Author Archives: ianbethune

Bobby Valentine Names His Major League Coaching Staff

New Boston Red Sox skipper Bobby Valentine has finally filled all the roles on his coaching staff for the 2012 season.

Boston Red SoxThere are three newcomers to the staff in addition to Valentine. Bob McClure has been named the pitching coach, Alex Ochoa will be the first base coach and Jerry Royster the third base coach.

The holdovers from former manager Terry Francona’s regime are Dave Magadan, who will stay as hitting coach and Gary Tuck, who remains the bullpen coach. Tim Bogar is also still around and will serve as the bench coach for Valentine.

To continue reading, the press release from the Red Sox, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Here’s the release from the Red Sox:

BOSTON, MA—The Boston Red Sox today announced their 2012 Major League coaching staff.  Tim Bogar has been named bench coach, Bob McClure joins the staff as pitching coach, Alex Ochoa has been appointed first base coach and Jerry Royster has been named third base coach.

Additionally, Hitting Coach Dave Magadan and Bullpen Coach Gary Tuck will both return in the same roles they held in 2011.

Executive Vice President/General Manager Ben Cherington and Manager Bobby Valentine made the announcements.

The 45-year-old Bogar enters his fourth year with the Red Sox in 2012.  He spent the last two seasons as Boston’s third base coach after joining the club as first base coach prior to the 2009 campaign.  He served as the quality assurance coach for the Tampa Bay Rays in 2008 and previously managed in the Houston Astros (2004-05) and Cleveland Indians (2006-07) minor league systems, leading his clubs to a 289-200 mark (.591) and three postseason appearances.  A former infielder selected by the New York Mets in the eighth round of the 1987 draft, Bogar played 701 Major League games over nine seasons with the Mets (1993-96), Astros (1997-2000) and Los Angeles Dodgers (2001).  He played under Valentine in New York for part of the 1996 season.

McClure, 59, recently joined the Red Sox organization as a special assignment scout/instructor.  He spent the last six seasons as the pitching coach for the Kansas City Royals after being named to that position on October 12, 2005.  During his tenure as Kansas City’s pitching coach, he worked with 2009 American League Cy Young Award Winner Zack Greinke and his 2011 staff’s 4.44 ERA was the best single-season mark for the club since 1994.  Prior to joining the Royals, he served as a minor league pitching coach in the Colorado Rockies system for seven seasons, including three years with Single-A Salem from 1999-2001 and four seasons with Triple-A Colorado Springs from 2002-05.  McClure began his coaching career with the Florida Marlins in 1994 as a coach on the Major League staff and also served as a scout with the Marlins in 1996.  A left-handed pitcher, he played 19 Major League seasons with the Royals (1975-76), Brewers (1977-86), Expos (1986-88), Mets (1988), Angels (1989-91), Cardinals (1991-92) and Marlins (1993), compiling a 68-57 record with 52 saves and a 3.81 ERA (490 ER/1,158.2 IP) in 698 career games (73 starts).

Ochoa, 39, was the hitting coach for Boston’s High-A Salem affiliate last season and his batters led the Carolina League in on-base percentage (.328), and finished third in average (.254) and slugging (.387).  He began his professional coaching career in 2009 as Boston’s staff assistant and served as a special assistant in the Red Sox Baseball Operations department in 2010.  Ochoa is a veteran of eight Major League seasons with the Mets (1995-97), Twins (1998), Brewers (1999, 2002), Reds (2000-01), Rockies (2001) and Angels (2002).  An outfielder, he hit .279 (597-for-2,143) with 131 doubles, 19 triples, 46 home runs, 261 RBI, 320 runs, 203 walks and 56 stolen bases over 807 career games.  Ochoa played under Valentine for parts of two seasons with the Mets in 1996-97.

The 59-year-old Royster has been involved in professional baseball for over 40 years.  He most recently managed the Lotte Giants of the Korea Baseball Organization from 2008-10, becoming the league’s first foreign manager.  He led the Giants to the playoffs in each of his three seasons at the helm.  Royster previously served on Major League coaching staffs as third base coach for the Rockies in their inaugural 1993 campaign and as the Brewers bench coach from 2000 until taking over as interim manager from April 18, 2002 through the end of that season.  His minor league managerial experience includes stints in the Dodgers (1989-92, 2005-06) and Padres (1995-98) systems, including five seasons at the Triple-A level.  Additionally, he was Montreal’s minor league base running/infield coordinator in 1999 and the Dodgers minor league infield coordinator from 2003-04.  Royster signed with the Dodgers as an amateur free agent in 1970, two years after Valentine began his minor league career with Los Angeles.  He played parts of 16 seasons in the Majors with the Dodgers (1973-75), Braves (1976-84, 1988), Padres (1985-86), White Sox (1987) and Yankees (1987).  Primarily a second and third baseman, he batted .249 (1,049-for-4,208) with 165 doubles, 33 triples, 40 home runs and 352 RBI in 1,428 career Big League games.

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/23

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 Goes on Christmas Break [David Borges – New Haven Register]

UConn 79, Fairfield 71: Jim Calhoun’s Take [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn 79, Fairfield 71: Wrapping Things Up [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn men 79, Fairfield 71: the wrap (what Calhoun said) [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

Post-game breakdown: Fairfield [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Notes/Quotes from Fairfield: “We’re 10-1.” [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Fair Fight [UConn Huskies Basketball]

UConn men survive scare, pull away from Fairfield [CT Post]

Fairfield comes up short again against big-time program [CT Post]

Ryan Olander wins battle with brother Tyler, but UConn wins bigger fight over Fairfield [CT Post]

What we learned about UConn [CT Post]

UConn Survives Scare In 79-71 Win Over Fairfield [Hartford Courant]

In The End, Drummond Did The Right Thing [Hartford Courant]

UConn Men Notebook: Both A Sibling And An In-State Rivalry [Hartford Courant]

Huskies stave off upset bid by Fairfield [New Haven Register]

UConn men beat Fairfield in game of survival [The Day]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Geno: Heather Buck’s X-Rays Show No Break [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Despite Big Win Wednesday, UConn Had Problems On Trip [Hartford Courant]

UConn, Baylor to meet as part of ESPN’s “Rivalry Week” in 2013 [The Day]

UConn Football links

Video: UConn quarterbacks [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Help officially on the way [John Silver – Journal Inquirer]

Other UConn related links

M. Ice Hockey. Rene Rancourt To Sing National Anthem at UConn Hockey Classic [UConnHuskies.com]

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

UConn Survives Fairfield, 79-71

Ryan Olander, a center for Fairfield, greeted his brother, UConn center Tyler, at center court before the UConn/Fairfield game at the XL Center Thursday night.

Basketball is a game which is played for 40 minutes. Sometimes, a team can “play” for 28 minutes and win. And that’s about exactly what the UConn Huskies did on Thursday night against the Fairfield Stags.

The Huskies held off a late second half rally by the Stags to win the “Battle of the Olanders” 79-71 in front of 13,821 at the XL Center in Hartford, CT.

UConn heads into the Christmas break at 10-1 while Fairfield falls to 7-5.

UConn's Tyler Olander goes up for a dunk and is rejected by his brother, Ryan, in the second half of the UConn/Fairfield game at the XL Center Thursday night. UConn won, 79-71.Older brother Ryan Olander definitely got the better of the matchup with his younger brother Tyler despite the fact the Stags lost. Neither one of them could find the bucket in the first half. Ryan found the basket for eight points in the second half while Tyler had just two. Ryan also blocked a dunk by Tyler cleanly and then capped it off later by dunking over Tyler. Ryan also led the Stags with eight rebounds.

Shabazz Napier led the Huskies with 24 points with six rebounds and five assists. Jeremy Lamb chipped in with 18 points while Andre Drummond had 16 points, nine rebounds, four steals and two blocked shots.

Ryan Boatright had a nice game off the bench for the Huskies with 10 points, seven rebounds and five assists.

Rakim Sanders paced the Stags with 20 points and added seven rebounds. Sean Crawford added 14 points with all of his baskets coming from beyond the arc with Derek Needham chipping with 12 points on four threes. Desmond Wade rounded out the Stags in double digits with 10 points.

Fairfield stayed with UConn for the first five minutes of the game. But with the Huskies leading 14-13, Napier led the Huskies on an 11-2 to run to open up a 10 point lead. The Stags would battle back though cutting the lead back down to eight at 30-22 with 6:26 to go in the half.

But UConn would close out the first half on a 16-4 run to open up a 20 point lead at the half at 46-26 and it looked like the rout was on.

That wouldn’t be the case though.

A Lamb three would give the Huskies their biggest lead of 22 points at 57-35 with 13:22 to go in the game. Over the next eight minutes, the Stags would get that lead into single digits and trail by six at 65-59 with 5:44 to go. They did it the same way they stayed in the game early in the first half. And that was by hitting some three pointers.

Fairfield didn’t stop there though.

Each time it looked the Huskies would pull away, the Stags answered. They would get the lead down to three points at 72-69 with when Sanders made a layup with 2:23 to go.

Things changed though for the worse for the Stags when Sanders missed the front end of a one-and-one with 1:39 to go after the Stags forced a turnover down the other end before Roscoe Smith fouled him. The Huskies would grab the rebound and Boatright would nail a three. After Ryan Olander missed a shot, Lamb put an exclamation point on the win with an emphatic dunk to seal the win for the Huskies.

The Huskies will now get ready for the first of three straight Big East games without head coach Jim Calhoun who will be serving his NCAA suspension that was handed down last year. They may be lucky in the fact that Calhoun can only coach practices until Christmas because you know he won’t be pleased with the total effort of his team.

The first game sans Calhoun will be against the South Florida Bulls on Wednesday the 28th in South Florida. Tip is scheduled for 9 p.m.

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 12.22.11 box score

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn head coach Jim Calhoun and Fairfield head coach Sydney Johnson. The quotes from the players are underneath what the coach’s had to say.

UConn has won 65 straight games against competition from the state of Connecticut.

The starters for the Huskies were Shabazz Napier, Jeremy Lamb, Roscoe Smith, Alex Oriakhi and Andre Drummond.

UConn shot 53.8% (28-52) from the floor while Fairfield shot 40.6% (26-64).

The Huskies had just 12 assists on their 28 made baskets.

UConn was 7-of-11 (63.6%) from beyond the arc while the Stags were 12-of-27 (44.4%).

The Huskies were 16-of-21 (76.2%) from the charity stripe.

UConn barely won the battle of the boards, outrebounding Fairfield 34-32.

The Huskies outscored the Stags 32-20 in the paint and 24-8 on the fast break.

Fairfield had 15 second chance points to just four for UConn.

The Huskies had 14 points off of 12 Stags turnovers. Fairfield had 10 points off of 12 UConn turnovers.

Jim Calhoun picked his up his first technical foul of the season in the first half. Ironically enough, he got that technical before any of his players had committed a personal foul.

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Photo credits: Stephen Dunn – Hartford Courant (No. 3, No. 14 in gallery)

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/22

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.

It’s game day for the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team as they’ll host the Fairfield Stags at the XL Center. Tip is scheduled for 7 p.m. and the game will be broadcast locally on SNY.

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

UConn Men’s Basketball links

The Bradley, Drummond Conundrum [David Borges – New Haven Register]

George Blaney to Serve As Head Coach During Jim Calhoun Suspension [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Blaney to fill in for Calhoun [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Preview: Fairfield at UConn [Lee Lewis – The Republican-American]

At last, Olanders meet on the court on opposite teams [CT Post]

The Olander brothers on each other [CT Post]

Fairfield’s Johnson Gets His Wish — A Game Against UConn [Hartford Courant]

UConn Says It Thoroughly Vetted Walk-On Status For Drummond [Hartford Courant]

Huskies not looking past Fairfield [New Haven Register]

Fairfield men won’t be a pushover for Huskies [The Day]

UConn Men’s Basketball Glance — Fairfield at UConn [The Hour]

UConn scholarships take positive turn [Eamonn Brennan – ESPN.com]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Nobody Really Happy With The Win At Charleston [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

The Secret To UConn’s Success [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Geno Sets The Tone For The Remainder Of The Season [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Tired And Frustrated, UConn Women Coast To A Win [Hartford Courant]

Notebook: Buck’s Injured Wrist To Be Checked Out [Hartford Courant]

Despite lopsided defeat, Charleston enjoyed spotlight with UConn [The Post and Courier]

Other UConn related links

UConn drafting policy requiring employees to report sexual abuse allegations [CT Post]

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Connectiut Whale 3, Adirondack Phantoms 2

By Brian Ring   

Hartford, CT, December 21, 2011 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Adirondack Phantoms, 3-2, Wednesday night at the XL Center in Hartford. The Whale received a late game-winner from defenseman Pavel Valentenko, as well as three assists from Brendan Bell. Kris Newbury assisted on two of the Whale’s goals.

CT WhaleThe win pushed the Whale (17-8-1-3, 38 points) to five points ahead of their closest competition in the Northeast Division, the Albany Devils, and six points ahead of Adirondack.

“It was a good way to finish up, it’s almost an elongated segment before you leave for the break,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “It’s nice to finish the game with a big goal and a win.”

“It’s a gritty game and good teams find ways to win when they’re shorthanded,” said Bell. “I guess we’re a good team.”

Mike Testwuide had put the Phantoms up 1-0 at 4:07 of the first period, finishing off a nifty
passing play with Tyler Brown and Tye McGinn. The tic-tac-toe passing left Testwuide open for an easy put in to the left of Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (27 saves), as Testwuide deposited his third goal of the season.

The Whale tied it up with 3:41 remaining in the period, as Andre Deveaux backhanded a shot past Phantoms goaltender Jason Bacashihua (24 saves). Newbury fed a behind-the-back, no-look pass to Deveaux from the half-boards, with Bell setting up the play. The goal was Deveaux’s seventh of the season.

Jeff Prough gave the Whale a brief 2-1 advantage with his first goal for Connecticut at 8:28 of the second. Valentenko’s shot was blocked but kicked off of Bacashihua, and Prough was in position to put home the rebound. Bell recorded his second assist of the game on the score.

McGinn tied it back up for the Phantoms at the 10:52 mark of the second, as Jason Akeson wheeled around and passed the puck across the slot to the waiting forward. Akeson had received a pass from Garrett Roe before weaving through the Whale defense and sending a quality pass to McGinn, who shot it past Johnson.

The game remained tied through the rest of the frame and into the waning moments of the third period, before the Whale scored the eventual game-winner in dramatic fashion.

A clean face-off win by Newbury sent the puck to Bell at the point, and he fed it over to Valentenko. Valentenko’s blast from the blue line got past Bacashihua, and the Whale took a 3-2 lead with just 16 seconds left in the third period.

“It was a good, heavy shot,” said Gernander. “It was great.”

The Whale will return to action after the holiday with a rare Monday tilt against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers at the Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport (7:00). Tuesday, Connecticut will be home to host the Albany Devils for the first time this season at XL Center (7:00).

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

Adirondack Phantoms 2 at Connecticut Whale 3
Wednesday, December 21, 2011 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Adirondack 1 1 0 – 2
Connecticut 1 1 1 – 3

1st Period-1, Adirondack, Testwuide 3 (Brown, Rowe), 4:07. 2, Connecticut, Deveaux 7 (Newbury, Bell), 16:19. Penalties-Prough Ct (tripping), 11:48; Eddy Adk (boarding), 14:16.

2nd Period-3, Connecticut, Prough 1 (Valentenko, Bell), 8:28 (PP). 4, Adirondack, McGinn 5 (Akeson, Roe), 10:52. Penalties-Jancevski Adk (tripping), 6:45.

3rd Period-5, Connecticut, Valentenko 3 (Bell, Newbury), 19:43. Penalties-Bouchard Ct (hooking), 11:27; Brown Adk (hooking), 16:38.

Shots on Goal-Adirondack 11-11-7-29. Connecticut 6-8-13-27.
Power Play Opportunities-Adirondack 0 / 2; Connecticut 1 / 3.
Goalies-Adirondack, Bacashihua 4-3-1 (27 shots-24 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 10-4-3 (29 shots-27 saves).
A-2,389
Referees-Terry Koharski (10), Jon McIsaac (39).
Linesmen-Luke Galvin (2), Derek Wahl (46).

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Jeff Adrien to Get Chance with Houston Rockets

Here’s the release from the Houston Rockets that former UConn Huskies power forward Jeff Adrien has been signed by the team. He’ll join his former Huskies teammate, Hasheem Thabeet, in the Space City.

HOUSTON – Houston Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey announced today that the team has signed free agent forward Jeff Adrien. Per team policy, financial terms were not released.

Adrien (6-7, 243, Connecticut), who had been playing with Benetton Treviso in Italy, appeared in 23 games over two stints with Golden State in 2010-11. His second stint with the Warriors was as a GATORADE Call-Up from the Rio Grande Valley Vipers of the NBA D-League.

Overall, Adrien appeared in 27 D-League games last season between the Erie BayHawks and Rio Grande Valley, averaging 18.3 points, 11.4 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.03 steals and 1.44 blocks in 32.7 minutes per contest. He was named the 2010-11 NBA D-League Impact Player of the Year (as voted by the league’s head coaches) after helping the Vipers to an 18-4 record in his 22 games with the team following a trade from Erie. The D-League Player of the Month for Jan. 2011 was also a D-League All-Star in 2010-11.

As a collegian, Adrien finished his career at the University of Connecticut with 1,603 points and 1,126 rebounds, becoming only the second Husky with over 1,600 points and 1,100 rebounds in a career since Jim Calhoun became coach in 1986. He was also just the fifth player in school history to amass over 1,000 points and 1,000 rebounds in a career. Adrien ranked 12th on the career points list and finished with the third-highest rebounding total ever by a Husky. As team captain in 2008-09, Adrien helped lead UConn to the NCAA Final Four.

Click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page to see the video of Adrien being interviewed about what he brings to the Rockets.

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Watch this video on your smartphone

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Hartley Paces Huskies Past Cougars, 72-24

Coming off a loss to No. 1 Baylor on Sunday night and the fact that the players’ minds may have been on heading home for the holidays, you weren’t quite sure how Geno Auriemma’s UConn Huskies would come out and play on Wednesday night in Charleston, SC.

One thing’s for sure, he definitely won’t be happy with the way his offense played, especially in the first half. But the defense was outstanding again in the 72-24 win over the College of Charleston Cougars at TD Arena in Charleston in front of a school record 3,863 fans.

The Huskies improve to 10-1 while the Cougars fall to 2-8.

Connecticut's Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis (23) goes for a layup against College of Charleston's Cathryn Hardy (5) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game on Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011, in Charleston, S.C.Bria Hartley led the Huskies with 15 points and nine rebounds. Freshman Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis added 13 points and six rebounds. Kelly Faris had a great all around game with 10 points, six rebounds, three steals and led the Huskies with six assists.

Jazz Green led the Cougars with eight points, hitting two threes in the second half. Megan Fischer added seven points while Cathryn Hardy led College of Charleston with six rebounds to go along with her three points.

Folks, this one was ugly to start out.

Both teams combined to go 0-for-15 before Faris finally got the Huskies on the board with a three with 15:36 to go in the first half. UConn would score the first 10 points of the game before the Cougars finally got on the scoreboard at the 11:43 mark on a jumper by Christy Hewatt, which happened to be her only basket of the game.

With UConn leading 10-4, they would close out the first half with an 17-4 run to take a 20 point lead at 27-7 into the break.

The Huskies came out and played much better offensively to start the second half, opening it up with an 18-0 run. Fischer would finally get the Cougars on the board with a three with 11:46 remaining in the game.

It was all UConn from there as they continued to build their lead while working on their offensive sets the rest of the way.

Other than the outstanding defensive effort, it’s tough to be pleased with the offense other than the 18-0 run to start the second half. They were much better in the second half but they need to put together a solid 40 minute game on both ends of the floor. That’s one of the reasons why they lost to Baylor on Sunday.

The Huskies now head home for the holidays and are due back on campus for practice on the 26th as they prepare for their next game. That game comes in eight days when they’ll host the Fairfield Stags on December 29th at Gampel Pavilion. Tip is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. and the game will be broadcast locally here in Connecticut on CPTV.

To continue reading the UConn Huskies @ College of Charleston Cougars recap, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Notes and musings:

UConn Huskies @ College of Charleston Cougars 12-21-11 box score

The last time UConn has lost consecutive games dates back to the 1992-93 season.

Former Husky, Kalana Greene, was honored at halftime of the game.

Heather Buck will be out of action for a little while with a wrist injury suffered in Sunday’s loss to Baylor. They said on the TV broadcast that her wrist could be broken but there’s been no official announcement yet.

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

The Huskies shot 44.6% (29-65) from the floor while the Cougars shot 14.3% (7-of-39).

UConn had 20 assists on their 29 made baskets.

The Huskies were 9-of-14 (64.3%) from the charity stripe. Three of those misses were Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis.

UConn was 5-of-23 (21.7%) on threes while the College of Charleston was 3-of-15 (20%).

The Huskies dominated the glass, outrebounding the Cougars 50-30.

UConn had 19 points off of 24 College of Charleston turnovers. The Cougars had six points off of 14 Huskies turnovers.

The Huskies outscored the Cougars 32-2 in the paint and 12-0 on the fast break.

UConn had 20 second chance points to just five for the Cougars.

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Photo credit: AP Photo

2012 NCAA Women’s Basketball Rankings – Week 6 (Dec. 20)

AP & ESPN/USA Today Coaches' Polls

The NCAA women’s basketball rankings came out on Tuesday and the UConn Huskies remain No. 2 in both polls despite falling to No. 1 Baylor on Sunday night.

The top five is the same in both polls from last week as Baylor and UConn are followed by Notre Dame, Stanford and Maryland.

Joining the Huskies and the Irish in the top 25 of both polls are the Rutgers Scarlet Knights (12/11), Louisville Cardinals (14/12), Georgetown Hoyas (17/17) and DePaul Blue Demons (21/19).

There are no Big East teams among the others receiving votes in the AP Poll and the Villanova Wildcats are among the others receiving votes in the Coaches’ poll.

For a complete look at the 2012 NCAA Women’s Basketball Rankings for Week 6 (Dec. 20), 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) 11-0 1,000 1 1 Baylor (30) 11-0 774 1
2 Connecticut 9-1 944 2 2 Connecticut (1) 9-1 739 2
3 Notre Dame 10-1 926 3 3 Notre Dame 10-1 717 3
4 Stanford 7-1 878 4 4 Stanford 7-1 683 4
5 Maryland 11-0 825 5 5 Maryland 11-0 641 5
6 Tennessee 7-2 802 6 6 Tennessee 7-2 623 6
7 Miami (FL) 9-1 758 7 7 Miami (FL) 9-1 567 8
8 Kentucky 10-1 692 8 8 Kentucky 10-1 563 7
9 Duke 7-2 657 9 9 Duke 7-2 533 9
10 Texas A&M 8-2 613 10 10 Texas A&M 8-2 480 10
11 Ohio State 11-0 585 12 11 Rutgers 10-2 442 11
12 Rutgers 10-2 546 11 12 Louisville 11-2 414 13
13 Georgia 8-1 500 13 13 Ohio State 11-0 409 14
14 Louisville 10-2 483 14 14 Green Bay 8-0 352 15
15 Texas Tech 9-0 476 15 15 Georgia 8-2 322 12
16 Penn State 9-2 390 16 16 Penn State 9-2 319 17
17 Georgetown 9-2 363 17 17 Georgetown 9-2 264 19
18 Green Bay 8-0 300 19 18 Texas Tech 9-0 242 20
19 Delaware 8-0 259 21 19 DePaul 11-2 206 21
20 Purdue 8-3 213 22 20 Delaware 9-0 152 23
21 DePaul 10-2 204 23 21 Purdue 9-3 132 22
22 Texas 8-2 162 24 22 North Carolina 7-2 123 16
23 North Carolina 7-2 114 18 23 Vanderbilt 10-1 122 18
24 Nebraska 10-1 110 25 24 Gonzaga 9-2 100 25
25 Vanderbilt 10-1 103 20 25 Texas 8-2 90 24
Dropped from rankings: Dropped from rankings:
None None
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
Virginia 26, California 19, LSU 15, South Carolina 10, Arkansas 6, Northwestern 5, Georgia Tech 3, Gonzaga 3, USC 3, Brigham Young 2, Michigan 2, Kansas 1, St. Bonaventure 1, Tulane 1 Nebraska 16, Georgia Tech 15, Kansas 9, Duquesne 6, Bowling Green 6, California 5, Michigan 2, South Carolina 2, UTEP 2, Oklahoma 2, Villanova 1

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/21

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.

It’s game day for the UConn Huskies women’s basketball team as they are in Charleston, SC for a matchup with the College of Charleston Cougars. Tip is scheduled for 7 p.m. and the game will be broadcast locally in Connecticut on CPTV.

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

UConn Women’s Basketball links

UConn/Baylor garners a 0.9 rating [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Breanna Stewart, Morgan Tuck square off in Arizona [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Stewart, Tuck light it up at TOC [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Don’t Worry, Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis Loves It Here [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Heather Buck Is Hoping For The Best [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Despite Distance, Mosqueda-Lewis Still Close To Her Parents [Hartford Courant]

Selling Tickets [Hartford Courant]

Huskies can start a new streak vs. Charleston [New Haven Register]

UConn women’s basketball glance [The Hour]

Charleston hosts power Connecticut [Charleston Post Courier]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Calhoun: 3-Game Suspension Will Be “Difficult” [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Bradley Kept Scholarship; Drummond a Walk-On [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Jim Calhoun Preparing for ‘Last Game For A While’ [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn Practice Notes: Some Thoughts On Fairfield [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Andre Drummond Gives Up Scholarship, Playing As A Walk-On [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Drummond, a highly valued walk-on [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

Calhoun prepares for his suspension, plus updates from practice [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Notes/Quotes from December 20: Shabazz turns ankle, Calhoun talks suspension [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Men’s Basketball Takes Part In Holiday Food Drive [UConnHuskies.com]

Early-morning practices pay off for Lamb [CT Post]

Calhoun Prepares For Some Time Off [Hartford Courant]

Bradley Still Has Scholarship, Drummond A Walk-On At UConn [Hartford Courant]

Olander Vs. Olander [Hartford Courant]

UConn vs. Fairfield a family feud for Olanders [New Haven Register]

Andre Drummond did not take Michael Bradley’s scholarship [New Haven Register]

Olander brothers ready for first head-to-head meeting [The Day]

Drummond is fine with his decision to become walk-on [The Day]

UConn Football links

Colts’ Orlovsky eager to go up against old team [CT Post]

Other UConn related links

Baseball. Mazzilli Lands a Spot on Preseason All-American First Team [UConnHuskies.com]

Field Hockey. Field Hockey Earns UConn Ten Points In Capital One Cup Standings [UConnHuskies.com]

SAAC Concludes Successful Fall Semester [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. UConn To Evaluate Men’s Ice Hockey Program [UConnHuskies.com]

Men’s and Women’s Tennis Supports The Community [UConnHuskies.com]

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