Category Archives: Articles

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/18

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball teams as well as some of the other sports. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

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

UConn Men’s Basketball links

UConn’s Season in Quotes [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

UConn changes coming, but passionate Calhoun unlikely to leave [CT Post]

This Time, Jim Calhoun Can’t Take His Time Telling Us If He Stays Or Goes [Hartford Courant]

5 Questions: Where Is UConn Men’s Program Headed? [Hartford Courant]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Paid Crowd: 4,563? [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

UConn NCAA Notebook [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

NCAA Tournament ‘Did You Know’ [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Breanna Stewart Does It Again [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Caroline Doty’s Long Slump [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Hayes Sits Out Second Half For Precautionary Reasons [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Huskies Reach 30 Again To Tie NCAA Record; Mosqueda-Lewis Ties Record Too [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Breanna Stewart has triple-double in championship game [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

UConn joins the 30-win club again [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

UConn women cruise to 83-47 win over Prairie View [CT Post]

Fan turnout ‘disappointing’ for NCAAs at Bridgeport, and ticket prices didn’t help [CT Post]

Huskies Turn Back Prairie View A&M, 83-47 [Hartford Courant]

Hartley Feels The Shooting Touch Again [Hartford Courant]

Hayes Becomes UConn’s 10th All-Time Scorer [Hartford Courant]

Huskies beat Prairie View A&M, march into second round [New Haven Register]

Stokes shows signs of living up to promise [New Haven Register]

Huskies roll past Prairie View A&M [The Hour]

NCAA women’s tournament notebook [The Hour]

UConn Football links

For UConn Football, Spring Practice Starts Tuesday [Hartford Courant]

Other UConn related links

Baseball. Baseball Falls in Regional Re-Match With Coastal Carolina, 6-2 [UConnHuskies.com]

Softball. Huskies Split Opening Day At Hofstra Invite [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Swimming. Cecco Finishes In 14th Place At NCAA Three-Meter Diving [UConnHuskies.com]

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/17

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball teams as well as some of the other sports. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

It’s game day for the UConn women’s basketball team as they’ll open up the 2012 NCAA Tournament against the Prairie View A&M Panthers. Tip is scheduled for approximately 1:50 p.m. and the game will be broadcast nationally on ESPN2.

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

UConn Women’s Basketball links

UConn’s Key? Getting Stokes To Get Stoked [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Mike Thibault On UConn And NCAAs [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Rebecca Lobo Understands What Geno Means [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Stewart Leads Team To State Finals [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

With One Scholarship Player Back, Prairie View A&M Back In NCAAs [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

No Problems For Hayes Will Play Saturday Vs. Prairie View A&M [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Doty Excited To Again Play In NCAAs [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Stokes Practiced Well Thursday; Hopes To Right Herself In NCAAs [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

UConn’s National Championship Quest Begins Saturday In Bridgeport [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Hartley Looks To Snap Out Of Shooting Slump For Huskies [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Prairie View A&M assistant raves about UConn recruit [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Doty ready for return to NCAAs [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Women’s Basketball Set To Begin 2012 NCAA Tournament [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn Women Earn a No. 1 Seed For the 15th time [UConnHuskies.com]

Auriemma Pressed Right Buttons on Way to 800 Wins [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn-Prairie View A&M Preview [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn women motivated by national ‘underdog’ role [CT Post]

Auriemma Calls Kiah Stokes Key To An NCAA Run [Hartford Courant]

Caroline Doty back in NCAA tournament [New Haven Register]

NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament Glance: UConn vs. Prairie View [The Hour]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Roscoe Smith Once Again Has Clock Management Issues, Watch ‘The And Now’ Clips Here [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

If Calhoun Returns, UConn Should Consider Naming ‘Coach-in-Waiting,’ Too [David Borges – New Haven Register]

First-round loss does not meet UConn’s standards [CT Post]

UConn Men’s Basketball Season Ends With Yet Another Thud [Hartford Courant]

Huskies’ season disappointing, not disastrous [New Haven Register]

Huskies never found their balance [The Day]

UConn goes into offseason with numerous questions [The Hour]

UConn Football links

One man’s way, way too early bowl picks [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Other UConn related links

Softball. Huskies Travel To New York For Hofstra Tournament [UConnHuskies.com]

Baseball. Huskies Knocked Out Early in Coastal Classic Opener vs. UAB [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Lacrosse. Huskies Dominate Sacred Heart, 17-4 [UConnHuskies.com]

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UConn Women’s 2012 NCAA First Round Pregame Quotes

UConn Huskies women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma along with senior Tiffany Hayes and Kelly Faris met with the members of the media assembled at Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, CT on Friday.

Here’s what they had to say:

2012 NCAA Women's Final FourQuotes courtesy of UConn Athletics

Head Coach Geno Auriemma
Opening Statement

It’s the same at this time of the year. Each year doesn’t matter how many times you do it. Each year, the first weekend of the NCAA Tournament is a time when if you had a great year you get to add to it. If it’s an okay year you can make it a lot better. Every kid that’s part of the 64 teams that are playing is anxious to get started. Especially our kids because it’s been so long since the (Big East) tournament ended. I know the kids feel that way. We are anxious to play. I wish it were today.

On the 10 days between winning the Big East Championship and the NCAA Tournament and balancing time off with momentum

Ideally, it would have been great if we could have played a week ago on Saturday. That would have been better for us. Anytime you have a little momentum going and you are feeling good about your team and they are feeling good about themselves, you like to capitalize on it. Having to wait 10 days, it’s hard to sustain that. You have to really rely on the fact that it is the NCAA Tournament. You almost treat it like it is a fresh start so whatever happened in the regular season and whatever happened in the Big East tourney it’s gone. You put that away. It’s over and done with.

I don’t think any team that is playing this weekend is thinking about if they lost in their conference tournament. I don’t think that is a big part of what they are thinking. They are just thinking about winning one game. The first game is not usually easy to win because you haven’t play in so long. And, the engines are raring to go and you want to go and you want to go and want to play and you wait and wait and wait.

And then like Kelly [Faris] said, you show up at the game, you have to control your emotions a little bit. It’s one game and that’s what we are trying to take it as – one game on Saturday and then one game on Monday hopefully. You know nothing is guaranteed at this time of the year.

On Tiffany Hayes’ foot and how she has practiced

Those who have watched Tiffany play sees she falls down all the time but never gets hurt. What’s her pain threshold, she’s never hurt. The fact that she had to miss a week of practice means that she was really hurt. When people never get hurt, they don’t know how to handle it. So this past week has been kind of ‘What I do? How do I handle myself because I am never hurt?’ But In practice yesterday, for the first day she looked pretty good. We ran her in and out so she wasn’t out there the whole time. She did enough to be ready today and be ready for tomorrow. I couldn’t give you a percentage. I just know when is going to play and I assume she will play as well as she has in the past.

To see what Faris and Hayes had to say, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Kelly Faris, Junior, Guard

On the NCAA Tournament and the biggest concerns about Saturday’s game

For just about any team, it’s tournament time; it’s March Madness. So we are sitting around watching the guys play. We are excited. I think we came off a good end of the tournament (Big East) so it’s always good to start the last part of your season on a good note. I think in general we are good to go and like coach said, we wish it were today. We’ll be ready to go tomorrow. At this point, I really don’t have any concerns.

Maybe we’re too excited.

Tiffany Hayes, Senior, Guard

On her playing status for Saturday

Practice went well. My status for tomorrow is that I will be playing.

On the feel of this year’s NCAA Tournament
We are under the radar a little bit. I think there are still targets on our backs but at the same time it’s not the same as the other years. We are going into the tournament with the same excitement and the same feelings about it.

On playing in her final NCAA Tournament during her senior year

I try not to think about it. It’s sad. I don’t want to leave yet, but there are six games and we have to take it one game at a time. If you don’t win one, you go home and cut it short so we are just trying to play our hardest so we can play six more games.

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Red Sox Make First Cuts of 2012 Spring Training

Not everyone in big league camp this year for the 2012 Boston Red Sox was going to make the team. Cuts will have to be made.

Well Bobby Valentine made his first cuts of spring training on Friday as he sent eight players to minor league camp.

Here’s the release from the Red Sox:

Boston Red SoxThe Red Sox today announced that they have reassigned four players to minor league camp, optioned outfielder Che-Hsuan Lin and third baseman Will Middlebrooks to Triple-A Pawtucket and optioned left-handed pitcher Drake Britton and second baseman Oscar Tejeda to Double-A Portland.

The announcements were made by Executive Vice President/General Manager Ben Cherington.

Among the reassigned players are right-handed pitchers Tony Pena Jr., Chorye Spoone and Alex Wilson and outfielder Juan Carlos Linares.

With today’s moves, the Red Sox now have 56 players in Big League Camp, including 36 players from the 40-man roster, two players on 60-day disabled list and 18 non-roster invitees.

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/16

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

Jim Calhoun’s Take [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Wrapping Things Up From L’Ville [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Shabazz: ‘Some People Could Leave, Some Could Stay. I’m Not Sure’ [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Iowa State 77, UConn 64: the wrap (really) [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

UConn becomes first defending champion since ’96 to lose in first round [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Notes/Quotes from Iowa State: “More often than not, you end up sitting here talking about what you could have done and should have done.” [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

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

It’s a wrap; UConn’s season ends with 77-64 loss [Neill Ostrout – Journal Inquirer]

Same Sad Song [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Iowa State ousts UConn from NCAA tournament [CT Post]

UConn’s Season Ends With Loss To Iowa State, 77-64 [Hartford Courant]

Calhoun Declines To Talk About What Lies Ahead For Him [Hartford Courant]

Season Ends With A Night Of Futility [Hartford Courant]

Iowa State eliminates Huskies from NCAA tournament 77-64 [New Haven Register]

Over before it began for UConn men [The Day]

Drummond, Lamb are at a crossroads [The Day]

UConn fortunate it didn’t get a date with Kentucky [CBSSports.com]

UK-UConn? Iowa St. says no thanks [ESPN.com]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Where 29-4 Requires Something More [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Stewart Named National Gatorade Player Of The Year [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Hayes Returns To Practice Today [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Tickets Sales Slow In Bridgeport; Price Of Tickets Could Be Why [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Hayes and Hartley Earn Spot on WBCA All-Region I Team [UConnHuskies.com]

Youthful Prairie View A&M took some lumps, then rose to the occasion [CT Post]

UConn Women’s Chase For Eighth National Title Begins Saturday In Bridgeport [Hartford Courant]

UConn Football links

cDan Orlovsky signs with Buccaneers as Josh Freeman backup [AP]

Other UConn related links

Baseball. Coast to Coast: Huskies Visit CCU for Weekend Classic [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Tennis. Huskies Sweep On Spring Break Trip [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Schneider Named AHA First Team; Gerke Second Team [UConnHuskies.com]

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

UConn 2012 NCAA 2nd Round Postgame Quotes

From left, UConn's Ryan Boatright, Shabazz Napier and Alex Oriakhi were having a rough time with Iowa State at the KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Ky., Thursday.

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn Huskies players Shabazz Napier, Jeremy Lamb and Ryan Boatright as well as head coach Jim Calhoun after their 77-64 loss to the Iowa State Cyclones in the second round of the 2012 NCAA Tournament.

Transcript courtesy of ASAP Sports:

THE MODERATOR:  We’re going to go ahead and get started with the University of Connecticut press conference.  We’ll begin with a brief opening remark from Coach Calhoun.  Coach?

COACH CALHOUN:  I’m as surprised as anybody.  Clearly.  I imagine our players are too.  Fred and the Iowa State team showed up at a different speed, a different level than what we played.

At times we certainly made a dent and came back, but the opening few minutes kind of set the tone for the game.  When we did come back, we didn’t have enough whatever it may be to stay with it.  I thought we still had opportunities to win the basketball game.

Give them all the credit, Iowa State.  There wasn’t too many ways in which they didn’t beat us tonight.  It’s very disappointing to have to end the season this way.  I’ve cared about these kids all through the season.  I continue to care about them.

Somebody asked me was it a disastrous season?  If UConn goes to the tournament and wins 20 or more games every year, I’m pretty happy.  I’m not happy with the way we played tonight.  I’m sure the players aren’t happy with the way they played tonight.  If I were Fred, the Mayor of Ames, I’d be happy with the way they played tonight.  They played at a different speed, and that’s why they won tonight’s game.

THE MODERATOR:  We’re going to take questions for the student‑athletes.

Q.  Shabazz, could you just talk about how the opening minutes went for you?  Coach mentioned he thought they came out at a different speed.  Is that what you saw and what you felt out there?

SHABAZZ NAPIER:  Yeah.  They came out, and they threw the first punch.  We weren’t ready for it.

It’s my fault I didn’t get my guys ready for the game, and as a point guard, you’re supposed to guard the speed, and I didn’t allow myself to do that.  Just not playing as well as we should have.  We lost the game in the first half.  We gave up a lot of points, down 24 points.

You do that in the NCAA Tournament, more often than not, you lose the game.  The team you’re playing against is a great team.

Q.  Ryan, you had it down to eight a couple of times, but both times they had three‑point plays to go back to 11.  Then you had those shots back to back where you got it down to 6.  Did you think at that point you guys had the momentum that maybe you could get back and at least tie it?

RYAN BOATRIGHT:  Yeah.  Once we cut it to six, I felt like if we dug down a little deeper and tied it up, maybe it’s going to crack.

I felt like they had made their run and it was our time to make our run.  But they made plays at the end and we didn’t.

Q.  Jeremy, did they do anything special defensively on you early in the game?  Looks like you had trouble getting free a couple times?

JEREMY LAMB:  They didn’t do nothing special.  They were a good defensive team, but I was able to get free.  I just had open shots and wasn’t able to knock them down.

Like I said, they played good team defense, and they contested my shots.  A couple of them they contested, I could have made, but I just missed some easy shots.

Q.  Shabazz, you’ve played on a championship team now and now one that went out in the first round.  Can you sort of define what the fundamental difference between the two teams and the seasons were?

SHABAZZ NAPIER:  Effort and attitude.  We had a great player last year who brung it every single day.  And as a point guard, it’s my job to bring that.  When you don’t bring that effort and attitude to be that leader for your teammates, you lose games.

More often than not, you sit up here talking about what you could have done and what you should have done. 

To see what Calhoun had to say about the loss, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

THE MODERATOR:  Thank you.  We’ll open it up for questions for Coach Calhoun.

Q.  Jim, can you just talk a little bit about the foul trouble Andre had, and how did that impact what you wanted to do?

COACH CALHOUN:  I don’t think any single foul situation‑‑ except for us missing foul shots‑‑ really didn’t have anything to do with the game.

The game was the fact they played 40 minutes full hard and fast.

At times we came back and played pretty good basketball.  But in the main, we had too many shots at the beginning of the game, getting down to 24, back up to 8, back up to 14, down to 6.  They played 40 minutes.  We played sporadically and thus was the game.  Foul situations really had nothing to do with it anything.

Q.  Jim, I’d like to ask you the same question that I asked Shabazz.  You had a lot of the same players on this year’s squad that you had last year.  Obviously, you lost Kemba.  What do you think was the difference between last year and this year?

COACH CALHOUN:  We won the first game last year, and we lost the first game this year.  I don’t know what to tell you.  You saw the game.  We played very poorly.  We deserved to lose the game.  They deserved to win the game.  Last year we played Bucknell and beat them by 25 points.  We deserved to win.  They deserved to lose.

Mike, we played very poorly.  I don’t know really what to tell you.  I’m sure our kids are‑‑ I feel badly that Shabazz is trying to take credit for it.  Shabazz wasn’t the problem.  We collectively didn’t play like Iowa State did.

And last year during the six games, or whatever games, and last year is last year.  This year in the past couple weeks, we played much better basketball collectively together for 40 minutes.  Tonight, we were very sporadic in the way we played.  We’d get back into the game, then out of game.

A lot of that was self‑induced, but it was taking advantage because of the way Iowa State played.  Any comparisons to last year, as I said to a thousand people, we won the National Championships last year, the trophy is tucked away, safe, locked.  We’re starting this season in the NCAA Tournament with an opportunity, and that’s what tonight was, and we didn’t take advantage of a great opportunity.

I thought that Iowa State took great advantage of the opportunity.  I’m not trying to be a jerk to you, but last year and this year have nothing to do with each other.  They really don’t.

Q.  Jim, what will be the process you’re going to go through here to decide if you’re going to come back and coach next year?

COACH CALHOUN:  We’re talking about tonight’s game.  We’re not talking about me.  I think we’re talking about that.  I’m going to get on the plane tomorrow, go home, and do what I usually do, and meet up with the team on Monday.

So as far as my own personal thing, I don’t think it has any relevance here, to be honest with you.

Q.  The disappointing result tonight notwithstanding, do you look back at this season as more of one that’s disappointing or one that’s rewarding.

COACH CALHOUN:  That’s a good question because it has got to do with tonight’s game.

More importantly, I discovered being away from the team for eight games and almost four weeks, that this team‑‑ and I think I might have expressed this yesterday‑‑ put a great deal of pressure on itself for no reason.  So when you ask about last year, last year is last year.  It’s done, finished, complete.  To make any comparisons is not valid because it’s not the same team.  You change one player, you change it, leadership and go‑to guy and all those kinds of things.

The only thing I can deal with is I think this team got better at particular points in time.  But I always felt until recently‑‑ tonight was an exception.  You’re right, it’s a disappointing ending.  That there were some things that made me feel good about this team.  I like coaching basketball.  I hated the ending today because I didn’t think we were typical to the way we played the last couple of weeks.

I really thought we competed a couple times against Syracuse, beating West Virginia, and some of the games against Pittsburgh, 3 out of 4 games.  The most important thing, and it will always be rewarding when dealing with young guys.  It’s always great to stand on the podium.  You only get so many chances to do that.

Tonight’s game was a disappointment.  This season was not a disappointment for me because I knew, quite frankly, that this team could be very good, and we just didn’t reach the level.

There’s been a lot of people saying this happened, that happened, so this should happen.  I still go back to Roy Williams’ team in 2009 after the National Championship and how much they struggled.  And at times, that’s who we were, trying to find who we were.  Always fighting ourselves‑‑ I don’t mean fighting each other, but fighting ourselves, who’s going to be what.

If they just kind of grew up a little bit, we were much better off.  But I always felt badly this team fought itself so much and probably could have achieved a little bit more.  As far as kids, they came together to get themselves in the NCAA Tournament.  We keep producing 20‑game seasons at UConn and getting into the tournament, have better results than we did tonight, I think we’ll be happy.

Q.  Jim, young players being young players, human nature, do you think there’s any chance they may have peeked ahead a little bit to the possibility of playing Kentucky?

COACH CALHOUN:  I really don’t know that.  It’s obviously a valid question because we had two great‑‑ we played Kentucky last year in the classic game of the semifinals in the National Championship, and the kids do know each other.  If they did, they made a hell of a mistake.  I don’t think they did.

For whatever reason, we got caught as being nothing more than a street sign as they went by us a thousand miles an hour in that first ten minutes of basketball.  We did regroup, came back, which I was very happy to see, but I can’t‑‑ I never felt we weren’t ready for the game.

As a matter of fact, I felt we were really ready for the game and obviously disappointed that we didn’t play better.

THE MODERATOR:  Thank you, Coach.

Here’s the Iowa State postgame transcript if you’re interested as well.

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photo credit: Bettina Hansen – Hartford Courant (No. 9 in gallery)

Red Sox Spring Training Delight – 3/15

Kyle Lohse (L), Alfredo Aceves (R)

After enjoying a day off yesterday, the Boston Red Sox return to Grapefruit League action when they host the St. Louis Cardinals at JetBlue Park this afternoon.

The first pitch today is scheduled for 2:35 p.m. There is no television or radio coverage of the game.

Here are this afternoon’s lineups:

St. Louis Cardinals Boston Red Sox
1. Rafael Furcal SS 1. Kevin Youkilis 3B
2. Jon Jay CF 2. Jacoby Ellsbury CF
3. Carlos Beltran DH 3. Dustin Pedroia 2B
4. Matt Adams 1B 4. Adrian Gonzalez 1B
5. Daniel Descalso 2B 5. David Ortiz DH
6. Matt Carpenter LF 6. Cody Ross RF
7. Erik Komatsu RF 7. Ryan Lavarnway C
8. Koyie Hill C 8. Darnell McDonald LF
9. Alex Cora 3B 9. Nick Punto SS
Kyle Lohse SP Alfredo Aceves SP

Aceves will be followed by RHP Daniel Bard, RHP Matt Albers and LHP Justin Thomas.

Lohse will be followed by RHP Jason Motte, RHP Kyle McClellan, RHP Fernando Salas, LHP J.C. Romero and LHP Marc Rzepczynski.

To see the links from the overnight and morning, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

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

MORE LINKS WILL BE ADDED BEFORE GAME TIME AS THEY BECOME AVAILABLE

Learning to be Lester: Prospect Drake Britton taking notes on Sox ace [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]

It’s clear that Red Sox are coming into focus [Boston Globe]

Out-of-nowhere Daniel Nava back there [Boston Herald]

Bobby Valentine, Ben Cherington in good spot [Boston Herald]

Handicapping the Red Sox’ rotation competition [Clubhouse Insider]

Red Sox top pitching prospect hopes to start season in Double-A [Clubhouse Insider]

Morning Red Sox notes: Ryan Sweeney still sore, pitching rotation [Clubhouse Insider]

Valentine: Carl Crawford to start hitting ’soon’ [Clubhouse Insider]

Scott Brown lauds Wakefield and Varitek [CSN New England]

Sox’ deal for Lannan still possible [CSN New England]

Pitching plans for the next few days [Extra Bases]

Ryan Lavarnway is still impressing … Bad news for Quiznos, good for the Red Sox [Full Count]

How the new CBA is hitting Red Sox players in the back pocket [Full Count]

Karl Ravech called it: Kevin Youkilis latest to lead off for Red Sox [Full Count]

Felix Doubront Poised to Land No. 5 Spot in Red Sox Rotation, Shortstop Battle Heating Up (Podcast) [NESN.com]

Hazen: “The decisions are far from over” [Projo Sox Blog]

Top prospect Ranaudo aiming for assignment to Double-A [Projo Sox Blog]

Sweeney taking return from quad strain slowly [Projo Sox Blog]

Prospect Q&A: Lavarnway on cusp [RedSox.com]

Legend of Bobby V continues to build [RedSox.com]

Short answer: Aviles the likely starter for Sox [RedSox.com]

For more slices of Red Sox goodness, head over to the Boston Globe, Boston Herald, CSN New EnglandESPN Boston, NESN, Providence Journal, RedSox.com and WEEI websites.

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Photo credits: Getty Images, Getty Images

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/15

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball teams as well as some of the other sports. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

It’s game day for the UConn men’s basketball team as they’ll open up the 2012 NCAA Tournament with a matchup against the Iowa State Cyclones. Tip is scheduled for approximately 9:20 p.m. and the game will be broadcast nationally on TBS.

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

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Iowa State’s Threes Will Pose Huskies Big Concern [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Cyclones’ Chris Babb: His Job Is To Silence UConn’s Jeremy Lamb [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

UConn Men: Wrapping Things Up From Louisville [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

‘Kemba Walker’s Not Coming Back, Is He?’ [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Huskies Are Ready for Iowa State [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Notes/Quotes from The Mayor: “I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a player like Royce White.” [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Iowa State Players: “I mean, Kemba Walker isn’t coming back, is he?” [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Notes/Quotes from UConn press conference: “I always felt this team pushed too hard to be something it wasn’t yet.” [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Hoiberg talks about UConn, Calhoun and pro prospects of Drummond, Lamb, etc. [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Confident Huskies ready to go [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Larry Bird’s not walking through that door… [Neill Ostrout – Journal Inquirer]

‘Cantankerous’ Calhoun enjoying ride with Huskies [Neill Ostrout – Journal Inquirer]

Five Keys to Beating Iowa State [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Men’s Basketball Prepares For NCAAs, Iowa State [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn men try to keep the good vibes going [CT Post]

Iowa State show: ‘The Mayor’ and his transfers [CT Post]

Calhoun Says Huskies Are Finally Coming Around [Hartford Courant]

Iowa State Coach Sees NBA Talent In UConn’s Jeremy Lamb, Andre Drummond [Hartford Courant]

Despite Unfriendly Past, Calhoun Has Praise For Calipari [Hartford Courant]

Iowa State’s Royce White A Complex, Remarkable Man [Hartford Courant]

Iowa State will attack from long range [New Haven Register]

Huskies anxious to get going [The Day]

Cyclones’ White will draw crowd [The Day]

Everyone wants UConn-Kentucky, but Iowa State wants to disappoint [CBSSports.com]

Iowa State-UCONN: Breaking Down the Key Matchups [Clones Confidential]

Iowa State-UCONN: Q&A With Sox & Dawgs [Clones Confidential]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Boys Will Be Boys, Girls Will Be Girls [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

John also answered a question in his mailbag [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Quest for another title begins Monday for future Husky [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Mosqueda-Lewis has been her own person, player for UConn [CT Post]

UConn Women Wouldn’t Mind Some Tournament Road Trips [Hartford Courant]

Home Cooking [Hartford Courant]

Samarie Walker showing she’s on the ball for Kentucky women’s team [Louisville Courier-Journal]

UConn Football links

Former UConn CB Chris Lopes: An Inside Look On A Decision To Transfer [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Catching Up With UConn Coach Paul Pasqualoni Ahead Of Spring Practice [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

UConn Coach Paul Pasqualoni Talks About The Addition Of Temple – And Coach Steve Addazio [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

UConn Football Coach Paul Pasqualoni Officially Welcomes Temple [Hartford Courant]

Other UConn related links

M. Ice Hockey. Cole Schneider Signs Pro Contact With Ottawa Senators [UConnHuskies.com]

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

UConn Men’s 2012 NCAA 2nd Round Pregame Quotes

Here’s what UConn Huskies men’s basketball players Alex Oriakhi, Jeremy Lamb and head coach Jim Calhoun had to say to the media assembled at the KFC Yum! Center before their matchup on Thursday with the Iowa State Cyclones.

2012 NCAA Men's Final FourTranscript courtesy of ASAP Sports:

Q.  For Alex, I don’t know if you’ll be guarding in most of the game, but you’ll probably have Royce White a little bit.  What kind of challenges does that represent, and how good is he?

ALEX ORIAKHI:  Well, he’s real versatile.  So I think me and Andre, we’re both going to get a shot at him.  We’re definitely going to double him because he’s obviously the best passer and big man overall.

We’re just going to try to make it as difficult as possible for him.

Q.  This is for any of you guys.  The regular season, you only get maybe two days to prepare for your team.  Does it help you guys have had extensive time to watch the game tape and prepare for Iowa State because they’re such a different team?

JEREMY LAMB:  During the regular season, sometimes we have more time to get ready for teams.  I think last year we went through the tournament, we prepared for teams in a short time.  I don’t think it helps.  I think our coaching staff really gets us prepared, good scouting report and good highlights on them so we know what to get ready for.

You could say it’s an advantage, but I think we’re ready for short time too.

Q.  Guys, do you feel like everybody’s rooting for you in this one, that everybody wants to see that UConn‑Kentucky matchup?  Have you heard that?  Do you get that feel?  How do you not overlook Iowa State with Kentucky?

ALEX ORIAKHI:  You definitely hear it from the fans.  They definitely want to see the UConn‑Kentucky matchup.  Coach tells us take it one game at a time.  We’re just trying to beat Iowa State and then play Saturday.  If we win on Saturday, we want to play again.  We just take it one step at a time, not looking too far ahead.

Q.  For Shabazz and Jeremy, could you talk about guarding three‑point shooters?  They have a lot of them, obviously they shoot a lot of them.  And you’ve struggled with it throughout the year.  What do you need to do differently?  What do you need to do better against Iowa State?

JEREMY LAMB:  In some of the regular season games, I think we didn’t work as hard to defend the three as we could.  We let people get open shots, and they were able to hit a couple, and it gave them confidence to hit more.

I think we’ve just really got to be ready to close out, no easy buckets.  They’re a great three‑point shooting team, and if we let them get open shots, they’re going to knock them down.  I think we’ve just got to work hard, talk on defense, and just be ready to contest and don’t let them get easy shots.

Q.  Alex, Royce was saying earlier today that you guys have played quite a few times.  Can you talk about your experience playing against him and his ability to pass?

ALEX ORIAKHI:  We’ve definitely played each other in AAU and the Jordan Classic.  He’s just a rushing type big man.  He can definitely handle the ball, and he can definitely pass.
It’s going to be a different look, though, from what I’m used to guarding.  It’s definitely going to be a challenge.  And it’s definitely something me and my frontcourt players are looking forward to.

THE MODERATOR:  Okay, guys.  Thank you very much.  Good luck. 

To see what UConn head coach Jim Calhoun has to say, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

We’d like to welcome University of Connecticut Head Coach Jim Calhoun to the dais and open it up to the media for questions.

Q.  Jim, it seems like the word most often used with Royce White is unique by most coaches.  In your experience, how unique is he, and how did you simulate him in practice this week?

COACH CALHOUN:  We don’t have anybody who plays like him, obviously.  When you’re 6’8″, 270, 280, big, and he’s very athletic.  He has a great feel for the game.

Any guy who has put up the numbers he’s put up‑‑ offensively, rebounding, but particularly assist‑wise.  He’s a terrific, terrific passer, and fearless in many ways.  He’ll turn it over a few times, but it’s not going to dissuade him from making plays.

I think the thing he does is he makes you‑‑ you don’t want to get polarized on him and get beat.  He can help facilitate that.  So it becomes very difficult.

But he’s a heck of a basketball player.  I was talking to a pro scout today who’s seen him four or five times and just said he’s got some McHale stuff inside.  Right now I wouldn’t consider him a great shooter outside, but he just does things to help his team win.
I think Fred has done more than a masterful job of training that team, looking around for the pure point guard.  Didn’t find one, didn’t find a very talented kid who can, once again, make his team go.  164 assists, I think he has.  Bottom line is he’s a traffic terrific basketball player.  You hit it right off the head.

You can’t simulate him.  I’ll guarantee you Fred doesn’t have another one, and nobody else has the same kinds of plays.  We’ve seen him before but not quite like him.  We can see the kids that can shoot.  We’ve seen the kids that can post up, but he’s a unique basketball player.
Hard to simulate in practice.  He isolates a lot.  He brings it up full court against pressure, and he makes everybody on his team better.  He’s a handful without question.

Just to give you an idea, this morning at practice, we played four different guys on him, small, big‑‑ we tried different sets trying to figure out which way he’d try to go after us.

Q.  Jim, what do you need to do differently or better to defend the three in the game against this team?

COACH CALHOUN:  We have started defending the three in the last three or four games by running people off of the three‑point marker.  We did a good job of that until late in that game.  They were really good early.

I thought we did a good job‑‑ I’m sorry.  We played Syracuse three times.  Given the fact that Syracuse shot so great the first time they played us‑‑ I mean, just lights out from three.  Next time around, they didn’t.  And I think we’re doing a better job.

The problem we’re going to have is that we have to stay in contact with three‑point shooters, three at a time, sometimes four.  Not White as much, but we can’t probably‑‑ not probably.  We can’t then allow penetration.  The problem, when you do, you stretch yourself out on the threes.  When you run a team off with two, that’s easy.  With three, that’s okay.  With four, it’s really, really difficult.

I think that Cincinnati in our league has just proven that alone.  One of the reasons they’re here is because they can make threes.  I think this team can make threes in the volume.  When I saw 36 being shot in one game, 15 for 30 against Oklahoma.  Just mind boggling stuff, and you know that that can really get a team to start doubting its own defense.

We’ve worked very hard.  They run about six different sets, and then White does some things on his own with dribble handoffs and so on.  We’re going to have to‑‑ we keep talking about run them off the three and contain the middle.

Dribble penetration for us means an alley‑oop for Andre, Alex, whoever it may be.  Dribble penetration for them means a three because they want to suck the defense down, get you to put your foot in the paint, and the ball is going back out.

So it is unique and different, but we’ve worked very hard at it.  Like any time you get into these tournaments, when they spin those‑‑ I’ve told this to a lot of people.  If you’re a 1 or a 9, there’s a difference.  Quite frankly, it’s who you’re going to play many times that’s more important.  We’re playing a different, unique team.  We think there’s things offensively we can do against them.  Defensively, we’re going to find out if we can stop a very unique team.

You’re right, they’re attacking two things that during the year have reared its ugly head for us.  We block shots down low very well, but we haven’t taken away the kind of penetration I’d like to see.  And at a particular point in seven or eight games, we were just God awful from three.  We’ve worked hard and gotten better at it, but we’re going to be put to the ultimate test.

Q.  Coach, the past four games since you’ve come back, do you think it’s the best stretch you’ve put together maybe of the whole season?

COACH CALHOUN:  It’s hard to say that.  We come out of the Bahamas, beating a pretty good Florida State team, looks even better today.  And then we played Arkansas and Fairfield came on to win 23, 24 basketball games.  We were playing really good then.

And just getting to Florida State, which was an overtime game, with Ryan back, I would say this much.  I think in the past ten days it’s been the least interrupted with both myself and Ryan, nine, eight‑‑ that’s 11 for me.  A lot of games.  So to be together‑‑ you know, I think, when I got to practice two and a half weeks ago on a Friday, I think we’ve been as together as we’ve been.

Early in the season, we went to‑‑ in 48 hours, beat Notre Dame, broke a 29‑game win streak at Notre Dame.  Come back on that Monday from the Saturday game and beat West Virginia.  We were playing fairly well then.  I think we get caught up in playing a loot of good teams that never give us a chance to kind of get going.
Those things are all in the past.  What we were doing, this is a brand new tournament.  I think we last year were living proof of that.  And everybody says we weren’t going to make the tournament.  We were going to make the tournament before we even played the Big East tournament.  We were 21‑9.  We had great wins over Kentucky.  We had great wins over Michigan State, Wichita State‑‑ we had great wins.  We were just fine.
But after we completed the Big East tournament in incredible fashion, we were given an opportunity.  This year we had to work a lot harder, didn’t do as good a job during the season.  But then at the end, we earned a chance here.  Then all bets are off.

I think the way basketball is today, as opposed to even 2004 when we had the power team and six potential pros, Emeka Okafor, Ben Gordon, Charlie Villanueva, et cetera.  That era is gone.  The closest to it would be probably Syracuse and a Kentucky team.

My point being simply those powerhouses I don’t think exist.  That’s why it’s very difficult for a team to win those six games.  We’re starting over, fresh chance, and we have an opportunity.  We earned that opportunity.

It begins against Fred’s team and Iowa State tomorrow night at 9:20.

Q.  Can you imagine John Calipari going back to coach in the NBA?  And do you think, if a coach wins a National Championship, they’re more likely to make a move like that than if they haven’t?

COACH CALHOUN:  A couple things.  John at present rate, based upon numbers, is going in the Hall of Fame, assuming he stays in college basketball.  And if he keeps‑‑ in 1990, we got beat by Christian Laettner’s shot.  For the next nine years, we were tortured that we weren’t good because we couldn’t win a National Championship, and we were good.  Ray Allen, Donyell‑‑ we all know there’s a lot of good players at UConn.  We average 26 wins a year, the whole thing.  A lot of final eights, just couldn’t get there.

If you stick with it and you smell it enough, you’ll get it.  So I don’t think it’s a case of John winning or not winning a National Championship.  Can I imagine John going in the NBA or anything else?  Yes.  Or anything else?  Yes.  I think John very simply marches‑‑ always has, even when he was a young guy.  When he was at Pitt, marches to his own drummer, and I think that John has taken that and obviously done a very good job coaching‑wise and otherwise.

Let’s put it this way.  Maybe in your own set of mind, would you think it’s some sort of standard, because I heard a lot of years until I won a few‑‑ you know, he’s on the landscape now.  You really don’t have to look, find, and come up with a much better coach, quite frankly.  I know he has a lot of very good talent.  He does a lot with that very good talent.

My point being simply, if he feels that way, what you’re talking, that’s the difference.  I’ve never had a chance to ask him, nor would I really.  It’s going to be his choice.  He certainly can handle the players, that’s one thing.  And I’ve always said that some of our best teams are much more difficult to handle because of talent, and he’s done a remarkable job doing that.

I don’t think he has to prove anything more in college basketball if he got a very good NBA job, if that’s what he’d want to do.  I personally don’t think he has to prove anything.

Q.  Coach, I just spoke to some of your players, and the most common thing they were saying, they’re having fun.  I asked Shabazz, where does it come from, just being here?  He said it stems from you since you returned.  Has there been a change in attitude, heart, enjoyment for you?

COACH CALHOUN:  I think cantankerous is the word associated with me.  Kind of a barrel of laughs, most people would refer to me as.  Most officials do.  They really just think I’m a hell of a guy.

But I’ve always enjoyed coaching.  I’ve always enjoyed games.  But the point you make is a very good one in this sense.  I begged, I pleaded with them.  We won the National Championship, we’re not defending anything.  It’s locked away, put away.  I know we’re going to be called defending champs.  I understand that.

But I always felt this team pushed too hard, too much to try to be something it wasn’t yet.  And that’s somewhat of why we had an up and down season for us.  So I do think right now, just the way things broke, it became kind of‑‑ let’s just go get it.  We’ve got to get into the NCAA Tournament.  Here’s what we’ve got to do, and we did it.

I think they’re not chasing something now.  They’re playing basketball.  So that gets your point.

But I really felt in retrospect, looking back, especially when you’re out four weeks, looking back at your own team, they put pressure on themselves that they never really had to.  They really didn’t.  I thought they didn’t find the joy they should find in the ball.

If you’re around me and you’re a player, you’d find out I enjoy basketball.  I love it.  And I’m demanding, but I’ve never found most of my kids, be it Ray Allen or all the other kids that we’ve had, not enjoy, not every minute of it certainly, but they enjoyed the experience of playing.  And I’m not so sure this team did enjoy themselves.  I think they’re enjoying themselves now.

It’s taken quite some time for them to really get off that kick of we have to do this.  No, you’ve just got to play ball, and the rest will take care of itself.  So we’re probably in a better place.  We’ll find that out a little more tomorrow night.

Be sure to check out what Iowa State head coach Fred Hoiberg and his players had to say as well.

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Red Sox Spring Training News & Notes – 3/14

The biggest rivalry in baseball and all of sports for that matter started up again last night with the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees playing each other in Tampa, FL. Oh, who am I kidding, it’s only spring training. But I digress.

Last night’s SPRING TRAINING game was all about the pitching staffs.

Hits were far and few between for both teams as they each had four hits for the game by eight different players. The winning run, also the only run of the game, was scored on a three-base error after a Pedro Ciriaco single allowed him to come all the way around.

Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Felix Doubrant delivers a warm-up pitch before the start of their spring training baseball game against the New York Yankees at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Fla,. Tuesday, March 13, 2012.Felix Doubront stated his case for a spot in the rotation as did Vicente Padilla while Michael Bowden kept his hat in the bullpen mix.

Doubront got into a little trouble in the 1st inning but settled down after that.  He allowed two hits, a walk and had three strikeouts in four innings of work. Bowden followed Doubront and gave up a hit while striking out three.

Padilla responded from a bad outing his last time out to strikeout four Yankees in three innings of work. Junichi Tazawa picked up the save after striking out three of the four batters he faced. The other had a single.

It is still early to know who will be in the starting rotation after Jon Lester, Josh Beckett and Clay Buchholz. But if this group of guys along with Daniel Bard, Alfredo Aceves and Aaron Cook continue to pitch as well as they have, skipper Bobby Valentine will have some tough choices to make.

One thing that could factor into Valentine’s and Ben Cherington’s decision making is the fact that several players are out of options. As far as the pitchers go, Bowden, Doubront, Matt Albers, Andrew Miller and Franklin Morales are out of options. As far as position players, only Darnell McDonald is out of options.

What this means is that if they don’t make the Red Sox out of spring training, they will be waived giving other teams a chance to claim them and put them on their 40-man roster. If they aren’t claimed, they can accept the assignment from the Red Sox or become free agents.

The Red Sox will enjoy a break from Grapefruit League games today and will be back in action tomorrow afternoon when they host the St. Louis Cardinals at 2:35 p.m. at JetBlue Park. So for now, enjoy the overnight links from the local Boston media.

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

He stays behind, yet moves ahead [Boston Globe]

Less of a diamond in the rough for GM [Boston Globe]

Clay Buchholz’ pickoff of Punto a highlight [Boston Herald]

For now, advantage New York [Boston Herald]

Felix Doubront leads way vs. Yankees [Boston Herald]

Lucchino: A ‘chance’ Iglesias will be Red Sox’ starting shortstop [CSN New England]

Doubront sharp in Red Sox’ 1-0 win over Yankees [CSN New England]

Valentine makes light of Guillen’s post-ejection comments [CSN New England]

Buchholz pitches four simulated innings [CSN New England]

Valentine on Guillen: No surprise [ESPN Boston]

Doubront, Padilla shut down Yankees [ESPN Boston]

Valentine enjoys first taste of rivalry [ESPN Boston]

Mark Melancon: The man who would have been Mo [Full Count]

Bobby Valentine really liked what he saw from Red Sox pitchers Tuesday night [Full Count]

Adrian Gonzalez Not Fond of Possibly Dabbling in Outfield, But Will Accept Role If Necessary [NESN.com]

Bobby Valentine Laughs Off Ozzie Guillen’s Expletive-Laced Comments [NESN.com]

Felix Doubront Shines Against Yankees As He Looks to Win Starting Job [NESN.com]

Padilla unlikely to get a start in immediate future [Projo Sox Blog]

Miller to return to mound Friday; Iglesias, Sweeney OK [Projo Sox Blog]

Doubront’s gem doesn’t come easily [RedSox.com]

Valentine eager to see what rivalry brings [RedSox.com]

Red Sox don’t fret over Sweeney’s soreness [RedSox.com]

Buchholz tests offspeed stuff in sim start [RedSox.com]

Podcast: Short-term solutions [Touching All The Bases]

For more slices of Red Sox goodness, head over to the Boston Globe, Boston Herald, CSN New EnglandESPN Boston, NESN, Providence Journal, RedSox.com and WEEI websites.

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