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Video: Junior dos Santos KO’s Cain Velazquez To Win Heavyweight Title at UFC on FOX 1

In the first event for the UFC on FOX, the UFC Heavyweight Champion Cain Velazquez and the challenger, Junior dos Santos, squared off in The Octagon at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA on Saturday night.

And after just 1:04 of the first round, dos Santos became the new UFC Heavyweight Champion when he knocked out Velazquez.

Dos Santos now awaits the winner of the Brock Lesnar/Alistair Overeem match that will take place on December 30th in Las Vegas, NV.

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St. John’s IceCaps 8, Connecticut Whale 4

St. John’s, Newfoundland, November 12, 2011 – Jason Jaffray scored a hat trick, and Carl Klingberg added a goal and two assists, to lead the St. John’s IceCaps to an 8-4 victory over the Connecticut Whale Saturday night at Mile One Centre.

CT WhaleJason DeSantis and Marco Rosa also had a goal and an assist each for St. John’s, and Spencer Machacek had three assists.  John Mitchell scored a pair of goals for the Whale.

The Whale led the game 4-3 in the second period, before a collision between the IceCaps’ Patrice Cormier and the Whale’s Brendan Bell shattered a pane of plexiglass in the Connecticut zone with 4:41 left.  The teams were sent to their locker rooms at that point for the second intermission, and the last 4:41 of the period was played prior to the start of the third period.  That seemed to take away all of the Whale’s momentum, as the IceCaps scored twice before the end of the second and tacked on three more goals in the third period.

The eight goals-against were a season high for Connecticut.

“We didn’t have good coverage,” Whale head coach Ken Gernander said.  “We didn’t finish checks, so now (St. John’s) players are free to move their puck and jump back into the play and become part of the second flow.  Passes were being made in behind our forecheckers because we didn’t finish checks.

“When we had the one-goal lead, it was three quick turnovers, bang-bang-bang, in our defensive zone, that allows them offensive opportunities as well.”

The two teams combined for six goals and 32 shots (18 by St. John’s, 14 by Connecticut) in a wild first period.

The offensive flow started only 1:14 in, as Jaffray, the IceCaps’ captain, victimized Whale starting goaltender Cam Talbot with a high shot to the stick side.

St. John’s made it a 2-0 game at 9:19, with DeSantis getting his third goal of the season, on a bad-angle shot from near the right-wing boards that beat Talbot over his glove-side arm.

Mitchell brought the Whale back quickly, though, with a burst of two goals in 2:08 starting at 10:35, only 1:16 after DeSantis’ tally.

Mitchell’s first goal came on a rebound, after St. John’s netminder Ed Pasquale (26) made a fine save on Carl Hagelin.  Then on a Whale power play at 12:43, Mitchell pounced on Kris Newbury’s rebound and fired a shot between Pasquale’s legs that the goalie got a piece of but could not stop, tying the score at two.

The scoring continued at 16:20, as Zach Redmond gave the IceCaps back the lead, and chased Talbot from the game, with his first pro goal.  That came on a sharp-angle shot from the right side that squeaked through Talbot’s pads.

Chad Johnson relieved Talbot, who gave up three goals on 15 shots, and the Whale quickly tied the game again with their second power-play goal in two chances.  This time, it was Tim Erixon beating Pasquale on a shot from the right point, for Erixon’s first pro tally.

The Whale grabbed their only lead of the game 6:33 into the second frame, on a penalty-shot goal by Hagelin, who was hooked on his way past the St. John’s defense.  On his first career pro penalty shot, and the Whale’s first of the season, Hagelin put a backhand shot up under the crossbar behind Pasquale.

That lead lasted until the glass-breaking, but after the early break, the IceCaps got goals from Jaffray and Cormier 61 seconds apart to take the lead for good.

Jaffray notched his second of the game at 18:54, taking a pass from Rosa on the right-wing side and cutting in front to put a forehand shot past Johnson.  Then with only 5.1 seconds left in the period, Cormier put St. John’s up 5-4, after the Whale’s Tommy Grant tried to drop the puck around behind his own net to the Whale defense, only to have Shawn Weller intercept and find Cormier with a centering pass.

After the teams switched ends to start the third, it took Klingberg only 1:11 to widen the IceCaps’ lead to two goals, after Arturs Kulda’s point shot deflected to Klingberg’s stick in the slot and he buried it past Johnson.

Rosa made it 7-4 at 13:38, just one second after Grant stepped out of the penalty box after serving a hooking penalty, deflecting a shot from the right point by DeSantis past Johnson.  Jaffray then completed his hat trick at 19:34 on a power play, converting a centering feed from Klingberg, after Newbury had taken a slashing minor only six seconds earlier.

The loss dropped the Whale to 7-3-1-2 on the season, and St. John’s improved its record to an AHL-best 10-2-3-0 for 23 points.

It was the Whale’s first visit to Newfoundland in nearly nine years, since a 3-1 Hartford Wolf Pack victory over the St. John’s Maple Leafs at Mile One Centre December 1, 2002.  The IceCaps have now scored a total of 14 goals in two games this year against the Whale, as they took a 6-3 decision from Connecticut last Friday at the XL Center.

“They’re a good team, they’re a first-place team,” Gernander said of the IceCaps, “and they’re going to create their own offense, they’re going to get their own chances, they’re going to create their own energy.  But you can’t give them freebies, they’re going to have to work and earn it.  But when you have turnovers, like we had tonight, those are quick scoring opportunities.  And if you’re going to give opportunities, and not play your best game, against a first-place team, you’re going to pay the price.”

The Whale and IceCaps battle again Sunday afternoon at Mile One Centre, with faceoff at 2:30 Eastern Time.  All the CT Whale Rockin’ Hockey action can be heard live on “The Rock”, 106.9 FM, WCCC, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com.

The Whale return home to the XL Center this Friday night, November 18, for a GEICO Connecticut Cup game against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers at 7:00.  In celebration of Veterans Day, the Whale is proud to offer a buy-one-get-one-free discount on Lower Level tickets for that game to any military personnel who present a military/veteran ID at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center.

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Connecticut Whale 4 at St. John’s IceCaps 8
Saturday, November 12, 2011 – Mile One Centre

Connecticut 3 1 0 – 4
St. John’s 3 2 3 – 8

1st Period-1, St. John’s, Jaffray 5 (Machacek, Marto), 1:14. 2, St. John’s, DeSantis 3 (Gagnon), 9:19. 3, Connecticut, Mitchell 5 (Hagelin, Valentenko), 10:35. 4, Connecticut, Mitchell 6 (Newbury, Erixon), 12:43 (PP). 5, St. John’s, Redmond 1 (King, Klingberg), 16:20. 6, Connecticut, Erixon 1 (Bell), 17:57 (PP). Penalties-Mitchell Ct (high-sticking), 3:54; Owens Ct (roughing), 11:55; Chiarot Stj (roughing, roughing), 11:55; Kulda Stj (interference), 17:35.

2nd Period-7, Connecticut, Hagelin 5 6:33 (TXT_PS). 8, St. John’s, Jaffray 6 (Rosa, Machacek), 18:54. 9, St. John’s, Cormier 3 (Weller), 19:55. Penalties-Bouchard Ct (tripping), 10:16.

3rd Period-10, St. John’s, Klingberg 8 (Kulda), 1:11. 11, St. John’s, Rosa 4 (Weller, DeSantis), 13:38. 12, St. John’s, Jaffray 7 (Klingberg, Machacek), 19:34 (PP). Penalties-Grant Ct (hooking), 11:37; Newbury Ct (slashing), 19:29.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 14-7-9-30. St. John’s 18-14-9-41.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 2 / 2; St. John’s 1 / 4.
Goalies-Connecticut, Talbot 4-2-0 (15 shots-12 saves); Johnson 3-2-2 (26 shots-21 saves). St. John’s, Pasquale 6-0-0 (30 shots-26 saves).
A-6,503
Referees-Jean Hebert (43).
Linesmen-Jim Vail (34), Todd Horwood (56).

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 11/12

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

Huskies Heading Back to Paradise Jam [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Calhoun Not Impressed With UConn’s Win [David Borges – New Haven Register]

UConn 70, Columbia 57: Wrapping  Things Up [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Jeremy Lamb: Scoring 30 Points With the Greatest of Ease [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn men 70, Columbia 57: the wrap [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

A growth spurt for Drummond [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

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

Notes/Quotes from Columbia [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Stepping Up [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Lamb, Napier lead UConn past Columbia [CT Post]

Huskies Open Season With 70-57 Win Over Columbia [Hartford Courant]

Not A Great Debut For Drummond [Hartford Courant]

In like a Lamb [Journal Inquirer]

‘Step up’ means more to UConn men’s basketball [Journal Inquirer]

Huskies beat Columbia in opener [New Haven Register]

Guards carry UConn men past Columbia in opener [The Day]

No. 4 UConn opens with 70-57 win over Columbia [The Hour]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

UConn Women Being Courted For 2013 Carrier Classic [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Doty, Mosqueda-Lewis Cleared To Play In Sunday’s Opener [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Talk Of UConn At Carrier Classic Premature [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

UConn-Bound Stewart Incredibly Humble and Talented [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Doty, Mosqueda-Lewis Practice Today, Ready For Opener [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Doty calls: It’s time to play [Journal Inquirer]

Other UConn related links

W. Volleyball. Volleyball Wraps up 2011 in the Garden State [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Diop’s Perfect Strike Leads UConn Into BIG EAST Championship [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Another Thriller [New England Soccer News]

M. Soccer. Diop inspires UConn victory [Soccer America]

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Lamb Leads Huskies Past Lions

It wasn’t the brow beating you expected to see from the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team in their opener against the Columbia Lions. In fact, it might have been closer than Jim Calhoun would have liked.

UConn's Jeremy Lamb dunks as he is fouled by Columbia center Mark Cisco during the Huskies' 70-57 win in their season opener at Gampel Pavilion Friday. Lamb was the leading scorer with 30 points. But when you have a special player like Jeremy Lamb, just like with Kemba Walker last season, you don’t have to worry as much as Lamb led the way with a career-high 30 points to help the Huskies to a 70-57 win in front of a sell-out crowd at Gampel Pavilion on campus in Storrs on Friday night.

Shabazz Napier was the only other Husky in double figures as he had 21 points to go along with six rebounds, eight assists and two steals. Roscoe Smith added eight points and seven rebounds while Tyler Olander had seven points and eight rebounds and four blocked shots. Freshman DeAndre Daniels blocked three shots for the Huskies (1-0) while Alex Oriakhi led the way with four blocks.

It was inauspicious debut for the highly hyped Andre Drummond. While showing flashes of brilliance at times, Drummond struggled with foul trouble early on and spent a good amount of time on the bench. And things didn’t get better for him as he was bumped in the face and had to leave the game. He had suffered a concussion and broken nose during the preseason and is wearing a mask.

Noruwa Agho led the Lions (0-1) with 16 points. Blaise Stabb added a double-double with 11 points and 12 rebounds while Brian Barbour chipped in with 10 points.

It was close early on before the Huskies went on an 8-0 run to open up a 13-5 lead. The Lions would cut the lead back down to five at 15-10 before another UConn run, this one 10-0, increased the lead to 15 points. Columbia would get as close as 10 points the rest of the way in the first half but the Huskies went into the locker room up 15 points at 37-22 on the strength of two Lamb threes including one to beat the halftime buzzer.

Columbia never really threatened the Huskies in the second half. Of course UConn couldn’t pull away from them either. The Huskies were never really able to put a game-killing run together as the scrappy Lions fought hard for the entire 40 minutes giving UConn a good early season battle.

The one thing besides the nasty dunk by Lamb that stood out to me was the play of Olander and Daniels.

For Daniels, his good play came on the defensive end while Olander just had a good overall game. He is definitely much improved from last year and you could see all the hard work he put in during the offseason. Playing in your hometown isn’t easy but Olander is proving it’s no fluke he’s at UConn.

While Oriakhi struggled, Olander stepped up his game on Friday night. Of course it’s only one game but I expect this to continue from Olander.

The Huskies will now get ready for their next game which comes on Monday night when the Wagner Seahawks come to Gampel. Game time is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. and the game can be seen locally in Connecticut on SNY.

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Notes and musings:

Columbia Lions @ UConn Huskies 11.11.11 box score

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn Huskies head coach Jim Calhoun.

The video boards did not work before the game so the opening montage that was supposed to be shown before the game was played at halftime.

There also was a little malfunction in the unveiling of the 2010-11 NCAA Championship Banner.

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

UConn shot 50% (26-32) from the floor for the game. The Lions shot 28.8% (21-73).

The Huskies had 13 assists on their 26 made baskets.

UConn was 8-of-17 (47.1%) from three point land while Columbia was 9-of-31 (29%).

As we’ve come to expect, the Huskies were awful from the free throw line. They were 10-of-18 (55.6%). Oriakhi missed all three of his attempts and Napier was 4-of-8.

UConn barely won the battle of the boards (43-41) and outscored the Lions 24-20 in the paint.

The Huskies had 15 points off of nine Columbia turnovers. The Lions had 10 points off of 15 UConn turnovers.

Columbia had 19 second chance points to just four for the Huskies. UConn did outscore the Lions 20-2 on the fast break.

Niels Giffey, Michael Bradley and Ryan Boatright were all in street clothes on the bench. Giffey and Bradley are battling injuries while Boatright is still ineligible to play pending the outcome of the NCAA investigation.

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Photo credit: Bettina Hansen – Hartford Courant (No. 10 in gallery)

VIdeo: UConn Men Raise 2010-11 NCAA Championship Banner

UConn Huskies 2010-11 National Championship Banner

Before Friday night’s eventual 70-57 win over the Columbia Lions and after a slight malfunction, the 2010-11 UConn Huskies Men’s Basketball National Championship Banner was unveiled at Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, CT.

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Photo credit: Bettina Hansen – Hartford Courant (No. 7 in gallery)

CPTV and Langan Volkswagen Group Give Away a 2012 VW Beetle

HARTFORD, Conn. (November 10, 2011) – CPTV is celebrating its 18th season of broadcasting UConn Women’s Basketball by partnering with The Langan Volkswagen Group to give away an all-new 2012 Volkswagen Beetle.

UConn and CPTVThis season during any of the 21 UConn Women’s Basketball games broadcast live on CPTV, viewers can call in to be automatically entered into the drawing. Also, anyone who makes an online pledge to CPTV.org during a live UConn broadcast is automatically entered to win. Only one entry per household is permitted and a pledge to CPTV is not necessary to enter.

The first opportunity to enter is this Sunday, November 13 at 2 p.m. when UConn takes on Holy Cross for the season opener on CPTV. The last chance is during the final CPTV broadcast of the season, when the Huskies face the Golden Eagles of Marquette on Saturday, February 25, 2012.

At the end of the season, one lucky name will be randomly selected from all of the entries received. The winner will receive an all-new 2012 2-liter turbo Volkswagen Beetle featuring a Fender sound system, navigation system and automatic transmission. The car features a Reef Blue exterior and black leather interior and retails for $28,785. The car will be on display at Langan Volkswagen of Vernon at 167 Hartford Turnpike in Vernon, Connecticut throughout the contest period. For more information and complete contest rules, visit cptv.org keyword: Langan VW.

Gene Langan of The Langan Volkswagen Group, with stores in Glastonbury, Vernon and Meriden commented on their partnership with CPTV: “Langan Volkswagen has been proud to support community events since 1969. We’re especially pleased and excited to be supporting CPTV, an important community asset, and their presentation of UConn Women’s Basketball during the 2011-12 season.”

In addition to the VW Beetle, the winner and three friends will get to have dinner with CPTV’s on-air UConn team – CPTV Color Analyst and former UConn Women’s Basketball player Meghan Culmo, UConn Producer Harriet Unger, and beloved in-studio host Mary Hobart.

This season, tune in to CPTV to watch the Huskies drive to the hoop and you could be driving home in your new car, thanks to The Langan Volkswagen Group and CPTV!

CPTV is the TV Broadcast Home of UConn Women’s Basketball and has been broadcasting the team’s games since 1994. With some of the consistently highest ratings and strongest membership levels of any program on public television over the past 17 years, UConn Women’s Basketball on CPTV is considered by many to be the most successful local franchise in public television history.

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Bouchard Excited to Join Whale

By Bruce Berlet

A lot of players might not be enamored with having to travel 12-15 hours round-trip to play their first few games with a new team.

CT WhaleNot right wing Francois Bouchard, whom the New York Rangers acquired from the Washington Capitals on Tuesday for Connecticut Whale defenseman Tomas Kundratek.

Bouchard arrived from Hershey, Pa., around 1 p.m. Wednesday, and met his new teammates and practiced with the Whale for the first time Thursday, before the team bussed to Boston for a flight to Toronto and then on to St. John’s, Newfoundland, for games Saturday night and Sunday afternoon.

“It’ll be fun to play at St. John’s, where I can go eat with the guys and meet them more,” Bouchard said after his first workout. “This is great timing just to get to know the guys and spend time with them so I can introduce myself.”

It’s not surprising that Bouchard had some mixed emotions about the deal, especially after being a key contributor as the Bears, the top affiliate of the Washington Capitals, won the Calder Cup in 2009 and 2010.

“It was a little surprising because you never really expect to be traded, but I think I needed a fresh start,” Bouchard said. “I left so many friends behind. There are guys there who I played with in my first (pro) game four years ago. We won the (Calder) Cup together twice, so there were really great memories and I’ll keep texting and communicating with them for sure. But I played three years in Hershey and Washington, so I think it was just time for me to get another opportunity somewhere else and get my confidence back. I think the change will be good for me.”

Bouchard’s confidence had declined with his playing time after he signed a one-year deal on July 15 with the Capitals, who selected him in the second round (35th overall) in 2006. For most of his time in Hershey, Bouchard played a regular shift and was on the power play, but not this season. After getting 48 goals and 63 assists in 215 games in three full seasons in Hershey, he was scoreless with eight penalty minutes and minus-4 in nine games this season while playing mostly on the fourth line.

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“They always have a great team in Hershey,” the 23-year-old Bouchard said. “They always sign so many players in the summer, so they have older guys that need ice time so mine was pretty limited. I wasn’t playing the power play, which I played in juniors and some in my first two years in Hershey. It was kind of hard to play six or seven minutes a night on the fourth line, but I think they’re going to give me a great opportunity here. They talked to me like they were really high on me and expect a lot from me, so I’m just going to try to do my best and work hard every day at practice. It’s a young team, too, so it’s always exciting with those guys.”

Kundratek, the Rangers’ third-round pick in 2008, also had seen his playing time decline this season as he was a victim of an overload on the Whale defense, including being a healthy scratch the last five games.

“We were a little bit long on defense and short on forwards, and you can’t have people not playing and not developing,” Whale coach Ken Gernander said. “Hopefully it works out well for Tomas and he gets a little more opportunity in Hershey. And it should work out to our advantage to get a skilled forward that can help us offensively.”

Kundratek was upbeat when he arrived in Hershey.

“I was asking for a trade because it was kind of a tough position in New York and Hartford,” Kundratek told Tim Leone of The Patriot-News in Hershey. “I was so excited when I heard I got traded to Washington, and I’m looking forward to being here. It was tough to get in to play in the top six defense (in Hartford).”

Bears assistant coach Troy Mann said, “(Kundratek) has got good size and looks like he moves pretty well. We’ll just have to see over the next few games if we can get him in there to get a true evaluation. I don’t think you can 100 percent evaluate him after one or two games. You have to give him a body of work of four or five or six games and then assess what you’ve got.”

Bouchard’s adjustment to his new surroundings was made easier, as he knew several Whale players, notably rookie left wing Ryan Bourque, whose older brother Chris plays with the Bears and was MVP of the playoffs in 2010.

“I went to Boston a few times to see the Bourques, and Chris was my best friend in Hershey,” Bouchard said.

But Chris will be his foe on Nov. 29, when the Bears visit the XL Center and the Bourque brothers play against each other for the first time.

“I got a little X on my calendar for that one,” Bouchard said with a smile. “For sure I’ll be excited to play against my old team, but right now I’m focusing on this team.”

Bouchard also knows center Kelsey Tessier and rookie wing Jonathan Audy-Marchessault from youth hockey in the Quebec province. Bouchard grew up in Sherbrooke, Quebec, where he learned to play hockey with his father, Denis, and 27-year-old brother Pierre-Marc Bouchard, who is in his ninth season with the Minnesota Wild.

“He’s an idol and role model for me,” Bouchard said. “We’re really close and talk to each other every day. He has always been a big help to me since we grew up playing hockey in the street with my dad. And he was pretty happy for me to get another opportunity. He knows the Rangers are a great organization for young guys, so I was pretty excited about that.”

Rangers assistant general manager Jeff Gorton told Jim Cerny of BlueshirtsUnited.com that Bouchard is “a skilled guy that can play all positions and just needed a change of scenery. We like his sense and playmaking ability.”

Gernander feels Bouchard should be “a pretty good offensive player.”

“He’s pretty creative and showed some pretty good passing and hand skills (in practice),” Gernander said. “Now we’ll see how he does in games.”

Bouchard twice exceeded 100 points in four seasons with Baie-Comeau Drakkar in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, with his best being 2006-07 when he led the league in scoring with 125 points (45 goals, 80 assists) in 68 games. Two seasons ago, he had career highs as a pro in goals (21), assists (31) and points (52) as the Bears won their first of two straight Calder Cup titles.

Bouchard had several productive outings against the former Hartford Wolf Pack, most notably when he had one goal and three assists in Hershey’s 6-0 victory at the XL Center on Oct. 30, 2009 while playing with Mathieu Perreault (one goal, one assist) and former Wolf Pack left wing Alexandre Giroux (two goals, two assists).

“I remember some great games both here and back home (in Hershey),” Bouchard said with a smile.

Now the Whale hopes Bouchard can play as well for them as he did against them.

CHALLENGING WEEKEND FOR WHALE

Bouchard joined the Whale as they look for some revenge in another battle of two of the Eastern Conference’s three division leaders.

The Whale (7-2-1-2) was in first place in the Northeast Division as they headed to Newfoundland on Thursday to play the Atlantic Division-leading St. John’s IceCaps on Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. Last Friday night the Whale allowed four third-period goals in a 6-3 loss to the IceCaps (9-2-3-0), who had the AHL’s best record when they completed a nine-day, six-game trip through New England with a 4-0-2-0 record, capped by a 4-3 victory at Bridgeport on Sunday.

Veteran defenseman Wade Redden was impressed with a team that was minus five call-ups, including half of the Winnipeg Jets’ defensive corps in a 3-0 loss to the Rangers on Sunday night – Brett Festerling, Mark Flood and Paul Postma, an AHL All-Star last season.

“I think we have to be happy with where we’re sitting right now with our record, but realizing, too, that we obviously can’t be content and there are things that we need to improve,” Redden said. “St. John’s was kind of the benchmark for us as the top team in the conference, and they played real hard and kind of took it to us for some important parts of the game, so we have to learn from that because it’s a big weekend coming up against them.”

The IceCaps’ comeback was especially impressive, after Kris Newbury and Ryan Bourque scored in less than 20 seconds in the final minute of the second period to give the Whale a 3-2 lead. The Whale did a good job of protecting the lead the first five minutes of the third period with smart dump-ins, and then lost their way with a series of ill-advised plays and a few rare soft goals allowed by Chad Johnson, the Reebok/AHL Goaltender of the Month in October.

“They obviously played hard for most of the game,” Redden said. “They put together a pretty solid 60 minutes, and all their guys were skating and checking and forcing plays, so if you’re up against that, you have to be doing the same. We weren’t doing that enough that game and we have a tendency to panic a little bit, which we can’t do. Obviously we have to feel confident in ourselves with what we can do because we’ve got a great group of guys, so we just have to stick to the game plan. Sometimes we face adversity, and the first thing guys do is try to do a bit too much instead of keeping it simple and relying on each other.”

The IceCaps, formerly the Manitoba Moose, are the top affiliate of the new Jets, the former Atlanta Thrashers, after St. John’s was the home of the feeder system for the Toronto Maple Leafs from 1991 to 2005, before that team was relocated to Toronto and became the Marlies. This is the Wolf Pack/Whale’s first visit to The Rock since a 3-1 victory on Dec. 1, 2002. Prior to last Friday, the Wolf Pack/Whale last played a St. John’s team on March 26, 2003, a 7-4 loss in Hartford.

“They’re obviously a strong team, being at the top of their division,” Gernander said. “They’re playing winning hockey, finding ways to win games, and if we’re going to be successful, we have to play our best hockey. Obviously if you’re going to make mistakes or give them opportunities, they’re going to hurt you. They’re a little more experienced team and played a very patient, fairly tight defensive game and worked hard on their forecheck. They have a good, complete game and the wherewithal or savvy where if you deviate from your plan or try to take a shortcut and make a mistake, they’re going to cash in on those too, because they have the guys to pay it off on the other end.”

The St. John’s trip is part of the Whale opening the season with 10 of their first 14 games and 15 of 22 on the road, much like the Rangers started with a team-record seven straight away from Madison Square Garden, which is undergoing a $850 million facelift over three years. The Rangers ended a six-game home stand on a high Sunday night behind Martin Biron’s 23 saves in his 27th career shutout, first with the Rangers. The Whale plays eight of its last 11 in 2011 on Asylum Street.

Audy-Marchessault leads the Whale’s balanced attack with five goals and six assists in the last seven games, after going scoreless in the first five. Kris and John Mitchell, both former St. John’s Maple Leafs, are tied for second with nine points, one ahead of rookie Carl Hagelin and Mats Zuccarello, who has three goals and five assists in seven games since being reassigned by the Rangers.

The Moose were based in Winnipeg, and played in the International Hockey League in 1996-2001, and the AHL in 2001-2011, after the departure of the original Jets to Phoenix. As the top affiliate of the Vancouver Canucks, they won the North Division in 2006-07 and 2008-09, when they reached the Calder Cup finals, losing to Hershey in six games.

The IceCaps lost the five players to call-ups because of numerous Jets injuries, including to defenseman Ron Hainsey, a Bolton native who has been sidelined for three weeks with a separated shoulder. But IceCaps rookie head coach Keith McCambridge’s team has hardly missed a beat, showing plenty of perseverance and grit while rallying to beat the Whale, who return home Nov. 18 to play nemesis Bridgeport. The Sound Tigers have twice overcome two-goal deficits to beat the Whale, 5-4 in a shootout on Oct. 15 in Hartford and 4-3 in overtime on Wednesday in Bridgeport.

FORMER WHALERS DEFENSEMAN AMONG FOUR TO BE INDUCTED INTO AHL HALL OF FAME

Former Hartford Whalers defenseman John Stevens was among four selected for induction into AHL Hall of Fame as the Class of 2012. Others to be recognized Jan. 30 at the AHL Hall of Fame induction and awards ceremony at the Circus Maximus Theatre at Caesars Atlantic City in New Jersey are Joe Crozier, Jack Gordon and Zellio Toppazzini.

Stevens, 45, is a former head coach of the Philadelphia Flyers who is now an assistant coach with the Los Angeles. His 14-year playing career, which was cut short by an eye injury, included eight assists in 44 games with the Whalers spanning three seasons. He was a member of the undefeated 1987-88 Hershey Bear Calder Cup championship team coached by former Wolf Pack coach John Paddock. Stevens also won a Calder Cup in 1990-91 with the Springfield Indians, but the defenseman is best known for his days with the Philadelphia Phantoms, where he was the team’s first captain in 1996-97, won a Calder Cup in 1997-98 and coached the club for six seasons in 2000-07. He then took over as Flyers coach for 31/2 seasons before being fired.

“These four individuals enjoyed significant careers and are legendary figures in the rich history of the American Hockey League,” AHL president and CEO David Andrews said in a statement. “The AHL Board of Governors is pleased to support the selection committee’s recommendation for their induction into the American Hockey League Hall of Fame.”

The quartet will be honored as part of the festivities at the 2012 AHL All-Star Classic in Atlantic City, N.Y. Formed in 2006 to recognize, honor and celebrate individuals for their outstanding achievements and contributions in the AHL, the AHL Hall of Fame is housed on-line at www.ahlhalloffame.com. … South Windsor native and Houston Aeros captain Jon DiSalvatore had a nine-game points streak (four goals, nine assists) end in a 5-3 loss to the visiting Abbotsford Heat on Thursday night.

BALDWIN TO BE HONORED SATURDAY NIGHT

Whalers Sports and Entertainment chairman and CEO Howard Baldwin will receive the Community Leader of the Year Award from the Connecticut Chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation at its Sportscasters’ Super Ball on Saturday at The Club at Rentschler Field in East Hartford. The black-tie optional gala from 7 p.m. to midnight honors Connecticut sports stars and community leaders while raising fund and awareness of cystic fibrosis.

Baldwin is the former owner and managing general partner of the Hartford Whalers and then founded Whalers Sports and Entertainment two years ago. WSE assumed business control of the former Hartford Wolf Pack 14 months ago and rebranded the team the Connecticut Whale last Nov. 27.

Former Kolbe Cathedral High-Bridgeport and University of Connecticut basketball star Chris Smith and Plainville’s Abby Negro will receive the Native Son Award and Rookie of the Year Award at the dinner.

Smith, UConn’s leader in career (2,145 points) and Big East (1,140) scoring and three-point field goals (242), is one of only two Huskies to score at least 500 points in three different seasons and a member of the UConn basketball All-Century Team. He graduated from Kolbe Cathedral, where he became a high school All-American and played on the U.S. national team. He was Connecticut Player of the Year before playing at UConn and then three seasons with the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves. He is now the Kolbe boys’ basketball coach.

Negro, 16, is an honor student and basketball player at Plainville High and will be making her debut as an ambassador for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.

Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease affecting the respiratory and digestive systems. Thick mucus blocks the airways, leading to life-threatening infections. The median life expectancy is 37 years.

The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation is consistently rated one of the most efficient health charities in the country and is devoted to controlling the disease. Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., the foundation has more than 80 chapters and supports and accredits a nationwide network of 115 care centers. To advance research for a cure, the foundation has invested nearly $300 million in promising drug research in the biotech industry since 1998. For more information, visit www.cff.org.

The Sportscasters’ gala was established in 2002 by ESPN’s Joe Tessitore and Chris Berman to celebrate Connecticut’s rich sports history. Since its inception, the gala has raised more than $1 million in much needed research funds for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Dinner, dancing and a unique live auction will highlight the event. For tickets ($200) or to get involved, contact CFF director of special projects Paul Drury at 860-632-7300 or pdrury@cff.org.

MARK HOWE SET TO ENTER NHL HALL OF FAME

Mark Howe, the best defenseman in Hartford Whalers history, heads to Toronto on Sunday for a celebratory dinner as a prelude to being inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame on Monday. Howe, who had been eligible since 1998, will be inducted with Dallas Stars GM Joe Nieuwendyk, Ed Belfour and Doug Gilmour.

“It’s hard to believe this is happening,” Howe, 56, the director of pro scouting for the Detroit Red Wings, said while watching the Rangers-Winnipeg Jets game Sunday night. “There’ll be about 40 friends and family coming in, and I’m so happy dad will be able to be there.”

“Dad” is legendary 83-year-old Gordie “Mr. Hockey” Howe, who ended his 32-year pro career at 52 playing with sons Mark and Marty with the Whalers after six seasons with the World Hockey Association’s Houston Aeros and New England Whalers. Marty and his family still live in Glastonbury.

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