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Owens Brings Familiar Attributes to Whale

By Bruce Berlet

CT WhaleJordan Owens’ style and demeanor has hardly changed since his first stint in Hartford, but he has seen one major improvement in his second go-around.

“I like the new uniforms,” Owens said with a smile. “There’s no specific reason. I like the colors, I guess.”

Yes, many of his teammates are different as Owens is into the green, blue and white of the Connecticut Whale, who were the Hartford Wolf Pack when he first signed with the New York

Rangers organization on June 12, 2007.

In a strange twist of fate, Owens’ stay in Hartford ended on March 3, 2010, when he was traded to the Detroit Red Wings for center Kris Newbury, one of Owens’ favorite players while growing up in Niagara Falls, Ontario after being born in Toronto. Owens had seven goals and 18 assists in 77 games with the Grand Rapids Griffins before his 2010-11 season ended because of an injury sustained with 20 games left.

“It’s weird because I used to watch the Maple Leafs, and (Newbury) was one of my favorites,” Owens said. “When I got traded for him, it was kind of cool and weird at the same time. I didn’t know him, but I liked the way he played a lot.”

It’s a lot like the way Owens plays.

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

“He plays a pretty straightforward game, so the consistent effort and hustle are kind of a constant in his game,” said Whale coach Ken Gernander, who displayed similar qualities in his distinguished 14-year pro career. “So if he plays a simple, straightforward game and is giving the energy and the work, it’s not going to deviate much. He creates pretty good forechecking pressure and finishes his hits. And when it gets a little nasty, he can scrap a bit. He brings a lot.”

Owens brought enough in the Whale’s first 12 games that he was given an AHL contract on Monday to replace the professional tryout deal he signed on Oct. 6, two days before the season started.

“There was a general consensus that everybody appreciates what he does, what he brings, his versatility,” Gernander said. “We’re not extremely deep up front right now, and Jordan is doing well in his role.”

Owens has been on a checking/defensive line with Scott Tanski and either Andre Deveaux, Chris McKelvie or Jyri Niemi. He has played center and wing, is one of the Whale’s key penalty killers and rather adept at face-offs.

“There are all kinds of ways to get it done,” Gernander said. “I think if someone were to watch Jordan, if you’re maybe bringing up a young kid and don’t know what their skill set is going to be, but if you want someone who is going to be doing the right things and a good role model as far as work ethic and things like that, he’d be a pretty good example.”

And Owens is appreciated by more than just his coaches and teammates, as fans still drape a banner saying “Jordan’s Corner” over the railing of the upper deck of the XL Center. He remained in touch with many of them during his hiatus to Grand Rapids.

“I have a good supporting cast, especially my friends in Jordan’s Corner,” Owens said.

Owens also gets to see his relatives in Ludlow again, which made his return that much more enjoyable.

“I’m happy to be here,” Owens said. “It feels like my home away from home. I spent a lot of time in the area when I was younger, and I came to camp this year not being on a high, so I’m pretty happy about that.”

Though he wasn’t with the Wolf Pack/Whale for nearly 18 months, Owens said he feels like he never left Connecticut after arriving from the Mississauga IceDogs of the Ontario Hockey League.

“It’s been a blur, it’s been five years since I’ve been a pro, but it feels like yesterday that I was coming here out of juniors,” Owens said. “It’s a good feeling to be familiar. I was really excited to come back, not only because it was familiar but I love the new uniforms, so I was pretty happy to wear those.”

Owens first visited the area when he vacationed and went fishing with his grandparents in Springfield. He also has family in Hartford but didn’t meet them until he first arrived in 2006. So Owens never crossed the state line and went to Hartford, settling for rooting for the Maple Leafs and AHL Toronto Marlies, where Newbury also played.

After last season ended on a downer, Owens got only a few contacts from other teams, some of which were in Europe, but nothing concrete.

“I was pretty desperate,” he said. “My back was against the wall, so I was going to do whatever it took to stick because I didn’t have anywhere else to go. By the time I heard from Europe, it was late summer and they had already started (the season), which made it even tougher to get in. This was my only option, so I had to make sure I stuck here.”

Owens and Tanski weren’t assured of roster spots until late in training camp, and while Tanski was signed to an AHL contract, Owens was relegated to a PTO. But Owens was comfortable in Hartford after having been with the organization and knowing Gernander. He also was helped by right wing Chad Kolarik sustaining a torn ACL in his left knee in training camp and Dale Weise being claimed off waivers by the Vancouver Canucks.

“It definitely is one of the reasons I’m here is because they knew who I was already,” Owens said. “The numbers weren’t really in my favor when I came here, but there were injuries and Weisie got picked up off waivers, so I pretty much got lucky.”

And, as usual, he worked and played hard, too.

“Sometimes you just have to be in the right place at the right time,” Owens said.

Now if only he can put a few more biscuits in the basket. In the OHL, Owens’ goals, assists and points increased in each of his three seasons, capped by 32-42—74 and plus-17 in 60 games in 2006-07. He joined the Wolf Pack for the end of the season and playoffs, then played in Hartford and with Charlotte of the ECHL in 2007-08 before becoming a Wolf Pack regular the following season, when he had pro career highs in goals (12), assists (25) and points (37) and tied his career high in plus-minus (plus-17).

Then after getting six goals and 13 assists in 50 games with the Wolf Pack in 2009-10, he was traded for Newbury. At the time, the Wolf Pack were looking for some veteran leadership and grit up front and gave up a hustling, hard-working young wing who was a fan favorite for playing bigger than his 6-foot, 180-pound frame, often rattling the plexiglass when he finished a check. Newbury provided immediate dividends, getting four goals and 14 assists in 18 games, though the Wolf Pack missed the playoffs for the only time in the franchise’s 14-year history. 

Newbury continued his production last season, when he led the Wolf Pack/Whale in assists (44) and points (61) in 69 games, and earned kudos from Rangers coach John Tortorella while getting one assist and showing plenty of spunk in 11 games during several call-ups to Broadway. He had four goals, including his second AHL hat trick in the opener, and four assists in four games this season before being called up again. He is currently tied for second on the Whale team in scoring with John Mitchell with nine points, two behind rookie Jonathan Audy-Marchessault.

Owens has two goals, 12 penalty minutes and is minus-1 in 12 games this season, with both goals, including the winner, coming in a 4-2 victory at Adirondack on Oct. 28. He said he still plays the same as he did in juniors but hasn’t found the back of the net as often, though he was usually in more offensive situations, including on the power play, while with Mississauga.

“I don’t know what happened. I used to score more goals,” Owens said with a smile. “When I came here, I knew I had to find a way to contribute night in and night out if I wasn’t going to be scoring. So I turned to being good defensively and blocking shots and hitting and defending teammates if need be.”

And learning what it takes to score at a higher level.

“At this level, and even in the NHL, you get maybe one (scoring) chance per game, and that’s the difference between a goal scorer and a guy that’s not,” Owens said. “A guy who is a goal scorer will capitalize on the opportunity given them. Someone like me needs a couple of chances before I can score a goal. I noticed that after the first couple of games. If you’re playing well, you’ll get a good chance and really have to bear down on it.”

Even if Owens doesn’t do anything resembling Audy-Marchessault’s 35-foot laser from the top of the right circle in the Whale’s 3-2 overtime victory at Albany on Saturday night, he’s the kind of guy who can have a positive influence on a team. Just the kind of guy who resembles his coach – on and off the ice.

FORMER WOLF PACK FORWARD REJOINS FALCONS

The Columbus Blue Jackets have reassigned former Wolf Pack wing and 2009 AHL MVP Alexandre Giroux to the Springfield Falcons. In a reversal of three weeks ago, Giroux changed places with Greenwich native and former Avon Old Farms and Boston College standout wing Cam Atkinson, who had four goals and two assists in 10 games with the Falcons after scoring one goal in five games with the Blue Jackets.

Giroux, 30, had one goal in nine games with Columbus after getting one goal and one assist in two games with Springfield. In 48 NHL games with Columbus, Edmonton, Washington and the Rangers, Giroux has six goals and six assist in 10 years. A seventh-round pick of Ottawa in 1999, he has 340 goals and 310 assists and is plus-143 in 706 AHL games. He led the Hershey Bears to the back-to-back Calder Cup titles in 2009-10, when he had 110 goals and 90 assists in 138 games. He has scored 30 or more goals in seven straight AHL seasons and appeared in several AHL All-Star Games, including each of the past three years.

The Falcons also signed veteran defenseman Brett Lebda to a professional tryout contract. Lebda has 19 goals and 53 assists in 367 NHL games and won a Stanley Cup ring with the Detroit Red Wings in 2009. … Former Rangers and Wolf Pack wing Jed Ortmeyer was suspended one game as a result of an illegal check to the head in a game at Hamilton on Friday night. He missed Sunday’s game against Toronto.

FORMER UCONN STAR, PLAINVILLE TEEN TO BE SALUTED WITH BALDWIN

Former Kolbe Cathedral High-Bridgeport and University of Connecticut basketball star Chris Smith and Plainville’s Abby Negro will be honored by the Connecticut Chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation with Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and CEO Howard Baldwin 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.

Smith, UConn’s leader in career (2,145 points) and Big East (1,140) scoring and three-point field goals (242), will receive the Native Son Award. Smith 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, will receive the Rookie of the Year Award. She is an honor student and basketball player at Plainville High and will be making her debut as an ambassador for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.

Baldwin was previously named the Community Leader of the Year Award. Baldwin was 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.

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.

WHALE BOWL-A-THON NOV. 27

The Whale’s annual Bowl-a-Thon to benefit Special Olympics Connecticut is Nov. 27 at the AMF Silver Lanes in East Hartford.

There will be shifts at 11 a.m. and 2 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 or visit www.soctbowlathon.com or www.ctwhale.com.

WHALE FANS LOOK TO EVEN SERIES

Whale fans will look to get even in their seven-game series with Falcons fans in Game 2 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield on Dec. 3. Falcons fans rolled to a 10-6 victory Oct. 23 at the XL Center in Hartford 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 are $10 in Springfield and $16 in Hartford, with a portion of the sales benefitting Defending the Blue Line, an organization that helps children of military families play hockey. 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 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 in the near future.

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

Rangers Acquire Francois Bouchard from Washington for Tomas Kundratek

New York, November 8, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that the club has acquired forward Francois Bouchard from the Washington Capitals in exchange for defenseman Tomas Kundratek.

CT WhaleBouchard, 23, has skated in 227 career games for the Hershey Bears (AHL), compiling 49 goals and 63 assists for 112 points along with 129 penalty minutes.  In 2009-10, Bouchard notched career highs in games played (77), goals (21), assists (31), points (52), plus/minus (21), and penalty minutes (55).  Last season, he finished seventh on the Bears in goals (12) and recorded four multi-point games.

The 6-1, 198-pounder has competed in 39 career playoff games for Hershey, registering seven goals and seven assists for 14 points, along with 38 penalty minutes, helping lead the team to back to back Calder Cup Championships in 2008-09 and 2009-10.  In 2009-10, Bouchard played in 21 playoff contests, registering 5 goals and 5 assists for 10 points, along with 28 penalty minutes.  He tied for second among team forwards in plus/minus (9) and tied for seventh in playoff scoring.

The Sherbrook, Quebec native was originally selected as Washington’s second round choice, 35th overall, in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft.

Kundratek, 21, has played in 77 career games for the Connecticut Whale (AHL), registering two goals and 12 assists for 14 points, along with 44 penalty minutes.  The Trinec, Czech Republic native was originally New York’s third round choice, 90th overall, in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.

By the Numbers: 11 Reasons to Watch ESPNU on 11-11-11

By the Numbers: 11 Reasons to Watch ESPNU on 11-11-11

  1. ESPNU College Basketball

    The first College Basketball Live of the 2011-12 season airs at 6:30 p.m.

  1. Two coaches with 1,802 wins between the pair and a combined 78 years of coaching experience reflect on it all with Rece Davis in A Conversation with Legends: Coach K and Bob Knight airing at 4:30 p.m.
  1. ESPN’s voice of the NBA, Mike Breen, will be doing college basketball play-by-play for the first time this season on ESPNU. The first of Breen’s 3 Duke home games alongside Doris Burke tips-off with Belmont at Duke on ESPNU at 9 p.m.
  1. The Home Court for College Hoops, ESPNU will air four live studio shows surrounding all of the 11-11-11 basketball action, including a two-hour Basketball Signing Day Special beginning at 1 p.m.
  1. Columbia men’s basketball had a 5-9 record playing away games last year. Dave O’Brien and Bill Raftery will let you know where the team’s first away game stat falls when Columbia travels to No. 4 Connecticut, airing on ESPNU at 7 p.m.
  1. Capping off a week of six conference preview shows – Pac-12, BIG EAST, ACC, SEC, Big Ten and Big 12 – The Experts give their national input with the Men’s College Basketball Preview Show at 3 p.m.
  1. Duke men’s basketball has been listed in the top 10 of the last 75 Associated Press polls, most recently clinching No. 7 in the preseason poll. The Blue Devils’ first regular-season game, against Belmont, airs on ESPNU at 9 p.m.  Should the Blue Devils win, Coach K will be one win shy of tying Knight’s career record.
  1. In addition to the games on ESPNU, the network will include highlights during SportsCenterU of eight teams featured exclusively on ESPN3 on 11-11-11: Northern Illinois at Purdue, Loyola (Maryland) at Wake Forest and Oral Roberts at West Virginia.
  1. Connecticut is currently the home of nine NCAA National Championship banners between the men’s and women’s basketball programs. Watch the third men’s banner rise to the UConn rafters prior to the BIG EAST evening matchup during College Basketball Live at 6:30 p.m.
  1. Krzyzewski – 10 total letters, 70% of his name is made up of consonants, strikingly close to his current 76% wins to loss record.  Two wins away from tying Knight for men’s basketball career wins, ESPNU airs Coach K Record Climb Preview at 6 p.m.
  1. More than 11 hours of football programming on 11-11-11 including an afternoon block of studio programming with College Football Live at 4 p.m., ESPNU Film Room at 5 p.m. and 1st and Ten at 5:30 p.m.

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

ESPNU Programing Highlights on 11-11-11:

Time (ET)

Program

1 p.m.

College Basketball Signing Day Special

3 p.m.

The Experts: Men’s College Basketball Preview

4:30 p.m.

Coach K and Bob Knight: A Conversation with Legends

5 p.m.

Film Room (college football)

6 p.m.

Coach K’s Record Climb Preview

6:30

College Basketball Live

7 p.m.

Big East: Columbia at No. 4 Connecticut

Dave O’Brien and Bill Raftery

9 p.m.

ACC: Belmont at No. 7 Duke

Mike Breen and Doris Burke

11 p.m.

SportsCenterU

ESPNU
The 24-hour college sports television network airs more than 650 live events annually and offers over 600 original studio shows. ESPNU has seen a steady increase since its inception on March 4, 2005 and is now in over 73 million households. The brand is also available in high definition on ESPNUHD, now in over 20 million homes. The network has long-term carriage agreements with all 10 of the top multichannel TV providers – Cablevision, Charter, Comcast, Cox, DirecTV (Channel 208), DISH Network (Channel 141), Mediacom, Time Warner Cable, Verizon FiOS TV and AT&T U-verse.

Red Sox Ticket Prices Stay Same for 2012

Good news Boston Red Sox fans. Ticket prices for the 2012 season will be exactly the same as the 2011 season.

Boston Red SoxHere’s the release from the Red Sox:

BOSTON — The Boston Red Sox today announced that prices for all ticket categories available to the public for the 2012 regular season at Fenway Park will be held at 2011 levels. This marks the second time in four years the team has held ticket prices as the Red Sox also froze prices across the board for the 2009 season.

“John Henry, Tom Werner, and the members of our Front Office spend considerable time each year discussing ticket pricing and policies for the following season, and as a group we make a concerted effort to look at our business through the prism of Red Sox fans. Over the last several years, many in Red Sox Nation have experienced economic difficulties, and every fan has gone through some trying times – particularly at the end of the 2011 season – as the team fell short of our goal of reaching the post-season,” said President/CEO Larry Lucchino. “The decision to hold ticket prices next season is just one of many ways we hope to show our gratitude to Red Sox Nation in 2012 for the unfailing support they have shown at the ballpark, and for their faith in the Red Sox. It is also part of an effort we’ve made over the last few years to slow the growth of season ticket and individual game tickets to ensure the Fenway Park experience is a viable option for as many citizens of Red Sox Nation as possible. We are constantly impressed by our fans’ love of the game and our franchise, and we hope to see them fill up Fenway Park next year as we celebrate the ballpark’s special 100th anniversary season.”

After freezing prices in 2009, the Red Sox implemented a small increase on a limited number of prime tickets in 2010 – the second lowest increase in then-16 seasons – and in 2011 the Red Sox froze 70 percent of ticket prices.

Fans’ first opportunity to purchase tickets for the 2012 season will be the annual, all-day “Christmas at Fenway” presented by Stop & Shop on Saturday, December 10th. Additional details for this traditional and popular holiday event will be released in the coming weeks.

Distribution methods for Green Monster and Budweiser Deck tickets will be announced after the New Year, in accordance with past practice, and will be designed to make these popular seats available to as many different people as possible. Pricing for premium seating in 2012 will vary and be based on longer term contracts entered into several years ago.

The Red Sox will continue to offer special discount programs for Active Duty Military and Clergy in 2012.

2011 BlogPoll Top 25 – Week 11

Here’s the BlogPoll Top 25 for week eleven in college football.  If you’re curious to see how I voted, you can check that out as well. Also be sure to check out the analysis on the BlogPoll Top 25 as well.

College Football Rankings 2011

Results for Week 11

# School Points/blog SD Delta
1 LSU Tigers (80) 25.27 2.78
2 Oklahoma St. Cowboys (1) 23.69 2.49 Arrow_up 1
3 Stanford Cardinal (1) 23.16 2.32 Arrow_up 1
4 Alabama Crimson Tide 21.94 2.02 Arrow_down -2
5 Boise St. Broncos 21.59 1.83
6 Oregon Ducks 20.05 1.97
7 Oklahoma Sooners 19.37 1.70
8 Arkansas Razorbacks 18.38 1.49
9 Clemson Tigers 16.68 0.86 Arrow_up 1
10 Virginia Tech Hokies 14.90 2.30 Arrow_up 2
11 Houston Cougars 14.32 3.25 Arrow_up 2
12 Penn St. Nittany Lions 12.53 3.93 Arrow_up 3
13 Michigan St. Spartans 11.38 2.65 Arrow_up 3
14 Georgia Bulldogs 10.70 2.87 Arrow_up 5
15 Wisconsin Badgers 10.47 2.79 Arrow_up 3
16 South Carolina Gamecocks 9.81 3.73 Arrow_down -5
17 Nebraska Cornhuskers 7.88 3.09 Arrow_down -8
18 Kansas St. Wildcats 7.67 4.41 Arrow_down -1
19 USC Trojans 6.32 4.58 Arrow_up 3
20 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets 6.09 3.27 Arrow_up 1
21 Cincinnati Bearcats 5.89 4.09 Arrow_up 2
22 Texas Longhorns 5.52 3.59 Arrow_up 4
23 Southern Miss. Golden Eagles 4.48 3.51 Arrow_up 1
24 Michigan Wolverines 4.44 3.31 Arrow_down -10
25 Auburn Tigers 2.00 2.68 Arrow_up 2
Others Receiving Votes: TCU Horned Frogs | Ohio St. Buckeyes | Florida St. Seminoles | Arizona St. Sun Devils | Notre Dame Fighting Irish | Texas A&M Aggies | Virginia Cavaliers | Arkansas St. Red Wolves | Baylor Bears | West Virginia Mountaineers | Washington Huskies | Missouri Tigers | Florida Gators | Louisiana Ragin Cajuns | Illinois Fighting Illini | Iowa Hawkeyes
Updated: Nov 8, 2011 9:47 AM EST

SB Nation BlogPoll College Football Rankings 2011

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

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 11/8

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 Football links

Weekend Rewind: Big East [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Big East news and notes [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Bodog Likes Huskies [David Borges – New Haven Register]

All-Stars to Play in Bridgeport Nov. 18 [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Breaking down UConn’s Opponents: Game 19, Tennessee [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Breaking Down UConn’s Opponents; Game 21, Georgetown [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Breaking Down UConn’s Opponents: Game 23, Louisville [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn’s Allen Could Get Chance To Make A Point [Hartford Courant]

Ex-Rice star Kemba Walker comes to Brooklyn for exhibition games [NY Daily News]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Moriah Jefferson to sign with UConn on Thursday [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Pace Women’s Team Features State Connection [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

UConn Women To Announce Series With Oregon [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Princeton uses foreign trip to help others [SI.com]

Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis has Maya Moore’s number [ESPNW]

Other UConn related links

Field Hockey. Carolan Norris Named to New Agenda: Northeast Women’s Hall of Fame [UConnHuskies.com]

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

Boyhood Buddies Together Again with Rangers

Michael Cammalleri #13 of the Montreal Canadiens shoots the puck against Dan Girardi #5 of the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden on November 5, 2011 in New York City.

By Bruce Berlet

It’s almost something out of Ripley’s Believe It or Not.

Then again, even Ripley’s might not believe this tale.

Two decades ago, Dan Girardi and Andre Deveaux lived five minutes apart in Welland, Ontario, Canada, and spent many a day shooting at targets in a net that Girardi’s father had set up at the end of the driveway.

“We played games for candy or chocolate bars,” a smiling Girardi said after the New York Rangers’ 3-0 victory over the Winnipeg Jets on Sunday night. “When my parents sold their house, the shed about 50 yards behind it was covered in holes, absolutely mangled, from us missing the net after keeping the fence open where we placed the net. They didn’t fix the shed, just sold it as is. There were a lot of good memories there for sure.”

When Deveaux didn’t have a ride to his youth hockey game because his parents had successful but quite time-consuming careers, he’d hitch one with the Girardis or the parents of Daniel Paille, who helped the Boston Bruins win their first Stanley Cup in 39 years this spring.

“I wouldn’t have been able to play organized hockey if it wasn’t for families like the Girardis and Pailles taking me,” said Deveaux, 27, who was born two months before Girardi. “If my dad couldn’t join me, I went with one of the two families. Dan’s parents, Carol and Marc, are like second parents to me. I grew up with Girardi’s wife, Pam. I have pictures of him at my 7-8 year-old birthday party. That’s how we grew up.”

Girardi has especially fond memories of the trips to and from the rink.

“It was great car rides getting on my parents’ nerves,” he said with another smile. “We always tried to push the buttons when we could.”

And try to earn a special reward.

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

“There was always a promise of McDonald’s if we had a good game,” Girardi said. “My dad was a McDonald’s guy himself, so it was always, ‘Have a good game and we’ll do McDonald’s.’ I was very picky. I only liked cheeseburgers with only cheese on them, and (Deveaux) was a Big Mac guy. He liked everything, so we were pretty different that way.”

But they often ended up in the same place, as Andre did sleepovers at Dan’s house because he had three brothers and one sister and there wasn’t much extra room at the Deveaux Inn.

“He had all the cool toys, so we’d all want to go to his house,” a beaming Deveaux said. “There was Super Nintendo, going bowling with his dad, shooting pucks in his driveway, that’s how we all grew up.”

And they usually shot with the same kind of stick. When Girardi, then a forward and big-time goal scorer with a big shot, bought new red Titan sticks, Deveaux would get his father to follow suit. If Girardi switched to blue Titan sticks, Deveaux altered his color, too.

“That’s just the way it was growing up,” Deveaux said. “Danny was my best friend. Paille, too.”

Starting at age 6, the three played together for more than a decade before heading their separate ways to the Ontario Hockey League and the minors. But it felt like old times again this summer when Paille brought the Stanley Cup to Welland and the trio ended up in hotel room late that night with the wives of Paille and Girardi sipping champagne from hockey’s most prized trophy.

“It was pretty cool because that’s the way we grew up,” Deveaux said. “I was so happy for Danny, but it didn’t hit me that he had won it until we were in the (hotel) room and just all hanging out like we did all through high school, drinking out of the Stanley Cup. I always say to my brothers and sisters that it gives me hope. It’s pretty good for a couple kids from Welland: Paille was the captain of the (Canadian) junior national team, was drafted in the first round by Buffalo (in 2002) and just won a Stanley Cup, and Girardi is now doing great as one of the top defensemen with the Rangers.”

After bouncing around the minors for most of his first seven pro seasons and playing 22 games with the Toronto Maple Leafs, Deveaux experienced one of the highlights of his hockey career a week ago. He signed a one-year, free-agent contract with the Rangers on Aug. 16, largely because of his longtime friendship with Girardi and having originally signed with Tampa Bay in the summer after current Rangers coach John Tortorella led the Lightning to the Stanley Cup, though he played his rookie pro season with the Springfield Falcons during the 2004-05 lockout year.

“My agent said the Rangers would give me a chance, and Girardi was there, too,” Deveaux said. “And I knew Torts and how his training camp was going to be tough. That was my wakeup call back then. I thought I was in shape, but I found out I wasn’t after going to his camp. It was good for me to find out what it really takes to be a professional hockey player. So that was enough for me to want to come to the Rangers to play.”

On Oct. 30, Deveaux got that chance when he was called up from the Connecticut Whale after getting four goals and two assists and handing out plenty of solid hits in seven games. Now, he sits four locker stalls from Girardi.

“It’s great to be on the same team with him,” Deveaux said. “He gives me a little advice here and there, but he kind of leaves me alone and I kind of leave him alone. We have our jobs to do, and we know what that is. But it’s nice that whenever it gets a little intimidating that I can look down the bench and see an old friend and know we’re in the trenches together.”

Now that they have a son, 17-month-old Landon, Girardi and his wife don’t see Deveaux as much as in their days in Welland. Deveaux now lives in Toronto and Girardi has a home an hour away in Niagara Falls, N.Y., though they occasionally see each other in the summer.

“Off the ice, I’ve got a family, and he’s just kind of getting a feel for enjoying his life,” Girardi said. “But we worked out and power-skated together until last year, and when it comes to at the rink, we’re helping each other here and there.”

Yes, Deveaux can peer down the bench and see the guy for whom he was co-best man with Paille when Girardi got married. And when Paille said his wedding vows, Deveaux and Girardi served as his best men.

“In 2050, they’ll probably be the best men in my wedding,” Deveaux said with another wide smile.

“We always give him grief that maybe one day he’ll be there,” a grinning Girardi offered.

But for now, Girardi said “it’s pretty surreal to be out there with him.”

“We started together in tykes, played 10 years together and now to be on the Madison Square Garden ice playing with him is a good story,” Girardi said. “I’m really happy that he’s here and hope he stays for a bit.”

That’s likely, with wings Wojtek Wolski (sports hernia) and Mike Rupp (knee) scheduled to be out four weeks after having surgery on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively. The Rangers called up feisty wing Sean Avery last Tuesday as a fill-in for Rupp and considered recalling Mats Zuccarello but opted for Deveaux because Tortorella still didn’t think he could get enough ice time for “The Norwegian Hobbit” on one of the team’s top offensive lines.

Though Girardi and Deveaux are on the same team, there’s a major difference in their ice time. With his All-Star defensive partner Marc Staal on injured reserve and out indefinitely with post-concussion symptoms, Girardi has been asked to take on even more responsibility, is averaging an NHL-high 27:58 of ice time and already has played more than 30 minutes four times in the Rangers’ first 13 games. And he’s now paired with Ryan McDonagh, who started last season with the Hartford Wolf Pack before switching places with Michael Del Zotto on Jan. 3 and is becoming one of the league’s most reliable defensemen while expanding his offensive game.

Deveaux has averaged only 6:03 on the Rangers’ fourth line with Avery and Erik Christensen, who gets time on the power play. But Deveaux has earned plaudits for continuing the gritty, grinding style that got him to the NHL for the second time with his fifth organization since being the Montreal Canadiens’ sixth-round pick in 2002. Last season with the Chicago Wolves, he had a career-high 23 goals, 14 on the power play, and tied his career best of 46 points while racking up 194 penalty minutes.

Deveaux had four goals, two assists, 24 penalty minutes and plenty of hits in nine games with the Whale before being called up. In four games with the Rangers, he is plus-3 and has one fight and one assist, on Brad Richards’ winning goal in a 5-3 victory over the Canadiens on Saturday night after digging out the puck along the boards. It was Tortorella’s 100th win as Rangers coach.

“I’d been putting up more (offensive) numbers and fighting a little less the last few years,” said Deveaux, who has quickly become one of the more popular players on the Rangers. “I really worked on the offensive side of things and tried to become a more complete player. The year before, I led the (Toronto) Marlies in goals (16) and assists (25).

“I’m pretty simple with what I do and think I’m making a difference. Sure I’d like to play more, but right now I’m happy with the time they’re giving me and just trying to take it one shift at a time and do my best every shift. But that’s what I’m here for, to be reliable and do my job. If Torts gives me more ice time, I’ll look forward to it. If not, the team is winning, and I’m happy just being a part of things.”

Meanwhile, the Rangers are delighted Girardi has been able to handle even more responsibility. He has continued to be effective despite needing six stitches to close a cut on his forehead Saturday night and then twice leaving the ice Sunday after blocking shots, one of his fortes and something that injured a pinky finger but didn’t knock him from the game.

“That’s just part of our game,” said Girardi, one of the last players to leave the locker room Sunday night. “That’s pretty much any sport, you’ll see guys after a game icing this, icing that, everyone’s hurting after a game, that means you’re playing the game the right way, you’re getting your body on the line, hitting and blocking shots, and that’s just part of my game.”

With Staal out, Girardi is the player the Rangers can least afford to lose beside standout goalie Henrik Lundqvist. The man known as “Block Ness” must lead the league in ice bags, bruises and stitches.

“He has been great for us, a stud back there,” said Rangers right wing/captain Ryan Callahan, another close friend of Girardi who was in his wedding, after sharing an apartment with him in Manchester when they were Wolf Pack teammates. “We knew he could do it all along after playing a lot of minutes for us last season. He’s going to have to continue to do it for us to have success with Marc out, and he has risen to the challenge. That’s what we expect from a guy like that. He’s not too flashy, and I don’t think he gets the recognition he should or deserves for what he does back there.”

Or as McDonagh succinctly put it: “He’s incredible. He’s a machine. It gives you such a confidence boost because 99 percent of the time he’s going to make the right play and a strong play.”

Yes, Girardi, who steadily and efficiently worked his way from an undrafted free agent to Charlotte of the ECHL to Hartford of the AHL to the World’s Most Famous Arena to one of the NHL’s premier defensemen, is a major reason that the Rangers have overcome a sluggish start. Part of that can be attributed to having to travel 20,000 miles to Europe and Western Canada for their last four preseason games and first seven games regular-season games as Madison Square Garden underwent the start of a three-year, $850 million renovation. The grind-it-out victory over Winnipeg was the Rangers’ fourth in a row, gave them a five-game points streak and improved their record to 7-3-3, good for third place in the Atlantic Division with games in hand on Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.

“We’ve had some good games when we got home,” Girardi said. “We lost the first two (to Toronto and to Ottawa in a shootout), but now we’ve won four in a row, and that’s how we have to play at home: Sound defensively and a simple game.”

Sure sounded a lot like those two longtime buddies from Welland who have somehow found their way to the same locker room on Broadway.

Yes, even Ripley might have a hard time believing that one.

HAINSEY HURTING

Bolton native Ron Hainsey was a frustrated onlooker – again – in the press box Sunday night.

The Jets’ top defenseman missed his 10th game since separating his shoulder when he missed a check and fell awkwardly in a game against Pittsburgh on Oct. 17. He is one of five Jets on injured reserve, along with goalie Chris Mason, forward Eric Fehr and defensemen Derek Meech and Tobias Enstrom. He also was one of five defensemen sidelined before Mark Stuart returned Sunday night, when the Jets had to go without leading scorer and former Rangers center Nik Antropov (three goals, eight assists), who was injured in a 3-0 victory over the New York Islanders on Thursday night.

“It’s been tough,” Hainsey said. “We’re down to our 11th defenseman, and I hate being up here. I thought I might be able to make it back for (Sunday’s) game, but it’s going to be a little longer.”

The Jets complete a six-game road trip Tuesday night against the Buffalo Sabres in what will be their 11th game away from home in 15 starts. But after a three-game trip to Washington, Carolina and Boston around Thanksgiving, the Jets play 12 of 13 games at home and will be away from Winnipeg for one day from Nov. 27 to Dec. 26.

“It’s been difficult being away so much, but being home that too much isn’t always that good, either,” Hainsey said.

But Hainsey hopes to feel good enough to return for the Jets’ next home game Thursday against the Florida Panthers, coached by former Hartford Whalers right wing and captain Kevin Dineen, who must still be seething after his team blew a 3-0 lead and lost a shootout to Tampa Bay on Sunday.

MARATHON MAN

Hockey Hall of Famer and former Rangers captain Mark Messier received a rousing ovation from the fans Sunday night as a picture of him running in his first New York Marathon earlier in the day was flashed on the jumbo screen. A camera then showed him sitting in a MSG skybox a few hours after completing the 26.2-mile race in 4:14.27.

Like his 25 years in the World Hockey Association and NHL, Messier left it all on the course. As he finished, he was so exhausted and dizzy he was put in a wheelchair and taken to a medical tent. He leaned on a railing near the finish line and asked to sit down, said Mary Wittenberg, the CEO of the New York Road Runners, the marathon organizer. He was then escorted to a TV studio and rested for five minutes before going to a medical tent, where his vital signs were taken. He was kept briefly for observation before quickly recovering with the help of fluids.

Running through five boroughs of New York City for more than four hours was obviously tougher than 60 minutes of hockey, though less dangerous.

“He was so classic, so tough,” Wittenberg said. “I knew he’d cross that line with nothing left, and that’s how he crossed the line.”

In a statement released Sunday night, Messier said, “I just got filled with inspiration. I feel great now.”

Part of that likely had to do with the Rangers’ 3-0 victory, especially after achieving his race goal of finishing in under 4:30, validating the hundreds of miles he ran over seven months near his home in Greenwich and the Rangers’ training facility in Greenburgh, N.Y.

Messier, a six-time Stanley Cup champion, participated in the race to help raise money and awareness for his two charities, Tomorrows Children’s Fund and The New York Police & Fire Widows’ & Children’s Benefit Fund.

Other former Rangers greats to run the race have been goalie Mike Richter and left wing Adam Graves, who played with Messier on the 1993-94 team that ended a 54-year Stanley Cup drought on Broadway. Messier beat Graves’ time in 2006 by 13 minutes but fell short of besting Richter’s time of 3:54:34 in 2007.

Messier was among 15 celebrities from sports, film, music and food to participate in the event’s charity program. The goal is to raise more than $26.2 million for 200 charities from the record 47,107 runner who started the race.

They also included Olympic speed skater Apollo Anton Ohno, who was running in the race to raise money for the Special Olympics and finished in 3:25:14.

“This being my first marathon, I didn’t know what to expect,” Ohno told the New York Times. “My body is simply not designed to work like that. It’s so long. I probably hit the wall many times.” … Syracuse Crunch right wing Dan Sexton was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Year after getting two goals and seven assists to record points on nine of his team’s 10 goals in a home-and-home series with Rochester, a 5-2 win and 6-5 overtime loss. His five-point performance (one goal, four assists) on Saturday was a career best and tied a season high in the AHL this season. His nine points in 25 hours came after he had four points in his first nine games.

Photo credit: Getty Images

Three Huskies Named To Naismith Preseason Watch List

Naismith Award

Here’s the release from UConn Athletic Communications Department announcing that Andre Drummond, Jeremy Lamb and Alex Oriakhi have been named to the 2011-12 Naismith Preseason Watch List.

STORRS, Conn. – UConn sophomore Jeremy Lamb (Norcross, Ga.) headlines a trio of UConn players named to the Naismith preseason watch list, as announced today by the Atlanta Tipoff Club. Lamb is joined by junior Alex Oriakhi (Lowell, Mass.) and freshman center Andre Drummond (Middletown, Conn.).

The Naismith award is presented annually to the national player of the year. Former UConn star Kemba Walker was a finalist in 2011 with Jimmer Fredette of BYU taking home the honor.

Kentucky and North Carolina led the way with four student-athletes each on the list.

Lamb was most recently named an Associate Press Preseason All-American after being named to the Preseason All-BIG EAST First Team and the Wooden Preseason Top-50. Oriakhi joined Lamb on the Wooden Preseason Top-50 and also received votes in the Preseason All-America voting. He was a Preseason All-BIG EAST Second Team selection.

Drummond, the BIG EAST Preseason Rookie of the Year, was also a BIG EAST Honorable Mention selection. The freshman center was most recently named to the Wayman Tisdale Award preseason watch list which honors the nation’s top freshman at the end of the season.

UConn opens the regular season against Columbia on ESPNU at 7 p.m. in Gampel Pavilion on Friday, November 11. The Huskies will unveil the 2011 NCAA Championship banner in front of the home fans prior to the game.

To see the full 2011-12 Naismith Trophy Preseason Watch List, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

2011-12 Naismith Trophy Preseason Watch List
Name School Class Position
Tim Abromaitis Notre Dame GS F
Harrison  Barnes North Carolina So F
Will Barton Memphis So G
Bradley Beal Florida Fr G
William Buford Ohio State Sr G
Aaron Craft Ohio State So G
Anthony Davis Kentucky Fr F
Marcus Denmon Missouri Sr G
Andre Drummond Connecticut Fr C
Festus Ezeli Vanderbilt Sr C
Ashton Gibbs Pitt Sr G
Michael Glover Iona Sr F
Drew Gordon New Mexico Sr F
Draymond Green Michigan State Sr F
JaMychal Green Alabama Sr F
Tim Hardaway Jr. Michigan So G
Elias Harris Gonzaga Jr F
John Henson North Carolina Jr F
Tu Holloway Xavier Sr G
Robbie Hummel Purdue Sr F
Joe Jackson Memphis Jr G
John Jenkins Vanderbilt So G
Orlando Johnson UC Santa Barbara Sr G
Darius Johnson-Odom Marquette Sr G
Perry Jones III Baylor So F
Terrence Jones Kentucky So F
Kevin Jones West Virginia Sr F
Kris Joseph Syracuse Sr F
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist Kentucky Fr F
Jeremy Lamb Connecticut So G
Kendall Marshall North Carolina So G
Ray McCallum Detroit So G
Doug McDermott Creighton So F
Khris Middleton Texas A&M Jr F
Quincy Miller Baylor Fr F
Reeves Nelson UCLA Jr F
Andrew Nicholson St. Bonaventure Sr F
Alex Oriakhi Connecticut Jr C
Austin Rivers Duke Fr G
Thomas Robinson Kansas Jr F
Terrence Ross Washington So G
John Shurna Northwestern Sr F
Peyton Siva Louisville Jr G
Joshua Smith UCLA So C
Jared Sullinger Ohio State So C
Jordan Taylor Wisconsin Sr G
Jeffery Taylor Vanderbilt Sr G/F
Marquis Teague Kentucky Fr G
Patric Young Florida So F/C
Tyler Zeller North Carolina Sr F

Whale Sign Jordan Owens to AHL Contract

HARTFORD, November 7, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the Whale has signed forward Jordan Owens to an American Hockey League contract.

CT WhaleOwens, a fifth-year pro who is in his second tour of duty with the Whale franchise, had been playing this season on a Professional Tryout (PTO) agreement with the Whale.  The 6-0, 193-pound Toronto native has scored two goals and has 11 penalty minutes in 12 games on the year.

Owens, 25, played 160 games in a Hartford Wolf Pack uniform starting in the 2006-07 season, registering 25 goals and 45 assists for 70 points, plus 163 PIM, before being traded to the Detroit Red Wings for current Whale teammate Kris Newbury March 3, 2010.  After the trade, Owens skated with the Grand Rapids Griffins, Detroit’s AHL affiliate, to which he contributed six goals and 14 assists for 20 points, while serving 101 minutes in penalties, in 60 games last season.

In 249 career AHL games with the Whale/Wolf Pack and Griffins, Owens has totaled 34 goals and 63 assists for 97 points, along with 297 PIM.  Prior to turning pro with the Wolf Pack late in the 2006-07 campaign, he spent three seasons in the OHL with the Mississauga IceDogs.

JORDAN OWENS’ AMATEUR AND PROFESSIONAL RECORD

The Whale return to action this Saturday, November 12, in the first of back-to-back games in St. John’s, Newfoundland against the St. John’s IceCaps.  Faceoff is 6:00 PM, and all the CT Whale Rockin’ Hockey action can be heard live on “The Rock”, 106.9 FM, WCCC, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  The Whale’s next home game is coming up Friday, November 18, a GEICO Connecticut Cup battle with the Bridgeport Sound Tigers at the XL Center at 7:00.

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

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

Louisville Kickoff On Six-Day Window; McCombs Honored

Here’s the release from the UConn Athletic Communications Department about the game time for the UConn Huskies football game vs Louisville on Saturday, November 19th.

UConn Huskies footballSTORRS, Conn. – The kickoff time for the Louisville at University of Connecticut football game at Rentschler Field on Saturday, November 19 will be announced on a “six day” window by the BIG EAST Conference and ESPN. Kickoff time will be known either late Saturday night (Nov. 12) or on Sunday (Nov. 13).

In addition, University of Connecticut redshirt freshman running back Lyle McCombs (Staten Island, N.Y.) was named to the BIG EAST Conference Weekly Honor Roll on Monday. McCombs rushed for 152 yards and a touchdown on 24 carries in UConn’s 28-21 win against Syracuse on Saturday.