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2012 NCAA Women’s Basketball Rankings – Week 14 (Feb. 14)

AP & ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls

The NCAA women’s basketball rankings are out for the week and the UConn Huskies now find themselves as the No. 2 team in the land after the Notre Dame Fighting Irish were upset by the West Virginia Mountaineers this past weekend.

The Baylor Lady Bears remain as the unanimous No. 1 team in both polls and are followed by UConn, Stanford, Notre Dame and Duke in both as well.

Joining UConn and Notre Dame in the top 25 from the Big East are the Georgetown Hoyas (15/14), Louisville Cardinals (19/16), Rutgers Scarlet Knights (21/18) and the DePaul Blue Demons (24/20).

The Mountaineers and St. John’s Red Storm find themselves among the others receiving votes in both polls.

For a complete look at the 2012 NCAA Women’s Basketball Rankings – Week 14 (Feb. 14), click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

AP Top 25 ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll
RK TEAM REC PTS PVS RK TEAM REC PTS PVS
1 Baylor (40) 25-0 1,000 1 1 Baylor (31) 25-0 775 1
2 Connecticut 24-2 950 3 2 Connecticut 24-2 740 3
3 Stanford 22-1 905 4 3 Stanford 22-1 702 4
4 Notre Dame 24-2 894 2 4 Notre Dame 24-2 693 2
5 Duke 21-3 827 5 5 Duke 21-3 649 5
6 Miami (FL) 22-3 816 6 6 Miami (FL) 22-3 626 6
7 Kentucky 21-4 758 7 7 Maryland 21-4 570 8
8 Maryland 21-4 707 8 8 Kentucky 21-4 528 7
9 Ohio State 22-3 655 10 9 Delaware 22-1 497 12
10 Delaware 22-1 644 12 10 Tennessee 18-7 484 11
11 Green Bay 21-1 523 9 11 Ohio State 22-3 473 10
12 Penn State 20-5 483 18 12 Green Bay 21-1 406 9
13 Tennessee 18-7 462 11 13 Texas A&M 17-6 398 14
14 Texas A&M 17-6 441 15 14 Georgetown 19-6 395 13
15 Georgetown 19-6 418 14 15 Georgia 19-6 300 20
16 Nebraska 19-4 393 13 16 Louisville 18-7 279 17
17 Purdue 19-6 378 16 17 Penn State 20-5 254 21
18 Georgia 19-6 341 21 18 Rutgers 17-7 211 16
19 Louisville 18-7 272 20 19 Purdue 19-6 209 19
20 Georgia Tech 18-7 182 22 20 DePaul 19-7 170 22
21 Rutgers 17-7 181 17 21 Nebraska 19-5 148 15
22 St. Bonaventure 24-2 176 25 22 Georgia Tech 18-7 136 23
23 Brigham Young 22-4 106 NR 23 Gonzaga 22-4 116 18
24 DePaul 19-7 101 NR 24 Vanderbilt 19-6 62 25
25 South Carolina 19-6 72 24 25 St. Bonaventure 24-2 56 NR
Dropped from rankings: Dropped from rankings:
Gonzaga 19, North Carolina 22 South Carolina 24
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
Gonzaga 64, West Virginia 60, Arkansas 50, St. John’s 24, Oklahoma 23, UTEP 17, Princeton 16, Fresno State 15, North Carolina 15, California 10, FGCU 10, Vanderbilt 6, Middle Tennessee 4, Kansas State 1 West Virginia 39, South Carolina 38, UTEP 22, FGCU 20, Middle Tennessee 20, Brigham Young 18, St. John’s 12, Arkansas 10, Fresno State 8, Princeton 6, California 3, Oklahoma 2

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 2/14

Paw Prints The 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 some of the other sports. 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.

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

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Calhoun Weighing Options; Drummond, Lamb Dealing With Injuries [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Calhoun ‘Really Happy’ About Choice of Warde Manuel [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Drummond will miss practice with ankle sprain [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Calhoun on new AD Manuel [Neill Ostrout – Journal Inquirer]

UConn Coach Jim Calhoun Likely To Miss Wednesday Game [Hartford Courant]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Auriemma Getting Pumped For The Olympics [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

How Do You Say No To Asjha Jones? [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

The New Boss Leaves Geno A Voice Mail [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Stewart, Jefferson, Tuck Named Naismith Finalists [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

UConn women drop Oklahoma [CT Post]

UConn Overcomes Early Fouls To Defeat Oklahoma [Hartford Courant]

Auriemma Has Tough Act Jugging Two Teams [Hartford Courant]

Huskies beat Oklahoma for 12th straight win [New Haven Register]

Huskies easily handle Oklahoma [Mechelle Voepel – ESPN.com]

Huskies’ Hayes embraces senior role [Mechelle Voepel – ESPN.com]

No. 2 Connecticut routs Sooners [NewsOK.com]

Geno Auriemma sorry to see series vs. Sooners end [NewsOK.com]

UConn Football links

Revised 2011 top 25 countdown: No. 21 Lyle McCombs [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Maryland QB Danny O’Brien Transferring And UConn Is Believed To Be Interested [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Other UConn related links

Q&A: UConn AD Warde Manuel [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Quotes From The Introductory Press Conference Of New AD Warde Manuel [UConnHuskies.com]

Cleaning up APR mess is Manuel’s biggest task [CT Post]

Herbst calls new UConn AD Warde Manuel a ‘rock star’ [New Haven Register]

Manuel brings his vision to Storrs [The Day]

Tests for New Athletic Director at UConn [NY Times]

W. Cross Country. Women’s Cross Country Earn All-Academic Accolade [UConnHuskies.com]

Baseball. Opening Day Nears for UConn Baseball [UConnHuskies.com]

Baseball. Mazzilli Adds Two More Preseason All-American Honors [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Track. Former Husky Shines At Milrose Games [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Golf. UConn Golfers Bow In Match Play Opener [UConnHuskies.com]

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Hayes Leads UConn Past Oklahoma, 73-55

Stepping out of conference this late in the season can be tough for any team, even if you are the UConn Huskies women’s basketball team. When you’re used to one style of play in the Big East, sometimes that doesn’t carry over so well. Case in point was Monday night’s game against the Oklahoma Sooners.

The Huskies had been in some heavyweight brawls their last two times out against Louisville and Georgetown where fouls were called like they were in style. The Big East is a physical conference and UConn can play physical with the best of them. Just ask Sylvia Hatchell, UNC women’s basketball coach who complained about the Huskies strong-arming her team.

So with the whistles blowing again, UConn’s play changed and this allowed Oklahoma back into the game. But fortunately for the Huskies, they were the more talented team and that showed in their 73-55 win over the Sooners in front of 7,954 pink clad fans and a nationally-televised audience on ESPN2 at the Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, OK.

UConn improves to 24-2 while the Sooners fall to 16-8. The Huskies finish up the non-conference portion of their schedule at 13-1 with their only loss coming to No. 1 Baylor in Waco, TX.

Connecticut guard Tiffany Hayes (3) goes up for a shot in front of Oklahoma guard Whitney Hand, left, in the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in Norman, Okla., Monday, Feb. 13, 2012.Tiffany Hayes led the way for UConn with 23 points and seven assists to go along with six rebounds and three steals.  Bria Hartley added 20 points and a team-high seven rebounds with three assists and two steals. Stefanie Dolson and Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis both added 10 points with five rebounds and four rebounds respectively. KML tied Hayes with a team-high three steals.

Whitney Hand paced the Sooners with 18 points and added six rebounds and three assists. Sharane Campbell was the only other Sooner in double digits with 11 points and she also pulled down seven boards. Jelena Cerina led all rebounders in the game with nine to go along with her seven points.

It really looked as though this game was going to be over early for the Sooners as UConn didn’t waste too much time going on a big run. They started off the game with a 21-4 run over the first eight minutes. Sheri Coale’s team didn’t give up though.

Over the next three minutes, they scored the games next 11 points to cut UConn’s lead down to six points. Kelly Faris ended that run with a jumper. The Huskies would work their lead back up to 11 points at 30-19 with just under six minutes remaining on a Hartley three pointer.

Then for the next two and a half minutes, neither team found the basket until Hand sunk a free throw after missing her first one. Brianna Banks would nail a three to give UConn a 33-20 lead but once again the Sooners made another run. This time it was an 8-0 run that would cut UConn’s lead to five points but the Huskies would score the final four points of the half to enjoy a 37-28 lead at the break.

UConn tried their best to put this one away again right out of the gates in the second half as they opened up with an 8-2 run. The Sooners rallied back again and got it down to 10 points before six straight points by the Huskies pushed that lead back 16.

Oklahoma would eventually wittle UConn’s lead back down to nine points on two Hand free throws with just under six to go in the game. But that’s as close as the Sooners would get the rest of the way as UConn would use a 10-0 run to put this one out of reach.

Another solid win for the Huskies who had to battle adversity at times during this game with the fouls being called early on. But good teams adjust to things and that’s exactly what they did.

The next game for UConn will be Saturday night when the St. John’s Red Storm come to Gampel Pavilion. It’s Senior Night for the Huskies as Hayes will be honored before the game. Tip is scheduled for 7 p.m. and the game will be televised locally in Connecticut on CPTV.

To continue reading the UConn Huskies @ Oklahoma Sooners recap, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Notes and musings:

UConn Huskies @ Oklahoma Sooners 2.13.12 box score

UConn leads the all-time series with the Sooners 10-0.

Oklahoma guard Whitney Hand is engaged to Sooners quarterback Landry Jones.

Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant was in attendance for the game

The Huskies finished up their non-conference schedule at 13-1 with their only loss coming to No. 1 Baylor in Waco, TX.

The starters for UConn were the usual five suspects of Bria Hartley, Caroline Doty, Tiffany Hayes, Kelly Faris and Stefanie Dolson.

The Huskies shot 39.4% (26-66) from the floor while the Sooners shot 34.5% (19-55).

UConn had 15 assists on their 26 made baskets.

The Huskies were 7-of-24 (29.2%) from beyond the arc. Oklahoma was 3-of-14 (21.4%).

UConn was almost perfect at the free throw line going 14-of-15 (93.3%). The only miss was by Kiah Stokes who was 1-of-2.

The Huskies barely won the battle of the boards, outrebounding the Sooners 40-39.

UConn outscored Oklahoma in the paint 32-22 and 12-2 on the fast break.

The Huskies had 14 second chance points to eight for the Sooners.

Oklahoma’s bench outscored UConn’s 26-16.

The Huskies had 16 points off of 15 Sooners turnovers. Oklahoma had 13 points off of eight UConn turnovers. Geno Auriemma should be much happier with that number considering how much the team has turned the ball over as of late.

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Photo credit: AP Photo

UConn To Host 2013 NCAA Women’s Subregional

Here’s the press release from the NCAA that announces that Gampel Pavilion, home of the UConn Huskies, will host the first and second rounds of the 2013 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament.

INDIANAPOLIS — The NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Committee has announced the selections of the first- and second-round as well as regional sites for the 2013 tournament.

NCAACities chosen to host first- and second-round games in 2013 include Baton Rouge, La.; Boulder, Colo.; College Park, Md.; College Station, Texas; Columbus, Ohio; Durham, N.C.; Iowa City, Iowa; Knoxville, Tenn.; Louisville, Ky.; Lubbock, Texas; Newark, Del.; Queens, N.Y.; Spokane, Wash.; Stanford, Calif.; Storrs, Conn.; and Waco, Texas.

The four selected regional sites are Norfolk, Va.; Oklahoma City, Okla.; Spokane, Wash.; and Trenton, N.J.

“As a committee we are excited that in 2013 our championship will be hosted by institutions from nine different conferences, with Delaware and St. John’s hosting for the first time,” said Greg Christopher, chair of the Division I Women’s Basketball Committee and director of athletics at Bowling Green State University. “Having this geographic blend of sites is important to the committee as we continue to grow the game of women’s basketball.”

To continue reading, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

The following first- and second-round sites will play host to games either March 23 and 25 or March 24 and 26, 2013 (dates to be determined in June 2012):

2013 First- and Second-Round Sites
City Venue Host
Baton Rouge, La. Pete Maravich Assembly Center LSU
Boulder, Colo. Coors Events Center Colorado
College Park, Md. Comcast Center Maryland
College Station, TX Reed Arena Texas A&M
Columbus, Ohio St. John Arena Ohio State
Durham, N.C. Cameron Indoor Stadium Duke
Iowa City, Iowa Carver Hawkeye Arena Iowa
Knoxville, Tenn. Thompson Boling Arena Tennessee
Louisville, Ky. KFC YUM! Center Louisville
Lubbock, Texas United Spirit Arena Texas Tech
Delaware, Del. Bob Carpenter Center Delaware
Queens, N.Y. Carnesecca Arena St. John’s
Spokane, Wash. McCarthey Athletic Center Gonzaga
Stanford, Calif. Maples Pavilion Stanford
Storrs, Conn. Gampel Pavilion Connecticut
Waco, Texas Ferrell Center Baylor

The following regional sites will play host to games either March 30 and April 1 or March 31 and April 2, 2013 (dates to be determined in June 2012):

2013 Regional Sites
City Venue Host
Norfolk, Va. Ted Constant Center Old Dominion
Oklahoma City, Okla. Chesapeake Energy Arena TBD
Spokane, Wash. Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Washington State
Trenton, N.J. Sun National Bank Arena Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference

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Wolski and Woywitka Happy with Whale Experience

By Bruce Berlet

Mission accomplished.

That’s the consensus of left wing Wojtek Wolski and defenseman Jeff Woywitka after playing six games in 10 days with the Connecticut Whale in two-week conditioning assignments from the New York Rangers. The stints don’t officially end until Wednesday, but the Whale don’t play again until Friday night at home against the Springfield Falcons.

CT WhaleWolski, Woywitka and center Casey Wellman, who also joined the Whale on Feb. 2 after being acquired from the Minnesota Wild for Erik Christensen and a conditional seventh-round pick in 2013, have helped the team earn 11 of 12 points in February after an 11-game winless streak (0-6-3-2) in January and reclaim first place in the Northeast Division. The only blemish was a 2-1 overtime loss Sunday to the Bridgeport Sound Tigers (25-18-3-2), the AHL’s hottest team with a 13-1-0-1 record in 2012. The Sound Tigers, coached by former Hartford Wolf Pack defenseman Brent Thompson, momentarily moved from last to first as the Whale (24-16-5-5) struggled last month, but they’re now three points behind with two games in hand.

Wolski and Woywitka got more ice time in six games than they had at any time in four months with the Rangers. Much of their lack of playing time on Broadway was the result of injuries, but Whale coach Ken Gernander and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller used them plenty in all situations.

“They were obviously a good boost to our lineup, and two guys who bring different elements,” Gernander said Sunday. “Wolski is a skilled guy who can create some offense and get some points and scored a few goals. And Jeff played sound on the back end. He’s a bigger body (6-foot-3, 215 pounds) that can finish checks and move pucks. They’re both obviously very good caliber players and were good additions to our squad.

To continue reading, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

“They were here to get playing ‘experience,’ not that there’s a lack of experience on either guy. But like anything, you have to be playing in those situations to stay in shape. They definitely got plenty of ice time, and it’s probably the first time Wolski played three (games) in three (days).”

Wolski, 25, said he thought he had achieved what he wanted as far as getting plenty of playing time and improving his conditioning. Wolski, who is in the final year of a two-year, $7.6 million deal signed with the Phoenix Coyotes on June 28, 2010, had played in only nine games with the Rangers and was a healthy scratch the previous six since Jan. 15 after playing just three games following a return from sports hernia surgery on Nov. 8.

Wolski, acquired from the Coyotes for defenseman Michal Rozsival on Jan. 10, 2011, had two winners among his three goals and one of his two assists set up the Whale’s only goal Sunday by Kelsey Tessier. He had three assists in the nine games with the Rangers.

“I started to feel better each game,” said Wolski, who played with veteran center Kris Newbury and All-Star Mats Zuccarello. “It was great to get more minutes and just feel the puck and kind of see the ice a little better. The three in three is obviously tough, and the last game is exhausting. You have to give credit to the guys because it’s definitely not easy, but we played well and got 11 of 12 points, which is nice. My stickhandling is getting where it was, and my skating is starting to pick up a little bit. Overall, I’m happy that I had the opportunity to come down, feel like I’m getting back to where I feel I should be and want to build on it from here.”

Wolski said conditioning was the biggest perk he got from his first minor-league stint since he turned pro after four seasons with Brampton of the Ontario Hockey League that was capped by 47 goals and 81 assists in 56 regular-season games and seven goals and 11 assists in 11 playoff games in 2005-06.

“Being out for the longest I’ve ever been off the ice is tough, but it’s something you have to deal with because injuries happen,” said Wolski, who has 91 goals and 158 assists in 402 NHL games with the Colorado Avalanche, Coyotes and Rangers. “I had surgery and was out for a long time, and even before that, I had problems with my groin and wasn’t feeling the way I should. So it’s good to start building back to where I feel I should be. (Saturday) night was a pretty good game where I had the puck a lot and created a lot of opportunities (in a 4-1 win at Manchester), which was positive. (Sunday) was just a tough game with three in three. It’s a first since I was a kid when I used to play a ton of three in three. Now I want to get back to where I want to be.”

That’s the NHL, and there might be a spot with the Rangers after wing Ruslan Fedotenko missed games against the Philadelphia Flyers and Washington Capitals on Saturday and Sunday after he was hit in the head by his stick when former Rangers and Hartford Wolf Pack forward Dominic Moore put a shoulder into him in a 4-3 overtime victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Thursday night. After the Rangers’ 3-2 victory over Washington, Coach John Tortorella said Fedotenko likely would travel with the team to Boston for a game Tuesday night against the defending Stanley Cup champion Bruins, who have fallen seven points behind the surging Blueshirts in the Eastern Conference with one game in hand.

Woywitka, 28, was claimed off waivers from the Montreal Canadiens on Oct. 6 and got consistent playing time on the Rangers’ third pairing, until he was injured in a 3-2 victory over the Coyotes on Dec. 17. Before joining the Whale, Woywitka had missed 17 of the previous 19 games, including the last 13 since a 4-1 victory over the Florida Panthers on Dec. 30.

But Woywitka, a first-round pick (27th overall) of the Flyers in 2001, also got oodles of ice time with the Whale and was bent over at the end of the regulation Sunday.

“It was good, and I thought as a team we played pretty well, other than maybe (Sunday) when we maybe looked a little fatigued,” said Woywitka, who had three assists while paired mostly with Blake Parlett. “But that’s obviously no excuse. We weren’t maybe as sharp as we should have been, but I guess if you go on the road and get a point out of a three in three, there’s worse things that happen, too. So all in all, we battled hard, and we know they’re a hard-working team. They came hard at us, and it was a good game, but we came out on the bottom end.”

The Whale might not have gotten a point if Chad Johnson didn’t stop Scott Howes’ penalty shot with 2:20 left in regulation after the Sound Tigers’ wing was hooked from behind on a breakaway by Sam Klassen. Johnson, who stopped 180 of 189 shots in the Whale’s 5-0-0-1 turnaround this month, denied Howes’ backhand bid but was screened before David Ullstrom’s 50-foot shot hit the crossbar and went in 37 seconds into overtime. The Whale asked referee Jon McIsaac for a video replay available as a test at Webster Bank Arena at Harbor Yard, and after a five-minute delay cueing up the video, he confirmed the goal good again.

“It was a lot of hockey, a lot of travel (with three road games), and it’s still hard when you’re playing (so many) minutes,” Woywitka said. “You’re always getting hit, you’re always taking hits, and you could feel everybody was feeling it a little bit (Sunday). It’s something you have to battle through and get used to, but we’ll take the point and move on.”

Woywitka also hopes to “move on” to the NHL, where he has nine goals and 46 assists in 277 games with the St. Louis Blues, Dallas Stars and Rangers, including one goal and five assists in 26 games with the Blueshirts this season. He called his first minor-league stint since playing seven games for the Peoria Rivermen in the 2008-09 season a “good experience.”

“The first couple of games, you have to get used to it again, get the routine going again, making plays, thinking again,” Woywitka said. “Getting into game action was good, and coming down here and contributing and helping the guys get wins and good goaltending … Everything kind of falls into place and everybody is happy and everybody comes to the rink with excitement, and that made it a lot easier in getting comfortable and getting established here.”

Did Woywitka get what he wanted out of the six games?

“Absolutely,” he said. “The main thing is winning hockey games, wherever you are. It’s the main goal and what we’re here for.”

Woywitka is also taking a wait-and-see attitude with the Rangers, who already have seven healthy defensemen, including Steve Eminger, who returned Saturday after being out with a separated shoulder since Dec. 17.

“I don’t control anything,” Woywitka said. “We just come and play, and hopefully I get another opportunity so we’ll just have to see what happens. I’ll just come to the rink every day and work hard. I want to get to the next level, which is why we’re down here because we obviously have got to be better and have to find a way to get back up there. I have to wait and see what happens and see what (the Rangers) tell me.”

Fortunately for the Whale, defensemen Wade Redden and Pavel Valentenko are close to returning. Redden has missed 22 games since being injured in a 2-1 shootout loss to Providence on Dec. 17. Valentenko has sat out seven games with an injury sustained in a 3-2 overtime loss to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Jan. 27. But he has had some relief already with wife Ekaterina giving birth of the couple’s first child, 8-pound, 6-pound Polina, last Tuesday.

WHALE HOST FALCONS, SHARKS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT

The Whale will try to start another winning streak Friday night against the Falcons (23-23-2-2), who are eight points behind the Whale. The Falcons had a bizarre weekend in which they lost 3-2 in overtime at home to the Whale on Friday night, lost 8-1 at Bridgeport on Saturday night and then rebounded to beat visiting Manchester 5-1 on Sunday as All-Star forward Cam Atkinson, former Wolf Pack wing Alexandre Giroux and rookie Wade MacLeod each had a goal and an assist to back the 24-save effort of former UMass goalie Paul Dainton.

Atkinson, a Greenwich native who starred at Avon Old Farms and helped Boston College win two national championships, is second on the Falcons in scoring and among AHL rookies with 27 goals. His 41 points are fifth among first-year players and two fewer than Whale All-Star forward Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, who is tied for third. Former All-Star center Martin Pierre leads the Falcons in scoring with nine goals and 35 assists, followed by Atkinson, Giroux (17, 20), former Wolf Pack left wing and captain Dane Byers (10, 14), Matt Calvert (11, 11) and Nick Drazenovic (6, 16). Dainton is 6-3-1 with a 2.89 goals-against average and .898 save percentage. Manny Legace, 39, the Hartford Whalers’ eighth-round pick in 1993, is 10-16-1, 2.84 and .902.

The Whale won the first five meetings with their I-91 rival and then went 0-2-0-1 before the win Friday night when Wolski scored at 1:04 of overtime. Audy-Marchessault, a solid contender for the AHL All-Rookie team with Atkinson, has taken over the Whale scoring lead with 18 goals and 25 assists, followed by Newbury (18, 24 in 39 games), former Falcons right wing Andre Deveaux (13, 17) and Zuccarello (10, 20). Chad Johnson played all six games in the Whale’s recent resurgence, stopping 180 of 189 shots, to improve to 15-10-5, 2.42, .919 with one shutout. Cam Talbot is 9-11-0, 2.96, .900 with two shutouts.

After playing the Falcons, the Whale hosts Worcester (23-15-4-5) on Saturday night and visits Providence (23-22-3-3) on Sunday afternoon. On Saturday night, the Whale and Whalers Sports and Entertainment will host “It All Starts Here” Night, which will pay tribute to players who spent time playing in the AHL in Hartford before moving on to the Rangers. It also will participate in USA Hockey’s “Hockey Weekend Across America” that is meant to spread the game throughout the country.

The night will include special ticket deals, as those wearing a youth hockey jersey to the XL Center’s Public Power Box Office will be able to purchase special $10 lower-level end zone seats. Also, 5,000 fans will receive an “It All Starts Here” poster, compliments of Webster Bank. The poster will feature Wolf Pack and Whale alumni who have made it to the Rangers, including former AHL All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan, who is now the captain on Broadway. For more information, log on to www.ctwhale.com.

Despite five goals in the last three games to surpass 20 in a season for the third time, Callahan continues to fly under the radar on a national basis and remains considered basically a team-first, defensively responsible two-way forward. While that’s laudable, the native of Rochester, N.Y., is much more, as shown by being named captain.

“I think sometimes people think he’s just a shot blocker and a guy who can bang along the boards, forecheck and finish checks,” Tortorella said after Sunday’s game in which Callahan scored one after getting his second career hat trick in a 5-2 victory over the Flyers. “This is his third season now with 20-plus goals. He can also play and make plays. I think Cally has a little bit of a chip under his shoulder that everyone thinks he’s a one-dimensional guy, and he isn’t. As he keeps on growing as a player, he’s certainly showing that.”

Callahan is on pace for 33 goals and 61 points, and his 10 power-play goals are tied with the Capitals’ Alexander Ovechkin for fifth in the league. Rangers forward Brandon Dubinsky, who has played with Callahan the past six seasons, including with the Wolf Pack, said his buddy has taken it to another level since scoring 35 goals in Hartford in 2006-07 and the winner in the All-Star Game with three seconds left.

“He was always one of the best, if not the best, defensive forwards on our team with all the little things that he does,” Dubinsky said. “His offensive game has really come to a completely different level. Listen, the guy scored 50 at one point in his career (52 in 2005-06 with the OHL’s Guelph Storm). It wasn’t in the NHL, but when you’re able to score that many at any level, I’m pretty confidence you can put the puck in the net. He’s shown some of that this year.”

Callahan was on the way to a career year in 2010-11 but broke his hand while blocking a shot by Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Kris Letang on Dec. 15 and missed 19 games. Then in the 80th game of an 82-game regular season, he blocked a shot by Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara, who has won the hardest shot contest the last two years, and was out as the Capitals eliminated the Rangers in five games in the first round of the playoffs. Still, he had 48 points in 60 games.

Now Callahan has become even more well rounded, logging the most minutes among forwards on the penalty kill, where the Rangers rank fifth (87.2 percent), and his 60 blocked shots are fourth among forwards and only four behind league leader Boyd Gordon of the Phoenix Coyotes.

“Callahan is a top-six guy yet he still plays with so much heart and grit,” Chara said after his shot sidelined the Rangers captain. “You don’t see many guys that throw their bodies around to block shots like that. He plays the game so hard. You have to respect a guy like that.”

SOMMER HITS 500 WINS PLATEAU

The poster is worth it for Callahan alone, but there will be much more for fans attending Saturday night, including Sharks coach Roy Sommer, who became only the fourth coach to win 500 AHL games Saturday night when Worcester won 3-2 in a shootout at Hershey. After a 5-2 victory over Portland on Sunday, Sommer, the dean of AHL coaches, is 501-496-90 in 14 seasons and trails only Hall of Famers Fred “Bun” Cook (636-413-122), Frank Mathers (610-512-134) and John Paddock (589-438-98), who led the Wolf Pack to the Calder Cup in 2000.

Sommer, who also ranks fourth all-time in games coached (1,082), first assumed his post as the Sharks’ top development coach in 1998 and has coached more than 80 players who have spent time in the NHL, including Joe Pavelski, Devin Setoguchi, Doug Murray, Ryane Clowe, Logan Couture, Dan Boyle, Miikka Kiprusoff, Brad Boyes, Christian Ehrhoff, Johan Hedberg and former Wolf Pack wing Mikael Samuelsson. Sommer’s first career win came on Oct. 17, 1998, a 6-4 victory over the Albany River Rats. David Cunniff, the son of former Whalers forward and assistant coach John Cunniff, played for Albany that night and has been Sommer’s assistant coach since 2002.

Sommer’s newest player is former Wolf Pack center Tim Kennedy, acquired from the Florida Panthers for defenseman Sean Sullivan on Jan. 26. Kennedy has two goals and five assists in six game with the Sharks, who are led in scoring by center Mike Connolly (10, 19), left wing John McCarthy (12, 16), defenseman Matt Irwin (8, 18) and right wing Jack Combs (11, 12), though McCarthy is on recall to the San Jose Sharks. Tyson Sexsmith (10-8-5, 2.14, .924) and rookie Harri Sateri (11-8-0, 2.58, .908, two shutouts) are sharing the goaltending with veteran Antero Niittymaki (2-3-0, 3.01, .890) on loan to the Syracuse Crunch. … College students can get discounted Whale tickets to weekday games with a “Ditch the Dorms” deal. For Monday through Friday games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket office can get $2 off upper-level tickets and $5 off lower-level seats. … Falcons fans beat their Whale counterparts 12-7 Friday night for a sixth straight win in their inaugural seven-game series. The final game is March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, at 4 p.m. at the XL Center, and tickets ($16) will be available soon. For more information and tickets, visit facebook.com/whalefalconsfangame. The series was originated by Seth Dussault of Easthampton, Mass. Matt Marychuk of Glastonbury created a Facebook page to see if there were any interested players, and he and Dussault managed the social media page as interest grew. They used the page to sign up fans to play and communicate between the players and managed to fill rosters for each fan team. The idea caught the attention of the Falcons and then Whale front office, leading to players of all ages and skill levels participating in the series. A portion of ticket sales benefits Defending the Blue Line, an organization that helps children of military families play hockey. The first five games raised $750 for DBL.

BARONS’ GOALIES TRYING TO DUPLICATE WOLF PACK DUO

While the Oklahoma Barons have had the AHL’s top-ranked defense most of the season, they now officially have the top two goalies as well.

Yann Danis (1.94), named MVP of the All-Star Game, and former Wolf Pack goalie David LeNeveu (2.06) are 1-2 in goals-against average. Danis is 21-8-1 with a league-leading .928 save percentage and five shutouts, one less than All-Star Ben Bishop of the Peoria Rivermen. LeNeveu is 11-6-2 with a .923 save percentage and one shutout.

Since 1990, Steve Valiquette and Jason LaBarbera are the only teammates to finish 1-2 in GAA when they did it with the Wolf Pack in 2004-05. … St. John’s goalie Eddie Pasquale was named the Reebok/AHL Player of the Week on Monday after stopping 83 of 87 shots in leading the IceCaps to three wins and into first place in the overall standings. He started the week with a 29-save shutout of Providence in a 2-0 victory and then stopped 36 of 37 shots in a 2-1 overtime win over the Bruins. He finished with 18 saves in a 4-3 victory over Binghamton that extended his personal winning streak to six games and gave him a 3-0 record with a 1.32 GAA and .954 save percentage for the week. A fourth-round pick of the former Atlanta Thrashers in 2009, Pasquale, 21, is 14-6-0 with a 2.59 GAA, .907 save percentage and two shutouts in 20 appearances for St. John’s this season. … Fans can bid on AHL All-Star Classic jerseys, helmets, gloves and pucks at www.theahl.com. Zuccarello, Audy-Marchessault and Atkinson were on the Eastern Conference team, which was captained by former Wolf Pack left wing and Hershey captain Boyd Kane. … Former Wolf Pack defenseman Jyri Niemi scored his fourth goal of the season with 37 seconds left in overtime to give the Greenville Road Warriors a wild 7-6 ECHL victory over the Chicago Express on Sunday. Brendan Connolly, who was in Whale training camp, had two goals and two assists and former Quinnipiac University standout Brandon Wong, who started last season with the Wolf Pack, had one goal and two assists as the Road Warriors (29-18-1-2) won their third game in four starts to solidify second place in the South Division and Eastern Conference. Connolly has tied a team record with a 12-game point streak in which he has nine goals and 12 assists. Jason Missiaen, who spent the end of last season and training camp with the Whale, had 34 saves in his sixth straight start Sunday and is 11-10-0, 3.17, .903 with three shutouts. Former Wolf Pack wing Devin DiDiomete had an assist for the Express. The Road Warriors play three games this week, starting with a showdown at home with division-leading Gwinnett on Tuesday night.

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Red Sox Announce Start Of Fan Voting For All-Fenway Team

Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox, will be celebrating it’s 100th year anniversary and now it’s time to vote for the All-Fenway Team.

Here’s the release from the Red Sox:

BOSTON, MA – The Boston Red Sox today announced the start of fan voting for the All-Fenway Team, comprised of Red Sox players voted on by fans as the greatest to appear at their position at Fenway Park.  The voting will be hosted on RedSox.com, and fans can access it via FenwayPark100.com, the official website for the ballpark’s 100th Anniversary celebrations, with voting for the fifteen positions taking place each month leading up to the All-Star break.

Boston Red SoxThe schedule of the All-Fenway Team vote is as follows:

February 13 – February 26:     Right-handed and Left-handed Starting Pitchers

February 27 – March 11:         Catcher and First Base

March 12 – March 25:             Second Base and Third Base

March 26 – April 8:                 Shortstop, Bench and Bullpen

April 9 – April 22:                   Left Field

April 23 – May 6:                    Right Field and Designated Hitter

May 7 – May 20:                     Center Field and Manager

May 21 – June 3:                     The 10th Man

The All-Fenway Team ballot was selected by a group comprised of team historians, Front Office staff, and the club’s historical and archival consultants. The players up for selection in each category are:

Right-Handed Starting Pitcher: Roger Clemens, Dennis Eckersley, Tex Hughson, Jim Lonborg, Pedro Martinez, Bill Monbouquette, Luis Tiant, Tim Wakefield and Smoky Joe Wood.

Left-Handed Starting Pitcher: Ray Collins, Lefty Grove, Bruce Hurst, Bill Lee, Dutch Leonard, Jon Lester, Mel Parnell, Herb Pennock and Babe Ruth

Catcher: Rick Ferrell, Carlton Fisk, Rich Gedman, Birdie Tebbetts, Jason Varitek and Sammy White.

First Base: Bill Buckner, Jimmie Foxx, Stuffy McInnis, George Scott, Mo Vaughn and Kevin Youkilis.

Second Base: Mike Andrews, Marty Barrett, Bobby Doerr, Pete Runnels, Dustin Pedroia and Jerry Remy.

Third Base: Wade Boggs, Larry Gardner, Mike Lowell, Frank Malzone, Bill Mueller and John Valentin.

Shortstop: Rick Burleson, Joe Cronin, Nomar Garciaparra, Johnny Pesky, Rico Petrocelli and Everett Scott.

Left Field: Mike Greenwell, Duffy Lewis, Manny Ramirez, Jim Rice, Ted Williams and Carl Yastrzemski.

Right Field: Tony Conigliaro, J.D. Drew, Dwight Evans, Harry Hooper, Jackie Jensen and Trot Nixon.

Center Field: Johnny Damon, Dom DiMaggio, Fred Lynn, Jimmy Piersall, Reggie Smith and Tris Speaker.

Designated Hitter: Don Baylor, Orlando Cepeda, Cecil Cooper, Mike Easler, Reggie Jefferson and David Ortiz.

Bench: Jerry Adair, Bernie Carbo, Alex Cora, Billy Goodman, Dalton Jones, John Kennedy, Ted Lepcio, Rick Miller, Dave Roberts and Dave Stapleton.

Bullpen: Ike Delock, Tom Gordon, Ellis Kinder, Derek Lowe, Sparky Lyle, Jonathan Papelbon, Dick Radatz, Jeff Reardon, Bob Stanley and Mike Timlin.

Manager: Bill Carrigan, Joe Cronin, Terry Francona, Joe Morgan, Dick Williams and Don Zimmer.

The 10th Man: Top 5 second place finishers across all categories.

The results of the votes will be announced prior to the All-Star Break. The winning players and/or their families will be recognized in pre-game ceremonies during the second half of the season.

The Red Sox have also launched a photo upload tool on FenwayPark100.com for fans to share their favorite memories at Fenway Park.  These moments are in many ways symbolic of Fenway Park’s status as a place of great significance in the lives of Red Sox Nation.  Both sites are part of the team’s effort to provide a way for fans to share their stories and memories at the almost 100-year-old ballpark, and to join in the celebration of America’s Most Beloved Ballpark.

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Seven Former Huskies Named 2012 USA Olympic Finalists

When UConn Huskies and current USA Women’s Basketball National Team head coach Geno Auriemma holds his 2012 Olympic Training Camp, there will be a certain UConn feel there. Seven of his former players are part of 21 finalists for the 2012 USA Olympic Women’s Basketball Team that was announced on Monday.

They are Sue Bird, Swin Cash, Tina Charles, Ashja Jones, Renee Montgomery, Maya Moore and Diana Taurasi.

Here’s the full release from USA Basketball:

Feb. 13, 2012 • Colorado Springs, Colo. – Highlighted by a trio of two-time Olympic gold medalists and featuring a total of nine players who have won Olympic gold, 21 USA Women’s National Team members were today named as finalists for the 2012 U.S. Olympic Women’s Basketball Team.  The player selections were made by the USA Basketball Women’s National Team Player Selection Committee.

USA Basketball“Now that we’re down to 21 finalists, you look around and you see a group of players that have tremendous experience,” said Geno Auriemma, 2009-12 USA National Team and University of Connecticut head coach. “(We have) players that have won (Olympic) gold medals, won World Championships, there are WNBA champions on the list, players that have won in Europe in international competition. You’ve got a group of players that have experienced everything there is to experience and as a coach, as someone who’s been around these players, I couldn’t be happier with this group. They represent the best of what the United States has to offer.”

The 21 finalists for the 2012 U.S. Olympic Women’s Basketball Team include: Jayne Appel (San Antonio Silver Stars), Seimone Augustus (Minnesota Lynx), Sue Bird (Seattle Storm), Rebekkah Brunson (Minnesota Lynx), Swin Cash (Chicago Sky), Tamika Catchings (Indiana Fever), Tina Charles (Connecticut Sun), Candice Dupree (Phoenix Mercury), Sylvia Fowles (Chicago Sky), Brittney Griner (Baylor University), Lindsey Harding (Atlanta Dream), Asjha Jones (Connecticut Sun), Kara Lawson (Connecticut Sun), Angel McCoughtry (Atlanta Dream), Renee Montgomery (Connecticut Sun), Maya Moore (Minnesota Lynx), Candace Parker (Los Angeles Sparks), Cappie Pondexter (New York Liberty), Diana Taurasi (Phoenix Mercury), Lindsay Whalen (Minnesota Lynx) and Sophia Young (San Antonio Silver Stars).

“When you’re trying to pick a team,” said Auriemma. “It’s important that you don’t just say, ‘ok, well, we’re just going to get the best player and that’s all there is to it.’ You’re trying to put together the Olympic team. So, you’re trying to find players that fit together very well, that are very compatible, they complement each other’s strengths, hide each other’s weaknesses. So, we’re going to have to decide: What kind of team do we want? What are the dynamics that we’re trying to achieve? In the end, are we prepared for anything the other countries are going to throw at us and do we have something for every occasion? As we’re picking the team, those things are going to be really crucial.”

Headlining the finalists roster are 2004 and 2008 Olympic gold medalists Bird, Catchings and Taurasi. They were joined on the 2004 Olympic gold medal stand by Cash and on the top of the podium in 2008 by Augustus, Fowles, Lawson, Parker and Pondexter.

All 12 members of the 2010 USA World Championship Team, which earned the USA’s London Olympic berth by virtue of claiming the ’10 FIBA World Championship, are still in the running for a spot on the 2012 team. Those athletes include: Appel, Bird, Cash, Catchings, Charles, Dupree, Fowles, Jones, McCoughtry, Moore, Taurasi and Whalen.

Bird and Catchings are three-time USA World Championship Team members, having also won gold in 2002 and bronze in 2006; while Augustus, Parker and Taurasi competed on the 2006 USA World Championship Team that returned with the bronze medal.

Twenty of the 21 athletes compete professionally in the WNBA and most continue to hone their games during the winter in China or Europe. The lone collegian is Griner, who has the chance to be the first collegiate athlete selected to a U.S. Olympic women’s basketball team since 1988 (Vicky Bullett, Maryland; Bridgette Gordon, Tennessee).

Auriemma will be assisted in the USA’s quest for a gold medal by DePaul University head coach Doug Bruno, 1988 Olympic gold medalist and Washington Mystics assistant coach Jennifer Gillom and Atlanta Dream head coach Marynell Meadors.

To continue reading, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

2012 Olympic Games
Four-time defending Olympic gold medalists, the U.S. will look to capture its fifth straight and seventh overall gold medal and extend its 33-game Olympic winning streak at the 2012 Olympic Summer Games in London. The Olympic basketball competition will be held July 28-Aug. 12 in the Olympic Park Basketball Arena (preliminary round and quarterfinals) and North Greenwich Arena (semifinals and finals).

The draw to determine the two preliminary round pools of six teams each is scheduled to be held April 28 at the FIBA Central Board meeting in the Ivory Coast. The preliminary round, played July 28-Aug. 5, will feature a round-robin schedule and the top four finishing teams will advance to the Aug. 7 quarterfinals. The semifinals are scheduled for
Aug. 9 and the finals will be played on Aug. 11.

Seven countries have claimed spots in the eventual 12-nation field, including host country Great Britain; the United States, which earned its berth by virtue of earning the gold medal at the 2010 FIBA World Championship; and five nations which earned the gold medal at their respective FIBA zone qualifying tournaments, including Angola (FIBA Africa), Australia (FIBA Oceania), Brazil (FIBA Americas), China (FIBA Asia) and Russia (FIBA Europe).

The final five teams will earn their spots at the 2012 FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament (June 25 – July 1 in Ankara, Turkey), which will feature 12 nations from each of the five 2011 FIBA zone qualifying tournaments as follows: two from FIBA Africa, including Mali (bronze medalists) and Mozambique (fifth-place finisher); three from FIBA Americas, including Argentina (silver medal), Canada (bronze medalist) and Puerto Rico (fifth-place finisher); two from FIBA Asia, including South Korea (silver medalist) and Japan (bronze medalist); four from FIBA Europe, including Turkey (silver medalist), France (bronze medalist), Czech Republic (fourth place) and Croatia (fifth place); and New Zealand (silver medalist) from FIBA Oceania.

The USA Basketball Women’s National Team Player Selection Committee is comprised of WNBA representatives Reneé Brown, Chief of Basketball Operations and Player Relations; Dan Hughes, head coach/General Manager of the San Antonio Silver Stars; and Chief Operating Officer/General Manager of the Indiana Fever Kelly Krauskopf; athlete representative and five-time Olympian Teresa Edwards; and USA Basketball Women’s National Team Director Carol Callan.

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KML Wins 7th Big East Freshman of the Week Honors

For the seventh time this season, UConn Huskies women’s basketball freshman Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis has been named the Big East Freshman of the Week.

She ties former Husky and current ESPN analyst Rebecca Lobo for the second most in conference history. Former Husky Maya Moore’s record of being named 10 times will stand though as the Big East will only have to more weekly awards before the end of the season conference honors.

Here’s the release from UConn:

STORRS, Conn.– Freshman forward Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis earned her seventh BIG EAST weekly accolade of her career as she was tabbed the BIG EAST Freshman of the Week as announced by the conference office on Monday.

UConn freshman Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis faces some tight defensive coverage by Louisville forward Bria Smith Tuesday night at Louisville.Mosqueda-Lewis, chosen as the 2011-12 BIG EAST Preseason Freshman of the Year, earns the award after averaging 14.0 ppg, 4.0 rpg and 2.5 assists per game in a 2-0 week for Connecticut. The Huskies posted a pair of wins against ranked opponents, winning at No. 20/17 Louisville on Feb. 7 before returning home to defeat No. 14/13 Georgetown.

Mosqueda-Lewis shot 44 percent from the field as she was 10-of-16 from the floor and sank a trio of 3-pointers and had a team-high 23 points against No.14 Georgetown in the Huskies 80-38 win. Mosqueda-Lewis has recorded six 20-plus and 19 double-digit performances in her young career.

West Virginia’s Asya Bussie was named as the Women’s Basketball Player of the Week for the BIG EAST. Bussie led the Mountaineers to a 65-63 victory at No. 2 Notre Dame scoring 22 points and grabbing eight rebounds.

The Huskies return to the court on Monday, Feb. 13, to take on Oklahoma at 9 p.m. in Norman, Okla. The game will be televised on ESPN2.

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Photo credit: Michael McAndrews – Hartford Courant

2012 NCAA Men’s Basketball Rankings – Week 15 (Feb. 13)

AP & ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls

The NCAA men’s basketball rankings are out and once again the UConn Huskies are not ranked at all. Last week, they had received votes in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll but that is no longer the case.

The Kentucky Wildcats remain as the No. 1 team in both polls and are followed by Syracuse, Missouri, Kansas and Duke in the AP Poll. In the Coaches Poll, the top three is the same with Duke as the No. 4 team and Kansas at No. 5.

The Orange are joined in the top 25 by their Big East brethren the Georgetown Hoyas (10/9), the Marquette Golden Eagles (12/11), the Louisville Cardinals (19/18) and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish (23/25).

There are no Big East teams among the others receiving votes in either poll.

For a complete look at the 2012 NCAA Men’s Basketball Rankings – Week 15 (Feb. 13), click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

AP Top 25 ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll
RK TEAM REC PTS PVS RK TEAM REC PTS PVS
1 Kentucky (63) 25-1 1,623 1 1 Kentucky (31) 25-1 775 1
2 Syracuse (2) 25-1 1,559 2 2 Syracuse 25-1 744 2
3 Missouri 23-2 1,498 4 3 Missouri 23-2 713 4
4 Kansas 20-5 1,356 7 4 Duke 21-4 649 9
5 Duke 21-4 1,336 10 5 Kansas 20-5 628 10
6 Ohio State 21-4 1,284 3 6 Ohio State 21-4 618 3
7 Michigan State 20-5 1,283 11 7 North Carolina 21-4 592 5
8 North Carolina 21-4 1,227 5 8 Michigan State 20-5 588 12
9 Baylor 21-4 1,064 6 9 Georgetown 19-5 476 11
10 Georgetown 19-5 983 12 10 Baylor 21-4 464 6
11 UNLV 22-4 976 14 11 UNLV 22-4 455 16
12 Marquette 21-5 810 18 12 Florida 19-6 388 17
13 San Diego State 20-4 688 13 13 Marquette 21-5 386 19
14 Florida 19-6 675 8 14 Murray State 24-1 359 7
15 Wisconsin 19-6 635 21 15 San Diego State 20-4 284 14
16 Murray State 24-1 600 9 16 Saint Mary’s 23-3 274 13
17 Michigan 19-7 562 22 17 Wisconsin 19-6 255 22
18 Indiana 19-6 430 23 18 Louisville 20-5 236 23
19 Louisville 20-5 421 24 19 Michigan 19-7 190 25
20 Florida State 17-7 406 15 20 Indiana 19-6 188 23
21 Saint Mary’s 23-3 377 16 21 Florida State 17-7 145 17
22 Virginia 19-5 337 19 22 Virginia 19-5 134 20
23 Notre Dame 17-8 231 NR 23 Mississippi State 19-6 95 18
24 Gonzaga 20-4 221 NR 24 Gonzaga 20-4 84 NR
24 Wichita State 22-4 221 NR 25 Notre Dame 17-8 76 NR
Dropped from rankings: Dropped from rankings:
Creighton 17, Mississippi State 20, Harvard 25 Creighton 15, Harvard 21
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
Temple 122, Mississippi State 108, Creighton 20, Brigham Young 12, New Mexico 12, Long Beach State 12, Iowa State 10, Southern Miss 7, Harvard 6, Saint Louis 5, California 3, Vanderbilt 2, Virginia Commonwealth 2, Memphis 1 Wichita State 63, Temple 48, Creighton 30, Harvard 22, Nevada 21, New Mexico 17, Long Beach State 17, California 15, Southern Miss 12, Drexel 11, Middle Tennessee 8, Iowa State 7, Saint Louis 4, Virginia Commonwealth 3, Texas-Arlington 1

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