack had countered with two quick ones, and then made it a 3-1 lead with a tally by J.T. Miller only 2:02 into the third.  Shortly after that, though, the Devils struck for a pair of scores only 28 seconds apart, starting at the 6:29 mark.  The Wolf Pack ended up shrugging off that punch in the gut, and got a goal from Ryan Bourque at 12:25 that would hold up as the game-winner.  From an outsider’s perspective, the team’s recovery from those two rapid-fire goals-against seemed significant, but the always-analytical Grumet-Morris dismisses that notion.

“Goals happen, both for and against,” he said.  “The fact that they could score quickly is not really indicative of anything, that’s just the way the game went.  There were two quick goals in 30 seconds, that’s not ideal, but it’s not really that unusual, especially in this league, and it doesn’t matter.  We just continued to play after that, they had some chances, we had some chances, and we ended up scoring and they didn’t.  And at the end of the day, what does it matter if they score one in the first, one in the second and one in the third?  It’s still three goals. 

“People fixate sometimes on the number of seconds between goals, but it’s essentially irrelevant, if you, again, are focusing on each individual step, focusing on the process, because we scored four and they scored three.  I don’t think they gained any victory whatsoever over the fact that they tied the game three to three.  It doesn’t matter, they’re still [angry] about losing four to three.

“I don’t really focus on that, and I try to play my game accordingly.  Sometimes people say, ‘Oh, well you settled down after that,’ it has nothing to do with settling, it just has to do with playing.  What does it matter if I had made the save before?  I still have to make the next save.  So I don’t really focus on that.”

Similarly, Grumet-Morris is not about to turn handsprings over the record he has put together in a Wolf Pack uniform, even as compared to the 1-6-1 slate he compiled in his eight appearances with San Antonio prior to the trade.  In considering that point, he had some interesting things to say about the significance, or lack thereof, of individual goaltending statistics. 

“If you want to digest blocks of the season, I started in San Antonio 1-6-1,” Grumet-Morris said.  “In my six losses, five of those games I had either zero or one goal scored-for, and in only one game did we have more than one goal.  So you can’t win games 1-0.  You can win one a year, maybe two. 

“If my team had scored four goals each and every one of those games, I would have been 6-1-1.  Would that mean that I was playing better hockey because my team was scoring four goals?  No, it means that offensively we were clicking, and when I was there we weren’t.  And that’s just part of hockey.  I don’t blame anyone, it’s not my responsibility to worry about goal-scoring, and that’s why the record was 1-6-1.  And then you come here, and maybe you’re struggling one night but your team scores six goals, and you win 6-3.  Great, OK, good job, does that mean that it was a better game than the previous game that you lost 2-1, but maybe statistically you had a better game? 

“It really doesn’t matter, I think people get fixated because it’s hard to watch every individual game, and every individual save, and analyze it down if you’re not doing it for your living.  I don’t really worry about the stats in that sense, I worry about the process and I worry about doing the right thing all the time.”

The team as a whole has seemed to feed off of that approach, and Grumet-Morris feels that the entire group is in a good collective rhythm at this point.

“It helps that we’re playing some home games, because we get the crowd behind us and we’re sleeping in our own beds and we’re just a little more comfortable, so that’s nice,” he said.  “And overall I think our team has been just much more consistent from day to day, and even from shift to shift.  So we’re getting better, it’s a process but we’re real excited, we’re making a great push right now.  We have to continue that, we understand, but we are excited.”

Grumet-Morris’ own situation has stabilized considerably as well, now that he has moved his wife, Rachel, and their two daughters, Gabriella and Leah, from San Antonio out to Connecticut.  Rachel was still pregnant with Leah when Grumet-Morris was traded, and Leah did not arrive until January 19.  Shortly thereafter, the three ladies relocated north to rejoin their favorite goaltender, who had made several trips back and forth to Texas prior to Leah’s birth.

“It’s great,” said Grumet-Morris of having the whole brood back under the same roof.  “It certainly is chaotic with a family, and it’s very difficult when you’re trying to move a whole crew and all your stuff, especially the toys, but it’s been great and I appreciate having my family here.  And I do think it makes a difference, and I think it helps.”

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

photo credit: chris rutsch

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/10

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. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you're on the home page.

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

It's game day for the UConn Huskies women's basketball team as they'll take on the Louisville Cardinals in the finals of the AAC Tournament at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, CT. Tip is scheduled for 7 p.m. and the game will be broadcast nationally on ESPN. You can also catch the game online at WatchESPN. If you can't watch the game and live locally, you can listen to Bob Joyce and Debbie Fiske on the UConn IMG Sports Radio Network.

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

UConn Women's Basketball links

Video: UConn Women Cruise Past Rutgers, 83-57 [sox & dawgs]

Video: UConn's Breanna Stewart's Monster Block vs. Rutgers [sox & dawgs]

UConn gains AAC final, Louisville next [carl adamec – snyuconn.com]

Notebook: KML slowly making progress [carl adamec – snyuconn.com]

On Rutgers, LSU, ND And Morgan Tuck [john altavilla – hartford courant]

Louisville Ready To Take Another Shot At UConn [rich elliott – ct post]

Tremendous Block Was Simply Stewie Being Stewie [rich elliott – ct post]

Mosqueda-Lewis Showing Signs Of Progress [rich elliott – ct post]

Mosqueda-Lewis getting back into the flow for UConn [jim fuller – new haven register]

Stewart's block one for the ages [jim fuller – new haven register]

Huskies Down Rutgers 83-57; Head to Championship [uconn huskies youtube]

UConn routs Rutgers in semifinal, Louisville up next [ct post]

KML trending upsward for No. 1 UConn [ct post]

UConn Never Lets Rutgers Into AAC Semifinal [hartford courant]

Rutgers Vs. UConn Rivalry Will Live On [hartford courant]

Huskies sink Rutgers, advance to inaugural AAC title game [new haven register]

Huskies continue their roll [the day]

The historic UConn-Rutgers rivalry isn't history yet [the day]

Mosqueda-Lewis bounces back again to help UConn win [the hour]

UConn Men's Basketball links

Here's How I'd Pick the AAC Award-Winners [david borges – new haven register]

Napier, Boatright did not share well at Louisville [ct post]

Huskies About To Show If They're Ready For March [hartford courant]

UConn Football links

UConn Football Spring Practice Starts Monday [sox & dawgs]

5 keys heading into spring practice [jim fuller – new haven register]

Other UConn related links

Baseball. UConn Downed In Extras For Third Straight Day At Florida, 6-5 [uconnhuskies.com]

W. Lacrosse. Kahn's Game-Winner In Overtime Lifts UConn Past JMU, 14-13 [uconnhuskies.com]

W. Track. Women's Track & Field Wins 2014 ECAC Championship [uconnhuskies.com]

M. Track. Men's Track & Field Places Second at IC4A Championship [uconnhuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Huskies Will Host Robert Morris in Atlantic Hockey Quarterfinal [uconnhuskies.com]

Softball. Huskies Add to Win Column at Winthrop Adidas Invitational [uconnhuskies.com]

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

Video: UConn Women Cruise Past Rutgers, 83-57

Right now, the only way to stop the UConn Huskies women's basketball team is to sneak in and put a lid over their basket. And that might not even work because of how tenacious they are on the defensive end.

In a monster play, UConn Huskies forward Breanna Stewart (30) flies along the baseline to deny Rutgers Scarlet Knights guard/forward Betnijah Laney (44) in the first half of their semifinal matchup against Rutgers in the American Athletic Conference Championship at the Mohegan Sun Arena And oh yeah, they've got Breanna Stewart and the other teams don't.

For the second straight game, Stewart led the Huskies in scoring as they crushed the Rutgers Scarlet Knights 83-57 in the semifinals of the American Athletic Conference Tournament at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, CT on Sunday afternoon.

UConn moves to 33-0 on the season while Rutgers falls to 22-9 and will now have to wait eight days to find out if they're NCAA Tournament bound.

All five Huskies starters were in double figures led by Stewart's 22 points and team-high seven rebounds. She also had two blocked shots. Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis had 19 points with five made threes while Stefanie Dolson had 15 points.

Bria Hartley just missed a double-double with 12 points and nine assists. Her backcourt mate Moriah Jefferson added 10 points and seven assists.

Briyona Canty came off the bench to lead the Scarlet Knights with 16 points. AAC Freshman of the Year Tyler Scaife added 12 points as did Kahleah Cooper. Rachel Hollivay led Rutgers with seven rebounds and had seven points.

If there was any doubt as to who was going to win this game, UConn made sure it was going to be them by playing their finest 20 minutes of basketball this season.

They started out the game with the first 13 points then followed that with a 12-2 run to take a 25-4 lead. Rutgers would cut the lead down to 16 points before the Huskies went on 10-0 run to push to 26.

By the time the first half was over, UConn had hit the half century mark and led by 31 at 50-19.

Rutgers actually outscored UConn in the second half by five points but when you're trailing by 31 at the half, it didn't even matter. If you're looking for a moral victory, Rutgers did lose twice to the Huskies this season by over 40 points each time.

The win by UConn and the win by Louisville in the nightcap sets up the final for Monday night at 7 p.m. And we all know the Cardinals will be out for revenge after falling twice to the Huskies this season.

It should be an interesting and great battle.

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn head coach Geno Auriemma and Rutgers head coach C. Vivian Stringer.

Here are the postgame notes for UConn and Rutgers.

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

photo credit: cloe poisson – hartford courant

Wolf Pack’s Rally Falls Short in 3-2 Loss To Monarchs

Manchester, NH, March 9, 2014 – The Hartford Wolf Pack fell behind the AHL’s top team, the Manchester Monarchs, 3-0 in the first period Sunday at Verizon Wireless Arena and nearly recovered, but ended up on the short end of a 3-2 score.

Hartford Wolf PackA pair of T.J. Hensick goals closed the final to a one-goal margin, after Colin Fraser, Andrew Campbell and Jordan Weal scored for the Monarchs in the first.

“It just seems the first period is our Achilles heel right now,” Hensick said.  “We’ve had strong thirds lately, but we’ve got to find a way to have better starts.  We give up three goals early and it’s a tough battle to climb back, especially against the best team in the league.  They’re the best team in the league for a reason, and if you spot them three goals early, they’re going to shut it down defensively pretty solid.”

The loss broke a two-game Wolf Pack win streak, and cost the Pack (25-28-0-6, 56 pts.) a chance to move into a tie with idle Bridgeport in the Northeast Division standings.  The win improved the Monarchs’ league-best record to 39-16-2-6 for 86 points.

Manchester outshot the Wolf Pack 11-4 in the first period, and jumped on top on a power play at 9:14, with Tommy Hughes in the penalty box for tripping.  Linden Vey carried the puck down the right side in the Wolf Pack zone and dropped it off to Fraser, whose snapshot beat Hartford goaltender David LeNeveu (22 saves) over the catching glove.

Campbell, a veteran defenseman and Manchester’s captain, scored his third goal in 62 games on the year at 12:54 to make it a 2-0 Monarch lead.  Wolf Pack defenseman Conor Allen skated in front of LeNeveu just as Campbell fired the puck from the top of the right circle, and the shot got by LeNeveu and into the top shelf.

A four-on-four goal upped the Manchester lead to 3-0 at 16:53.  A shot from the blue line by Andrew Bodnarchuk went wide, but Zach O’Brien jumped on the carom behind the net and fed it in front to Weal, who shot it past LeNeveu from point-blank range.

That would be it for the Monarch offense, though, and the Wolf Pack got on the scoreboard with only 22.6 seconds remaining in the period.  Allen stopped an attempted Monarch breakout just inside the Manchester blue line, and found Hensick all alone in front of Manchester goaltender J.F. Berube (18 saves).  Hensick had time to put a fake on Berube, and Hensick slipped his eighth goal of the year through the pads.

The second period was nearly dead even, with neither team scoring, despite both enjoying two-man advantages, the Monarchs a five-on-three of 1:19 and the Wolf Pack one of 49 seconds.  Shots on goal were eight apiece in the middle frame.

It was nearly a scoreless standoff in the third as well, but the Wolf Pack were finally able to cut the lead to one with 58.2 seconds remaining.  With LeNeveu on the bench for an extra attacker, Ryan Bourque worked the puck out of a scrum to J.T. Miller in the slot, and Miller passed to the right-wing side to Hensick, who whipped the puck behind a sliding Berube.

The Wolf Pack were able to pull LeNeveu successfully again, but Berube and the Monarchs held on, dropping the Wolf Pack to 14 points out of a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.

The Wolf Pack’s next action is a home game at the XL Center this Friday, March 14, a 7:00 PM contest against the Adirondack Phantoms.  All Wolf Pack Friday-night home games feature $1 hot dogs and $2 beers through the start of the second period, presented by Marc’s Appliance Warehouse, located at 75 Prospect Ave., Hartford, CT.

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.

Hartford Wolf Pack 2 at Manchester Monarchs 3
Sunday, March 9, 2014 – Verizon Wireless Arena

Hartford 1 0 1 – 2
Manchester 3 0 0 – 3

1st Period-1, Manchester, Fraser 3 (Vey, McNabb), 9:14 (PP). 2, Manchester, Campbell 3 (Shore, O'Brien), 12:54. 3, Manchester, Weal 16 (O'Brien, Bodnarchuk), 16:53. 4, Hartford, Hensick 8 (Allen, Kristo), 19:37. Penalties-Fast Hfd (hooking), 2:12; Hughes Hfd (tripping), 7:40; McIlrath Hfd (fighting), 11:16; Sabourin Mch (fighting), 11:16; Beach Hfd (delay of game), 15:44; McNabb Mch (checking to the head), 16:29; Shore Mch (hooking), 19:44.

2nd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Miller Hfd (slashing), 8:53; Powe Hfd (cross-checking), 9:34; Livingston Mch (slashing), 12:24; Campbell Mch (hooking), 13:35.

3rd Period-5, Hartford, Hensick 9 (Miller, Bourque), 19:01. Penalties-LoVerde Mch (holding), 3:02; Johnson Hfd (roughing), 8:21; Sabourin Mch (goaltender interference), 8:21; Sabourin Mch (tripping), 11:46.

Shots on Goal-Hartford 4-8-7-19. Manchester 11-8-6-25.
Power Play Opportunities-Hartford 0 / 6; Manchester 1 / 5.
Goalies-Hartford, LeNeveu 4-8-0 (25 shots-22 saves). Manchester, Berube 22-14-2 (19 shots-17 saves).
A-4,996
Referees-Jon McIsaac (45), Jarrod Ragusin (54).
Linesmen-Ed Boyle (81), Joe Ross (92).

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