Category Archives: CT Whale

Letter From Howard Baldwin & Howard Baldwin, Jr. To CT Whale Fans

To Our Valued CT Whale Fans,

Thank you so much for your interest in our team and in our efforts to bring back the great Whaler brand to the city of Hartford and the state of Connecticut. It’s hard to believe we are about to conclude our second year of operation with the team. The next couple of months is going to be a very critical time period for our efforts in Hartford. We therefore wanted to reach out to you directly so you heard from us what will be transpiring.

CT WhaleThe first issue that we must deal with for the future is that of establishing a long-term and permanent home for the Connecticut Whale at the XL Center — under lease terms that enable us to properly operate our business in a professional manner.  In order for us to be able to operate beyond 2013, we must have a lease arrangement with the XL Center that is competitive with other AHL teams. Right now we are operating under lease terms that are by far and away the most onerous in the American Hockey League.

In no way is this meant to be a criticism of the current building management team or anyone else for that matter. We recognize full well the things were done in the 90s that have put an unfair burden on current operations at the XL Center which of course includes us. However, these obligations no longer exist after next season. Therefore it is imperative that as we go into the future these burdens are no longer passed on to the prime tenant (i.e. the Connecticut Whale). It is our responsibility to you and to all our loyal fans and sponsors to do what we have to do in the next 30-60 days to solidify hockey in Hartford for the next 10 years.

The month of March is an exciting month for the Connecticut Whale. During the month of March and the first half of April we have 12 home games, all on attractive weekend dates. On March 10th, Saturday night, we have the first Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame night. This will be an annual event. Some of the players being inducted into the first group are former Whaler greats Mike Liut, Pat Verbeek and Blaine Stoughton as well as our great coach and former Wolf Pack player Ken Gernander, three-time US Olympian Julie Chu as well as former Ranger Hall of Famer Brian Leetch.

The month of March is hockey time. This is a time when playoffs are upcoming and the games are meaningful. We are counting on your attendance to as many of these games as possible.

Finally, rest assured on behalf of our partnership and each dedicated person that works for the Connecticut Whale, executives, coaches, and players alike, it is a privilege to play in this city and to have your support. Thank you very much.

Sincerely,

Howard Baldwin, Chairman/CEO

Howard Baldwin, Jr., President/COO

Whalers Sports & Entertainment/Connecticut Whale

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Whale’s CT Hockey Hall of Fame Night is this Saturday

HARTFORD, March 7, 2012:  The Connecticut Whale’s CT Hockey Hall of Fame Night is coming up this Saturday, March 10 at the XL Center, as the Whale host the Norfolk Admirals in a 7:00 game.

CT WhaleThe night marks the enshrinement of a new class of 2012 inductees into the CT Hockey Hall of Fame, which has adopted eight members from the storied Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame.  The new inductees are: Connecticut-bred Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, ex-Hartford Whalers 56-goal scorer Blaine Stoughton, former Whalers goaltender Mike Liut, former Whalers captain Pat Verbeek, Connecticut Whale/Hartford Wolf Pack franchise icon, long-time captain and current head coach Ken Gernander, three-time Olympic medalist for Team USA and all-time NCAA women’s leading scorer Julie Chu, and one of the founders of the New England Whalers, William E. Barnes.

The honorees will be officially enshrined into the Hall of Fame in an induction ceremony during the first intermission.  The ceremony will feature the raising of a Hall of Fame banner and video tributes to each inductee.  Fans can take home a special souvenir of the night, as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be distributed, courtesy of SuperCuts.

The pre-game festivities will include a return appearance by the band “Scarlet Fade” and a free autograph session by Whalers Alumni Russ Anderson, Garry Swain, Norm Barnes and Yvon Corriveau.

There will also be an autograph session in the second intermission featuring selected members of the Hall of Fame class.  Those committed at this point are Brian Leetch, Mike Liut, Blaine Stoughton and Pat Verbeek.  The autograph session will be limited to 250 attendees, and a special autograph session pass, which can be purchased for $20, is required.  An application form for a pass can be found on the Whale’s official website at http://www.ctwhale.com/news/?article_id=812, and first priority in awarding the passes will be given to Whale full-season seat-holders.

Additionally, in Saturday’s pre-game warm-up each Whale player will wear a jersey commemorating the career of one of the inductees.  For example, one of the players will wear a Blaine Stoughton New England Whalers jersey, one will wear a Stoughton Hartford Whalers sweater and one will sport a Stoughton New Haven Nighthawks jersey, etc..  All of the jerseys are authentic, hand-crafted and of the highest quality.  A number of the jerseys will then be available for bids in a silent auction in the arena on Saturday night, and a portion of them will be auctioned on-line.  A full list of all the different commemorative jerseys is available at http://www.ctwhale.com/news/?article_id=812.  The pregame warm-up period runs from approximately 6:25-6:40 PM.

This will be the first class of Hall of Fame inductees since 1990, and further details are available at www.cthockeyHOF.org.

An overview of the schedule of events:

5:30-7:00: “Scarlet Fade” band performs in the Atrium.

6:15-7:00: Four members of the Hartford Whalers Alumni — Russ Anderson, Norm Barnes, Yvon Corriveau and Garry Swain will sign autographs in the concourse (inside main entrance).

6:20 – 6:40: CT Whale players take the ice wearing classic CT hockey jerseys.

1st Intermission: HOF Banner Raising Ceremony.

7:00-2nd intermission: Classic jersey silent auction in Atrium.

2nd intermission:  HOF inductees sign autographs in Atrium.

Tickets to CT Hockey Hall of Fame Night, and 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.

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

“Papa” Surprised, Honored to be New Whale Captain

By Bruce Berlet

When the Connecticut Whale gathered for a team meal Saturday night in Manchester, N.H., coach Ken Gernander had a surprise, especially for veteran defenseman Wade Redden.

CT WhaleAfter the Whale had been without a captain for nearly 16 months, Gernander announced he and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller had decided the man affectionately known as “Papa” would be wearing the “C” for the first time in his illustrious career. Redden had been an assistant captain several times, including since he arrived in Hartford last season, but never was the official leader of the pack.

“He kind of announced it unexpectedly, but it was all good,” Redden said Tuesday. “It’s a nice honor, for sure, but it was a bit surprising. It’s been awhile since Dane has been traded, and no one had been named captain, though that’s not a huge deal for the team not to have one. There’s obviously a good group of guys here who are great leaders, but it’s an honor for me to get it, and we’ll try to do our best to do as good as we can down the stretch.”

Gernander said there were a few candidates for the captaincy, which has been vacant since Dane Byers were traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets for right wing Chad Kolarik on Nov. 10, 2010. But while fellow assistant captain Kris Newbury was another high on the list, Redden seemed a natural after he returned Feb. 18 after missing two months because of an injury sustained in a 2-1 shootout loss to Providence on Dec. 17.

“He has a lot of real good qualities from the way he handles himself both on and off the ice and the way he interacts with his teammates and what he shows as far as leadership on the ice and the way the other guys look to him at times,” Gernander said. “We haven’t had a captain for a while, but there had been a lot of movement and transactions early on in the season, and he missed a lot of time because of injury, so now that he’s back and healthy, we thought it was time to name him.

“Even while he was out injured, I think you could see he was a guy who knew how to handle himself, carry himself, and was a very good professional. I think guys responded to that, so when we were comfortable that he was back and healthy and playing, it’s going to be important that we have some leadership going down the stretch and into the playoffs.”

Appropriately, Redden’s first home game as captain will be Friday night against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers. The Whale (29-19-5-5) are on a 10-3-1-0 run and were tied for the Northeast Division lead with the Sound Tigers (31-19-3-3) before Bridgeport visited Worcester on Tuesday night. The Sound Tigers were on an 8-1-0-1 run and a staggering 19-2-0-2 in 2012 after a 2-10-1-1 slide from Thanksgiving to the end of 2011 dropped them into the division cellar. The Sound Tigers, coached by former Hartford Wolf Pack defenseman Brent Thompson, have won five of the first seven meetings with the Whale, who have a six-game winning streak at the XL Center and the AHL’s best home winning percentage of .731 (16-4-2-4).

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Despite his first go-round as a captain and the importance of this time of the season, Redden said he isn’t about to alter his personality or what he has done for 15 pro seasons after being the second overall pick of the New York Islanders in 1995.

“I don’t think anything changes,” said Redden, who has one goal and 11 assists in 32 games. “I think I’ve always been looked to to be a leader on the team, and that’s not going to change anything. I’m not going to try to be overly vocal or anything. I’m not going to try to do too much that way just because they appointed me the captain. I’ve always tried to lead and help out where I could, and that’s going to say the same.”

Redden has exuded nothing but class since being sent to the Wolf Pack in September 2010, helping youngsters such as Ryan McDonagh, Tomas Kundratek, Pavel Valentenko, Michael Del Zotto, Stu Bickel and Jyri Niemi, who idolized Redden growing up in Finland, improve.

“We, as a staff, are proud of Reds and everything he has done,” Gernander said.

As fate would have it, Redden, who is three months shy of his 35th birthday, feels he was helped by a knee injury that sidelined him from Dec. 17 to Feb. 18.

“I obviously didn’t play there for a while, and the rest of the body also had time off, not just the knee was healing,” said Redden, who helped the Whale rally for a 3-2 victory over Manchester on Sunday in his debut as captain. “It’s a long grind, and I used that time to keep myself ready and did everything I could to heal up and stay ready to go, so I’m feeling good right now.

“And when you get to March, everyone gets that excitement back when you see the playoffs are near. Every game means so much now, so it’s a fun time of year to be playing. We’ve got a lot to play for, and for me, it’s always exciting coming to the rink at this time of year. Playoffs are around, and I think everyone likes playing in that atmosphere.”

Redden hopes his refreshed state will allow him to help the Whale even more than usual in the most important part of the season.

“We’ve worked hard to get where we are, and there’s a lot of big games left so we want to do the things that make us successful and do them real hard,” Redden said. “We don’t want to change much at this time because we’ve worked hard to build ourselves into the team we want to be. Now we just have to trust in each other and have some fun out there.”

Fun is something a few of Redden’s teammates have already had at the expense of their captain. After Gernander made the announcement, Kelsey Tessier and Scott Tanski twittered the news to the world, congratulating “Papa” on his new position. It was a friendly reference to Redden nearly being old enough to be the father of teammates such as Tessier, Tanski, Tim Erixon, Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and Ryan Bourque. But it also was a serious sign of respect for someone following in the footsteps of Gernander, who captained the team for its first eight seasons, Craig Weller, Andrew Hutchinson, Greg Moore and Byers.

“I actually got that nickname from (defenseman) Paul Mara when I was in New York,” Redden said with a chuckle. “He’s a good guy, and I don’t know how it kind of stuck. He was ‘Uncle Paulie’ and I was ‘Papa Reds.’ The (Whale) guys picked up on it, and I just think it comes with the territory being an older guy. But it’s all in fun, and I still have lots to play for and hopefully still get another run at (the NHL), so I’ve always tried to continue as I have been.”

CLEAR-DAY ROSTERS ANNOUNCED

The Whale’s 22-man “Clear Day” roster announced Tuesday is goalies Chad Johnson and Cam Talbot, defensemen Redden, Erixon, Brendan Bell, Sam Klassen, Jared Nightingale, Blake Parlett, Pavel Valentenko and Mike Vernace and forwards Tessier, Audy-Marchessault, Bourque, Tanski, Andre Deveaux, Tommy Grant, Kris Newbury, Jordan Owens, Jeff Prough, Andreas Thuresson, Casey Wellman and Mats Zuccarello. Kolarik would have been on the list, but can’t play this season because he wasn’t on an AHL roster on Feb. 27.

“My next goal is to be ready for camp,” Kolarik wrote in his Twitter account.

“It’s unfortunate because Chad has worked so hard to recover from the injury,” Gernander said, alluding to Kolarik’s extensive rehab with athletic trainer Damien Hess and strength and conditioning coach/trainer Mark Cesari. “He would have been a big boost in our lineup offensively and a little bit more experienced and skilled guy. But unfortunately the rules prohibit him from being allowed to participate for us.”

Another player not on the Whale list is veteran left wing Sean Avery. In two stints with the Whale after being waived by the Rangers, Avery had two goals, one assist and 39 penalty minutes in seven games but has been a healthy scratch for the last 15 games since Jan. 27.

The Sound Tigers’ roster is goalies Anders Nilsson and Kevin Poulin, defensemen, Calvin de Haan, Matt Donovan, Mark Katic, Jon Landry, Aaron Ness, Steve Oleksy and Ty Wishart and forwards Sean Backman, Casey Cizikas, Jeremy Colliton, Justin DiBenedetto, Trevor Frischmon, Michael Haley, Scott Howes, Tomas Marcinko, Tyler McNeely, Kael Mouillierat, Rhett Rakhshani, Blair Riley and David Ullstrom. Nilssson, the Reebok/AHL Goaltender of the Month in February, Cizikas and Ullstrom are on recall to the Islanders, and Katic made his season debut in a 6-3 victory at Providence on Sunday after shoulder surgery.

According to AHL-by-laws, only these players are eligible to compete in the remainder of the regular season and playoff games unless emergency conditions arise as a result of recall, injury or suspension. Teams also can add signed junior players or players on amateur tryout contracts after their respective junior or college seasons are complete.

Among the major late moves before the roster deadline were Peoria acquiring former AHL Rookie of the Year wing Patrick O’Sullivan from Portland via a loan deal from Phoenix; the Rivermen sending former AHL 50-goal scorer Brett Sterling to the Pirates; goalie Alex Stalock going from Worcester to Peoria on a loan deal from San Jose; wing Brock Trotter going from Portland to St. John’s; the Jets reassigning goalie Peter Mannino and wing Kenndal McArdle to the Pirates; and Winnipeg trading AHL-contracted wing Shawn Weller to Texas for Dallas loaning forward Raymond Sawada to the IceCaps. … Erixon, Chris Kreider and center J.T. Miller, the Rangers’ first-round pick (15th overall) in 2011 who has 23 goals and 37 assists in 56 games with Plymouth of the Ontario Hockey League, are on The Hockey News’ upcoming Top 75 Future Watch list. … Forward Jared Staal, the youngest of the four professional Staal brothers, has been loaned to the Providence Bruins by the Carolina Hurricanes and is on the Bruins’ Clear Day list. Staal, whose brothers include Rangers defenseman Marc Staal, had three goals and three assists in 37 games with the Charlotte Checkers. … San Antonio ended its annual “rodeo trip” with a 7-3-0-1 record, the most successful in its 10-year history. With the San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo taking over the AT&T Center every winter, the team hits the road for an extended trip, with this year’s trek covering 7,310 miles over 23 days. When the Rampage began the trip in Hamilton on Feb. 7, they were ninth in the Western Conference, but they returned home tied for fourth with their sights set on a playoff berth for the first time since 2008. The Rampage’s top scorer on the rodeo trip was Bill Thomas, who had two points in each of the first three games and finished with five goals and seven assists. Dov Grumet-Morris, the Whale’s MVP last season (5-2-1, 2.36, .924) and Jacob Markstrom (2-1-0, 1.68, .953) shared the goaltending and combined to allow six goals over the final five games. San Antonio returned to the AT&T Center on Saturday night and beat Houston 2-1 for its league-leading 21st one-goal victory. After a two-game set at Texas this weekend, the Rampage will play 11 of their final 16 games at home. … Jason Missiaen of the Greenville Road Warriors, who was with the Whale at the end of last season and in training camp last fall, was named Reebok/ECHL Goaltender of the Week for the second time this season after going 3-0-0 with a 1.62 goals-against average and .948 save percentage. He is 18-12-2 with a 2.90 GAA, .910 save percentage and three shutouts in 33 games this season. … Congratulations to South Windsor native Jon DiSalvatore, whose goal in Houston’s 2-1 loss at San Antonio on Saturday night gave the Aeros’ captain his ninth consecutive 20-goal AHL season to start his career. DiSalvatore also became the AHL’s reigning ironman last week when Alex Henry missed Hamilton’s game against Toronto on Feb. 29. That ended Henry’s streak at 203 consecutive games played. DiSalvatore played his 166th straight game and had a goal and three assists in a 7-6 shootout victory at Abbotsford on Tuesday. Former Wolf Pack center Jeff Taffe scored the deciding goal in the shootout, while former Wolf Pack right wing Hugh Jessiman had two goals and an assist and was named the No. 1 star for Abbotsford. Jessiman, who started the season with Lake Erie, has a career-high 23 goals this season, three in 10 games with the Heat.

GERNANDER, LEETCH AMONG SEVEN NEW HALL OF FAME MEMBERS

Gernander and Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, who was raised in Cheshire and spent most of his 16-year NHL career with the New York Rangers, will be among the seven new inductees into the Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame during the first intermission of the Whale-Norfolk Admirals game on “Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame Night” at the XL Center on Saturday night. The Whale is 0-2-0-1 against the East Division-leading Admirals (39-18-1-2), who have won 12 in a row that given them the best record in the league. That’s largely thanks to All-Star left wing Corey Conacher, who is third overall in the AHL in scoring and first among rookies in goals (31), assists (35) and points (66), veteran center Trevor Smith (21, 36, plus-26) and All-Star goalie Dustin Tokarski (27-11-0, 2.34 goals-against average, .907 save percentage, four shutouts).

The other Hall of Fame inductees will be former Whalers goalie Mike Liut and right wings Blaine Stoughton and Pat Verbeek, three-time Olympian and all-time NCAA women’s leading scorer Julie Chu, a native of Fairfield, and the late William E. Barnes, one of the founders of the New England Whalers.

“Obviously it’s nice to be recognized, and it’s a little different that some of those players are NHL guys,” said Gernander, whose No. 12 is the only number in Wolf Pack/Whale history to be retired to the XL Center rafters. “I’ve spent more time in Connecticut than anywhere else, so I’m pretty fortunate in that regard. Any time that you get recognized I don’t think it’s so much the individual as it’s the people he has been fortunate enough to be associated with. It’s been a first-class organization for a parent club as far as the New York Rangers go. We’re always given every opportunity to succeed and excel here, and I’ve been fortunate enough to play with so many good players and to coach so many good players that I just feel very fortunate. I think it’s just more or less a byproduct of all the great people that I’ve been able to work with.”

Gernander has been with the Wolf Pack/Whale franchise since 1997, when the Rangers moved their top affiliate to Hartford from Binghamton, N.Y., where he played for three seasons. After retiring in 2005 as the AHL’s all-time leader with 123 playoff games and the league’s career scoring leader among American-born players with 624 points in 973 games, Gernander had his number retired on Oct. 8, 2005 as he began two seasons as an assistant coach under Rangers assistant general manager/assistant coach/Whale GM Jim Schoenfeld. Gernander took over as head coach on July 23, 2007 and is trying to lead the Whale to the playoffs for the fourth time in five seasons.

On her Twitter account, Chu, an assistant coach for the Union College women’s hockey team who also plays for the Montreal Stars in the Canadian Women’s Hockey League, said, “Greatly honored to be a part of the 2012 CT Hockey Hall of Fame class. What a privilege.” Next Saturday, Chu will be the keynote speaker at the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award ceremony in Duluth, Minn., where the NCAA Women’s Frozen Four will be played Friday and Sunday. Chu won the award in 2007 as a senior at Harvard University, where she played with fellow Olympians Angela Ruggerio, a standout at Choate School in Wallingford, and Branford native Caitlin Cahow, who is playing for the CWHL’s Boston Blades. The Kazmaier Award is annually given by the USA Hockey Foundation to the top player in NCAA Division I women’s hockey.

The Class of 2012, the first inductees since 1990, will join the eight members of the storied Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame that have been adopted by the Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame. Fans will receive a special souvenir of the night as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given away, courtesy of SuperCuts. Whale players will wear commemorative uniforms celebrating the career of one of the inductees in warm-ups that will be auctioned at the XL Center and on-line, and there will be a special meet-and-greet event during the second intermission with Leetch, Liut, Verbeek, Stoughton and Chu for 250 people who purchased autograph passes for $20 ($15 for season ticket holders). For more information, visit www.cthockeyHOF.org.

Fans also can sponsor a local youth to attend the game on Faith and Family Night by making a $12 donation to Hockey Ministries International Northeast that support chapel programs through the AHL, including with the Whale, and Christian hockey camps for boys and girls. Music will be provided by Scarlet Fade. For more information, contact Rick Mitera, AHL chapel coordinator of Hockey Ministries Northeast at 860-817-6440 or rmitera@hockeyministries.org.

FALCONS FANS GO FOR THE SWEEP

Falcons fans will go for a series sweep in their seventh and final meeting with their Whale counterparts on March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, at 4 p.m. at the XL Center. Tickets ($16) and more information are available at facebook.com/whalefalconsfangame.

The series was 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. A portion of ticket sales benefits Defending the Blue Line, an organization that helps children of military families play hockey. The first five games raised $850 for DBL. … College students can get discounted Whale tickets to weekday games with a “Ditch the Dorms” deal. For Monday through Friday games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket office can get $2 off upper-level tickets and $5 off lower-level seats. … Fans can bid on AHL All-Star Classic jerseys, helmets, gloves and pucks at www.theahl.com. The Whale’s Zuccarello and Audy-Marchessault and the Falcons’ Cam Atkinson, a Greenwich native, were on the Eastern Conference team, which was captained by former Wolf Pack left wing Boyd Kane, captain of the Hershey Bears. Atkinson was recalled by the Columbus Blue Jackets last Friday.

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

Whale Announce “Clear Day” Playoff Roster

HARTFORD, March 6, 2012:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today the team’s 22-man “Clear Day” playoff list, and that forward Chris McKelvie has been loaned to the Whale’s ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhalePer AHL by-laws, only the 20 skaters and two goaltenders on the Clear Day roster are eligible to suit up for the Whale for the remainder of the AHL regular season and the Calder Cup playoffs, unless emergency conditions result from recalls, injuries or suspensions.

Signed Junior players, or players who join the team on amateur tryout agreements after their Junior or college seasons are complete, are also allowed to see action for AHL teams during this period, regardless of whether or not emergency conditions exist.

Following is the Whale’s Clear Day list:

Goaltenders (2): Chad Johnson, Cameron Talbot

Defensemen (8): Brendan Bell, Tim Erixon, Sam Klassen, Jared Nightingale, Blake Parlett, Wade Redden, Pavel Valentenko, Mike Vernace

Forwards (12):  Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Ryan Bourque, Andre Deveaux, Tommy Grant, Kris Newbury, Jordan Owens, Jeff Prough, Scott Tanski, Kelsey Tessier, Andreas Thuresson, Casey Wellman, Mats Zuccarello

McKelvie has skated in 38 games with the Whale this year, and the second-year pro out of Bemidji State University has scored two goals and added three assists for five points, while serving 42 minutes in penalties.

The Whale’s next action is this Friday night, March 9 at the XL Center, a GEICO Connecticut Cup game vs. the Bridgeport Sound Tigers.  That game faces off at 7:00 PM, and fans can take advantage of a special food combo at every remaining Whale Friday home game, as a hot dog and a 12-ounce soda is only $5.

Then this Saturday night, February 10, when the Norfolk Admirals visit the XL Center for a 7:00 game, is CT Hockey Hall of Fame Night.  The night marks the enshrinement of a new class of 2012 inductees into the CT Hockey Hall of Fame, which has adopted eight members from the storied Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame.  The new inductees are: Connecticut-bred Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, ex-Hartford Whalers 56-goal scorer Blaine Stoughton, former Whalers goaltender Mike Liut, former Whalers captain Pat Verbeek, Connecticut Whale/Hartford Wolf Pack franchise icon, long-time captain and current head coach Ken Gernander, three-time Olympic medalist for Team USA and all-time NCAA women’s leading scorer Julie Chu, and one of the founders of the New England Whalers, William E. Barnes.  There will be an induction ceremony during the game, and fans can take home a special souvenir, as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given away, courtesy of SuperCuts.

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.

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

Connecticut Whale 3, Manchester Monarchs 2

By Brian Ring

Manchester, NH, March 4, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Manchester Monarchs, 3-2, Sunday afternoon at the Verizon Wireless Arena. Kelsey Tessier notched the game-winning goal, and Kris Newbury and Andre Deveaux also scored, to back a 31-save performance by goaltender Chad Johnson.

CT WhaleJustin Azevedo scored twice for Manchester.

“We’re happy to get a road win and get back on track here,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “It’s been a couple games without a road win, so it’s an important one.”

The two teams played a scoreless opening period which started out slow, but picked up in intensity after a mid-period scrap between the Whale’s Jared Nightingale and Manchester’s Justin Johnson. The teams finished the frame tied with nine shots each, with the Whale getting their best chances on a five-on-three opportunity starting at the 12:11 mark.

The Whale would carry the majority of the play in the second period, outshooting the Monarchs 17-13. Jeff Zatkoff (39 saves) was great in goal for Manchester, stopping a number of quality opportunities, with saves on Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Casey Wellman and Mats Zuccarello rating among the best.

Johnson was equally up to the task for the Whale, helping the Whale to kill a pair of second period penalties.

Azevedo would finally break through for the Monarchs 33 seconds into the third period, as Manchester’s power-play recorded the first goal of the game. Azevedo one-timed a pass from Jake Muzzin past Johnson for the score, with Trent Hunter recording the secondary assist.

The game would turn at that point, as the Whale scored three unanswered third-period goals in a span of 3:37.

The Whale would tie the game with 11:46 remaining, as Deveaux poked the puck past Zatkoff for his 19th goal of the season. The puck had bounced from Audy-Marchessault to Deveaux, who managed to just squeak it by the left pad of Zatkoff. Tommy Grant also assisted on the goal.

Newbury would score to make it a 2-1 game at the 10:23 mark, as he won the draw back to Pavel Valentenko. Newbury would then tip Valentenko’s shot past Zatkoff, becoming the first Whale player to crack the 20-goal barrier this season.

Tessier would earn the game-winner with a great individual effort just under a minute later, capitalizing on a two-on-one rush with Brendan Bell. Tessier made a nice move around the Manchester defender, missing his initial shot but sending the second attempt past Zatkoff.

Azevedo would score again for Manchester with 3.2 seconds remaining, but it was not enough to keep the Whale from capturing their third straight meeting with the Monarchs.

The Whale return home this Friday, when they host the Bridgeport Sound Tigers in GEICO Connecticut Cup action at the XL Center (7:00). The Whale will then face the Norfolk Admirals Saturday night in Hartford (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.

The Whale and the CT Hockey Hall of Fame will partner to hold a CT Hockey Hall of Fame night at the Whale’s home game at the XL Center this Saturday, March 10 vs. Norfolk.  That night will mark the enshrinement of a new class of 2012 inductees into the CT Hockey Hall of Fame, which has adopted eight members from the storied Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame.  The new inductees are: Connecticut-bred Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, ex-Hartford Whalers 56-goal scorer Blaine Stoughton, former Whalers goaltender Mike Liut, former Whalers captain Pat Verbeek, Connecticut Whale/Hartford Wolf Pack franchise icon, long-time captain and current head coach Ken Gernander, three-time Olympic medalist for Team USA and all-time NCAA women’s leading scorer Julie Chu, and one of the founders of the New England Whalers, William E. Barnes.  There will be an induction ceremony during the game, which faces off at 7:00 PM on Saturday, and fans can take home a special souvenir of the March 10 night, as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given away, courtesy of SuperCuts.  This will be the first class of inductees since 1990, and further details are available at cthockeyHOF.org.

College students can get discounted tickets to Whale weekday games with the Whale’s “Ditch the Dorms” deal.  For Monday through Friday home games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center can get $2 off Upper Level tickets and $5 off Lower Level seats.

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, mini plans and great group discounts, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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

Connecticut Whale 3 at Manchester Monarchs 2
Sunday, March 4, 2012 – Verizon Wireless Arena

Connecticut 0 0 3 – 3
Manchester 0 0 2 – 2

1st Period- No Scoring.  Penalties-Nightingale Ct (fighting), 9:43; Johnson Mch (fighting), 9:43; Newbury Ct (interference), 9:58; Azevedo Mch (hooking), 11:39; Cliche Mch (high-sticking), 12:11.

2nd Period- No Scoring.  Penalties-Deveaux Ct (delay of game), 3:57; Newbury Ct (tripping), 19:40.

3rd Period-1, Manchester, Azevedo 14 (Muzzin, Hunter), 0:33 (PP). 2, Connecticut, Deveaux 19 (Audy-Marchessault, Grant), 8:06. 3, Connecticut, Newbury 20 (Valentenko), 10:23. 4, Connecticut, Tessier 10 (Erixon, Bell), 11:43. 5, Manchester, Azevedo 15 (Hickey, Kolomatis), 19:56. Penalties-Clune Mch (boarding), 3:08; Wellman Ct (holding), 3:13; Zuccarello Ct (roughing), 10:19; Clune Mch (roughing), 10:19.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 9-17-16-42. Manchester 9-13-11-33.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 3; Manchester 1 / 4.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 18-12-5 (33 shots-31 saves). Manchester, Zatkoff 16-13-1 (42 shots-39 saves).
A-4,573
Referees-Darcy Burchell (42).
Linesmen-Jeremy Lovett (78), Brian MacDonald (72).

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

Whale Name Wade Redden Team Captain

HARTFORD, March 3, 2012:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that defenseman Wade Redden has been named captain of the Whale.

CT WhaleRedden, a 15th-year veteran who is in his second season with the Whale, and has 994 games of NHL experience in his career, is the sixth player to wear the captain’s “C” in franchise history.  He follows current Whale head coach Ken Gernander, who captained the squad for its first eight seasons in Hartford, Craig Weller, Andrew Hutchinson, Greg Moore and Dane Byers.  The Whale has gone without a captain since Byers was traded by the parent New York Rangers to the Columbus Blue Jackets November 10, 2010.

Redden’s first game as Whale captain will be tomorrow, Sunday, March 4, when Connecticut visits Manchester to take on the Monarchs.  Faceoff is 3:00 PM, and all the “Rockin’ Hockey” action can be heard live on “The Rock” 106.9 WCCC-FM.

The Whale are next on home ice at the XL Center this Friday night, March 9, in a GEICO Connecticut Cup game vs. the Bridgeport Sound Tigers.  That game faces off at 7:00 PM, and fans can take advantage of a special food combo at every remaining Whale Friday home game, as a hot dog and a 12-ounce soda is only $5.

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.

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

Portland Pirates 3, Connecticut Whale 2

By Brian Ring

Portland, ME, March 2, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated, 3-2, by the Portland Pirates Friday night at the Cumberland County Civic Center. The Pirates would score twice in the third period to rally from a 2-1 deficit, culminating with Ryan Duncan’s game-winning tally at 10:45 of the final frame.

CT WhalePatrick O’Sullivan scored once and added an assist for Portland, with Andy Miele recording two assists. Wade Redden and Casey Wellman scored for the Whale.

“Coverage mistakes and lack of urgency on the backcheck cost us two goals,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “We turned down some shot opportunities, we’re better offensively when we’re straightforward, getting pucks to the net.”

The Whale were 0-for-6 on the power-play.

Neither team scored in the opening period, although the Whale carried the majority of the play with two power-play opportunities and outshot the Pirates, 9-6. Each team had quality chances towards the end of the frame, with Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (23 saves), and his counterpart, Justin Pogge (26 saves), each making outstanding saves to keep the contest scoreless headed into the second.

O’Sullivan opened the scoring for the Pirates at 4:40 of the second period, beating Johnson with a wrist shot through the five-hole on a breakaway. Marc-Antoine Pouliot and Mark Louis both assisted on the goal, O’Sullivan’s tenth of the season.

The Whale tied the game 12:19 into the period, as Redden came out of the box and beat Pogge with a slap shot after serving two minutes for a delay of game penalty. The goal was the first of the season for the veteran defenseman.

Wellman would give the Whale a 2-1 lead just 25 seconds later, stuffing a loose puck past Pogge for his 18th tally of the season. Jared Nightingale and Jonathan Audy-Marchessault each collected assists on the play, which allowed the visitors to take a lead into the third period.

The Whale caught one big break in the period, as O’Sullivan appeared to have notched his second goal of the night while on the power-play.  It was deemed, however, that a Pirates player was in the crease in front of Johnson and the goal was washed out.

The third period, though, would not be so kind to the Whale.

Nathan Oystrick would beat Johnson to tie it at the 6:29 mark of the third period, tipping in an O’Sullivan shot from the left point, as the Whale were unable to clear the puck from their own end for a large stretch of time. Miele also assisted on the score.

The Pirates would complete their come-from-behind effort when they took a 3-2 lead 10:45 into the period, as Duncan scored the game-winner after making a nice backhand move on Johnson for his 13th goal. Mathieu Beaudoin made the pass to set up the goal, and Miele notched his second assist of the night on the play with the secondary helper.

The Whale will be back in action this Sunday, when they face the Manchester Monarchs in afternoon action (3:00). Connecticut will return home on Friday, when they play host to the Bridgeport Sound Tigers in a GEICO Connecticut Cup game.

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.

The Whale and the CT Hockey Hall of Fame will partner to hold a CT Hockey Hall of Fame night at the Whale’s home game at the XL Center Saturday, March 10 vs. the Norfolk Admirals.  That night will mark the enshrinement of a new class of 2012 inductees into the CT Hockey Hall of Fame, which has adopted eight members from the storied Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame.  The new inductees are: Connecticut-bred Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, ex-Hartford Whalers 56-goal scorer Blaine Stoughton, former Whalers goaltender Mike Liut, former Whalers captain Pat Verbeek, Connecticut Whale/Hartford Wolf Pack franchise icon, long-time captain and current head coach Ken Gernander, three-time Olympic medalist for Team USA and all-time NCAA women’s leading scorer Julie Chu, and one of the founders of the New England Whalers, William E. Barnes.  There will be an induction ceremony during the game, which faces off at 7:00 PM on March 10, and fans can take home a special souvenir of the March 10 night, as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given away, courtesy of SuperCuts.  This will be the first class of inductees since 1990, and further details are available at cthockeyHOF.org.

College students can get discounted tickets to Whale weekday games with the Whale’s “Ditch the Dorms” deal.  For Monday through Friday home games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center can get $2 off Upper Level tickets and $5 off Lower Level seats.

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, mini plans and great group discounts, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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

Connecticut Whale 2 at Portland Pirates 3
Friday, March 2, 2012 – Cumberland County Civic Center

Connecticut 0 2 0 – 2
Portland 0 1 2 – 3

1st Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Bolduc Por (slashing), 4:49; Nightingale Ct (cross-checking), 8:04; Ross Por (delay of game), 11:17.

2nd Period-1, Portland, O’Sullivan 10 (Pouliot, Louis), 4:40. 2, Connecticut, Redden 1 (Erixon), 12:19. 3, Connecticut, Wellman 18 (Nightingale, Audy-Marchessault), 12:44. Penalties-Szwarz Por (high-sticking), 5:36; Redden Ct (delay of game), 10:07; Redden Ct (hooking), 15:35; Bourque Ct (diving), 16:19; Pouliot Por (tripping), 16:19; served by Duncan Por (bench minor – too many men), 18:41.

3rd Period-4, Portland, Oystrick 10 (O’Sullivan, Miele), 6:29. 5, Portland, Duncan 13 (Miele, Beaudoin), 10:45. Penalties-Pouliot Por (high-sticking), 5:46; Redden Ct (tripping), 6:06; Erixon Ct (hooking), 12:35; Louis Por (boarding), 15:07.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 9-7-12-28. Portland 6-7-13-26.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 6; Portland 0 / 5.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 17-12-5 (26 shots-23 saves). Portland, Pogge 12-12-3 (28 shots-26 saves).
A-4,731
Referees-Darcy Burchell (42), Jamie Koharski (84).
Linesmen-Landon Bathe (80), Joe Andrews (32).

Connecticut Whale 2, Worcester Sharks 1 (SO)

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, February 28, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Worcester Sharks, 2-1 in a shootout, Tuesday afternoon at the XL Center in Hartford. Connecticut goaltender Chad Johnson made 33 saves through regulation and overtime, and four more in the shootout to help guide the Whale to two points.

CT WhaleMats Zuccarello picked up the only regulation goal for the Whale, and also scored in the shootout, along with Kris Newbury. Brandon Mashinter had the only goal of the game for the Sharks.

“[Johnson’s] been a very important part of our recent success here,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “He’s been very good for us, very solid and he’s been a big factor in our turnaround in February.”

The Sharks took the first lead of the game at 9:15 of the opening period, when Mashinter redirected a shot and then buried the rebound past Johnson in the waning seconds of the first power-play of the game. Nathan Moon and Mike Moore both assisted on the goal, Mashinter’s 12th of the season.

Zuccarello would tie the game up with just 50 seconds left in the first, as Newbury fed the Whale forward a great pass from the goal line. Zuccarello redirected the feed through the legs of Sharks goaltender Tyson Sexsmith (21 saves) for the equalizer. New acquisition Mike Vernace received the secondary assist on the goal, in his first game with the Whale.

“I thought [Vernace] played well, I thought he did a lot of things for us,” said Gernander about his new defenseman.

Neither team would score in the middle period, although the Whale were outshot by the Sharks, 14-8, in the second. The Whale were also forced to kill three penalties to the Sharks’ one, with Connecticut managing to negate a pair of five-on-three opportunities for the visitors. Johnson continued his recent hot run in net to keep the game tied headed into the third period.

The Sharks would have two more power-play opportunities in the third period, but the Whale penalty-kill would keep Worcester off the board as they went a perfect six-for-six. Johnson and Sexsmith would both be up to the task in the third, sending the two Eastern Conference foes to overtime.

“The best penalty-killer is your goalie, so we got some important saves there and we were able to kill off some penalties,” said Gernander.

The offensive drought would continue through overtime, necessitating a shootout to determine a winner.

Zuccarello, the first shooter in the tiebreaker, scored on Sexsmith to start things out, but Mashinter would tie it against Johnson in the fourth round. Newbury would then score on a backhand move to seal the win for Connecticut (28-18-5-5, 66 pts.), and move them back into a tie for first place in the Northeast Division with the Bridgeport Sound Tigers.

The Whale are back in action Friday, when they head to Maine to take on the Portland Pirates at the Cumberland County Civic Center (7:00).  Connecticut’s next home game is Friday, March 9, a GEICO Connecticut Cup battle with Bridgeport 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.

The Whale and the CT Hockey Hall of Fame will partner to hold a CT Hockey Hall of Fame night at the Whale’s home game at the XL Center Saturday, March 10 vs. the Norfolk Admirals.  That night will mark the enshrinement of a new class of 2012 inductees into the CT Hockey Hall of Fame, which has adopted eight members from the storied Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame.  The new inductees are: Connecticut-bred Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, ex-Hartford Whalers 56-goal scorer Blaine Stoughton, former Whalers goaltender Mike Liut, former Whalers captain Pat Verbeek, Connecticut Whale/Hartford Wolf Pack franchise icon, long-time captain and current head coach Ken Gernander, three-time Olympic medalist for Team USA and all-time NCAA women’s leading scorer Julie Chu, and one of the founders of the New England Whalers, William E. Barnes.  There will be an induction ceremony during the game, which faces off at 7:00 PM on March 10, and fans can take home a special souvenir of the night, as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given away, courtesy of SuperCuts.  This will be the first class of inductees since 1990, and further details are available at cthockeyHOF.org.

College students can get discounted tickets to Whale weekday games with the Whale’s “Ditch the Dorms” deal.  For Monday through Friday home games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center can get $2 off Upper Level tickets and $5 off Lower Level seats.

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, mini plans and great group discounts, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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

Worcester Sharks 1 at Connecticut Whale 2 (SO) –
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Worcester 1 0 0 0 – 1
Connecticut 1 0 0 0 – 2

1st Period-1, Worcester, Mashinter 12 (Moon, Moore), 9:15. 2, Connecticut, Zuccarello 12 (Newbury, Vernace), 19:10. Penalties-Bell Ct (holding), 7:15; Pelech Wor (roughing), 17:32; Audy-Marchessault Ct (slashing), 17:32.

2nd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Valentenko Ct (boarding), 6:22; Zuccarello Ct (high-sticking), 7:36; Vernace Ct (hooking), 9:11; Sheppard Wor (hooking), 12:12.

3rd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Newbury Ct (high-sticking), 0:58; Grant Ct (hooking), 8:33.

OT Period- No Scoring. Penalties-No Penalties

Shootout – Worcester 1 (Reid NG, Sheppard NG, Combs NG, Mashinter G, Lucia NG), Connecticut 2 (Zuccarello G, Wellman NG, Bell NG, Audy-Marchessault NG, Newbury G).
Shots on Goal-Worcester 7-14-9-4-0-34. Connecticut 5-8-8-1-1-23.
Power Play Opportunities-Worcester 0 / 6; Connecticut 0 / 1.
Goalies-Worcester, Sexsmith 10-10-6 (22 shots-21 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 17-11-5 (34 shots-33 saves).
A-1,583
Referees-Ryan Hersey (46), Jon McIsaac (39).
Linesmen-Paul Simeon (66), Kevin Redding (16).

Whale Recall Jeff Prough from Greenville

HARTFORD, February 27, 2012:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the Whale has recalled forward Jeff Prough from its ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleThis is Prough’s second stint of the year with the Whale, and he scored one goal and had four penalty minutes in five games in an earlier tour of duty with Connecticut.  The fourth-year pro out of Brown University is currently third on the Road Warriors’ club in assists, fourth in points and fifth in goals, with 18-29-47, and 26 PIM, in 47 games.

The Whale return to action tomorrow, Tuesday, February 28, hosting the Worcester Sharks in a special school-day, morning-start game at 11:00 AM.  Tickets can be purchased on the day of the game for only $10 each Tuesday at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center.

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.

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

Springfield Falcons 2, Connecticut Whale 0

By Brian Ring

Springfield, MA, February 25, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated by the Springfield Falcons, 2-0, Saturday night at the MassMutual Center. The Falcons’ Maksim Mayorov had the game-winning goal and an assist, and defenseman Brent Regner added two assists. Springfield goaltender Paul Dainton made 30 saves to record the shutout in goal, the first of his AHL career, and the first against the Whale since the second game of the season.

CT Whale“We had a couple good opportunities,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “We couldn’t bury any of them, it could have been a different game. That being said, [Springfield] did a good job protecting the front of the net. Dainton challenged and we didn’t get a lot of second and third chances on him.”

The Falcons would get on the board at 12:15 of the first period, as Dane Byers got a greasy goal past Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (29 saves) just seconds after Springfield’s first power-play expired. Mayorov’s shot was deflected in front of the Whale net and underneath Johnson, squeaking through just enough so that Byers could tap it in. Regner would collect the secondary assist on the score, Byers’ fifth of the season against his former team.

Springfield would bump the lead to 2-0 off the stick of Mayorov, who converted on a down-low three-on-two on a feed from Martin St. Pierre at 5:10 of the second period. Regner recorded his second assist of the night on the goal. Mayorov had an easy one-time opening, as Johnson was committed to the other side of the cage.

Neither team would break through in the third period, as the Whale struggled to amount any consistent attack in the Springfield end. Their best chance of the period came off of a Kris Newbury shot that found iron behind Dainton midway through.

The period saw 68 minutes in penalties doled out, largely the result of a brawl with 37 seconds remaining in the game.

“You want emotion, but it’s got to be directed and it’s got to make a positive impact on the game,” said Gernander.

The teams combined to go 0-for-12 on the power-play in the contest, with the Whale failing to score in five attempts.

The Whale will be back on home action this Tuesday, when they host the Worcester Sharks at the XL Center for a special 11:00 AM start time.

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.

The Whale and the CT Hockey Hall of Fame will partner to hold a CT Hockey Hall of Fame night at the Whale’s home game at the XL Center Saturday, March 10 vs. the Norfolk Admirals.  That night will mark the enshrinement of a new class of 2012 inductees into the CT Hockey Hall of Fame, which has adopted eight members from the storied Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame.  The new inductees are: Connecticut-bred Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, ex-Hartford Whalers 56-goal scorer Blaine Stoughton, former Whalers goaltender Mike Liut, former Whalers captain Pat Verbeek, Connecticut Whale/Hartford Wolf Pack franchise icon, long-time captain and current head coach Ken Gernander, three-time Olympic medalist for Team USA and all-time NCAA women’s leading scorer Julie Chu, and one of the founders of the New England Whalers, William E. Barnes.  There will be an induction ceremony before the game, which faces off at 7:00 PM on March 10, and the new inductees will also be recognized on the ice during the first intermission.  Fans can take home a special souvenir of the March 10 night, as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given away, courtesy of SuperCuts.  There will also be a special meet-and-greet event on March 10, details of which will be announced soon.  This will be the first class of inductees since 1990, and further details are available at cthockeyHOF.org.

College students can get discounted tickets to Whale weekday games with the Whale’s “Ditch the Dorms” deal.  For Monday through Friday home games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center can get $2 off Upper Level tickets and $5 off Lower Level seats.

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, mini plans and great group discounts, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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

Connecticut Whale 0 at Springfield Falcons 2
Saturday, February 25, 2012 – MassMutual Center

Connecticut 0 0 0 – 0
Springfield 1 1 0 – 2

1st Period-1, Springfield, Byers 14 (Mayorov, Regner), 12:15. Penalties-Garlock Spr (tripping), 6:04; Erixon Ct (hooking), 10:14; Erixon Ct (high-sticking), 14:28; Kubalik Spr (holding), 16:23.

2nd Period-2, Springfield, Mayorov 6 (St. Pierre, Regner), 5:10. Penalties-Wellman Ct (high-sticking), 6:37; Bell Ct (hooking), 8:01; Nightingale Ct (roughing, fighting), 8:01; Byers Spr (unsportsmanlike conduct), 8:01; Calvert Spr (fighting), 8:01; Cullity Spr (hooking), 11:57; Cullity Spr (slashing), 19:30.

3rd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Newbury Ct (goaltender interference), 3:11; served by MacLeod Spr (bench minor – too many men), 4:18; Deveaux Ct (unsportsmanlike conduct), 5:45; Zuccarello Ct (misconduct – abuse of officials), 6:22; Byers Spr (tripping), 10:59; Deveaux Ct (roughing, roughing, misconduct – abuse of officials, game misconduct – continuing altercation), 19:22; Newbury Ct (roughing), 19:22; Amadio Spr (roughing, misconduct – continuing altercation, game misconduct – continuing altercation), 19:22; Dainton Spr (roughing), 19:22.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 5-13-12-30. Springfield 9-16-6-31.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 5; Springfield 0 / 7.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 16-11-5 (31 shots-29 saves). Springfield, Dainton 8-4-0 (30 shots-30 saves).
A-5,003
Referees-Terry Koharski (10), Jon McIsaac (39).
Linesmen-Rich Patry (52), Jim Briggs (83).

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