Author Archives: ianbethune

Rangers Recall Tim Erixon from Whale

New York, December 14, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that defenseman Tim Erixon has been recalled from the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL).

NY Rangers' Tim Erixon takes a shot during the NHL hockey match between Anaheim Ducks and NY Rangers in Stockholm, Sweden, Saturday Oct. 8, 2011.Erixon, 20, has registered one goal and 11 assists for 12 points, along with 10 penalty minutes in 13 games with Connecticut this season.  He currently has a three-game assist streak, tallying four assists during the stretch which began with a two-assist effort on Friday vs. Hershey.  Erixon leads all Whale defensemen and is tied for sixth on the team in scoring with 12 points, and ranks second on Connecticut overall in average points per game (0.92) and is tied for third in assists (11).  He registered seven points in a five-game span (one goal and six assists), beginning with his first career AHL goal on November 12 at St. John’s and culminating with a career-high, three assists on November 23 vs. Portland.  Erixon tallied an assist while making his AHL debut on November 2 at Bridgeport.

The Port Chester, New York native began the season on the Rangers opening night roster, and skated in nine games with the Blueshirts before being assigned to Connecticut on October 29.  Erixon posted a plus or even rating in six of his nine contests.  He made his NHL debut on October 7 against Los Angeles in Stockholm, Sweden, as part of the 2011 Bridgestone NHL Premiere.

Erixon was acquired by the Rangers along with a fifth round selection in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft (Shane McColgan) from Calgary, in exchange for Roman Horak and two second round picks in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft (Markus Granlund, Tyler Wotherspoon) on June 1, 2011.  He was originally selected by the Flames in the first round, 23rd overall, in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.

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Photo credit: AP Photo

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/14

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

UConn still struggling to find footing in post-Kemba Walker era [SI.com]

UConn Football links

FUMA RB Joe Williams Commits To UConn [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

UConn Gets JUCO Honorable Mention AA QB Chandler Whitmer [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Cheshire Acad.WR Golden And Maryland OL Dill Visiting UConn [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

UConn Huskies: 2011 Exit Survey [College Football Zealots]

Other UConn related links

Big East Newbies: Boise State [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

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2012 NCAA Women’s Basketball Rankings – Week 5 (Dec. 13)

AP & ESPN/USA Today Coaches' Polls

The NCAA women’s basketball rankings are out for the week and the UConn Huskies find themselves as the No. 2 in the team behind the Baylor Lady Bears.

Of course those two teams will matchup in Waco, TX on Sunday night at 8:30 p.m. on ESPN so it’s quite possible we could have a new No. 1 team in women’s basketball. Or the Huskies will drop a spot or two in the poll. I’m hoping for the former and not the latter myself.

Baylor and UConn are followed in the top five by Notre Dame, Stanford and Maryland in the AP Poll. In the top five of the ESPN/USA Today Coaches’ Poll, they are followed by Notre Dame, Stanford and Duke.

Joining the Huskies and Fighting Irish in the top 25 from the Big East are the Rutgers Scarlet Knights (11/11), Louisville Cardinals (14/13), Georgetown Hoyas (17/19) and the DePaul Blue Demons (23/21).

There are no Big East teams among the others receiving votes in the AP Poll. West Virginia and Villanova are among the others receiving votes in the coaches’ poll.

For a complete look at the 2012 NCAA Women’s Basketball Rankings for Week 5 (Dec. 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 Baylor (39) 10-0 975 1 1 Baylor (29) 10-0 773 1
2 Connecticut 9-0 930 2 2 Connecticut (2) 9-0 745 2
3 Notre Dame 9-1 896 3 3 Notre Dame 9-1 713 3
4 Stanford 6-1 852 4 4 Stanford 6-1 679 4
5 Maryland 11-0 803 5 5 Maryland 11-0 639 6
6 Tennessee 5-2 773 7 6 Tennessee 5-2 590 8
7 Miami (FL) 8-1 723 9 7 Kentucky 10-0 582 10
8 Kentucky 10-0 717 10 8 Miami (FL) 8-1 560 9
9 Duke 7-2 637 6 9 Duke 7-2 524 5
10 Texas A&M 7-2 575 8 10 Texas A&M 7-2 516 7
11 Rutgers 9-1 560 11 11 Rutgers 9-1 463 11
12 Ohio State 8-0 547 13 12 Georgia 8-1 429 12
13 Georgia 8-1 480 14 13 Louisville 8-2 389 13
14 Louisville 8-2 457 15 14 Ohio State 8-0 348 15
15 Texas Tech 8-0 451 16 15 Green Bay 8-0 321 16
16 Penn State 8-2 364 17 16 North Carolina 7-1 285 17
17 Georgetown 9-2 316 19 17 Penn State 8-2 259 18
18 North Carolina 7-1 313 18 18 Vanderbilt 10-0 255 19
19 Green Bay 8-0 241 21 19 Georgetown 9-2 226 20
20 Vanderbilt 10-0 220 23 20 Texas Tech 8-0 179 22
21 Delaware 8-0 209 22 21 DePaul 8-2 148 21
22 Purdue 7-3 206 12 22 Purdue 7-3 131 14
23 DePaul 8-2 166 20 23 Delaware 8-0 115 25
24 Texas 6-2 130 25 24 Texas 6-2 109 24
25 Nebraska 9-1 54 NR 25 Gonzaga 7-2 28 NR
Dropped from rankings: Dropped from rankings:
Oklahoma 24 Oklahoma 23
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
California 21, Virginia 11, Oklahoma 8, LSU 8, USC 7, Arizona State 4, Arkansas 4, Georgia Tech 3, Northwestern 3, Tulane 3, Brigham Young 2, Gonzaga 2, Michigan 2, Florida State 1, Kansas 1 Nebraska 19, Georgia Tech 16, Kansas 12, Michigan 6, California 5, Oklahoma 4, USC 2, West Virginia 2, Duquesne 2, Villanova 1

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Red Sox Sign Kelly Shoppach; Arrivederci Varitek?

Boston Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek walks back to the dugout at the end of the ninth inning of their MLB American League baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts September 21, 2011.

When former Boston Red Sox and current Baltimore Orioles general manager Dan Duquette stole Jason Varitek and Derek Lowe for Heathcliff Slocumb in 1997 at the trade deadline, it marked the start of the Tek’s time in the Red Sox organization. And on this day in December of 2011, it looks as though his time as a member of the Red Sox is up.

With the Red Sox signing free agent catcher Kelly Shoppach to a one year deal worth $1.35 million on Tuesday, the Red Sox will more than likely will be without their captain for the first time since 2004 when he was named just the third captain of the Red Sox in their history.

Ironically enough, the Red Sox drafted Shoppach in the second round of the 2001 MLB Draft. He made it to the big leagues with the Red Sox in 2005 for nine games before being shipped to Cleveland for Coco Crisp and Andy Marte before the 2006 season.

He spent four seasons with the Indians before playing the last two with the Tampa Bay Rays.

With Shoppach in the fold at catcher for the Red Sox as the backup to Jarrod Saltalamacchia, the presumption is that Ryan Lavarnway will start the season in Pawtucket allowing him some more time to develop his catching skills. We all know he doesn’t need to much work at the plate.

It is a bittersweet moment with Tek’s tenure in Boston likely done.

His skills have definitely eroded behind the plate as he’s gotten older and he’s not the same at the plate either. If there’s one thing good that he can still do, it’s call a game behind the plate. The part-time role the past two seasons has definitely suited him better.

But with the collapse of the team in 2011 and the reports that his leadership wasn’t the same, this Shoppach signing does not surprise me in the least. We all knew this moment was going to come some day.

I guess the big question now is this?

How will Josh Beckett react to not having his binky anymore?

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Photo credit: Reuters Pictures

Whale Get Exposure on HBO

By Bruce Berlet

The Connecticut Whale got their first TV air time Saturday night since 2007 when the team was known as the Hartford Wolf Pack.

CT WhaleWednesday night the Whale could get some exposure on a much larger scale, as part of the first of four episodes in HBO’s “24/7: Road to the NHL Winter Classic” series leading to the fifth Winter Classic on Jan. 2 at 1 p.m. at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, where the Flyers will host the New York Rangers.

While a good crowd of 5,598 at the XL Center and a WCCT-TV audience watched the Whale beat the Providence Bruins 3-0 behind Cam Talbot’s 27 saves Saturday night, millions could see the Whale’s green and white, as HBO asked the AHL team for footage of Sean Avery while he played on Asylum Street for two games in October. That should also give the team and other Whale players more exposure, which is always a good thing and a major reason the team is televising five games on WCCT this season.

Plus, the Rangers have nine players besides Avery who have plied their trade in Hartford – captain Ryan Callahan, Brandon Dubinsky, Artem Anisimov, Dan Girardi, Ryan McDonagh, Michael Sauer, Michael Del Zotto and the newest call-ups, John Mitchell and Carl Hagelin. And All-Star defenseman Marc Staal, who played his first 12 pro games with the Wolf Pack in the 2006 playoffs, is on injured reserve with post-concussion symptoms.

Then there’s the Hartford Whalers influence on the Flyers, in general manager Paul Holmgren and top defenseman Chris Pronger, the second overall pick in 1993. Pronger was on a preview released by HBO last week but is out indefinitely with concussion-like symptoms, which is certain to be part of the cable network’s series. And former Rangers Jaromir Jagr, Blair Betts and Jody Shelley are on the Flyers’ roster.

For those interested in viewing Part I on Wednesday night, tune in HBO at 10 p.m. and see the Rangers, Flyers and perhaps a bit of the Whale.

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

Then on Dec. 31 at 1 p.m., Hockey Hall of Famers Mark Messier, Cheshire native Brian Leetch, Glenn Anderson and Mike Gartner will be among the former Rangers in the Winter Classic alumni game against the Flyers 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 surgery and says he’s good to go after running the New York City Marathon for the first time last month.

Other Rangers scheduled to compete include former Wolf Pack players Dale Purinton, Dan Blackburn and Darius Kasparaitis and former Hartford Whalers Nick Fotiu, Darren Turcotte and Nick Kypreos, along with Adam Graves, John Vanbiesbrouck, Brian Mullen, Ron Duguay and commentator Dave Maloney, whose son Dave Jr. now works for the Whale. Coaches will be Mike Keenan, Colin Campbell and former Whalers general manager Emile Francis. 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.

Fans can vote at www.Blueshirtsunited.com for the starting lineup for the Rangers team in the alumni game. By casting a vote, fans will be entered to win a host of prizes, including Winter Classic jerseys and tickets to the alumni game and Winter Classic.  The Rangers are offering special one-day and three-day NHL 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 the Adirondack Phantoms, 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.

CROSBY SIDELINED AGAIN

Unfortunately, Penguins superstar Sidney Crosby is on the shelf again because of concussion-like symptoms. Crosby missed 61 games, 20 this season, from Jan. 5 to Nov. 21, when he returned with a flourish, getting two goals and two assists in a 5-0 victory over the New York Islanders. But after getting eight assists in seven more games, Crosby is out again, something he likely never guessed would happen so soon. And he’s not even practicing or sure when he will be back.

Crosby emphasized he is feeling much better than he did when he was diagnosed with a concussion nearly a year ago and better than he did a few weeks before training camp began. But after being out for so long, he’s not about to risk returning too soon.

“It’s much different than previously going through that stuff,” Crosby told reporters in Pittsburgh. “I’m way better off than I was dealing with this stuff 10 months ago or whatever it was.”

But Crosby missed this third game Tuesday night and won’t play again until he can engage in a full-contact practice without experiencing any symptoms.

“I’m not (feeling) bad,” Crosby said. “And I’m not happy about watching. But I’ve got to make sure with these sort of things that I’m careful and (I’m) aware of making sure I’m 100 percent before coming back.”

Crosby passed an initial baseline concussion test last week, a day after he absorbed several hits in a 3-1 Penguins loss to Boston. He believes an elbow from the Bruins’ David Krejci in front of the Penguins’ bench might have been the cause of his latest problem, though he doesn’t know for sure. A mid-ice collision with teammate Chris Kunitz in the third period of the same game was jarring but knee-to-knee.

“I know I got hit in the head there (by Krejci), but I felt like I was pretty good after that,” Crosby said. “I didn’t feel like it was anything too major. But if I had to look at one hit, yeah.”

Crosby didn’t feel right the next day, although he skated lightly. He practiced as usual last Wednesday and talked afterward to reporters about playing against the Flyers the following night. But after he developed a headache, he unexpectedly did not accompany the Penguins on a two-game weekend road trip.

While the test result was good news and Crosby has exercised moderately the last few days, he has been bothered by concussion-related symptoms, including headaches.

“You have to listen to your body,” Crosby said. “Passing ImPACT (the baseline test) was encouraging, but it’s not everything. … My ImPACT was much, much worse after I did it in January. This is just something I’ve got to be careful with.”

Crosby’s doctors haven’t given him a diagnosis, but he knows from sitting out for so long that this isn’t the way he’s supposed to feel.

“Either you’re kind of symptomatic or you’re not; I don’t know the medical terms,” he said. “With this kind of stuff there’s so many different things you could call it; it’s not always clear-cut. It’s not like a break or anything. I’m treating it as being symptomatic, as I’ve looked at those symptoms before and (have been) treated for those symptoms before. And it’s the same way I’m going to treat them now.”

Crosby didn’t play Tuesday night against Detroit, is listed as day-to-day and has empathy from his teammates.

“He’s been away for so long and was so happy to be playing with us again,” goalie Marc-Andre Fleury said. “It’s been crazy. We’ve had a full team for only a couple of games.”

Penguins coach Dan Bylsma said the reoccurrence of Crosby’s concussion-related problems is “obviously frustrating.” Crosby went a step further and said frustrating “doesn’t even describe it.”

“I’m not happy to be watching or dealing with this, but I have a pretty good idea (of what he is experiencing) now,” he said. “But I know this is not where I was before and that’s encouraging.”

What’s not encouraging is Flyers star Claude Giroux is out indefinitely with a concussion. Holmgren said the symptoms for Giroux, the NHL’s leading scorer with 39 points when injured in a game against Tampa Bay on Saturday, have gotten worse. He was injured when he took an inadvertent knee to the head from teammate Wayne Simmonds in the last minute of the second period and didn’t return for the third period.

The Flyers said Monday that Giroux had been feeling better, but another exam Tuesday found Giroux has a concussion. Let’s hope Crosby isn’t out for another 10 months and that Giroux returns ASAP. Concussions are serious business for all parties concerned, but it’s frustrating for players and fans when some of the game’s best are turned into spectators.

STAAL SKATES WITH TEAMMATES AGAIN

One day after Crosby announced he is out indefinitely again, Rangers defenseman Marc Staal took another step toward returning from the same setback, as he joined his teammates in a morning skate Tuesday for the first time since training camp before a game against the Dallas Stars. Center Brad Richards faced his former team for the first time Tuesday night since signing a nine-year, $60 million free-agent contract on July 2.

Staal wore an orange non-contact jersey but saw this as the “next step” in his recovery and eventual return to the ice, though there is still no timetable for his return.

“I felt pretty good through the workouts and skating so I decided to jump on the ice,” Staal said, though clearly that decision was made in concert with the team’s medical staff.

Symptoms from a concussion he sustained Feb. 22 when hit by his brother, Eric, in a game against Carolina have kept him out of every game this season.

Asked what Crosby’s regression means for him, Staal said: “Everybody’s different. I have no idea what he’s going through. But for me, I know I have to make sure I’m 100 percent.”

Staal agreed “100 percent” means not only physically healthy, but mentally prepared and not playing with concern that another concussion could be around the corner. Given that Crosby has had a relapse, Staal is 100 percent correct in being as cautious as possible before returning to the Rangers’ lineup.

“Every situation is different,” Staal said. “The biggest thing is you have to know yourself when you’re ready to play. It’s different for everybody. You wait until the workouts get harder, then you see what happens after that. (Crosby’s situation) has obviously shed a lot of light on it. Guys are being more careful with these types of injuries. It’s not fun going through it.”

Tortorella also paid attention to the Crosby news.

“For me, you don’t want to see anybody go through that,” Tortorella said. “So I hope it works out. I’m sure he’s in great care, and we’re trying to do the same thing with our guys.”

Left wing Mike Rupp tossed away his orange non-contact jersey for a regular blue practice jersey for the first time since surgery on his left knee Nov. 9 after being injured Oct. 24 in a 2-1 win at Winnipeg. Left wing Wojtek Wolski (sports hernia) also skated, and he, Rupp and Staal will travel with the team to St. Louis and Phoenix this week.

Rupp has been cleared for contact but said the earliest he could resume playing is Saturday night in Phoenix. The Rangers are in St. Louis on Thursday night.

“I’ve got to find my way through this week to use these practices to really test it,” said Rupp, who had one goal in seven games before being injured. “Not that we don’t skate hard all the time but maybe treat it like a game.”

Unfortunately, former Wolf Pack defenseman Michael Sauer has not been around the team since sustaining a concussion Dec. 5 in a 4-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs. He missed his fourth game Tuesday night and will not make the trip to St. Louis and Phoenix.

On another front, Tampa Bay wing Steve Downie was fined $2,500 for his role in the second-period melee after former Wolf Pack center Artem Anisimov used his stick as a rifle after scoring a shorthanded goal in the Rangers’ 3-2 shootout loss last Thursday.

Downie was not listed as on the ice for Anisimov’s goal but drew a two-minute roughing minor and a 10-minute misconduct. He was sitting on the boards at the Lightning bench, waiting to jump on, when Anisimov scored. The NHL ruled it was a legal line change but still fined him the maximum allowed under the collective bargaining agreement. The fine money goes to the Players’ Emergency Assistance Fund.

WHALE BACK HOME THIS WEEKEND

The Connecticut Whale returns home for another Friday-Saturday night set this weekend against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers and Providence Bruins. It’s part of nine games in the final 12 in 2011 at the XL Center after the Whale started the season with 15 of 22 outings on the road.

The Northeast Division-leading Whale (15-8-1-2) lost two of three games last weekend and has had problems with the pesky Sound Tigers (11-11-3-1), losing three of four meetings, the first two in a shootout and overtime after leading by two goals in each game. Then after a 3-2 victory on defenseman Brendan Bell’s goal with seven seconds left in overtime, the Whale lost 6-2 at Bridgeport on Nov. 25 in what equaled their worst defeat of the season.

So the Whale will have plenty of incentive in Round 5 of the GEICO Connecticut Cup on Friday night, especially after a 3-2 loss at Providence on Sunday, their first defeat in four meetings with the Bruins. The Sound Tigers, who have lost three in a row and are 1-4-1-1 since their last win over the Whale, have been led by left wings Tim Wallace (nine goals, 11 assists), Casey Cizikas (5, 11) and Justin DiBenedetto (9, 5) and centers Jeremy Colliton, the team captain, and David Ullstrom (12, 2). Wallace and Ullstrom are on recall to the parent New York Islanders, while left wing Micheal Haley (1, 2 in 16 games) was reassigned to the Sound Tigers on Monday. The goalies for coach and former Wolf Pack defensemen Brent Thompson are rookie Anders Nilsson (5-5-1, 2.99 goals-against average, .906 save percentage) and Kevin Poulin (6-7-0, 3.37, .892), who was reassigned by the Islanders on Sunday.

The Bruins’ win Sunday was their first in regulation since they beat Worcester 3-2 on Nov. 13. Since then, the Bruins (10-15-1-2) are 2-6-0-2, with the only other victory being 2-1 over Manchester in a shootout on Friday night, when Michael Hutchinson (1-5-0, 2.83, .909) had 26 saves in regulation and overtime and stopped four of five shots in the shootout for his only win of the season. Rookie right wing Carter Camper leads the Bruins in scoring with six goals and 12 assists, followed by centers Josh Hennessy (8, 7) and Zach Hamill (7, 7), right wing Jamie Tardif (7, 5) and rookie defenseman David Warsofsky (1, 11). Rugged left wing Lane MacDermid, son of former Hartford Whalers right wing Paul MacDermid, has two goals, five assists and a team-high 67 penalty minutes, and Anton Khudobin (8-11-2, 3.02, .911, one shutout) has done most of the goaltending for the Bruins and had 29 saves in the win over the Whale on Sunday to end a personal 0-5-2 run. The NHL Bruins recalled Hamill on Tuesday on an emergency basis.

Rookie forward Jonathan Audy-Marchessault (eight goals, 14 assists) shares the Whale scoring lead with wing Mats Zuccarello (8, 14), who missed the two Bruins games last weekend with an injury. The next top scorers still with the team are center Kris Newbury (8, 7), right wing Andre Deveaux (6, 6) and rookie defenseman Tim Erixon (1, 11). Chad Johnson (8-4-2, 2.49, .913, one shutout) and Cam Talbot (7-5-0, 2.89, .894, two shutouts) have shared the goaltending.

The Whale’s only other game before their Christmas break is Dec. 21 at Adirondack, which is three points behind the Whale, who are at Bridgeport the day after Christmas.

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 home 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 Dec. 31 will be entered to win a round-trip excursion via limousine to a Rangers regular-season home game at Madison Square Garden. Current season seat holders and mini-plan-holders are also automatically entered. … Left wing Roman Horak, traded from the Rangers to Calgary with two second-round picks for Erixon and a fifth-round pick on June 1, was recalled Sunday from Abbotsford. Horak had one assist and was plus-2 in two games with the Heat after being assigned after getting two goals and seven assists in 25 games with the Flames. … Former Wolf Pack and Rangers forwards Patrick Rismiller and Tim Kennedy were placed on waivers and re-entry waivers by Colorado and Florida. … Greenville Road Warriors goalie Jason Missiaen, who was in Whale camp after practicing with the team at the end of last season, was named ECHL Goaltender of the Week after going 2-0-0, including his first pro shutout, with a 0.50 GAA and .986 save percentage. Missiaen had 31 saves in a 3-1 victory over Gwinnett on Thursday night and stopped all 38 shots he faced in a 3-0 win over South Carolina on Friday night.

BARBER, CLARKE NAMED AHL ALL-STAR HONORARY CAPTAINS

Hall of Famers and Flyers legends Bill Barber and Bob Clarke were named honorary captains for the 2012 AHL All-Star Classic Jan. 29-30 at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, N.J. The honorary captains stand on the team benches during the skills competition and All-Star Game and are recognized for their careers at the AHL Hall of Fame inductions and awards ceremony.

Barber began his pro career with the AHL’s Richmond Robins in 1972 before playing 12 seasons with the Flyers, winning two Stanley Cups and named an All-Star six times. He retired as the Flyers’ career goal-scoring leader (420) and later coached their AHL affiliates in Hershey and Philadelphia, leading the Phantoms to a Calder Cup title in 1998. Barber, who also won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL’s Coach of the Year in 2000-01, was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1990 and is now a scouting consultant for the Flyers.

Clarke played his entire 15-year pro career with the Flyers, racking up 1,210 points and three NHL MVP awards while captaining the Broad Street Bullies to two Stanley Cup titles. The talented playmaker and eight-time All-Star then spent 19 seasons as the Flyers’ general manager between 1984 and 2007 and was GM of the Phantoms’ Calder Cup championship teams in 1998 and 2005. He was a 1987 inductee into the Hockey Hall of Fame and is currently the Flyers’ senior vice president.

Tickets for the All-Star Classic, who include admission to the skills competition at 3 p.m. on Jan. 29 and the All-Star Game at 7 p.m. on Jan. 30, are on sale at the Boardwalk Hall box office, all Ticketmaster locations, by calling 800-736-1420 or at www.ticketmaster.com. Tickets are also available for the post-skills party Jan. 29 at 5:30 p.m. and the AHL Hall of Fame induction and awards ceremony Jan. 30 at 11 a.m. at Caesars Atlantic City.

For destination information about Atlantic City, visit www.atlanticcitynj.com.

WHALE-FALCONS FANS SERIES TICKETS AVAILABLE

Tickets for the next two games in the seven-game series between the Whale and Springfield Falcons 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 inaugural 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.

And mark Jan. 22, 2012 on your calendar as that’s when the Whale’s annual Tip-A-Player Dinner and Sports Carnival, presented by Aetna, will be held from 4-7 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 for the dinner, visit the table outside Section 101 at Whale games.

WORTH NOTING AND QUOTING

Former Whalers star right wing and captain Kevin Dineen earned plaudits from the New York media for his typical frankness and honesty after his Florida Panthers were waxed 6-1 by the Rangers on Sunday night: “Any time you get a tail kicking like that, you always say things like, ‘the will to compete,’ that’s what you always hear from coaches. Certainly their want was higher than ours. When we play well, we certainly travel as a unit. We seemed really spread out. We were very individualistic tonight versus playing as a group.” Always have – always will – enjoy listening to a straight shooter such as Dineen. Ditto for Ken Gernander, who also always showed/shows his will, emotion and desire on his sleeve as a player and now as Whale coach.

Red Sox Re-Sign Albers; Non-Tender Rich Hill

The Boston Red Sox have avoided salary arbitration with Matt Albers as they’ve signed him to a one-year deal. They have also non-tendered Rich Hill. And as expected the Red Sox tendered contracts to Alfredo Aceves, Daniel Bard, Franklin Morales, Mike Aviles, Jacoby Ellsbury, Jed Lowrie and Jarrod Saltalamacchia.

Boston Red SoxI fully expect that Hill will be given a minor league deal by the Red Sox in the not so distant future.

Here’s the release from the Red Sox with the details:

BOSTON — The Boston Red Sox today signed right-handed pitcher Matt Albers to a one-year contract for the 2012 season, thus avoiding salary arbitration.  Terms were not disclosed.

The club also announced that it will not tender a 2012 contract to left-handed pitcher Rich Hill.  As a result, Hill will become a free agent.  The Red Sox tendered 2012 contracts to the other 23 unsigned players on their Major League roster.  Boston’s 40-man roster is now at 38.

The announcements were made by executive vice president/general manager Ben Cherington.

The 28-year-old Albers appeared in 56 games last season, all in relief, posting a 4-4 record with a 4.73 ERA (34 ER/64 2/3 IP) and 68 strikeouts in his first year with Boston.  He averaged a career-high 9.46 strikeouts per nine innings, the 15th-highest mark among qualifying American League relievers.  Albers has appeared in 237 Major League games (23 starts) over parts of six seasons with the Astros (2006-07), Orioles (2008-10) and Red Sox (2011) and is 19-29 with a 5.04 ERA (214 ER/382 IP) and 274 strikeouts in his big league career.

Hill, 31, threw eight scoreless innings over nine appearances out of the bullpen for Boston in 2011 before undergoing season-ending Tommy John surgery on June 9.  The native of Milton, Mass. also pitched with Triple-A Pawtucket last season, going 1-0 with one save, a 1.13 ERA (2 ER/16 IP) and 18 strikeouts.  In 93 career Major League appearances (70 starts) between the Cubs (2005-08), Orioles (2009) and Red Sox (2010-11), Hill owns a 22-20 record with a 4.73 ERA (214 ER/407 1/3 IP) and 370 strikeouts.

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/13

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

UConn, San Diego State Could Meet On The Court Soon [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn-SDSU series in the planning stages [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

UConn, San Diego State agree to home-and-home [Kevin Duffy – The Day]

Alumni Profile: Rip Hamilton [UConn Huskies Basketball]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Some early thoughts about Baylor/UConn [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Other UConn related links

M. Swimming. Shumkov Competes At European Championships [UConnHuskies.com]

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2012 NCAA Men’s Basketball Rankings – Week 6 (Dec. 12)

AP & ESPN/USA Today Coaches' Polls

The NCAA men’s basketball rankings are out and for some reason, the UConn Huskies have fallen in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches’ Poll after beating a ranked Harvard team last week.

They held steady at No. 9 in the AP Poll while dropping to No. 10 in the coaches’ poll.

After some upsets over the weekend, the Syracuse Orange have ascended to the top of both polls. They are followed by Ohio State, Kentucky, Louisville and North Carolina in the AP Poll. In the coaches’ poll, they are followed by Ohio State, Kentucky, Louisville and Duke.

Joining the Orange, Cardinals and Huskies in the top 25 from the Big East are the Marquette Golden Eagles (11/11), Pittsburgh Panthers (15/14) and Georgetown Hoyas (16/17).

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

For a complete look at the 2012 NCAA Men’s Basketball Rankings for Week 6 (Dec. 5), 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 Syracuse (51) 10-0 1,607 3 1 Syracuse (28) 10-0 746 3
2 Ohio State (7) 8-1 1,478 2 2 Ohio State (2) 8-1 671 2
3 Kentucky (4) 8-1 1,468 1 3 Kentucky 8-1 665 1
4 Louisville (2) 9-0 1,374 5 4 Louisville 9-0 658 4
5 North Carolina (1) 8-2 1,373 4 5 Duke 9-1 618 5
6 Baylor 7-0 1,284 6 6 North Carolina 8-2 608 6
7 Duke 9-1 1,273 7 7 Baylor 7-0 539 7
8 Xavier 8-0 1,122 8 8 Missouri 9-0 512 10
9 Connecticut 8-1 1,087 9 9 Xavier 8-0 503 8
10 Missouri 9-0 1,030 10 10 Connecticut 8-1 485 9
11 Marquette 9-0 988 11 11 Marquette 9-0 466 11
12 Kansas 7-2 945 13 12 Kansas 7-2 441 13
13 Florida 7-2 891 12 13 Florida 7-2 418 12
14 Wisconsin 8-2 728 14 14 Pittsburgh 9-1 356 14
15 Pittsburgh 9-1 696 15 15 Wisconsin 8-2 317 16
16 Georgetown 8-1 602 18 16 Mississippi State 9-1 251 18
17 Mississippi State 9-1 574 17 17 Georgetown 8-1 246 21
18 Indiana 9-0 462 NR 18 Michigan 7-2 185 19
19 Illinois 10-0 375 24 19 Illinois 10-0 182 22
20 Michigan 7-2 354 20 20 Indiana 9-0 171 NR
21 Michigan State 8-2 310 NR 21 Alabama 8-2 143 15
22 Texas A&M 8-1 270 22 22 Texas A&M 8-1 108 25
23 Alabama 8-2 204 16 23 Michigan State 8-2 107 NR
24 Murray State 10-0 93 NR 24 Creighton 7-1 54 17
25 Creighton 7-1 88 19 25 Vanderbilt 6-3 51 NR
25 Vanderbilt 6-3 88 NR
Dropped from rankings: Dropped from rankings:
Memphis 21, Gonzaga 23, Harvard 25 Memphis 20, Gonzaga 22, Harvard 24
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
Harvard 73, San Diego State 59, Virginia 57, UNLV 41, Stanford 39, Saint Louis 26, Gonzaga 25, Memphis 13, Northern Iowa 7, Cleveland State 7, Arizona 5, California 3, Long Beach State 3, Northwestern 2, Wichita State 1 Harvard 43, Murray State 42, California 29, Memphis 27, San Diego State 26, Purdue 14, Gonzaga 13, Virginia 12, UNLV 9, Saint Louis 9, Saint Mary’s 5, Stanford 5, Saint Joseph’s 5, Oklahoma 4, Northern Iowa 3, Northwestern 3

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KML Wins Fourth Straight Big East Freshman of the Week Honors

If this continues weekly, there’s really no sense in posting this anymore. I kid I kid.

Here’s the release from UConn about UConn Huskies women’s basketball freshman Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis winning the Big East freshman of the week honors for the fourth straight week.

STORRS, Conn. – Freshman forward Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis has been honored as the BIG EAST Freshman of the Week as announced by the league on Monday. Mosqueda-Lewis, the 2011-12 Preseason BIG EAST Freshman of the Year, has earned the honor in each of the season’s first four weeks.

UConn freshman Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis dives for the ball Tuesday against Texas A&M at the XL Center in Hartford. Mosqueda-Lewis averaged 14.5 points, 3.5 rebounds per game en route to leading the No. 2 Huskies to a spotless 2-0 week, which included an 81-51 victory over No. 8 Texas A&M on Tuesday. Mosqueda-Lewis scored 14 points on 6-of-15 shooting against the Aggies while dishing-out two assists and blocking a pair of shots.

She followed that performance up with a 15-point, five-rebound effort in Connecticut’s 70-37 victory at Seton Hall on Friday night.

The Anaheim Hills, Calif. native is leading the Huskies at 15.9 points per game and is second on the squad with .406 3-point field goal percentage. She has scored in double-figures seven times this season, including the last four games, and is the Huskies’ fourth-leading rebounder.

Connecticut will break for Final Exams this week and will be back in action on Sunday, December 18 when the teams travels to Waco, Texas to take on No. 1 Baylor. Game time is set for 8:30 p.m. and the contest will be televised nationally on ESPN.

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Photo credit: Richard Messina – Hartford Courant

UConn Football Holds 2011 Awards Ceremony

Here’s the release from UConn about the 2011 UConn Huskies football team’s awards ceremony banquet that was held on Sunday.

STORRS, Conn. – The University of Connecticut football team held its annual awards ceremony Sunday evening when the team had a dinner at The Burton Family Football Complex, honoring 10 student-athletes for their accomplishments this season.

UConn Huskies footballSenior defensive tackle Kendall Reyes (Nashua, N.H.) was named the Team Most Valuable Player and the Defensive Player of the Year. Reyes was a First Team All-BIG EAST Conference pick for the second time in a row this season. He started 42 games during his UConn career and was third on the UConn team with 13.5 tackles for loss while making 46 total tackles in 2011. For his career, he had 31.5 tackles for a loss – tenth in school history.

Freshman tailback Lyle McCombs (Staten Island, N.Y.) was named the Offensive Player of the Year. McCombs rushed for 1,115 yards this season – the ninth-highest in school single-season history and the second among freshmen at UConn. He was a Second Team All-BIG EAST Conference selection.

Senior kicker Dave Teggart (Northborough, Mass.) was the Special Teams Player of the Year. He was also a First Team All-BIG EAST pick. Teggart was a four-year standout and holds the UConn career records for field goals (74), extra points (128) and points (349). Teggart kicked a field goal in 22 of his final 25 collegiate games and had multiple field goals in eight games this year and had 11 career games with three or more field goals.

Redshirt senior wide receiver Kashif Moore (Burlington, N.J.) was honored with the Jasper T. Howard – Play-Every-Play Award, which is presented to a strong team player who best exemplifies a “battle-to-the-end” spirit during every game through every play. Moore wore Howard’s No. 6 this season in honor of the Husky player who was murdered in the fall of 2009. Moore was a four-year starter for the Huskies and was second on the team in receiving in 2011 and first in TD receptions with five.

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The Brian Kozlowski Award was given to redshirt senior defensive tackle Twyon Martin (Parkland, Fla.) This award is designated for a courageous, hard working and productive person. The award is named for the former Husky tight end, later a 13-year NFL veteran, who through relentless hard work, effort and dedication was able to have a lengthy NFL career. Martin was a four-year starter for the Huskies and had a total of 43 career starts and 26.5 career tackles for a loss.

Junior defensive end Trevardo Williams (Bridgeport, Conn.) was given the Kendall Madison Award which is presented to a strong team player whose dedication, hard work, positive attitude and outstanding citizenship best exemplifies the proud spirit of the UConn Huskies. The award is named for the former Husky who was tragically killed in the mid 1990s while being a good Samaritan in his attempt to break up an altercation. Williams was a Second Team All-BIG EAST Conference pick and led UConn with 13.5 sacks – a UConn single-season record. Williams came on strong at the end of the season as he made nine of his sacks in the final five games of the year.

The Football Alumni Award, which is given to a player who has demonstrated leadership and dedication and is the ultimate team player, was presented to redshirt junior linebacker Jory Johnson (Mobile, Ala.). Johnson led UConn in tackles this season with 97 and also had seven tackles for a loss and two interceptions.

The John L. Toner Scholar-Athlete Award was given to redshirt senior safety Harris Agbor (Mesquite, Texas). This award was designed to honor a senior member of the football program who has demonstrated outstanding academic performance and citizenship while making a significant contribution to the overall success of the team. Selected by the Football CPIA Staff, the award is named after the former UConn athletic director and football coach and NCAA President. Agbor, a finance and political science major, has a 3.452 GPA. He started in 13 games over his UConn career.

The 2011 Joseph M. Giannelli Unsung Hero Award went to redshirt junior quarterback Johnny McEntee (Fullerton, Calif.). McEntee, a walk-on, started all 12 games for UConn this year after having virtually no collegiate playing experience. McEntee was 172 of 335 in the air in 2011 for 2,110 yards with 12 TDs and eight interceptions.

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