Author Archives: ianbethune

Video: Alistair Overeem Beats Brock Lesnar by TKO at UFC 141

Alistair Overeem was making his UFC debut, Brock Lesnar was returning to The Octagon for the first time in 14 months after battling through an illness. All that was on the line at UFC 141 in the main event at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, NV was a shot at the title in a future bout against Junior dos Santos.

Using some vicious knees and kicks to the body, Overeem beat Lesnar by TKO (strikes) at 2:26 of the first round to set up the matchup with Dos Santos.

{flvremote}http://cdn.ianbethune.com/ufc141overeem.flv|375|281{/flvremote}

Watch this video on your smartphone

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

Red Sox Re-Sign Rich Hill To Minor League Deal

When Rich Hill was non-tendered by the Boston Red Sox earlier this month, I had said that it wouldn’t surprise me if they re-signed him to a minor league deal. And that’s exactly what has happened.

Boston Red Sox pitcher Rich Hill, right, is assisted by Red Sox catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia as he leaves the game with a forearm injury after facing just one batter in the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox, Wednesday, June 1, 2011, at Fenway Park, in Boston.John Tomase of the Boston Herald was the first to learn that the Red Sox have re-signed Hill to a minor league deal with an invitation to spring training.

Hill was having a great season with the Red Sox last season before he blew out of his elbow on June 1st and then underwent Tommy John surgery weeks later. He spent the rest of the season rehabbing with the team and was part of the bullpen band during games.

He made nine appearances for the Red Sox last year, throwing eight innings and striking out 12. In his 15 appearances with the Red Sox between 2010 and 2011, Hill has not allowed a run.

Hill had been the best lefty in the Red Sox bullpen after others failed. One could say the loss of Hill hurt the bullpen a little as no lefty was able to match what Hill was able to do.

While it doesn’t appear he’ll be ready for the start of the 2012 season, I would expect that once Hill is healthy, he’ll be back with the big club and hopefully doing what he’s done in the past out of the bullpen.

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

Photo credit: AP Photo

Worcester Sharks 4, Connecticut Whale 3

By Brian Ring

Worcester, MA, December 30, 2011 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated, 4-3, Friday night by the Worcester Sharks at the DCU Center. Tim Erixon had a goal and an assist for the Whale, but it was Brandon Mashinter’s game-winning tally that would propel the Sharks past Connecticut.

CT Whale“It was a good, competitive game tonight,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander.

“We seemed to swing the momentum in the second period, play better,” said Gernander. “I think things were going our way, but they were negated by penalties.”

The Sharks struck first, as Tony Lucia backhanded a Mashinter rebound past Whale goaltender Cam Talbot (27 saves) at 5:20 of the opening period. Mashinter’s shot bounced off the glove of Talbot to Lucia, who was in position for his third goal of the season. Marek Viedensky also assisted on the goal.

Jonathan Audy-Marchessault opened the scoring in the second period, tying the game at one for the Whale at 5:02 of the frame. Pavel Valentenko’s slap shot from the point was tipped past Sharks’ goaltender Harri Sateri (30 goals) by Audy-Marchessault. Kris Newbury set up the play, earning himself the secondary assist.

Worcester retook the lead in a four-on-four situation, as John McCarthy walked in on Talbot and shot the puck under the crossbar for a 2-1 advantage. Mike Connolly received an assist on the score, which was McCarthy’s eighth of the season, coming at 7:10.

The Whale special teams struck back to tie the game for Connecticut, as Erixon wristed a shot past Sateri while in the left faceoff circle. Newbury had fed Erixon for his second assist of the evening, with Brendan Bell recording the other helper.

The third period saw more back-and-forth action, as the Sharks regained the lead on Jack Combs’ goal at 8:49.

Connecticut would tie the game at three apiece on Andreas Thuresson’s eighth of the season, as he tipped Erixon’s shot past Sateri at 13:32.

The Sharks would take the lead for good on Mashinter’s goal with just 2:56 remaining in the final period. Uncovered in front of the Whale crease, Mashinter had time to corral the puck and fire it over Talbot’s shoulder, with assists going to Lucia and Ryan Del Monte.

The Whale are right back on home ice Saturday, New Year’s Eve, taking on Springfield.  That game has a special holiday start time of 5:00, and all upper-level tickets are discounted to $5 each.  Also, in celebration of New Year’s Eve, the Hartford Parking Authority is offering free parking at the Morgan Street garage and $2 parking at both the Church Street and MAT garages.

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

Connecticut Whale 3 at Worcester Sharks 4
Friday, December 30, 2011 – DCU Center

Connecticut 0 2 1 – 3
Worcester 1 1 2 – 4

1st Period-1, Worcester, Lucia 3 (Viedensky, Mashinter), 5:20. Penalties-Deveaux Ct (boarding), 2:44; Deveaux Ct (fighting), 18:00; Acolatse Wor (fighting), 18:00.

2nd Period-2, Connecticut, Audy-Marchessault 11 (Valentenko, Newbury), 5:02. 3, Worcester, McCarthy 8 (Connolly), 7:10. 4, Connecticut, Erixon 2 (Newbury, Bell), 9:50 (PP). Penalties-Valentenko Ct (boarding), 1:24; Wingels Wor (holding), 6:30; Newbury Ct (interference), 6:34; Combs Wor (interference), 8:32; Pelech Wor (interference), 12:31; Bell Ct (tripping), 19:54; Deveaux Ct (slashing), 19:54; Nightingale Ct (fighting), 19:54; Mashinter Wor (fighting), 19:54; Pelech Wor (roughing), 19:54.

3rd Period-5, Worcester, Combs 4 (Moore, Sullivan), 8:49. 6, Connecticut, Thuresson 8 (Erixon, Bell), 13:32. 7, Worcester, Mashinter 4 (Lucia, Del Monte), 17:04. Penalties-McKelvie Ct (high-sticking), 4:17; Deveaux Ct (kneeing), 6:43; Sullivan Wor (roughing), 11:29.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 10-8-16-34. Worcester 13-7-11-31.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 1 / 4; Worcester 0 / 6.
Goalies-Connecticut, Talbot 8-6-0 (31 shots-27 saves). Worcester, Sateri 7-4-0 (34 shots-31 saves).
A-5,091
Referees-Ryan Hersey (46), Geno Binda (22).
Linesmen-Ed Boyle (81), Bob Paquette (18).

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

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/30

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’s Recruiting: ‘Only Thing I Know is to Keep Going’ [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Dom answered a question in his mailbag [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Kemba Walker on Jimmy Fallon [UConn Huskies Basketball]

For Huskies, A Sloppy Game, But Still A Big East Road Win [Hartford Courant]

Huskies’ hits enough to overcome misses in recruiting [New Haven Register]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Heather Buck happy to be back [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Mixed bag for the freshmen [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Geno Predicts Newt Gingrich Will Not Be The Next President [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Auriemma Has High Praise For His 2001-02 Champions [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Geno Auriemma’s Greatest Hits [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Dolson leads UConn women over Fairfield [CT Post]

2001-02 UConn team best of all-time for Auriemma, Bird [CT Post]

UConn women: What we learned [CT Post]

Hayes, Dolson Lead UConn Women Past Fairfield [Hartford Courant]

Auriemma: 2001-02 Team Was Supreme [Hartford Courant]

Tiffany Hayes, Stefanie Dolson lead charge past Fairfield [New Haven Register]

Just Dolson being Dolson [The Day]

UConn Football links

Cochran makes UConn signing official [CT Post]

Other UConn related links

Peter And Pam Werth Commit $4.5 Million To Basketball Facility [UConnHuskies.com]

Top UConn Moments of ’11: No. 6 [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

2011 in Review: UConn’s big year [Lee Lewis – The Republican-American]

M. Ice Hockey. UMass Lowell Advances To Championship of Toyota Hockey Classic [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Huskies Advance To Toyota Championship; 2-0 Over Army [UConnHuskies.com]

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

No Problems For UConn Women in 93-40 Win Over Fairfield

Given that UConn Huskies women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma had to abruptly end practice on Wednesday, you weren’t quite sure how the team would come out of the gates on Thursday night. Well they made sure he’d be happy with how they responded.

The Huskies put this one away early as they went on to an easy 93-40 win over the Fairfield Stags in front of 8,106 at Gampel Pavilion on campus in Storrs, CT.

UConn finishes the 2011 portion of their schedule at 11-1. The Stags fall to 7-4.

UConn's Stefanie Dolson drives to the basket against Fairfield Thursday night at Gampel Pavillion. Dolson scored 22 points. Tiffany Hayes led the way for the Huskies with 23 points and added five rebounds. Stefanie Dolson had perhaps her finest game of the season with 22 points and pulled down four rebounds. Freshman Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis and Brianna Banks both had 12 points off the bench while Bria Hartley had 10 points, six rebounds and four assists.

Kelly Faris might not have scored any points but she led the Huskies with eight rebounds and nine assists. For good measure, Caroline Doty added seven assists to go along with her seven points.

Fairfield was led by Desiree Pina who had 12 points. Alexys Vazquez added nine points while Brittany MacFarlane chipped in with eight. MacFarlane and Taryn Johnson led the Stags with three rebounds each.

UConn got out of the gates quickly and into the paint as Dolson scored the first eight points of the game. In fact, Dolson scored 16 of the first 19 points UConn scored.

With the Huskies up 25-14, they used a 9-0 run to make sure the Stags would have no chance of coming back.

Very solid performances all around for the Huskies. Coming off the Christmas break and what happened at practice on Wednesday, this is a good sign. The one thing UConn has lacked all season is an identity. Hopefully this is the start of something good for the Huskies as they prepare to jump back into Big East play.

The Huskies will be back in action next Wednesday night when they’ll host the West Virginia Mountaineers at the XL Center. Tip is scheduled for 7 p.m. and the game will be broadcast locally here in Connecticut on CPTV.

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

Notes and musings:

Fairfield Stags @ UConn Huskies 12.29.11 box score

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn head coach Geno Auriemma and Fairfield head coach Joe Frager.

The 2002 National Championship team was inducted into the Huskies of Honor at halftime. Sue Bird, Ashley Battle and Maria Conlon were among those who made it back.

Former Husky Svetlana Abrosimova was also reinducted into the Huskies of Honor. She had previously been honored but wasn’t able to attend the first time.

The starters for the Huskies were Bria Hartley, Tiffany Hayes, Caroline Doty, Kelly Faris and Stefanie Dolson.

UConn shot 59.4% (38-64) from the floor while the Stags shot 33.3% (16-48).

The Huskies had 26 assists on their 38 made baskets.

UConn was 8-of-18 (44.4%) on three pointers. Fairfield was 8-of-26 (30.8%).

The Huskies were 9-of-14 (64.3%) at the charity stripe.

UConn dominated the glass as they outrebounded Fairfield 46-16.

The Huskies had 28 points off of 18 Stags turnovers. Fairfield had 12 points off of 10 UConn turnovers.

UConn outscored Fairfield 58-2 in the paint and 18-0 on the fast break.

The Huskies had 25 second chance points to just two for the Stags.

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

Photo credit: Brad Horrigan – Hartford Courant (No. 12 in gallery)

Kalish Won’t Be Part of RF Mix to Start 2012

Besides possibly needing a couple of starting pitchers, the Boston Red Sox have a glaring need in right field for the 2012 season.

Ryan KalishOne of the players thought to be in the mix was Josh Reddick but he was part of the trade that got the Red Sox Andrew Bailey and Ryan Sweeney from the Oakland A’s. Sweeney essentially replaces Reddick in the competition in right field.

The others are Darnell McDonald and Mike Aviles. Another player thought to be part of the equation was Ryan Kalish who missed most of the 2011 season with a neck injury.

But Red Sox GM Ben Cherington announced on Thursday that Kalish underwent surgery on his shoulder for a torn labrum in November and won’t be ready for the start of the 2012 season.

The Red Sox won’t get much power out of the candidates they have so you can expect Cherington to be exploring the free agent market for outfielders. I wouldn’t think he gets anyone in a trade but the way this offseason is going you never know.

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

Photo credit: Getty Images

Several Goals for Whale this Weekend

By Bruce Berlet

The Connecticut Whale has several objectives for the last weekend of 2011.

CT WhaleFirst, the Whale (18-9-1-3) would like to build on a seven-point lead over the Albany Devils in the Northeast Division in games at Worcester on Friday night and against Springfield at the XL Center in Hartford on Saturday at 5 p.m.

Secondly, two victories might give coach Ken Gernander his first job in the AHL All-Star Classic on Jan. 29-30 in Atlantic City, N.J. Gernander, an All-Star player in 1996, 1999 (captain of PlanetUSA in 5-4 victory in Philadelphia) and 2000, and the Whale are third in the Eastern Conference in points percentage (.645) behind Keith McCambridge of St. John’s (.683) and Hershey’s Mark French (.656). In the Western Conference, Todd Nelson of Oklahoma City is first at .719, followed by Milwaukee’s Ian Herbers (.696), Abbotsford’s Troy Ward (.677) and Houston’s John Torchetti (.672). Abbotsford hosts Texas on Thursday night.

The coach whose team has the best record in each conference at the end of play Sunday will lead that conference’s team at Boardwalk Hall. In addition, one head coach from each conference will be selected by the AHL to serve as assistant coaches. Playing rosters will be announced Wednesday, and All-Star Classic fan balloting for the starting lineups, presented by Reebok, starts Thursday and runs through a date to be determined next week. The date to announce the starters also has to be decided.

“It would be great (to coach in the All-Star Classic), but I’ve got other things to worry about right now,” Gernander said after practice Thursday. “I’m more worried about how we finish out the year, want the guys to finish strong before the break. We want the two games this weekend for the team, not personal reasons.”

The chances for Gernander and the Whale will be bolstered by the return of rookie defenseman Tim Erixon, who was reassigned from the parent New York Rangers after they lost 4-1 at Washington on Wednesday night. Erixon was scoreless and plus-2 in four games with the Rangers after his emergency recall on Dec. 19. But he was a healthy scratch against the Capitals after Jeff Woywitka returned after missing four games with a sore left foot.

Erixon played nine games with the Rangers to start the season and then was assigned to the Whale, where he had one goal and 11 assists in 14 games. He led Whale defensemen in assists and points at the time of his second recall, and Rangers coach John Tortorella told the New York media that Erixon needs to play on a regular basis.

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

“I just don’t want to keep on yanking him all over the place,” Tortorella said. “There have been times that Tim has shown improvement in his ability to play on the smaller ice surface and handle the tight spaces. He’s getting banged around a lot, but he’s been able to use his skill more to make plays.

“Against the Islanders (in 3-0 win on Monday) he was in the corner being hemmed in on a four-on-four situation, we had (center Derek Stepan) in front, and instead of just banging the puck out of the glass, he made a nice little backhand pass to Step that led to a three-on-two when (defenseman Anton) Stralman joined the rush. So with plays like that, you see he’s able to handle it more. It’s coming, you can see him growing, but he needs to go down and play.”

With rookie left wing Carl Hagelin and veteran center John Mitchell on recall to the Rangers and wing Mats Zuccarello injured, rookie forward Jonathan Audy-Marchessault has taken over the Whale scoring lead with 10 goals and 18 assists, after failing to notch a point in his first five pro games. Audy-Marchessault, who had two assists in a 3-2 victory over Albany on his 21st birthday Tuesday, and has an excellent shot to make the All-Star team, is followed in scoring by alternate captains Kris Newbury (10, 16), Andre Deveaux (10, 10) and defenseman Brendan Bell (5, 11). Despite missing the Whale’s first four games while with the Rangers and seven more since being injured in a 5-3 loss to Hershey on Dec. 9, Zuccarello is still third on the team in scoring with eight goals and 14 assists.

Chad Johnson (10-5-3, 2.43 goals-against average, .914 save percentage, one shutout) and Cam Talbot (8-5-0, 2.82, .899, two shutouts) have been solid most of the season. But with Johnson having to go home Wednesday because of a death in the family, the Whale called up rookie Jason Missiaen from Greenville of the ECHL, where the tallest goaltender in North American pro hockey (6 feet 8, 220 pounds) was 5-3-1, 2.43, .926 with three shutouts in 10 games, including a 0.60 GAA and .983 save percentage in his five wins. The three shutouts were tied for the ECHL lead and included back-to-back 3-0 wins on Dec. 9 and 12, and a 2-0 victory over South Carolina in his last start Tuesday.

In their only previous meeting with Worcester on Oct. 29, the Whale rallied from a two-goal deficit to win 3-2 on Sean Avery’s shootout goal in a tiebreaker. The Sharks (15-8-3-3) ended a three-game losing streak Monday night with a 3-2 victory over Portland on an overtime goal by left wing and leading scorer John McCarthy (seven goals, 14 assists), and then beat visiting Manchester 3-1 on Wednesday night, as Curt Gogol scored an insurance goal after setting up the winner by defenseman Matt Pelech. McCarthy is followed in scoring by right wing Tommy Wingels (12, 8), defensemen Matt Irwin (7, 9) and Sean Sullivan (3, 13) and forward Mike Connolly (5, 10).

Rookies Tyson Sexsmith (8-5-3, 1.83, .932) and Harri Sateri (6-4-0, 2.84, .900) have done most of the goaltending for Roy Sonmor, 52, the AHL’s longest-tenured coach, who is in his 13th season behind the bench of San Jose’s top affiliate and his 15th season overall with the Sharks organization. He is 457-410-60-62 in the regular season and has reached the postseason seven times, including advancing to the Atlantic Division finals the last two seasons.

The Whale close out 2011 with a Hartford First Night game at 5 p.m. against the Falcons (14-15-1-0), whom they have beaten four times by a combined 16-6 score, as Audy-Marchessault has three goals and six assists for nine points, five more than any other player. In celebration of New Year’s Eve, the Hartford Parking Authority is offering free parking at the Morgan Street garage and $2 parking at the Church Street and MAT garages. All upper-level seating will be $5, and fans showing a First Night wristband or button at the Public Power Ticket Office can take advantage of a 50 percent discount on lower-level end-zone seats. And there will be a First Night table in the XL Center atrium with First Night buttons available for purchase.

The Falcons, who won two in a row on the road before a 5-2 loss at Syracuse on Wednesday night, are led by former All-Star center Martin St. Pierre (six goals, 23 assists), followed by Greenwich native and former Avon Old Farms and Boston College standout right wing Cam Atkinson (15, 9), injured center Nick Drazenovic (5, 15) and former Hartford Wolf Pack wings Alexandre Giroux (10, 8) and Dane Byers (7, 9), who returned from a three-game stint with the parent Columbus Blue Jackets last week but was recalled again Monday. Former Wolf Pack center Ryan Garlock (3, 8) had his first two-goal game in the AHL, and an assist, in a 6-3 victory at Worcester on Dec. 20. Manny Legace (7-10-0, 2.27, .921), 38, the Hartford Whalers’ eighth-round pick in 1993, has started the last eight games for the Falcons since they lost 6-3 to the Whale on Dec. 3. The Falcons’ other goalie is Allen York (1-1-0, 3.94, .871), who has spent most of the season with the ECHL’s Chicago Express (seven games) and Blue Jackets (four games).

The Whale begins the 2012 segment of their season at Portland on Monday at 1 p.m. against the new top affiliate of the Phoenix Coyotes. The Pirates (14-12-2-2) got two goals and an assist from right wing Brett MacLean and a goal and two assists from center Brock Trotter in a 6-3 win over Providence on Wednesday night. In their only meeting with the Whale on Nov. 23, the Pirates took a two-goal lead before losing 3-2 on Bell’s goal at 3:29 of overtime.

The leading scorer for the Pirates is rookie center Andy Miele (eight goals, 15 assists), who won the Hobey Baker Award as collegiate hockey’s top player last season with Miami of Ohio and was called up by the Coyotes on Tuesday. Miele is followed by Trotter (7, 14), who has five goals and nine assists in 15 games since being acquired from the Montreal Canadiens on Oct. 23, MacLean (13, 7) and defenseman Nathan Oystrick (6, 13). Captain and former Wolf Pack defenseman Dean Arsene scored Wednesday night and has two goals and seven assists, while former Wolf Pack and Rangers wing Ryan Hollweg has two assists and 98 penalty minutes. Former Wolf Pack wing Mike Hoffman, who played at UConn, had two assists Wednesday night, his first points in the AHL since Dec. 18, 2009, when he scored for the Wolf Pack, and his first points in six games with the Pirates since signing a free-agent deal with the Coyotes on Dec. 8 after starting the season with the ECHL’s Las Vegas Wranglers.

“I know my role,” Hoffman, a 6-5, 250-pound wing who played last season for the Belfast Giants in Northern Ireland, told Paul Betit of the Portland Press Herald. “I’m not going out there to score goals every shift. I’m going out there to change momentum and be good defensively.”

Pirates first-year coach Ray Edwards said: “He’s out there to keep things calm, but he can make some plays.”

Veteran Curtis McElhinney (9-11-0, 2.95, .910) has done the brunt of the goaltending for the Pirates, but he and right wing Patrick O’Sullivan (two goals, five assists in six games) were recalled Monday, while Justin Pogge (4-3-2, 3.16, .891) was reassigned. Marc Cheverie, on his third call-up from the ECHL’s Gwinnett Gladiators, was Pogge’s backup in a 3-2 overtime loss to Worcester on Monday night and the win over Providence on Wednesday night.

After three days off following the game in Maine, the Whale has a demanding end to next week when they are at Binghamton on Friday night, host Springfield on Saturday night and visit the Falcons on Sunday afternoon, their fourth three games in three days stretch of the season.

HOLIDAY SPECIALS, GIVEAWAYS

To celebrate the holiday season, the Whale is offering a “Holiday Hat Trick” package of four upper-level tickets, four Whale winter hats and four Dunkin’ Donuts gift cards for $80, with upgrades available. To purchase a package, call the Whale ticket office at 860-728-3366.

College students can get discounted tickets to weekday games with the Whale’s “Ditch the Dorms” deal. For Monday through Friday games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center can get $2 off upper-level tickets and $5 off lower-level seats.

Fans who purchase Whale season tickets or a mini-plan before Saturday will be entered to win a round-trip excursion via limousine to a Rangers regular-season game at MSG. Current season seat holders and mini-plan-holders are also automatically entered. … Upcoming Whale giveaways include Wade Redden Bobblehead Night, sponsored by Click It or Ticket, on Jan. 21, when there will be a doubleheader as the Whale hosts the Norfolk Admirals at 7 p.m. after a Canadian Women’s Hockey League game between the Boston Blades and Team Alberta at 4 p.m., and Trading Cards Set II of Talbot, Audy-Marchessault, Ryan Bourque, Kelsey Tessier, Jordan Owens and former Wolf Pack All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan, now captain of the Rangers, sponsored by Webster Bank, on Jan. 27 (Wilkes-Barre/Scranton). … The Whale’s annual Tip-A-Player Dinner and Sports Carnival, presented by Aetna, is Jan. 22 from 4 to 7 p.m. at the XL Center. Whale players will serve dinner for the benefit of Gaylord Specialty Healthcare in Wallingford. Adult tickets are $30, and tickets for children 12 and under are $20. To purchase tickets, visit a table outside Section 101 at Whale games or call 860-728-3366.

WHALE-FALCONS FANS SERIES TICKETS AVAILABLE

Tickets for the next two games in the seven-game series between the Whale and Falcons fans are on sale. Game 4 is on Jan. 7 in Hartford at 4 p.m., and Game 5 is Jan. 8 in Springfield at 12:30 p.m. Tickets for the final two games on Feb. 10 in Springfield at 5 p.m. and March 17 in Hartford at 4 p.m. will be available in the near future. Tickets must be purchased at least 10 days in advance of a game and include admission to the AHL game. A portion of ticket sales benefits Defending the Blue Line, an organization that helps children of military families play hockey. The first three games raised about $600.

Tickets are available for games in Springfield by contacting Damon Markiewicz at dmarkiewicz@falconsahl.com. Advance tickets in Hartford are available by contacting Dussault at whalefalconsfangame@gmail.com. Information on all the games and the series is available at www.facebook.com/WhaleFalconsFanGame.

The Falcons fans have won 10-6, 14-4 and 8-4 in the first such series 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.

TORTORELLA CONTINUES TO TALK UP MITCHELL, BICKEL

Though the Ranger line of John Mitchell, Brian Boyle and former Wolf Pack Brandon Dubinsky hasn’t scored much, they’ve earned plenty of praise from Tortorella for their tenacity and checking effort. They shut down the Islanders’ No. 1 line of John Tavares, Matt Moulson and former Wolf Pack right wing P.A. Parenteau in a 3-0 victory over the New York Islanders on Monday night and started against the Capitals’ top trio of Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom and Alexander Semin on Wednesday night. But they couldn’t get matched up much against that threesome, and Semin scored twice and Ovechkin had two assists and Backstrom one.

Tortoralla told the New York media that he didn’t know anything about Mitchell when he played with the Toronto Maple Leafs but was impressed how much Gernander and Rangers assistant general manager/assistant coach/Whale GM Jim Schoenfeld talked up the veteran forward. They proved correct, as Mitchell and speedy rookie left wing Carl Hagelin have been solid contributors in 17 games since being called up Nov. 24.

Meanwhile, defenseman Stu Bickel has been a physical presence and had four assists in his first three games after being called up Dec. 18 after Steve Eminger sustained a separated right shoulder that will sideline him 8-to-10 weeks. Bickel’s eye was nearly swollen shut from a fight with the Islanders’ Micheal Haley, but he played Wednesday night while wearing a visor.

“(Bickel) gives us an element on the back end that we don’t have a whole lot of as far as his aggressiveness,” Tortorella said. “He’s played well.”

Bickel sported a nasty shiner around his right eye from the bout with Haley, who had been called up from the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, but said the eye wasn’t a problem.

“It looks much worse than it feels actually,” Bickel said with a laugh.

Bickel certainly didn’t want to miss a chance to continue his fine play, which includes four assists, 18 penalty minutes and a plus-3 rating in his first five NHL games.

“I think the past few years I have come a long way, and I think the biggest thing for me is that there never was a point in my career where I feel like I have been complacent or that I plateaued,” said Bickel, acquired from Anaheim on Nov. 23, 2010 for defenseman Nigel Williams. “It’s been great here, being a part of this winning, with a great group of guys.”

Erixon’s departure left the Rangers with 22 active roster players, two on injured reserve (Eminger, Michael Sauer) and two on long-term injured reserve (Wojtek Wolski, Marc Staal). The open 23rd roster spot will be needed if Wolski or Staal (post-concussion symptoms) come off LTIR and return to the lineup.

Staal, who was cleared for contact on Monday, said after the Rangers’ morning skate Wednesday that he has been doing the same level of contact and aggressive skating all week, meaning he hasn’t ramped up since Monday. But, as he put it, “the skates can’t get much harder than they are right now.”

On Monday, Staal said he would proceed for a week and then reevaluate what his timetable looks like

“Once I feel I’m in game condition and everything’s good with the head, we’ll pinpoint a date on when I can suit up again,” Staal said.  “To start playing in regular practices and body contact drills even just for three days, it’s been good. Just being out there with the team, it’s a good feeling.”

If Wolski can go Friday night at Florida against the Panthers and first-year coach and former Whalers captain Kevin Dineen after sitting out 24 games, the Rangers will have two spare forwards, Sean Avery and Erik Christensen, who sat out their ninth and fifth games in a row, respectively, on Wednesday night. The Rangers will have even more difficult decisions to make and roster spots to clear when Staal and Sauer are back from their post-concussion symptoms.

YOUTHFUL EXPERIENCE OUTDOORS

Hagelin, who co-captained Michigan to the Frozen Four last season, and former University of Wisconsin opponents Derek Stepan and Ryan McDonagh might be short on NHL experience, but they know plenty about playing outdoors, as the Rangers and Flyers will do Monday at 1 p.m. at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia in the 2012 NHL Winter Classic.

Hagelin is the only Ranger to play outdoors twice, in February 2010 in 21-degree temperatures at Wisconsin and again in December against Michigan State in “The Big Chill At The Big House” in temperatures in the low 40s. Stephan and McDonagh have bragging rights from a 3-2 Badgers victory, thanks to two late power-play goals, but Hagelin got lots of satisfaction when he had two goals and an assist in the Wolverines’ 5-0 rout of the Spartans.

“I’ve played two outdoor games now, and I was more nervous for the first one than I was for the second one,” Hagelin told NHL.com. “I know what the ice it going to be like. At Wisconsin, it was really cold so there were big chunks of ice coming up all the time. We were fortunate last year at The Big House (Michigan Stadium). We had the perfect temperature. The ice was like any other ice. I know how everyone is going to feel out there. It feels like you can skate forever. You don’t really get tired on the ice with all the fresh air. At least that’s the way I felt.”

While the level of competition in an NCAA game is obviously lower than the NHL, there will be fewer people at Citizens Bank Park (capacity 47,000) than there were at Camp Randall Stadium (55,031) and Michigan Stadium (113,411, a record for a hockey game).

Hagelin learned plenty between his first and second outdoor games.

“I think the first period (of the first game), not only myself, but both teams were skating around looking at everything,” Hagelin said. “The crowd is so far away, but you feel like you still want to see them. That was probably the best experience, just knowing this is another game.”

Christensen and Michael Rupp are the only other Rangers to play in a Winter Classic. Stepan and McDonagh have only the outdoor game at Wisconsin, but every bit helps.

“It was a great atmosphere,” said McDonagh, who is part of the Rangers’ No. 1 defensive pairing with fellow former Wolf Pack Dan Girardi. “We didn’t feel the cold as much as the fans did. It didn’t affect you, really. It was a little cold. It was perfect timing. Overall it was a great experience to be outside again.”

McDonagh added playing outside taught him it’s no different than playing inside once you get past everything surrounding the game.

“We had a cold night, but I didn’t wear anything different,” McDonagh said. “No long pants or anything like that. We had heaters on the bench, which helped. Other than that, it’s still a hockey game. The boards are the same. There was nothing really unexpected.”

MESSIER, LEETCH AMONG RANGERS STARTERS IN ALUMNI GAME

Rangers fans voting on BlueshirtsUnited.com chose Hockey Hall of Famers Mark Messier, Cheshire native Brian Leetch and Mike Gartner to be among the six Rangers starters in the NHL Winter Classic alumni game against the Flyers on Saturday at 1 p.m. on the same rink as the NHL teams will use.

Messier, the NHL’s second-leading all-time scorer (1,887 points), and Leetch, who won the Conn Smyth Trophy as playoff MVP, led the Rangers to their first Stanley Cup in 54 years in 1994. Messier was scheduled to undergo shoulder surgery this month and was uncertain if he’d be ready to play, but he postponed the operation.

Messier and Gartner will start at forward with Adam Graves, whose No. 9 is retired in the MSG rafters. Leetch, whose No. 2 is also retired, will start on defense with Ron Greschner, and John Vanbiesbrouck will be the goalie. The team will be coached by Mike Keenan, who led the Rangers to the 1994 Stanley Cup win that was backstopped by his assistant, Mike Richter.

“I am really looking forward to the outdoor alumni game, as well as the Winter Classic,” Messier told BlueshirtsUnited.com. “It really is a celebration of the game. I believe in the quote, ‘You sail in the wake of those who have gone before you.’ It is so true in hockey because we are so good at keeping the tradition alive, and we honor the players who have paved the way for the current players. And I think this game really is an opportunity to celebrate the game and the people who have made it what it is today.”

Other Rangers scheduled to compete include former Wolf Pack players Dale Purinton, Dan Blackburn and Darius Kasparaitis and former Whalers Nick Fotiu, Darren Turcotte and Nick Kypreos, along with Brian Mullen, Ron Duguay and commentator Dave Maloney, whose son Dave Jr. now works for the Whale. The Rangers off-ice ambassadors will be Rod Gilbert, Ed Giacomin and Harry Howell, all of whom have had their numbers retired. For ticket information on the alumni game, call 212-465-6080.

As part of the Winter Classic countdown, the Empire State Building began shining its world-famous tower lights in the teams’ colors on Wednesday. The east/west sides of the building, with west facing MSG, are lit in the Rangers’ blue, red and white, while its north/south sides, with south facing Philadelphia, are lit in the Flyers’ orange and white.

The Rangers are offering special one-day and three-day Winter Classic Road Trip packages presented by Amtrak. Packages include round-trip transportation to Philadelphia, game tickets, access to a pregame tailgate party with Rangers alumni, passes to watch practice and much more. For more information, visit www.newyorkrangers.com.

A third AHL outdoor game will be played at Citizens Bank Park on Jan. 6, when Adirondack, formerly based in Philadelphia and the Flyers’ top affiliate, will host the Hershey Bears. That will be two days after a collegiate exhibition game between Penn State and Division III Neumann University.

QUICK TAKES NHL SHUTOUT LEAD; LABARBERA NOT SO LUCKY

Hamden native and former Hamden High/Avon Old Farms/UMass star Jonathan Quick made 38 saves for his NHL-leading fifth shutout Wednesday night, as the Los Angeles Kings beat the Chicago Blackhawks 2-0, ending the five-game home winning streak of the league’s best team.

Quick was especially sharp in the third period when he had 18 saves, including several of the acrobatic variety off Patrick Sharp, Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa, who had an eight-game points streak ended. Trent Hunter and Jarret Stoll scored for the Kings, who are 3-0-0-1 under new coach Darryl Sutter, named to replace interim coach John Stevens a week after the former Whalers defenseman succeeded fired Terry Murray on Dec. 13.

Quick’s 23rd career shutout was especially rewarding since his dad, Dan, is one of 21 parents on the Kings’ semi-annual “father’s trip” that started with many watching a 4-3 victory over the Phoenix Coyotes in Los Angeles on Monday night when Quick bested former Wolf Pack goalie Jason LaBarbera, who was filling in for injured Mike Smith. The dads in L.A. then flew to Chicago to join others for dinner on Tuesday night, before watching the win over the Blackhawks and then going to Winnipeg for a game Thursday night against the Jets.

“That took four lines, six (defensemen) and a goalie,” Quick said of his shutout. “I thought we were outplaying them in the first two periods and getting the better of them – and because of which we jumped up to a two-goal lead. You know when you come into this building it’s just a matter of time before they get that kind of pressure (they got in the third). That’s a talented group over there. We’re fortunate to weather the storm and get out of here with two points.”

Blackhawks coach and former Whalers defenseman Joel Quenneville contested both goals, saying he thought there was goaltender interference that wasn’t called on Hunter’s goal and an uncalled slew foot on Stoll’s tally. But Quenneville and Hunter didn’t argue about who the star of the game was.

“I thought both their goals should have been whistled down,” Quenneville said, “but we still had a lot of chances at the other end and unfortunately you’re not going to win the game when you don’t score a goal.”

“He was unbelievable,” Hunter said of Quick, who is 16-10-5 with a 2.08 GAA and .930 save percentage. “He’s done that for us all year. You look at the way he played tonight and he was just a wall in there. He’s been solid all year, but he played unbelievable again tonight.”

LaBarbera wasn’t as fortunate as Quick on Wednesday night. His 27 saves also earned him No. 1 star, but Boston defenseman Dennis Seidenberg’s shot deflected off Coyotes defenseman Derek Morris’ right knee and through LaBarbera’s legs 58 seconds into overtime as the Bruins won their seventh straight, 2-1. An SRO crowd of 17,459 at Jobing.com Arena included many Bruins fans.

The Bruins have outscored their opponents 32-8 in their seven-game winning streak, and have won nine of 10 road games in a 21-2-1 run that began after a 3-7-0 start. The Bruins’ David Krejci scored on a screen shot 47 seconds into the game, and Ray Whitney matched it with 4:44 left in the first period, ending Tuukka Rask’s career-best shutout streak at 170:26. LaBarbera and Rask (21 saves) then matched stops until Seidenberg’s fortuitous winner.

“When you have a team like that come into your building, obviously everyone is going to get fired up,” said LaBarbera, who got the Coyotes to overtime with a brilliant glove save on Brad Marchand’s breakaway.

ENJOY RETIREMENT, ANGIE RUGGERIO

Happy trails to Angie Ruggerio, who retired Wednesday after beginning her climb to the most decorated and best women’s hockey player in U.S. annals with the Connecticut Polar Bears, which won the national women’s championship in 1995, and at Choate in Wallingford, where she set school records for goals (40), assists (23) and points (63). She became the youngest member of the national team in 1996 at 15 and was the only four-time Olympian, winning one gold, two silver and a bronze medal. After graduating from Choate, where she earned excellent grades and was class president for three of her four years, she played at Harvard and on the national team for 16 years, getting 208 points in a record 256 games for USA Hockey.

Ruggerio also made hockey history in 2005 when she played with her younger brother, Bill, a goalie, for the Tulsa Oilers in a home game in the Central Hockey League team. She was the first woman to play a non-goalie position in a men’s pro game in North America, and she and Bill became the first brother-sister combo to play on the same team in pro hockey. Ruggerio played last season for the Boston Blades and was on their roster this season but hadn’t been in a game because of an injury. It was doubtful that she was going to be able to play at the XL Center on Jan. 21, but now it’s official.

“It’s really great that finally women’s hockey has one league and one Cup to play for,” Ruggerio, who became a member of the IOC Athletes Commission last year, said in comments on the CWHL website before retiring. “I love playing for my country, but my Boston team is where I train throughout the year alongside teammates all striving to win the Cup.”

Not anymore, but that certainly doesn’t mean Ruggerio, who lives in Simi Valley, Calif., will be soon forgotten.

“She was the best ever, by far, and has quite the resume,” Tom Hine, who covered 10 Olympic Games for the Hartford Courant before retiring in 2007, said in an email. “Not many athletes play in four Olympics, win four medals, get fired on ‘The Apprentice’ at a late date by Donald Trump and are a player rep on the IOC. She was big, physical, talented and attractive – and also very, very nice. Other than that, she has nothing going for her.”

Enjoy your retirement, Angie, even if it’s a bit premature at 31. You deserve plenty of good times for all you provided for your country

NOT FORGOTTEN HERE

In its tribute to athletes who died in 2011, ESPN failed to mention a single hockey player, but I’d like to remember E.J. McGuire, Mandi Schwartz, Derek Boogaard, Rick Rypien, Wade Belak, Rick Martin, Johnny Wilson, Tom Cavanagh and the 43 people, including 36 members of the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl team and staff in the Kontinental Hockey League in Russia, who died in a plane crash Sept. 7. They included Lokomotiv coach and former Whalers defenseman Brad McCrimmon, Pavol Demitra and former Rangers players or draft picks Alexander Karpovtsev, an assistant coach who played on the 1994 Stanley Cup team, Karel Rachunek and Jan Marek. RIP to them all!!!!

Rangers Return Tim Erixon to Whale

HARTFORD, December 29, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have returned defenseman Tim Erixon to the Whale.

CT WhaleErixon had been recalled by the Rangers December 19 and skated in four games in his latest NHL stint, registering two penalty minutes and a +2 rating.  In 13 total NHL games in his rookie season, the Port Chester, NY native is scoreless and Even, with eight PIM and six shots on goal.  The 20-year-old, 6-3, 205-pounder is the second-leading point-getter among Whale defensemen, with one goal and 11 assists for 12 points in 14 games.

The Whale are back in action tomorrow night, Friday, December 30, when they travel to Worcester to take on the Sharks in a 7:30 PM game.  All the CT Whale Rockin’ Hockey action can be heard live on “The Rock”, 106.9 FM, WCCC, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  The Whale’s next home game is this Saturday night, New Year’s Eve, as they battle the Springfield Falcons.  The Whale will be celebrating the coming of the New Year with a special ticket discount, as all upper-level seats for Saturday’s game will be available for only $5 each at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center.

Tickets to all 2011-12 Whale home games are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Save on your tickets, and get the best seats, with a ticket plan for the Whale’s 2011-12 AHL campaign, which are on sale now. For information on season seats and mini plans, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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