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2012 NCAA Men’s Basketball Rankings – Week 3 (Nov. 21)

AP & USA Today Coaches Polls

The NCAA college basketball polls are out for the second time since the preseason and the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team still finds themselves as the No. 4 team in the country in both polls.

The top five remains the same from last week in both polls as the North Carolina Tar Heels are still No. 1. The Tar Heels are followed by the Kentucky Wildcats, Ohio State Buckeyes, UConn and Syracuse Orange.

Joining the Huskies and Orange from the Big East in the top 25 are the Louisville Cardinals (7/7), Marquette Golden Eagles (16/17) and Pittsburgh Panthers (17/16).

The Cincinnati Bearcats, Villanova Wildcats and Notre Dame Fighting Irish are among the others receiving votes in both polls. The Georgetown Hoyas and West Virginia Mountaineers are among the others receiving votes in the AP Poll.

For a complete look at the 2012 NCAA Men’s Basketball Rankings for Week 3 (Nov. 21), 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 North Carolina (62) 3-0 1,621 1 1 North Carolina (30) 3-0 774 1
2 Kentucky 4-0 1,528 2 2 Kentucky (1) 4-0 732 2
3 Ohio State (1) 3-0 1,493 3 3 Ohio State 3-0 708 3
4 Connecticut (2) 4-0 1,426 4 4 Connecticut 4-0 668 4
5 Syracuse 4-0 1,353 5 5 Syracuse 4-0 652 5
6 Duke 4-0 1,305 6 6 Duke 4-0 640 6
7 Louisville 3-0 1,186 8 7 Louisville 3-0 555 7
8 Memphis 1-0 1,123 10 8 Memphis 1-0 497 10
9 Baylor 3-0 1,079 11 9 Florida 2-1 480 8
10 Florida 2-1 998 7 10 Baylor 3-0 443 12
11 Wisconsin 3-0 916 14 11 Wisconsin 3-0 438 13
12 Xavier 3-0 912 13 12 Xavier 3-0 394 14
13 Alabama 5-0 820 16 13 Alabama 5-0 379 15
14 Kansas 1-1 717 12 14 Kansas 1-1 327 11
15 Michigan 3-0 587 17 15 Michigan 3-0 288 17
16 Marquette 4-0 558 21 16 Pittsburgh 2-1 252 9
17 Pittsburgh 2-1 524 9 17 Marquette 4-0 241 19
18 Vanderbilt 3-1 468 18 18 California 3-0 216 22
19 Gonzaga 3-0 454 22 19 Gonzaga 3-0 208 23
20 California 3-0 420 23 20 Florida State 4-0 189 24
21 Missouri 3-0 327 24 21 Missouri 3-0 181 25
22 Florida State 4-0 323 25 22 Vanderbilt 3-1 179 20
23 Arizona 4-1 273 15 23 Arizona 4-1 134 16
24 Mississippi State 4-1 215 NR 24 Texas A&M 3-1 65 18
25 Texas A&M 3-1 108 19 25 Creighton 4-0 62 NR
Dropped out of rankings: Dropped out of rankings:
No. 20 Cincinnati No. 20 Cincinnati
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
Cleveland State 94, Michigan State 58, Creighton 48, Cincinnati 30, Washington 27, UNLV 23, Villanova 18, Temple 14, San Diego State 12, Saint Mary’s 9, Oregon State 7, Kent State 7, Belmont 6, Saint Louis 6, Purdue 4, New Mexico State 4, Notre Dame 4, Long Beach State 4, Texas 4, Harvard 3, Illinois 2, Georgetown 2, Middle Tennessee 2, Minnesota 1, Marshall 1, West Virginia 1 Mississippi State 58, Purdue 48, Villanova 48, Texas 31, UNLV 23, Cincinnati 23, Northwestern 22, Temple 20, Cleveland State 20, Saint Louis 12, Michigan State 12, George Mason 10, Illinois 8, Long Beach State 8, San Diego State 8, Saint Mary’s 6, Oklahoma State 6, Washington 3, Virginia 2, Indiana 2, Marshall 1, Harvard 1, Notre Dame 1

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Whale Players Sport Facial Hair for “Movember”

By Bruce Berlet

Brendan Bell’s wife might not be enamored with his latest bit of facial hair, but he’s the early leader for best moustache on the Connecticut Whale during the always worthwhile Movember cause.

CT WhaleDuring Movember – the month formerly known as November – people worldwide sprout moustaches to raise money and awareness for men’s health issues, particularly prostate cancer and other cancers that affect men. It started in Australia in 2003 and then spread to South Africa and Europe, reaching American shores five years ago. In 2010 alone, more than 64,500 Mo brothers and sisters got on board in the United States, raising $7.5 million.

Bell, the veteran defenseman in his first season with the Whale after he signed a free-agent deal with the New York Rangers on Aug. 8, is participating in the fundraiser for the third straight year. While wife Monika doesn’t like the scraggly nature of her husband’s face, his Fu Manchu is drawing raves from all sides, and that was even before he scored his first two goals with the Whale. The first was a breakaway off a brilliant lead pass from Mats Zuccarello with 6.9 seconds left in overtime that beat the Bridgeport Sound Tigers 3-2 on Friday night, and the second started the Whale back from a two-goal, third-period deficit to a 3-2 shootout victory over Providence on Sunday.

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

“Must not be any Italian guys on the team,” a smiling Bell said of the Fu Manchu look. “If you can’t laugh at yourself, I don’t know what you can do. But I know I’ve been doing it for at least three years because my wife hates it. She actually left for five or six days to visit her parents in Tampa, Fla., and then went home to Ottawa, partially because we were on the road (in St. John’s, Newfoundland) and then had a busy schedule at home but partially just because she doesn’t want to be a part of the moustache. She laughs at everything, but there’s no extra kisses going around at my place.”

Bell said he has participated in the program to raise awareness and be part of “a fun thing for the team.”

“It’s something to joke around about, but it does raise awareness for a pretty serious issue,” Bell said. “I began having my prostate looked at at 20 because I had a prostate and urinary issue that I didn’t want to have to look after later on in life. And my grandfather died young of some intestinal issue that they never really sorted out. It’s just something that I’m kind of aware of because I want to be aware of it. It’s an important issue that we just kind of brush under the rug because it’s something that you don’t really want to think about.”

Whale veteran center Kris Newbury is also in his third go-round with a moustache, though he also isn’t earning kudos at home.

“It’s a great charity, absolutely, but I don’t look good with it,” Newbury said with a smile. “It raises awareness, so I sacrifice for a month to look a little bit silly for a good cause.”

And what do Newbury’s three kids about it?

“They don’t like it,” he said, smiling again. “They don’t like kissing dad anymore.”

Most of the Whale players are participating for the cause. Once registered at www.movember.com, participants start Movember clean shaven. For the rest of the month, the men known as Mo Bros, groom, trim and wax their way into fine moustachery. Women who support the Mo Bros are Mo Sistas, and they raise funds by seeking sponsorship for their Mo-growing efforts.

Mo Bros are virtually walking, talking billboards for the 30 days of November, and through their actions and words, they raise awareness by prompting private and public conversation around the often ignored issue of men’s health. At the end of the month, Mo Bros and Mo Sistas celebrate their efforts by throwing their own Movember party or attending one of the infamous Gala Partés held around the world by Movember, for Movember.

The funds raised in the United States support treatment and prevention of cancers that affect men and are directed to programs run directly by Movember and its men’s health partners, the Prostate Cancer Foundation and LIVESTRONG, the Lance Armstrong Foundation. Together, the three channels work together to ensure that Movember funds are supporting a broad range of innovative, world-class programs in line with strategic goals in the areas of awareness and education, survivorship and research.

Since its humble beginnings in Melbourne Australia, Movember has grown to become a global movement, inspiring more than 1.1 million Mo Bros and Mo Sistas to participate with formal campaigns in Australia, New Zealand, the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Finland, Spain, South Africa, Ireland and the Netherlands. In addition, Movember is aware of Mo Bros and Mo Sistas supporting the campaign and men’s health cause across the globe.

No matter the country or city, Movember will continue to work to change established habits and attitudes men have about their health, to educate men about the health risks they face and to act on that knowledge, thereby increasing the chances of early detection, diagnosis and effective treatment.

Those interested in participating can donate to an individual, a team or to the Movember cause itself. Funds raised benefit the Prostate Cancer Foundation, LIVESTRONG and the Movember Foundation. If you want to register, donate or get involved, Google Movember or call 310-450-3399. If you’ve got a few spare bucks in these difficult economic times, make a donation. It could help you or someone you love.

WHALE’S ANNUAL BOWL-A-THON IS SUNDAY

After hosting the Portland Pirates on Wednesday night and visiting Bridgeport and Springfield on Friday and Saturday nights, the Whale’s charity work will continue Sunday when they hold their annual Bowl-a-Thon to benefit Special Olympics Connecticut at the AMF Silver Lanes, 241 Silver Lane in East Hartford.

There will be shifts from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 2 to 3:30 p.m., with a team of four paired with one Whale player for a minimum donation of $200 for two games. There also will be chances to win prizes, including hockey memorabilia, restaurant gift cards, apparel and more.

To register, call 877-660-6667, visit www.soctbowlathon.com or enter at the door.

P-BRUINS RELEASE SOUTH WINDSOR NATIVE CLARK

The Providence Bruins released South Windsor native Chris Clark from his professional tryout agreement on Monday. Clark, a right wing, was scoreless in six games after signing a PTO on Nov. 3 after he participated in the Stanley Cup champion Boston Bruins’ training camp on a tryout basis.

The 35-year-old Clark has played 607 NHL games with the Calgary Flames, Washington Capitals, where he was the captain, and Columbus Blue Jackets. He had five goals and 10 assists in 53 games with the Blue Jackets last season but wasn’t offered a new contract.

Clark helped the Saint John Flames win the Calder Cup in 2001 and the Calgary Flames reach the Stanley Cup finals in 2004. … Abbotsford Heat goalie Leland Irving was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Week after going 3-1-0 with a 1.47 goals-against average, 948 save percentage and two shutouts as the Heat claimed the Western Conference’s best record (13-5-1-0).

Irving made 34 saves on Tuesday night in a 4-0 victory San Antonio to begin the week and then lost 4-1 at Oklahoma City on Friday night. But Irving bounced back with 21 saves in a 4-2 victory in a rematch with the Barons on Saturday night and then stopped 34 shots in regulation and overtime and was 5-for-5 in a shootout in a 1-0 victory at Houston on Sunday night.

Irving, 23, who has started 18 of Abbotsford’s 19 games, backstopped every minute of the Heat’s seven-game road trip, in which they were 6-1-0-0 to take over first place in the West Division. He is in his fourth pro season after being selected by the Calgary Flames in the first round (26th overall) in 2006. At 13-5-0, the native of Swan Hills, Alberta, leads the AHL in wins, minutes played (1,022) and shutouts (3), while ranking fourth with a 1.94 GAA and 10th in save percentage at .927. Irving led the league in minutes (3,436) and shutouts (eight) last season and has a career record of 81-64-6 with 13 shutouts in 161 AHL appearances. … The Buffalo Sabres recalled up defenseman T.J. Brennan from the Rochester Americans after Tyler Myers had surgery to repair a broken wrist sustained in the second period of a 4-2 loss to the Phoenix Coyotes on Saturday night. Myers, 22, who won the Calder Trophy two seasons ago, will be out for at least a month after appearing to find his game with two goals against the New Jersey Devils on Wednesday after a slow start. He has two goals and four assists and is minus-4 in 19 games. … Construction of the rink for the 2012 Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia that will feature the Rangers and Flyers on Jan. 2 began Monday morning. Approximately 61,000 square feet of decking will be installed by a crew from Toronto-based BaAM Productions, headed by project manager Chris Dowling. “This product is designed for military purposes,” Dowling told NHL.com. “It locks together with a cam fitting so it’s locked in horizontally and vertically, in both planes. So when the equipment drives over it, it has a rating of about 150,000 pounds per square foot. So it’s used for much heavier-duty purposes than what we’re using it for – for tanks, for cranes, for the whole deal. We use it for fork lifts, Zambonis, other equipment. It’s also used for pedestrian access. It’s easier to walk on than it is to walk on the field.” When completed, the decking will ring the ballpark’s warning track, come out under the temporary seating and broadcast positions that will be erected in center field and be the path the players walk from the dugouts to the rink. The only area that won’t be covered is where the actual rink will go. Dowling said at the request of the Phillies, a heavier-duty decking material will be installed to accommodate the Zamboni. That means there will be about 10,000 square feet of the heavier-duty decking, combined with about 51,000 square feet of the other type of decking. The Flyers also unveiled their jerseys for the event. They are available at shop.nhl.com, as well as the Wells Fargo Center. They will also be available on Tuesday at the NHL Powered by Reebok Store in New York City.

WHALE FANS LOOK TO EVEN SERIES

Whale fans will look to get even in their seven-game series with Springfield Falcons fans in Game 2 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield on Dec. 3. Falcons fans notched a 10-6 victory on Oct. 23 at the XL Center in the inaugural game of the historic 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.

For tickets to Game 2 at 4:30 p.m., email Damon Markiewicz at dmarkiewicz@falconsahl.com. For tickets to Game 3 at the XL Center on Dec. 4 at noon, contact Dussault at whalefalconsfangame@gmail.com. Information on all the games and the series is available at www.facebook.com/WhaleFalconsFanGame.

Tickets must be purchased at least 10 days before a game. A portion of ticket sales benefits Defending the Blue Line, an organization that helps children of military families play hockey. Game 1 raised $200, and ticket sales for Games 2 and 3 have already added $175. Other games are Jan. 7 in Hartford at 4 p.m., Jan. 8 in Springfield at 12:30 p.m., Feb. 10 in Springfield at 5 p.m. and March 17 in Hartford at 4 p.m. Tickets for those games will be available in the near future.

And mark Jan. 22, 2012 on your calendar. That’s when the Whale’s annual Tip-A-Player Dinner will be held from 4-7 p.m. at the XL Center. More information will be coming soon.

‘WHITE OUT FOR MANDI’ AT YALE ON DEC. 2

The Yale women’s ice hockey team is dedicating its game against Princeton at Ingalls Rink in New Haven on Dec. 2 to Mandi Schwartz, utilizing it as a fundraiser for the Mandi Schwartz Foundation. Senior forward and captain Alecz Hughes started the charity in memory of Schwartz, the Yale center who died in April after battling cancer for more than two years.

The goal is to pack Ingalls Rink, with everyone wearing white as a “White Out for Mandi” show of support. No admission will be charged, and donations for the foundation will be accepted at the door. The team is also lining up pledges from donors based on the attendance total, so every person who attends will count towards the final donation total. Special white t-shirts will be sold, and youth hockey teams are encouraged to come wearing white jerseys. The Bulldogs will honor Mandi in a special pregame ceremony.

The event also will help raise awareness of the need for marrow donors and umbilical cord blood donors. In an effort to save her life last year, Mandi had a stem cell transplant utilizing blood from two anonymous umbilical cord blood donations. Stem cells for patients with life-threatening illnesses like Mandi’s can also come from marrow donors. Yale hosts an annual Mandi Schwartz Marrow Donor Registration Drive every spring to help add potential donors to the Be The Match Registry. At least six matches for patients in need of transplants have been identified through the efforts. One of the matches was a Yale field hockey player Lexy Adams.

The Bulldogs hope to set an attendance record for a women’s game at Ingalls Rink. The current record is 1,539, set on Nov. 1, 2005, when Team USA played an exhibition game against the ECAC Hockey All-Stars. Last year’s “White Out for Mandi” drew 1,066, the most for a Yale women’s hockey game. The Ingalls Rink capacity is 3,500. … Former Rangers and Yale center Chris Higgins deflected in Dan Hamhuis’ shot 2:18 into overtime to give the Vancouver Canucks a 2-1 victory over the visiting Ottawa Senators on Sunday night. It made a winner of goalie Cory Schneider, who made 28 saves as he continues to be the Canucks’ No. 1 goalie after Roberto Luongo was sidelined by an undisclosed upper-body injury. It also was the 246th win for coach Alain Vigneault in Vancouver, tying him with Marc Crawford for the most in franchise history – in 99 fewer games. Higgins’ deflection made a loser of former Rangers backup goalie Alex Auld, a late replacement against his former team when Senators starter Craig Anderson’s neck stiffened up after the morning skate. He had entered the game winless in three starts with a 4.23 goals-against average and .823 save percentage.

BRACELETS TO BENEFIT LOKMOTIV FAMILIES

Whale wives and girlfriends will be selling bracelets to benefit the families of those lost in the tragic plane crash on Sept. 7 involving the Yaroslavl Lokomotiv team in the Kontinental Hockey League in Russia. “Love for Lokomotiv” bracelets will be available for purchase at Whale home games on Dec. 9 against Hershey and Dec. 10 against Providence.

In a united effort to show support for the grieving families for those lost in the Lokomotiv tragedy, hockey wives and girlfriends around the world are raising money for their dear friends. Show your support on Dec. 9 and 10 with the comfortable red silicone bracelet, with 100 percent of the proceeds going to the foundation set up in honor of the lost team.

You can learn more about “Love for Lokomotiv” and find out how you can help at www.loveforlokomotiv.com.

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2012 Red Sox Spring Training Schedule Released

Here’s the release from the Boston Red Sox announcing their 2012 Spring Training Schedule:

BOSTON, MA—The Boston Red Sox today released the 2012 Spring Training schedule, which includes 18 games at the team’s new Spring Training facility, JetBlue Park at Fenway South.  The 33-game exhibition season includes one game against the Washington Nationals in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday, April 3.  Tickets for all 2012 Spring Training games at JetBlue Park are scheduled to go on sale on Saturday, December 17.

Boston Red SoxTicket prices at JetBlue Park will range from $5 to $46 for the 2012 season with more than 75 percent of tickets available priced at $27 or less.  Like City of Palms Park, the Red Sox previous Spring Training home, the majority of seats in the park will be in the shade.

2012 Spring Training tickets will go on sale at 10:00 a.m. on December 17, and fans can purchase tickets at City of Palms Park in Fort Myers, FL, online at redsox.com, and by phone at 888-REDSOX6.  Fans who require ADA accessible seating may also call 877-REDSOX9.  Hearing impaired fans may call the Red Sox TTY line at (617) 226-6644.

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

Boston will open the Spring Training season with two college exhibitions on Saturday, March 3, a 2:35 p.m. matinee against the Northeastern University Huskies followed by a nightcap with the Boston College Eagles at 7:05 p.m.

The Red Sox will kick off the 2012 Grapefruit League schedule at home on Sunday, March 4 at 1:35 p.m. against their Mayor’s Cup rival Minnesota Twins.  The Twins host Boston at Hammond Stadium the following night, the second of six total contests between the cross-town foes.

Boston will visit the AL East rival New York Yankees on Tuesday, March 13 at 7:05 p.m. in Tampa and will host the club on Thursday, March 22 at 7:05 p.m.  The contests are two of nine scheduled night games for the Red Sox this spring, including six at home.

On March 17, the Baltimore Orioles will visit JetBlue Park as part of a split-squad St. Patrick’s Day match-up, starting at 1:35 p.m. The team will also play a 1:05 p.m. game against the Orioles in Sarasota.  Other division matchups include three additional contests against Baltimore, four versus the Tampa Bay Rays and four with Toronto.

The team will also hold the City of Palms Park Yard Sale on December 17, giving fans an opportunity to purchase a selection of items from the Red Sox’ 20-year history at the ballpark, including memorabilia from former and current players, ballpark furniture, collectables and more.  Fans may enter through the Broadway Gate beginning at 8:00 a.m.  All sales are cash only.  A portion of the Yard Sale proceeds will be donated to three local charitable organizations:  Police Athletic League of Fort Myers; Abuse Counseling and Treatment, Inc.; and Child Care of Southwest Florida, Inc.  All Yard Sale items are subject to availability and will be sold on a first come, first served basis.

The annual Spring Training equipment truck departure will take place on Saturday, February 11 from Fenway Park.

Prior to the start of the exhibition season, Red Sox will hold workouts at the organization’s new Player Development Complex at Fenway South. Pitchers and catchers are scheduled to report on Sunday, February 19, and will hold the first workout on Tuesday, February 21 with the first full squad workout on Saturday, February 25. All workouts are open to the public free of charge.

JetBlue Park sits within Fenway South, the Red Sox new Spring Training and Player Development Complex, which will provide a single, state-of-the-art, year-round site where both Major and Minor League teams can train together.  The ballpark includes improved features and amenities such as new food options, an HD video board as well as interactive family areas. The Yawkey Way experience at Fenway Park will be recreated on the road positioned immediately south of JetBlue Park during Spring Training and will add to the ballpark’s concourse with a street festival feel including entertainment, concessions and other activities.

2012 Boston Red Sox Spring Training Schedule

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2011 AL MVP Award

Justin Verlander

It’s been a long time since a starting pitcher had won the American League MVP Award, 1986 to be exact. But that changed on Monday when the Baseball Writer’s Association of America (BBWAA) released their 2011 AL MVP voting totals.

After winning the 2011 AL Cy Young Award last Tuesday, Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Justin Verlander has pulled off the rare double-double of winning the AL Cy Young and now the AL MVP. The last pitcher to win both awards was Tigers reliever Willie Hernandez in 1984.

Verlander went 24-5 with a 2.40 ERA in 34 starts. He struck out 250 in 251 innings and had four complete games including two shutouts. Verlander made two starts against the Boston Red Sox and was 1-0 with a 1.72 ERA (3 ER/15.2 IP).

Red Sox centerfielder Jacoby Ellsbury finished second in the balloting and was followed by Jose Bautista of the Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees outfielder Curtis Granderson and Tigers teammate Miguel Cabrera.

Red Sox first baseman Adrian Gonzalez finished seventh in the balloting while Dustin Pedroia finished ninth.

Next up in the BBWAA awards will be the final award of the season which will be the NL MVP tomorrow afternoon at 2 p.m.

The 2011 AL & NL Rookie of the Year Awards were presented last  Monday, the 2011 AL Cy Young Award last Tuesday, the 2011 AL & NL Manager of the Year Awards last Wednesday and the 2011 NL Cy Young Award last Thursday.

For a full look at the 2011 AL MVP Award voting totals, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

2011 American League Most Valuable Player voting totals
Player Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th Points
Justin Verlander Tigers 13 3 3 4 1 2 1 280
Jacoby Ellsbury Red Sox 4 13 4 1 4 1 1 242
Jose Bautista Blue Jays 5 7 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 231
Curtis Granderson Yankees 3 4 4 8 6 1 2 215
Miguel Cabrera Tigers 2 9 5 5 2 4 1 193
Robinson Cano Yankees 2 2 3 6 4 5 1 1 112
Adrian Gonzalez Red Sox 1 1 2 6 8 3 3 1 105
Michael Young Rangers 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 7 4 2 96
Dustin Pedroia Red Sox 4 1 4 6 48
Evan Longoria Rays 2 1 2 3 27
Ian Kinsler Rangers 1 2 1 1 1 25
Alex Avila Tigers 1 1 2 2 13
Paul Konerko White Sox 5 1 11
CC Sabathia Yankees 2 10
Adrian Beltre Rangers 2 1 1 9
Ben Zobrist Rays 1 1 7
Victor Martinez Tigers 1 1 2 7
James Shields Rays 1 5 7
Mark Teixeira Yankees 1 1 5
Asdrubal Cabrera Indians 1 2 4
Alex Gordon Royals 3 3
Josh Hamilton Rangers 1 1
David Robertson Yankees 1 1

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Photo credit: Getty Images

Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis Named Big East Freshman of the Week

Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis scored 25 points against Pacific.

Here’s the release from UConn regarding UConn Huskies women’s basketball player Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis being named Big East Freshman of the Week.

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

Mosqueda-Lewis, chosen as the 2011-12 BIG EAST Preseason Freshman of the Year, earns this award after leading the Huskies to a 112-53 victory over Pacific on Tuesday, November 15. Mosqueda-Lewis tallied her first double figure performance in only her second game in a Husky uniform with a team-high 25 points in 25 minutes. In addition to her 25 points, Mosqueda-Lewis also led Connecticut in rebounds pulling down seven. She has averaged 16 points and seven rebounds per game in the first two contests.

Skylar Diggins was named as the first 2011-12 Women’s Basketball Player of the Week for the BIG EAST after averaging 21 points per game in four games for Notre Dame .

The Huskies return to the court tonight as No. 4 UConn welcomes No. 5 Stanford for a 7:30 p.m. battle which will be aired on ESPNU.

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Photo credit: US Presswire

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 11/21

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 gameday for the No. 4 UConn Huskies women’s basketball team as they’ll host the No. 5 Stanford Cardinal tonight at the XL Center in Hartford, CT at 7:30 p.m. The game will be broadcast nationally on ESPNU.

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

UConn Women’s Basketball links

UConn players looking ahead to big-time test [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Familiar face to be in the house [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Freshmen Will Play A Big Role In UConn-Stanford [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

This May Make “U” Feel Fortunate [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Guess Who Is Coming To The Game Tonight? [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Maya Moore To Start Youth Camp In Atlanta [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Big test: Stanford at UConn [Lee Lewis – The Republcian-American]

The last meeting: Dec. 30, 2010 [Lee Lewis – The Republican-American]

To Avenge Or Not To Avenge, It Depends On Who You Ask [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Auriemma Revisits The Hug From Ogwumike [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Mosqueda-Lewis Ready To Make An Impact Against Stanford [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Auriemma Also In Favor Of A Stanford Extension [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Stanford pose major test for UConn women [CT Post]

In Stanford-UConn, Look For Freshmen To Make Noise [Hartford Courant]

Measuring up to Stanford inside will be challenge for Huskies [New Haven Register]

Auriemma will learn a lot about his team in tonight’s game [The Day]

UConn women’s basketball preview glance — Huskies vs. Stanford [The Hour]

Connecticut-Stanford renew their rivalry on Monday [The Hour]

Ball back in Caroline Doty’s hands [Graham Hays – ESPN.com]

Geno Auriemma and Connecticut a perfect fit [ESPNW]

Banking on Freshmen: UConn & Stanford in the Same Boat [Swish Appeal]

UConn Football links

Big East power rankings [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Big East race update: Week 13 [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Coach Pasqualoni On Recruits Visiting: They Saw It All [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Recruits Got A Look At What UConn Needs [Hartford Courant]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

A Likely Story: Why Shabazz Wears the Rat Tail [David Borges – New Haven Register]

UConn 87, Coppin State 70: Wrapping Things Up [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Shabazz Napier Joins List of UConn’s Triple-Doubles [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn men 87, Coppin State 70: the wrap [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

Post-game breakdown, video: Coppin State [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

The story behind Shabazz’s Rat tail [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Notes/Quotes from Coppin State: Why Shabazz Wouldn’t Pull a Ricky Davis [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Seeing Triple [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Napier leads UConn men in 87-70 victory [CT Post]

UConn Defeats Coppin State 87-70 [Hartford Courant]

Jeremy Lamb Sprains Ankle In Saturday Practice [Hartford Courant]

Shabazz Napier records triple-double in win over Coppin State [New Haven Register]

Napier leads UConn past Coppin State [The Day]

Napier leads No. 4 UConn past Coppin State, 87-70 [The Hour]

Napier makes statement [The Hour]

Other UConn related links

W. Swimming. Huskies Finish Fourth At Pittsburgh Invitational [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Swimming. Huskies Complete Competition At Pittsburgh Invitational [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Huskies Advance In NCAA Tournament Past Monmouth, 2-1 [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. UConn 2, Monmouth 1 NCAA 2nd Round Quotes [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Diouf’s Two Goals Lift UConn Over Monmouth, 2-1 [Hartford Courant]

M. Soccer. Mamadou Diouf’s 2 goals lift UConn soccer [Norwich Bulletin]

W. Ice Hockey. Huskies Snap Six-Game Slide With 3-0 Win Over Vermont [UConnHuskies.com]

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BCS Standings – Week 6 (Nov. 20)

The BCS Standings are out for the sixth time this season and once again it should come as no surprise to anyone that the LSU Tigers have now been on top all six weeks. And with all of the upsets over the weekend, there are some changes to the top five.

BCS Standings

The Alabama Sooners move up one spot to No. 2 and are followed by the Arkansas Razorbacks, Oklahoma State Cowboys and Virginia Tech Hokies.

There are no Big East teams ranked in the BCS Top 25 for the second straight week.

You can head over to the BCS website to see how the poll is computed weekly and how the teams are selected for the BCS bowls.

For a full look at the BCS Standings, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

BCS Rankings – Nov. 20, 2011
Rank Team Harris Poll USA TODAY poll Computer rank BCS Average
1 LSU 1 1.0000 1 1.0000 1 1.000 1.000
2 Alabama 2 .9593 2 .9580 3 .9300 .9491
3 Arkansas 3 .9110 3 .9146 4 .8700 .8985
4 Oklahoma State 6 .7885 6 .7837 2 .9500 .8408
5 Virginia Tech 5 .8007 4 .8420 7 .7100 .7842
6 Stanford 4 .8247 5 .8285 9 .6600 .7711
7 Boise State 8 .7085 8 .6658 8 .6900 .6881
8 Houston 7 .7165 7 .7288 12 .5600 .6684
9 Oklahoma 10 .5979 11 .5600 6 .8000 .6526
10 Oregon 9 .7082 9 .6325 11 .6000 .6469
11 Kansas State 15 .4737 15 .4549 5 .8400 .5896
12 South Carolina 13 .5256 13 .5464 10 .6200 .5640
13 Georgia 12 .5423 14 .5444 14 .4700 .5189
14 Michigan State 11 .5861 10 .6292 17 .2900 .5017
15 Michigan 16 .4049 16 .4190 15 .3700 .3980
16 Wisconsin 14 .5238 12 .5478 24 .1100 .3939
17 Clemson 17 .3923 17 .3980 16 .3000 .3634
18 Baylor 20 .2143 20 .2047 13 .5500 .3230
19 Penn State 18 .3280 19 .3085 18 .2800 .3055
20 TCU 19 .3033 18 .3349 19 .2700 .3027
21 Nebraska 21 .1537 22 .1119 21 .1800 .1485
22 Notre Dame 23 .0977 24 .1058 25 .0800 .0945
23 Georgia Tech 22 .1242 21 .1376 .0000 .0873
24 Auburn .0327 .0224 22 .1700 .0750
25 Texas .0031 .0007 20 .2200 .0746

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Connecticut Whale 3, Providence Bruins 2 (SO)

By Brian Ring

Providence, RI, November 20, 2011 – The Connecticut Whale recovered from a 2-0 third-period deficit to defeat the Providence Bruins 3-2 in a shootout Sunday at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center.

CT WhaleCarl Hagelin netted the shootout winner for the Whale, who won their second straight on the weekend after defeating the Bridgeport Sound Tigers Friday night in Hartford, and Brendan Bell and Jordan Owens scored in the third period.  Jamie Tardif had a pair of power-play goals for Providence.

“It was a good perseverant, come-from-behind win in the third,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “The guys did a great job in the third and really gutted one out. “

Providence got on the scoreboard first at 3:18 of the opening period, as Tardif tipped Carter Camper’s shot from the point past Whale goaltender Cam Talbot (18 saves). Josh Hennessy also received an assist on the goal, which came on the Bruins’ first power-play opportunity of the afternoon.

For Tardif, the tally extended his goal-scoring streak to three straight games.

Tardif widened the Bruins’ lead to 2-0 with another early-period power-play goal, this time scoring at 1:27 of the second period. David Warsofsky’s shot deflected off of the stick of a Whale defender in the slot, and the puck landed right on the stick of Tardif, who had a mostly empty net when he scored his second of the game. Camper tallied his second assist of the night on the play.

After two periods, the Whale were outshooting their hosts by a 15-12 margin.  Connecticut had gone zero-for-six on the power-play though, while the Bruins scored twice with the extra-man in four attempts.

Bell finally got the Whale on the board at 9:18 of the third period, with his second goal in as many games. Bell gathered a rebound from Providence goaltender Anton Khudobin (33 saves) in the left circle, and promptly fired a high shot past the netminder’s stick side to cut the Bruins’ lead to 2-1. Stu Bickel gathered the lone assist on the goal.

The Whale sustained offensive pressure through the rest of the third period, finally tying the game at 18:03 of the final frame when Jordan Owens buried a rebound past Khudobin. Owens’ third goal of the season was assisted by Bell and Andreas Thuresson.

“I think one shift fed off another, we were creating good pressure in their own end for long extended shifts and the guys got hungrier as the period went along,” said Gernander.

Neither team could find the scoreboard again through the rest of regulation and overtime, and so the Whale and Bruins headed into the shootout.

The shootout took extra rounds, as both goaltenders were on their game, each team scoring once through the first five rounds of the tie-breaker. The sixth-round found the game on the stick of Hagelin, who skated in on Khudobin and scored on a backhand, to give the Whale (9-4-1-2, 21 pts.) the win and propel them to first place in the Northeast Division.

The Whale will return to action on Wednesday, when they host the Portland Pirates at XL Center on the day before Thanksgiving (7:00). Five-thousand fans will receive rally towels that night, sponsored by Xfinity.

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

Connecticut Whale 3 (SO) at Providence Bruins 2
Sunday, November 20, 2011 – Dunkin’ Donuts Center

Connecticut 0 0 2 0 – 3
Providence 1 1 0 0 – 2

1st Period-1, Providence, Tardif 5 (Camper, Hennessy), 3:18 (PP). Penalties-Thuresson Ct (boarding), 1:34; McKelvie Ct (fighting), 4:03; Randell Pro (boarding, fighting), 4:03; Mitchell Ct (tripping), 19:37.

2nd Period-2, Providence, Tardif 6 (Warsofsky, Camper), 1:27 (PP). Penalties-Button Pro (slashing), 1:51; Parlett Ct (cross-checking), 5:21; Cohen Pro (holding), 7:57; Bartkowski Pro (holding), 9:47; Audy-Marchessault Ct (roughing), 10:11; Hamill Pro (roughing), 10:11; Newbury Ct (roughing), 12:30; Cunningham Pro (hooking), 15:14; Arniel Pro (slashing), 19:17.

3rd Period-3, Connecticut, Bell 2 (Bickel), 9:18. 4, Connecticut, Owens 3 (Thuresson, Bell), 18:03. Penalties-No Penalties

OT Period- No Scoring. Penalties-No Penalties

Shootout – Connecticut 2 (Mitchell G, Audy-Marchessault NG, Bell NG, Thuresson NG, Bouchard NG, Hagelin G), Providence 1 (Hamill NG, Hennessy NG, Arniel G, Tardif NG, Camper NG, Sauve NG).
Shots on Goal-Connecticut 6-9-19-1-1-36. Providence 6-6-5-3-0-20.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 6; Providence 2 / 4.
Goalies-Connecticut, Talbot 4-2-0 (20 shots-18 saves). Providence, Khudobin 7-8-0 (35 shots-33 saves).
A-4,721
Referees-Keith Kaval (40).
Linesmen-Bob Paquette (18)

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Napier’s Triple-Double Leads UConn Past Coppin State

Given the way the UConn Huskies men’s basketball came out of the gates, you have to wonder if maybe they were already in the Bahamas, the site of their next three games after Sunday afternoon’s tilt against the Coppin State Eagles.

But a strong effort from Shabazz Napier, who had a triple-double, helped the Huskies to an 87-70 win over the Eagles in front of 11,397 at the XL Center in Hartford, CT.

It’s the 15th straight win for No. 4 UConn who improves to 4-0. Coppin State falls to 1-3.

Connecticut's Shabazz Napier, right, drives to the basket while Coppin State's Antonio Williams, front left, and Coppin State's Logan Wiens, back center, defend in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Hartford, Conn., Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011.Napier played almost the entire 40 minutes and was outstanding throughout. He finished the afternoon with 22 points, 13 assists and 12 rebounds. Jeremy Lamb, who had been a game time decision after spraining his ankle in practice on Saturday, led all scorers in the game with 25 points.

After being demoted from the starting lineup in the last game, Roscoe Smith rebounded with a nice performance off the bench with 15 points and four rebounds. Tyler Olander had his second straight double-double of 11 points and 10 rebounds.

The Eagles were led by Tony Gallo’s 21 points and he had a team-high six assists. Akeem Ellis chipped in with 16 points and led them with seven rebounds while Michael Harper had 15 points.

UConn got out to a 6-4 lead before an Ellis three put the Eagles up 7-6. Coppin State then went on an 8-2 run to push their lead to seven at 15-8. After a Napier three cut their lead to four, the Eagles went on a 9-1 run to open up a 12 point lead at 24-12 with 10:42 to go in the half.

An old fashioned three-point play by Harper increased their lead to 13 at 27-14 before the Huskies woke up and mounted their comeback. It started on the defensive end as they increased the pressure that led to a 20-2 run that gave UConn a 34-29 lead with 3:14 to go in the half.

Collin Johnson’s three tied the game up at 34 before Lamb scored the final seven points of the half to give the Huskies a 41-34 lead at the break.

Lamb’s run continued as he scored the first five points of the second half to push UConn’s lead to 12. Their lead would hover around the 12-14 point mark throughout the first part of the second half before a DeAndre Daniels’ three pushed it to 17 with 10:20 to go.

Napier and Lamb made sure though that the Eagles would get no closer than 11 points the rest of the way to ensure UConn’s victory.

After a breakout game, Andre Drummond fell off in this one. He got into a little bit of foul trouble and that certainly didn’t help. Alex Oriakhi also didn’t play well in this game and has been the case all season long, Olander was the best big man on the floor for the Huskies. Nice to see Roscoe break back into things. He was a big part of UConn’s success last year and needs to be again this year. 

Right now this UConn team is still lacking an identity. We’ve seen Napier and Lamb carry this team so far this season and there’s going to come a point where they’ll be shutdown.

Hopefully this little jaunt to the Bahamas will get the team a little closer and get them play as a more cohesive unit. It worked for the team last year when they went to Maui and won the EA Sports Maui Invitational. Could the same thing be in order at the Battle for Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas.

The Huskies will open the tournament on Thursday night against the UNC Asheville Bulldogs at 7 p.m. The game will be broadcast on HDNet.

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

Notes and musings:

Coppin State Eagles @ UConn Huskies 11.20.11 box score

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn head coach Jim Calhoun as well as a few of his players.

Former Huskies All-Americans Kemba Walker and Hasheem Thabeet were seen sitting behind the UConn bench.

Shabazz Napier’s triple-double was just the ninth in UConn Huskies men’s basketball history. Walker has the last one last year against the University of Maryland Baltimore County.

The 15 game winning streak is the third longest winning streak in school history.

The starting five for the Huskies was Shabazz Napier, Jeremy Lamb, DeAndre Daniels, Tyler Olander and Alex Oriakhi.

The Huskies shot 55.9% (33-59) from the floor while the Eagles shot 39.1% (27-69).

UConn had 21 assists on their 33 made baskets.

The Huskies were 7-of-18 (38.9%) on three-pointers. Coppin State was 12-of-31 (38.7%).

UConn was once again awful at the charity stripe as they were 14-of-25 (56%). Niels Giffey was the big culprit as he was 1-of-5. DeAndre Daniels was 0-for-2.

After being outrebounded 24-21 at the half, UConn finished the game with a 42-36 advantage on the glass.

The Huskies had 11 points off of nine Eagles turnovers. Coppin State had 12 points off of eight UConn turnovers.

UConn outscored the Eagles 40-24 in the paint and 22-9 on the fast break.

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