Category Archives: CT Whale

Whale to Host “It All Starts Here Night” this Saturday

HARTFORD, February 15, 2012:  Whalers Sports & Entertainment announced today that, in the spirit of “Hockey Weekend Across America”, the Connecticut Whale will present “It All Starts Here Night” at its home game this Saturday, February 18 against the Worcester Sharks.

CT WhaleIt All Starts Here Night will celebrate both youth hockey and the tremendous player-development record that has been the hallmark of the relationship between the Whale and their NHL parent club, the New York Rangers.

Fans who wear a youth hockey jersey to the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center will be able to purchase lower-level end-zone seats to Saturday’s game for just $10 each.

In addition, all fans in attendance that night will receive a Whale TV poster, courtesy of Webster Bank. The poster will feature the theme of the night, “It All Starts Here”, with players and staff who have sent time developing with the Hartford Wolf Pack and the Whale before being promoted to the New York Rangers, including players like Ryan Callahan, Brandon Dubinsky and Carl Hagelin.

“Hockey Weekend Across America” is a program developed by USA Hockey that takes place from February 17-19, aiming to celebrate the game of hockey by any means possible throughout the entire nation. Part of the initiative is also to provide opportunities for those that have not tried hockey, resulting in more people playing the game at all levels.

Staff from the Connecticut Whale will be participating in “Try Hockey for Free” clinics this Saturday at Newington Arena (8:00 AM) and at the Koeppel Community Sports Center at Trinity College (10:30 AM).

Tickets to It All Starts Here 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.

Wolski and Woywitka Happy with Whale Experience

By Bruce Berlet

Mission accomplished.

That’s the consensus of left wing Wojtek Wolski and defenseman Jeff Woywitka after playing six games in 10 days with the Connecticut Whale in two-week conditioning assignments from the New York Rangers. The stints don’t officially end until Wednesday, but the Whale don’t play again until Friday night at home against the Springfield Falcons.

CT WhaleWolski, Woywitka and center Casey Wellman, who also joined the Whale on Feb. 2 after being acquired from the Minnesota Wild for Erik Christensen and a conditional seventh-round pick in 2013, have helped the team earn 11 of 12 points in February after an 11-game winless streak (0-6-3-2) in January and reclaim first place in the Northeast Division. The only blemish was a 2-1 overtime loss Sunday to the Bridgeport Sound Tigers (25-18-3-2), the AHL’s hottest team with a 13-1-0-1 record in 2012. The Sound Tigers, coached by former Hartford Wolf Pack defenseman Brent Thompson, momentarily moved from last to first as the Whale (24-16-5-5) struggled last month, but they’re now three points behind with two games in hand.

Wolski and Woywitka got more ice time in six games than they had at any time in four months with the Rangers. Much of their lack of playing time on Broadway was the result of injuries, but Whale coach Ken Gernander and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller used them plenty in all situations.

“They were obviously a good boost to our lineup, and two guys who bring different elements,” Gernander said Sunday. “Wolski is a skilled guy who can create some offense and get some points and scored a few goals. And Jeff played sound on the back end. He’s a bigger body (6-foot-3, 215 pounds) that can finish checks and move pucks. They’re both obviously very good caliber players and were good additions to our squad.

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“They were here to get playing ‘experience,’ not that there’s a lack of experience on either guy. But like anything, you have to be playing in those situations to stay in shape. They definitely got plenty of ice time, and it’s probably the first time Wolski played three (games) in three (days).”

Wolski, 25, said he thought he had achieved what he wanted as far as getting plenty of playing time and improving his conditioning. Wolski, who is in the final year of a two-year, $7.6 million deal signed with the Phoenix Coyotes on June 28, 2010, had played in only nine games with the Rangers and was a healthy scratch the previous six since Jan. 15 after playing just three games following a return from sports hernia surgery on Nov. 8.

Wolski, acquired from the Coyotes for defenseman Michal Rozsival on Jan. 10, 2011, had two winners among his three goals and one of his two assists set up the Whale’s only goal Sunday by Kelsey Tessier. He had three assists in the nine games with the Rangers.

“I started to feel better each game,” said Wolski, who played with veteran center Kris Newbury and All-Star Mats Zuccarello. “It was great to get more minutes and just feel the puck and kind of see the ice a little better. The three in three is obviously tough, and the last game is exhausting. You have to give credit to the guys because it’s definitely not easy, but we played well and got 11 of 12 points, which is nice. My stickhandling is getting where it was, and my skating is starting to pick up a little bit. Overall, I’m happy that I had the opportunity to come down, feel like I’m getting back to where I feel I should be and want to build on it from here.”

Wolski said conditioning was the biggest perk he got from his first minor-league stint since he turned pro after four seasons with Brampton of the Ontario Hockey League that was capped by 47 goals and 81 assists in 56 regular-season games and seven goals and 11 assists in 11 playoff games in 2005-06.

“Being out for the longest I’ve ever been off the ice is tough, but it’s something you have to deal with because injuries happen,” said Wolski, who has 91 goals and 158 assists in 402 NHL games with the Colorado Avalanche, Coyotes and Rangers. “I had surgery and was out for a long time, and even before that, I had problems with my groin and wasn’t feeling the way I should. So it’s good to start building back to where I feel I should be. (Saturday) night was a pretty good game where I had the puck a lot and created a lot of opportunities (in a 4-1 win at Manchester), which was positive. (Sunday) was just a tough game with three in three. It’s a first since I was a kid when I used to play a ton of three in three. Now I want to get back to where I want to be.”

That’s the NHL, and there might be a spot with the Rangers after wing Ruslan Fedotenko missed games against the Philadelphia Flyers and Washington Capitals on Saturday and Sunday after he was hit in the head by his stick when former Rangers and Hartford Wolf Pack forward Dominic Moore put a shoulder into him in a 4-3 overtime victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Thursday night. After the Rangers’ 3-2 victory over Washington, Coach John Tortorella said Fedotenko likely would travel with the team to Boston for a game Tuesday night against the defending Stanley Cup champion Bruins, who have fallen seven points behind the surging Blueshirts in the Eastern Conference with one game in hand.

Woywitka, 28, was claimed off waivers from the Montreal Canadiens on Oct. 6 and got consistent playing time on the Rangers’ third pairing, until he was injured in a 3-2 victory over the Coyotes on Dec. 17. Before joining the Whale, Woywitka had missed 17 of the previous 19 games, including the last 13 since a 4-1 victory over the Florida Panthers on Dec. 30.

But Woywitka, a first-round pick (27th overall) of the Flyers in 2001, also got oodles of ice time with the Whale and was bent over at the end of the regulation Sunday.

“It was good, and I thought as a team we played pretty well, other than maybe (Sunday) when we maybe looked a little fatigued,” said Woywitka, who had three assists while paired mostly with Blake Parlett. “But that’s obviously no excuse. We weren’t maybe as sharp as we should have been, but I guess if you go on the road and get a point out of a three in three, there’s worse things that happen, too. So all in all, we battled hard, and we know they’re a hard-working team. They came hard at us, and it was a good game, but we came out on the bottom end.”

The Whale might not have gotten a point if Chad Johnson didn’t stop Scott Howes’ penalty shot with 2:20 left in regulation after the Sound Tigers’ wing was hooked from behind on a breakaway by Sam Klassen. Johnson, who stopped 180 of 189 shots in the Whale’s 5-0-0-1 turnaround this month, denied Howes’ backhand bid but was screened before David Ullstrom’s 50-foot shot hit the crossbar and went in 37 seconds into overtime. The Whale asked referee Jon McIsaac for a video replay available as a test at Webster Bank Arena at Harbor Yard, and after a five-minute delay cueing up the video, he confirmed the goal good again.

“It was a lot of hockey, a lot of travel (with three road games), and it’s still hard when you’re playing (so many) minutes,” Woywitka said. “You’re always getting hit, you’re always taking hits, and you could feel everybody was feeling it a little bit (Sunday). It’s something you have to battle through and get used to, but we’ll take the point and move on.”

Woywitka also hopes to “move on” to the NHL, where he has nine goals and 46 assists in 277 games with the St. Louis Blues, Dallas Stars and Rangers, including one goal and five assists in 26 games with the Blueshirts this season. He called his first minor-league stint since playing seven games for the Peoria Rivermen in the 2008-09 season a “good experience.”

“The first couple of games, you have to get used to it again, get the routine going again, making plays, thinking again,” Woywitka said. “Getting into game action was good, and coming down here and contributing and helping the guys get wins and good goaltending … Everything kind of falls into place and everybody is happy and everybody comes to the rink with excitement, and that made it a lot easier in getting comfortable and getting established here.”

Did Woywitka get what he wanted out of the six games?

“Absolutely,” he said. “The main thing is winning hockey games, wherever you are. It’s the main goal and what we’re here for.”

Woywitka is also taking a wait-and-see attitude with the Rangers, who already have seven healthy defensemen, including Steve Eminger, who returned Saturday after being out with a separated shoulder since Dec. 17.

“I don’t control anything,” Woywitka said. “We just come and play, and hopefully I get another opportunity so we’ll just have to see what happens. I’ll just come to the rink every day and work hard. I want to get to the next level, which is why we’re down here because we obviously have got to be better and have to find a way to get back up there. I have to wait and see what happens and see what (the Rangers) tell me.”

Fortunately for the Whale, defensemen Wade Redden and Pavel Valentenko are close to returning. Redden has missed 22 games since being injured in a 2-1 shootout loss to Providence on Dec. 17. Valentenko has sat out seven games with an injury sustained in a 3-2 overtime loss to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Jan. 27. But he has had some relief already with wife Ekaterina giving birth of the couple’s first child, 8-pound, 6-pound Polina, last Tuesday.

WHALE HOST FALCONS, SHARKS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT

The Whale will try to start another winning streak Friday night against the Falcons (23-23-2-2), who are eight points behind the Whale. The Falcons had a bizarre weekend in which they lost 3-2 in overtime at home to the Whale on Friday night, lost 8-1 at Bridgeport on Saturday night and then rebounded to beat visiting Manchester 5-1 on Sunday as All-Star forward Cam Atkinson, former Wolf Pack wing Alexandre Giroux and rookie Wade MacLeod each had a goal and an assist to back the 24-save effort of former UMass goalie Paul Dainton.

Atkinson, a Greenwich native who starred at Avon Old Farms and helped Boston College win two national championships, is second on the Falcons in scoring and among AHL rookies with 27 goals. His 41 points are fifth among first-year players and two fewer than Whale All-Star forward Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, who is tied for third. Former All-Star center Martin Pierre leads the Falcons in scoring with nine goals and 35 assists, followed by Atkinson, Giroux (17, 20), former Wolf Pack left wing and captain Dane Byers (10, 14), Matt Calvert (11, 11) and Nick Drazenovic (6, 16). Dainton is 6-3-1 with a 2.89 goals-against average and .898 save percentage. Manny Legace, 39, the Hartford Whalers’ eighth-round pick in 1993, is 10-16-1, 2.84 and .902.

The Whale won the first five meetings with their I-91 rival and then went 0-2-0-1 before the win Friday night when Wolski scored at 1:04 of overtime. Audy-Marchessault, a solid contender for the AHL All-Rookie team with Atkinson, has taken over the Whale scoring lead with 18 goals and 25 assists, followed by Newbury (18, 24 in 39 games), former Falcons right wing Andre Deveaux (13, 17) and Zuccarello (10, 20). Chad Johnson played all six games in the Whale’s recent resurgence, stopping 180 of 189 shots, to improve to 15-10-5, 2.42, .919 with one shutout. Cam Talbot is 9-11-0, 2.96, .900 with two shutouts.

After playing the Falcons, the Whale hosts Worcester (23-15-4-5) on Saturday night and visits Providence (23-22-3-3) on Sunday afternoon. On Saturday night, the Whale and Whalers Sports and Entertainment will host “It All Starts Here” Night, which will pay tribute to players who spent time playing in the AHL in Hartford before moving on to the Rangers. It also will participate in USA Hockey’s “Hockey Weekend Across America” that is meant to spread the game throughout the country.

The night will include special ticket deals, as those wearing a youth hockey jersey to the XL Center’s Public Power Box Office will be able to purchase special $10 lower-level end zone seats. Also, 5,000 fans will receive an “It All Starts Here” poster, compliments of Webster Bank. The poster will feature Wolf Pack and Whale alumni who have made it to the Rangers, including former AHL All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan, who is now the captain on Broadway. For more information, log on to www.ctwhale.com.

Despite five goals in the last three games to surpass 20 in a season for the third time, Callahan continues to fly under the radar on a national basis and remains considered basically a team-first, defensively responsible two-way forward. While that’s laudable, the native of Rochester, N.Y., is much more, as shown by being named captain.

“I think sometimes people think he’s just a shot blocker and a guy who can bang along the boards, forecheck and finish checks,” Tortorella said after Sunday’s game in which Callahan scored one after getting his second career hat trick in a 5-2 victory over the Flyers. “This is his third season now with 20-plus goals. He can also play and make plays. I think Cally has a little bit of a chip under his shoulder that everyone thinks he’s a one-dimensional guy, and he isn’t. As he keeps on growing as a player, he’s certainly showing that.”

Callahan is on pace for 33 goals and 61 points, and his 10 power-play goals are tied with the Capitals’ Alexander Ovechkin for fifth in the league. Rangers forward Brandon Dubinsky, who has played with Callahan the past six seasons, including with the Wolf Pack, said his buddy has taken it to another level since scoring 35 goals in Hartford in 2006-07 and the winner in the All-Star Game with three seconds left.

“He was always one of the best, if not the best, defensive forwards on our team with all the little things that he does,” Dubinsky said. “His offensive game has really come to a completely different level. Listen, the guy scored 50 at one point in his career (52 in 2005-06 with the OHL’s Guelph Storm). It wasn’t in the NHL, but when you’re able to score that many at any level, I’m pretty confidence you can put the puck in the net. He’s shown some of that this year.”

Callahan was on the way to a career year in 2010-11 but broke his hand while blocking a shot by Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Kris Letang on Dec. 15 and missed 19 games. Then in the 80th game of an 82-game regular season, he blocked a shot by Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara, who has won the hardest shot contest the last two years, and was out as the Capitals eliminated the Rangers in five games in the first round of the playoffs. Still, he had 48 points in 60 games.

Now Callahan has become even more well rounded, logging the most minutes among forwards on the penalty kill, where the Rangers rank fifth (87.2 percent), and his 60 blocked shots are fourth among forwards and only four behind league leader Boyd Gordon of the Phoenix Coyotes.

“Callahan is a top-six guy yet he still plays with so much heart and grit,” Chara said after his shot sidelined the Rangers captain. “You don’t see many guys that throw their bodies around to block shots like that. He plays the game so hard. You have to respect a guy like that.”

SOMMER HITS 500 WINS PLATEAU

The poster is worth it for Callahan alone, but there will be much more for fans attending Saturday night, including Sharks coach Roy Sommer, who became only the fourth coach to win 500 AHL games Saturday night when Worcester won 3-2 in a shootout at Hershey. After a 5-2 victory over Portland on Sunday, Sommer, the dean of AHL coaches, is 501-496-90 in 14 seasons and trails only Hall of Famers Fred “Bun” Cook (636-413-122), Frank Mathers (610-512-134) and John Paddock (589-438-98), who led the Wolf Pack to the Calder Cup in 2000.

Sommer, who also ranks fourth all-time in games coached (1,082), first assumed his post as the Sharks’ top development coach in 1998 and has coached more than 80 players who have spent time in the NHL, including Joe Pavelski, Devin Setoguchi, Doug Murray, Ryane Clowe, Logan Couture, Dan Boyle, Miikka Kiprusoff, Brad Boyes, Christian Ehrhoff, Johan Hedberg and former Wolf Pack wing Mikael Samuelsson. Sommer’s first career win came on Oct. 17, 1998, a 6-4 victory over the Albany River Rats. David Cunniff, the son of former Whalers forward and assistant coach John Cunniff, played for Albany that night and has been Sommer’s assistant coach since 2002.

Sommer’s newest player is former Wolf Pack center Tim Kennedy, acquired from the Florida Panthers for defenseman Sean Sullivan on Jan. 26. Kennedy has two goals and five assists in six game with the Sharks, who are led in scoring by center Mike Connolly (10, 19), left wing John McCarthy (12, 16), defenseman Matt Irwin (8, 18) and right wing Jack Combs (11, 12), though McCarthy is on recall to the San Jose Sharks. Tyson Sexsmith (10-8-5, 2.14, .924) and rookie Harri Sateri (11-8-0, 2.58, .908, two shutouts) are sharing the goaltending with veteran Antero Niittymaki (2-3-0, 3.01, .890) on loan to the Syracuse Crunch. … 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. … Falcons fans beat their Whale counterparts 12-7 Friday night for a sixth straight win in their inaugural seven-game series. The final game is March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, at 4 p.m. at the XL Center, and tickets ($16) will be available soon. For more information and tickets, visit 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 $750 for DBL.

BARONS’ GOALIES TRYING TO DUPLICATE WOLF PACK DUO

While the Oklahoma Barons have had the AHL’s top-ranked defense most of the season, they now officially have the top two goalies as well.

Yann Danis (1.94), named MVP of the All-Star Game, and former Wolf Pack goalie David LeNeveu (2.06) are 1-2 in goals-against average. Danis is 21-8-1 with a league-leading .928 save percentage and five shutouts, one less than All-Star Ben Bishop of the Peoria Rivermen. LeNeveu is 11-6-2 with a .923 save percentage and one shutout.

Since 1990, Steve Valiquette and Jason LaBarbera are the only teammates to finish 1-2 in GAA when they did it with the Wolf Pack in 2004-05. … St. John’s goalie Eddie Pasquale was named the Reebok/AHL Player of the Week on Monday after stopping 83 of 87 shots in leading the IceCaps to three wins and into first place in the overall standings. He started the week with a 29-save shutout of Providence in a 2-0 victory and then stopped 36 of 37 shots in a 2-1 overtime win over the Bruins. He finished with 18 saves in a 4-3 victory over Binghamton that extended his personal winning streak to six games and gave him a 3-0 record with a 1.32 GAA and .954 save percentage for the week. A fourth-round pick of the former Atlanta Thrashers in 2009, Pasquale, 21, is 14-6-0 with a 2.59 GAA, .907 save percentage and two shutouts in 20 appearances for St. John’s this season. … Fans can bid on AHL All-Star Classic jerseys, helmets, gloves and pucks at www.theahl.com. Zuccarello, Audy-Marchessault and Atkinson were on the Eastern Conference team, which was captained by former Wolf Pack left wing and Hershey captain Boyd Kane. … Former Wolf Pack defenseman Jyri Niemi scored his fourth goal of the season with 37 seconds left in overtime to give the Greenville Road Warriors a wild 7-6 ECHL victory over the Chicago Express on Sunday. Brendan Connolly, who was in Whale training camp, had two goals and two assists and former Quinnipiac University standout Brandon Wong, who started last season with the Wolf Pack, had one goal and two assists as the Road Warriors (29-18-1-2) won their third game in four starts to solidify second place in the South Division and Eastern Conference. Connolly has tied a team record with a 12-game point streak in which he has nine goals and 12 assists. Jason Missiaen, who spent the end of last season and training camp with the Whale, had 34 saves in his sixth straight start Sunday and is 11-10-0, 3.17, .903 with three shutouts. Former Wolf Pack wing Devin DiDiomete had an assist for the Express. The Road Warriors play three games this week, starting with a showdown at home with division-leading Gwinnett on Tuesday night.

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Bridgeport Sound Tigers 2, Connecticut Whale 1 (OT)

By Brian Ring

Bridgeport, CT, February 12, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated on the road, 2-1 in overtime, Sunday afternoon by the Bridgeport Sound Tigers. David Ullstrom recorded the overtime game-winner for Bridgeport, who sent the Whale to their first February defeat.

CT WhaleJon Landry would assist on both of Bridgeport’s goals, with Kelsey Tessier supplying the lone goal for Connecticut.

“It was a back-and-forth game, a pretty close game,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “I thought there were opportunities to shoot pucks…of course, if you don’t take the shot, you’re in a situation where you’re stickhandling one versus one or one versus two or maybe trying to force a pass.”

The Whale would take the first lead of the game at the 12:24 mark of the opening period, as Wojtek Wolski set up Tessier for his eighth goal of the season. Wolski passed across the slot to Tessier, who banged the puck home on the doorstep of Bridgeport goaltender Kevin Poulin (27 saves). It was the fifth point in six games with the Whale for Wolski (3-2-5).

Justin DiBenedetto would tie the game for the Sound Tigers, as he capitalized on a good passing play with Landry and Sean Backman at 17:09. Landry and Backman managed to draw Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (40 saves) far enough to his right that DiBenedetto had an open shot from the right circle, for his 14th goal of the season.

The two in-state rivals would enter the third period still tied at one goal apiece, as neither club could break through in the second period. The Sound Tigers would outshoot the Whale, 15-9, in the second frame, but both goaltenders would stand tall in a period that saw each side receive one power-play chance.

Despite being heavily outshot in the third period, 18-6, the Whale kept the Sound Tigers off the board. The biggest moment came with 2:20 left in the period, as Bridgeport’s Scott Howes was awarded a penalty shot after Sam Klassen interfered with his breakaway.  Johnson, however, was up to the task and turned away the bid, eventually forcing overtime.

The Sound Tigers would need just 37 seconds in overtime to beat the Whale, as Ullstrom’s wrist shot beat a screened Johnson for the game-winning tally. The goal stood up even against a lengthy review, breaking the Whale’s five-game winning streak.

Having completed a three-game weekend road trip, the Whale will return home to host the Springfield Falcons at the XL Center on Friday (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 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.

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Connecticut Whale 1 at Bridgeport Sound Tigers 2 (OT)
Sunday, February 12, 2012 – Webster Bank Arena

Connecticut 1 0 0 0 – 1
Bridgeport 1 0 0 1 – 2

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Tessier 8 (Wolski), 12:24. 2, Bridgeport, DiBenedetto 14 (Landry, Backman), 17:09. Penalties-Owens Ct (fighting), 5:40; Frischmon Bri (fighting), 5:40; Gillies Bri (interference), 14:38.

2nd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Newbury Ct (delay of game), 3:29; Mouillierat Bri (hooking), 11:10.

3rd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Cizikas Bri (holding), 6:28; Erixon Ct (holding), 13:22.

OT Period-3, Bridgeport, Ullstrom 16 (Landry), 0:37. Penalties-No Penalties

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 12-10-6-0-28. Bridgeport 8-15-18-1-42.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 3; Bridgeport 0 / 2.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 15-10-5 (42 shots-40 saves). Bridgeport, Poulin 14-13-1 (28 shots-27 saves).
A-7,693
Referees-Jon McIsaac (39).
Linesmen-Derek Wahl (46), Mike Baker (11).

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Connecticut Whale 4, Manchester Monarchs 1

By Brian Ring

Manchester, NH, February 11, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Manchester Monarchs, 4-1, Saturday night at the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester.  Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and Casey Wellman both scored and added an assist for the Whale, who won their fifth straight game.

CT WhaleThe Whale scored three times in a key second period burst to power their victory over the Monarchs, improving to 2-0-0-0 against Manchester this season.  The five straight wins matches a season high for Connecticut.

“We had a good start again tonight, we did a lot of things right,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “I thought it was a solid effort throughout, five-on-five, special teams, goaltending. I thought there were a lot of good things.”

Neither team would score in the first period, but the Whale heavily outshot their opponents in the opening frame for the second straight night, totaling 17 shots to Manchester’s eight. Chad Johnson (26 saves) was especially good early on for the Whale, making a number of point-blank saves on Monarchs opportunities.

The Whale, however, would explode for three goals in the second period in the span of just 1:31.

Wellman would strike first as the beneficiary of hard corner work by Audy-Marchessault, as Audy-Marchessault dug the puck out and passed to Wellman as he sprinted into the slot. Wellman’s shot beat Manchester goaltender Martin Jones (36 saves) for his 15th goal of the season, his first as a member of the Whale, and a 1-0 Connecticut lead at 12:01. Tim Erixon picked up the secondary assist on Audy-Marchessault’s 18th goal.

Wellman would return the favor with a great pass to Audy-Marchessault just nine seconds later, as Audy-Marchessault put the Whale up 2-0. Audy-Marchessault sent a rocket of a one-timer past Jones from the left faceoff circle, the two goals coming just one second shy of the franchise record for fastest consecutive goals. Andre Deveaux would also assist on the score.

The Whale would increase their lead to 3-0 on the power-play, as Wojtek Wolski set up Kris Newbury’s 18th goal of the season with a backhand pass. Newbury found just enough room to stuff the puck between the pad of Jones and the post at 13:32. Mats Zuccarello recorded the secondary assist.

Robert Czarnik would cut the Whale lead to 3-1 with Manchester’s first and only tally of the night at the 1:45 mark of the third period, as his shot managed to sneak past a screened Johnson, with the assists going to Thomas Hickey and Nick Deslauriers.

Andreas Thuresson would regain the Whale’s three-goal advantage just 31 seconds later, as he tipped an Erixon shot past Jones for a 4-1 lead and the final score of the night. Kelsey Tessier also notched a helper on the goal.

The Whale will finish their three-game road trip Sunday afternoon in Bridgeport, as they take on the Sound Tigers in GEICO Connecticut Cup action (3:00). The next home game for the Whale will be Friday, Jan. 17, when they host the Springfield Falcons at the XL Center (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 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, please click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Connecticut Whale 4 at Manchester Monarchs 1
Saturday, February 11, 2012 – Verizon Wireless Arena

Connecticut 0 3 1 – 4
Manchester 0 0 1 – 1

1st Period- No Scoring. Penalties-No Penalties

2nd Period-1, Connecticut, Wellman 15 (Audy-Marchessault, Erixon), 12:01. 2, Connecticut, Audy-Marchessault 18 (Wellman, Deveaux), 12:10. 3, Connecticut, Newbury 18 (Wolski, Zuccarello), 13:32 (PP). Penalties-Zuccarello Ct (interference), 3:09; Woywitka Ct (hooking), 9:25; Azevedo Mch (holding), 12:42.

3rd Period-4, Manchester, Czarnik 6 (Hickey, Deslauriers), 1:45. 5, Connecticut, Thuresson 10 (Erixon, Tessier), 2:16. Penalties-Clune Mch (unsportsmanlike conduct), 6:08; Woywitka Ct (roughing), 8:32; Clune Mch (fighting, misconduct – unsportsmanlike conduct), 8:32; Bell Ct (tripping), 16:08; Deveaux Ct (holding), 19:35.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 17-10-13-40. Manchester 8-12-7-27.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 1 / 3; Manchester 0 / 4.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 15-9-5 (27 shots-26 saves). Manchester, Jones 13-13-1 (40 shots-36 saves).
A-9,852
Referees-Marcus Vinnerborg (45).
Linesmen-Joe Ross (92), Brian MacDonald (72).

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

Connecticut Whale 3, Springfield Falcons 2 (OT)

By Brian Ring

Springfield, MA, February 10, 2012 – The Whale defeated the Springfield Falcons, 3-2 in overtime, Friday night at the MassMutual Center. Wojtek Wolski had two goals, including the overtime game-winner, as the Whale won their fourth straight game in the month of February.

CT WhaleJonathan Audy-Marchessault also scored for the Whale to force overtime late in the third, with goaltender Chad Johnson making 33 saves for his fourth straight personal win in net.

“That was a great goal by [Audy-Marchessault],” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander of the winger’s late tying goal. “A great shot, that was a huge goal.”

Cam Atkinson scored twice for Springfield, notching his league-leading 26th of the season in the third period.

The game started off quickly, as the Whale took advantage of an early power-play to give themselves a 1-0 lead just 1:04 into the contest. Wolski converted his second goal of the season for the Whale with the man-advantage, burying a pass from Mats Zuccarello behind Springfield goaltender Manny Legace (37 saves). Brendan Bell received the secondary assist on the goal.

The lead would not last long, as Atkinson would tie the game just 16 seconds later. Alexandre Giroux’s pass from behind the Whale goal line found the stick of the open Atkinson in the slot. Johnson appeared to get a big piece of the shot, but it still snuck in for Atkinson’s 25th goal of the campaign, assisted by Giroux and Patrick Cullity.

Legace did his part to keep the game tied for the Falcons, as the Whale fired a team season-high 23 shots on goal in the first period.

Neither team would manage to score in the second period, with the Falcons outshooting the Whale in the middle stanza, 11-8. Both power-plays were held off the board despite another pair of chances for the Whale in the second, and one extra-man opportunity for the Falcons.

The Falcons would take a 2-1 lead 6:50 into the third period on the power-play, as Atkinson was able to score his second goal of the night. A shot from Giroux rebounded off of Johnson and to Atkinson, who was able to one-time it home from the left-wing side.

Audy-Marchessault would tie the game for Connecticut with just 3:06 left to play in the third period, as he took the puck up the ice nearly end-to-end and scored on Legace with a quick snap-shot. The goal was Audy-Marchessault’s 17th of the season and came unassisted, as he intercepted a Ryan Garlock pass in the Whale zone before turning and sprinting up ice.

The Whale would need just 1:04 to win the game once it was sent to the extra session, as Wolski backhanded the game-winner past Legace to send Connecticut to their fourth straight victory. Legace dove to poke the puck away from Wolski, whose long reach enabled him to corral the puck and net the winner.

“[Wolski] was able to pressure Legace and he gave it right back to him,” said Gernander.

Connecticut will be back in action with a pair of road games this weekend, as they take on the Manchester Monarchs Saturday (7:00) and the Bridgeport Sound Tigers on Sunday (3:00).  The Whale will return home next Friday, when they host Falcons at the XL Center (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 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 3 (OT) at Springfield Falcons 2
Friday, February 10, 2012 – MassMutual Center

Connecticut 1 0 1 1 – 3
Springfield 1 0 1 0 – 2

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Wolski 2 (Zuccarello, Bell), 1:04 (PP). 2, Springfield, Atkinson 25 (Giroux, Cullity), 1:20. Penalties-Amadio Spr (holding), 0:49; MacLeod Spr (slashing), 3:42; Audy-Marchessault Ct (hooking), 10:24; St. Pierre Spr (slashing), 15:16.

2nd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Motherwell Spr (cross-checking), 7:12; Bogosian Spr (hooking), 11:09; Tanski Ct (hooking), 15:14.

3rd Period-3, Springfield, Atkinson 26 (Giroux, Regner), 6:50 (PP). 4, Connecticut, Audy-Marchessault 17   16:54. Penalties-Newbury Ct (hooking), 5:11; Erixon Ct (hooking), 9:50.

OT Period-5, Connecticut, Wolski 3 (Nightingale, Erixon), 1:04. Penalties-No Penalties

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 23-8-8-1-40. Springfield 12-11-12-0-35.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 1 / 5; Springfield 1 / 4.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 14-9-5 (35 shots-33 saves). Springfield, Legace 10-15-1 (40 shots-37 saves).
A-3,863
Referees-Marcus Vinnerborg (45).
Linesmen-Kevin Redding (16), Chris Low (88).

Whale’s Wellman a Long Way from California Roots

By Bruce Berlet

Casey Wellman played several sports growing up in Brentwood, Calif., hardly a hotbed for hockey.

CT WhaleBut Wellman got hooked on the game played on ice after his father, Brad, met several New Jersey Devils players who asked him to skate with them in Boston.

“Dad didn’t know how to skate, so he was pretty upset about that,” Wellman said with a smile.

But Brad, an infielder for 441 games for three major league teams over eight seasons who later managed in the Houston Astros organization, introduced Casey and his brother, Logan, to hockey, and 31/2-year-old Casey fell in love with his new endeavor.

“I have some vague memories (of his dad playing), but I was pretty young,” said Wellman, whose uncle, Tom Candiotti, is a former major league pitcher known for his knuckleball. “Having pictures of a father-son game is pretty cool, but I haven’t played baseball for a while. It’s a great sport, but at the time, it was just a little slow, a little boring, so I stuck with hockey.”

Despite his West Coast upbringing, Wellman is now surprisingly playing professionally with the Connecticut Whale, who are about 70 miles from where he competed collegiately on the East Coast. When Wellman was on his way to practice with the Houston Aeros last Thursday, he got “a pretty big surprise,” a call that the Minnesota Wild had traded him to the New York Rangers.

“It was definitely pretty crazy, a bit of a shock,” said Wellman, 24, acquired for center Erik Christensen, who had a two-week conditioning assignment with the Whale in mid-January, and a conditional seventh-round pick in 2013. “It was tough to say goodbye because I had some good friends (in Houston), but that’s the business and that’s what can happen and probably won’t be the last time.”

Wellman quickly returned home, packed and headed for Hershey, Pa., where he met his new teammates. Whale coach Ken Gernander put Wellman on a line with All-Star Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and rugged Andre Deveaux, and the trio helped produce a 4-1 victory over one of the AHL’s top teams, including going 5-for-5 on the penalty kill against the league’s top power play.

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

In his home debut Tuesday night, Wellman again helped on the penalty kill, played the power play and assisted on Blake Parlett’s winning goal in a 3-1 victory over the Syracuse Crunch as the Whale won their third in a row after an 11-game winless streak (0-6-3-2) in January to reclaim first place in the Northeast Division from the idle Bridgeport Sound Tigers.

“I think there’s definitely been a little bit of chemistry, and as we play together more, it’s only going to grow,” Wellman said of the pairing with Audy-Marchessault and Deveaux. “They are two very good players, and there have been a few different plays where we could have been somewhere else. We talk about it on the bench, and we’re just going to learn from it.”

Wellman said the only Whale player he really knew was defenseman Stu Bickel, whom he skated with in the summer but has been on recall to the Rangers since Dec. 18 and a solid contributor, especially in the physical and stick-up-for-teammates department.

“When I got traded, he sent me a text (message) and just said welcome and if I needed anything to let him know,” Wellman said. “(But) there are great guys here, and they’ve welcomed me. Obviously we’ve got two wins since I’ve been here and are now on a three-game (winning) streak, so they’re turning the ship around and now we just have to keep it going.”

Wellman has brought some speed, playmaking and a pretty good shot to the Whale and can play all three forward positions. He had been playing wing but was a center at UMass, so he’s getting re-acclimated to that position “so I can be a solid, two-way player.” But Wellman’s versatility and speed fit in well with the puck-pursuing style that the Rangers and Whale like to play.

“He’s still finding his way, learning the guys and learning the systems, all those types of things,” Gernander said. “But he has picked up two points in two games, and center is an important position where you can always use depth. He’s got decent speed and won a footrace in the neutral zone in Hershey to make a nice play to Audy-Marchessault and eventually to Deveaux (for a goal).

“And he’s good on faceoffs, which are important. Depending on where you are on the rink, it could be from 10 to 20 to 30 seconds if you can win the draw as opposed to losing the draw. If it’s in the defensive zone, it takes time to get possession, break out and enter their zone. And if you look on special teams, if your power play can win a faceoff and start with possession, it’s certainly an advantage as to having a clear-in breakout and gain entry because a lot of times that’s a difficult task. So he does a lot for us and has been a very good pickup so far.”

Unlike former Hartford Wolf Pack left wing Ryan Hollweg, who also grew up in California but went to play in Western Canada in search of better competition, Wellman left home at 14 to attend Cranbrook Kingswood School in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., where he helped win Division III state titles in 2004 and 2006 when the Cranes went 21-5-0 and 25-4-1 in his sophomore and senior years. Though youth hockey in California is improving, there were limited quality teams, so the move proved beneficial for Wellman.

“It was a good fit for me academic-wise and hockey-wise, so I really loved it there (Cranbrook),” he said.

Wellman played two seasons with the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders in the United States Hockey League, getting 30 goals and 39 assists in 118 games in two seasons. Wellman then attended the University of Massachusetts for two years, getting 34 goals and 44 assists in 75 games.

“It was something in my mindset growing up that I always wanted to go to the furthest level that I could and that was playing college hockey so I was really fortunate to get that experience,” Wellman said. “Traveling around all over the place for hockey has been pretty exciting, and I liked UMass a lot. There are a lot of good people there.”

But after his sophomore season, Wellman decided to sign a two-year, free-agent entry level contract with the Wild on March 16, 2010. At the time, he was general manager Chuck Fletcher’s first major college free-agent pick-up and considered the Wild’s top prospect. But after drafting or signing youngsters such as Mikael Granlund, Brett Bulmer, Johan Larsson, Jason Zucker, Charlie Coyle, Zack Phillips and Mario Lucia, the Wild felt Wellman was expendable in favor of a needed veteran presence for an injury-riddled team.

“I still think he’s going to find his way and become a regular NHL player,” Fletcher told the Houston Chronicle on the day of the trade. “But we have a lot of returning forwards next year, and we have six young prospects that are turning pro. I can assure you it wasn’t a case of offering Casey around, but we’ve been working on this for a couple weeks. We tried several different options, and this is what they insisted upon.”

Wellman finished his Wild career with four goals and nine assists in 41 games and had 28 goals and 33 assists in 68 games with the Aeros, including a point-per-game output this season with 14 goals and 12 assists in 26 games. He also helped the Aeros reach the 2011 Calder Cup finals, where they lost in six games to the Binghamton Senators.

A major perk of the trade for Wellman was moving out of the Western Conference, where 6 a.m. flights and lots of travel are commonplace compared to mostly bus rides around the Northeast.

“It’s a little bit different, kind of like when I was in college at UMass, so it should be a little bit better,” Wellman said.

Being back near his alma mater also makes his adjustment to a new team easier.

“I’ve got some good friends around here and might head over to UMass to say hi to a few people,” Wellman said.

CONGRATS, PAPA PAVEL

Congratulations to Whale defenseman Pavel Valentenko and wife Ekaterina on the birth of their first child, 8-pound, 6-pound Polina, on Tuesday afternoon. Valentenko, recovering from an injury sustained in a 3-2 overtime loss to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Jan. 27, skated with the Whale on Tuesday morning and then got a call that Ekaterina was about to give birth. He and Ekaterina went to St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford for the arrival of Polina, and he then celebrated with a late-night dinner at Trumbull Kitchen restaurant in Hartford with neighbor Chad Johnson after the goalie made 23 saves to backstop the win over the Crunch.

“I still can’t believe it,” a beaming Papa Pavel said as he responded to congratulations in the restaurant to text messages from family and friends in Russian and English.

Best wishes to the Valentenkos. Pavel is one of the most pleasant and caring athletes/people that I’ve ever met. He’s often self-conscious about his English when chatting with the media after games, but he has done a tremendous job learning a new language. He sure speaks English a lot better than I speak Russian.

Meanwhile, Johnson spoke glowingly of the Whale’s turnaround thanks in large part to the return of Deveaux, veteran center and leading scorer Kris Newbury and All-Star Mats Zuccarello and the additions of Wellman and left wing Wojtek Wolski and defenseman Jeff Woywitka, who accepted the Rangers’ request for a two-week conditioning assignments last Thursday.

“We’re all playing together and playing well and just finding ways to win,” Johnson said. “We’re more disciplined, and you can tell that we’re more conscious of the score (in the third period) and what we want to accomplish, and that’s to get the two points. We’ve really locked down in the third period, and it helped out these last few games and it’s helped us to get these wins.”

WHALE ON ROAD THIS WEEKEND

With Monster Trucks in the XL Center this weekend, the Whale (21-16-4-5) is on the road for games at Springfield and Manchester on Friday and Saturday nights and at Bridgeport on Sunday afternoon.

Before Friday game’s game, Whale fans will try to get off the schneid in their inaugural seven-game series against their Falcons counterparts. Falcons fans have won the first five games, with Game 6 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield on Friday at 5 p.m. The final game of the series is March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, at 4 p.m. at the XL Center and tickets ($16) will be available soon. For more information and tickets, visit 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 $750 for DBL.

WHALE TO SALUTE ALUMNI WHO GRADUATED TO RANGERS

The Whale and Whalers Sports and Entertainment will host “It All Starts Here” Night on Feb. 18, when the Worcester Sharks visit the XL Center. The night will pay tribute to players who spent time playing in the AHL in Hartford before moving on to the Rangers. It also will participate in USA Hockey’s “Hockey Weekend Across America” that is meant to spread the game throughout the country.

The night will include special ticket deals, as those wearing a youth hockey jersey to the XL Center’s Public Power Box Office will be able to purchase special $10 lower-level end zone seats. Also, 5,000 fans will receive an “It All Starts Here” poster, compliments of Webster Bank. The poster will feature Wolf Pack and Whale alumni who have made it to the Rangers, including AHL All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan, who is now the captain on Broadway. For more information, contact www.ctwhale.com.

Sharks coach Roy Sommer is one victory from becoming only the fourth coach to win 500 AHL games. Sommer, the dean of AHL coaches, is 499-495-90 in 14 seasons and trails Hall of Famers Fred “Bun” Cook (636), Frank Mathers (610) and John Paddock (589), who led the Wolf Pack to the Calder Cup in 2000. Sommer’s newest player is former Wolf Pack center Tim Kennedy, acquired from the Florida Panthers for defenseman Sean Sullivan on Friday. Kennedy had three assists as the Sharks split two games at St. John’s on Friday and Saturday night. … Fans can bid on AHL All-Star Classic jerseys, helmets, gloves and pucks at www.theahl.com. Zuccarello and Audy-Marchessault represented the Whale, and Falcons rookie wing Cam Atkinson, a Greenwich native who starred at Avon Old Farms and helped Boston College win a national title, was also on the Eastern Conference team, which was captained by former Wolf Pack left wing Boyd Kane, captain of the Hershey Bears. … College students can get discounted 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 at the XL Center can get $2 off upper-level tickets and $5 off lower-level seats.

2013 AHL ALL-STAR CLASSIC IN PROVIDENCE

AHL president and CEO David Andrews announced Wednesday that the board of governors has selected the Providence Bruins and Rhode Island Convention Center Authority to host the 2013 Dunkin’ Donuts AHL All-Star Classic as part of a weekend of festivities Jan. 25-28.

The event will kick off with a P-Bruins game on Friday, Jan. 25, followed by the Providence Bruins Youth Hockey Festival on Jan. 26. The All-Star skills competition will be Jan. 27, and the AHL Hall of Fame induction and awards ceremony and All-Star Game will be Jan. 28.

“The American Hockey League is excited to be returning to one of its founding cities for the 2013 All-Star Classic,” Andrews said in a statement. “Providence has been part of the fabric of our league since our first season in 1936, and the Providence Bruins organization has been a cornerstone for the last two decades. We’re looking forward to showcasing our brightest stars to capacity crowds at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center and to an international television audience.”

Providence will host a third All-Star event. The old Rhode Island Auditorium was the site of an All-Star Game on Oct. 23, 1956, and the Dunkin’ Donuts Center hosted the first All-Star Game of the modern era on Jan. 17, 1995.

“The 2013 Dunkin’ Donuts AHL All-Star Classic is the American Hockey League’s premier exhibition, bringing together dozens of hockey’s rising stars for an exciting weekend of competition,” P-Bruins CEO Jeff Fear said in a statement. “The Providence Bruins are honored to play host to this special event.”

“We couldn’t be more thrilled to have this event coming to Providence and to be using our entire complex,” Rhode Island Convention Center Authority CEO James Bennett said. “One of our primary goals is to bring big-time sporting events to our facilities, and we continue to do just that: the NCAA Division I men’s basketball championships in 2010, the NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey regional tournament in 2013 and now the 2013 Dunkin’ Donuts AHL All-Star Classic weekend.”

The AHL All-Star Classic annually draws thousands of fans to the host city, and 2013 event is expected to provide a boost to hotels and restaurants in and around Providence. Of the 597 players to take part in the All-Star Classic since it was reinstated in 1995, more than 91 percent have competed in the NHL, including Callahan, who won the 2007 All-Star Game with three seconds left. More details, including event times and information on tickets, will be announced in the future.

2013 NHL WINTER CLASSIC IN DETROIT, ANN ARBOR

The NHL announced Wednesday afternoon that it will make a major announcement at a press conference at Comerica Park in Detroit on Thursday at 10:30 a.m. that will continue at 1:15 p.m. at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Mich., where the Red Wings will play the 2013 NHL Winter Classic on Jan. 1 against another Original Six team, the Toronto Maple Leafs. The Rangers rallied to beat the Flyers 3-2 in the fifth NHL Winter Classic on Jan. 2 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia.

Comerica Park, the baseball stadium of Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch, will host major events in a week-long celebration that will include a Legends Alumni game Dec. 31 between former members of the Wings and Leafs. Earlier in the week, there will be Great Lakes Invitational games, an AHL game between the Grand Rapids Griffins, the Wings top affiliate, and Toronto Marlies, Ontario Hockey League games between the Plymouth Whalers and London Knights and Saginaw Spirit and Windsor Spitfires, as well as youth and high school hockey games.

The Detroit Free Press reported Wednesday that the University of Michigan Board of Regents voted unanimously to allow the NHL to use Michigan Stadium, where a Guinness world-record crowd of 104,173 watched the Spartans beat Michigan State 5-0 in “The Big Chill at the Big House” on Dec. 11, 2010. Rangers rookie wing Carl Hagelin, who started the season with the Whale, had two goals and an assist in the game.

Regent Denise Ilitch, daughter of Mike Ilitch, recused herself from voting Wednesday. The Winter Classic game will be Jan. 1 with an alternate date of Jan. 2. The NHL will pay the University of Michigan $3 million to use the stadium from Dec. 1 until mid-January.

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

Connecticut Whale 3, Syracuse Crunch 1

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, February 7, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Syracuse Crunch, 3-1, Tuesday night at the XL Center in Hartford. Mats Zuccarello, Blake Parlett and Scott Tanski all scored for Connecticut, with defenseman Jeff Woywitka adding two assists. Goaltender Chad Johnson made 23 saves in winning his third straight start in the month of February.

CT WhaleThe Whale’s victory put them two points ahead of idle Bridgeport for first place in the AHL’s Northeast Division with 53 points.

“We’re all playing together and playing well right now,” said Johnson. “We’re more conscious of the score and of what we want to do, which is to get the two points.”

The Whale struck first midway through the opening period, taking a 1-0 lead on a power-play goal from Zuccarello 7:31 into the frame. Zuccarello tipped Tim Erixon’s shot from the right point past Syracuse goaltender Jeff Drouin-Deslauriers (25 saves) for his tenth goal of the season, with the secondary assist going to Brendan Bell.

Jean-Francois Jacques tied the game for Syracuse with 5:11 to play in the first, as he cut across the Whale slot in front of a sprawled Johnson. Jacques was able to flip the puck on the backhand up and over the Whale goaltender for his 14th goal of the season, with the assist going to highly-touted Anaheim prospect Devante Smith-Pelly.

Connecticut would retake the lead with 1:46 left in the second period with the game-winning tally, as the power-play came through for the second time in the game. Parlett’s shot from the blue line managed to fool a screened Drouin-Deslauriers for Parlett’s fourth goal of the season, putting the Whale ahead, 2-1. Woywitka and Casey Wellman would assist on the goal, Wellman notching his second assist in two games with the Whale.

Tanski would increase the Whale lead to 3-1 with 12:08 left in the third period, as he backhanded a Woywitka rebound into the Syracuse cage. Woywitka would receive his second assist of the game on the goal, Tanski’s fifth, with Jordan Owens picking up the secondary helper.

The win kept the Whale perfect in February (3-0-0-0), with tough tests coming this weekend with games in Springfield Friday, Manchester Saturday and a GEICO Connecticut Cup match with Bridgeport on Sunday.

The Whale will return home on Friday, Feb. 17, when they host the Springfield Falcons at the XL Center (7:00 PM).

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.


Syracuse Crunch 1 at Connecticut Whale 3
Tuesday, February 7, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Syracuse 1 0 0 – 1
Connecticut 1 1 1 – 3

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Zuccarello 10 (Erixon, Bell), 7:31 (PP). 2, Syracuse, Jacques 14 (Smith-Pelly), 14:49. Penalties-Parlett Ct (holding), 0:57; Smaby Syr (holding), 6:53.

2nd Period-3, Connecticut, Parlett 4 (Woywitka, Wellman), 18:14 (PP). Penalties-Carle Syr (high-sticking), 5:56; Erixon Ct (cross-checking), 12:56; Brittain Syr (double minor – high-sticking), 16:26; Fraser Syr (fighting), 18:58; Deveaux Ct (fighting), 19:58.

3rd Period-4, Connecticut, Tanski 5 (Woywitka, Owens), 7:52. Penalties-Tessier Ct (holding the stick), 2:19; Newbury Ct (unsportsmanlike conduct), 9:32; Caputi Syr (slashing), 15:30; Fraser Syr (misconduct – unsportsmanlike conduct), 16:43; Smith-Pelly Syr (unsportsmanlike conduct), 16:43; Deveaux Ct (misconduct – unsportsmanlike conduct), 16:43.

Shots on Goal-Syracuse 7-5-12-24. Connecticut 4-12-12-28.
Power Play Opportunities-Syracuse 0 / 4; Connecticut 2 / 6.
Goalies-Syracuse, Drouin-Deslauriers 6-8-0 (28 shots-25 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 13-9-5 (24 shots-23 saves).
A-2,329
Referees-T.J. Luxmore (47), Darcy Burchell (42).
Linesmen-Derek Wahl (46), Kevin Redding (16).

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

Wolski, Woywitka Looking to Make Most of Time with Whale

By Bruce Berlet

Taking one step back in hopes of making two forward is a familiar refrain.

CT WhaleLeft wing Wojtek Wolski and defenseman Jeff Woywitka are hoping that theory works in their quests to get more ice time with the New York Rangers or another NHL team.

Wolski and Woywitka accepted requests from the Rangers on Thursday for two-week conditioning assignments with the Connecticut Whale and then helped beat Albany and Hershey to end an 11-game winless streak (0-6-2-3) since the start of 2012 and gain a share of the Atlantic Division lead with the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, whose 11-game point streak (10-0-0-1) ended with a 3-2 loss to Manchester on Saturday night.

Goalie Chad Johnson was stout in both games, stopping 59 of 62 shots, and left wing Tommy Grant had his first two-goal game as a pro and new center Casey Wellman chipped in an assist in a 4-1 victory at Hershey while on a line with All-Star Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and rugged Andre Deveaux. Wellman, who played two years at UMass, was acquired from the Minnesota Wild on Thursday for center Erik Christensen, who had a conditioning stint with the Whale from Jan. 11 to 23, and a conditional seventh-round pick in 2013. Wellman’s father, Brad, was an infielder who played 441 games over eight seasons with the San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Dodgers and Kansas City Royals in the 1980s, and his uncle, Tom Candiotti, is a former major leaguer noted for his knuckleball.

Wolski scored the winner in a 3-2 victory over Albany off a nifty give-and-go with All-Star Mats Zuccarello while on a line with Whale leading scorer Kris Newbury (17 goals, 24 assists). Wolski, 25, who is in the final year of a two-year, $7.6 million deal signed with the Phoenix Coyotes on June 28, 2010, had played in only nine games with the Rangers and was a healthy scratch the previous six since Jan. 15 after playing just three games following a return from injury. The Rangers acquired Wolski from the Coyotes for defenseman Michal Rozsival on Jan. 10, 2011.

“It’s the best thing for them,” Ranger head coach John Tortorella said of the conditioning stints. “Because if they do get an opportunity, or if we sit to make a change, or if there is an injury – you can bag skate them until the cows come home, it doesn’t help them – they need to play. We had to get their permission, and it was seamless. They wanted to go do it, and that’s a good sign.”

Continued solid play in Hartford could help Wolski crack the lineup of the NHL’s top team or get ice time elsewhere. But playing anywhere now is the only way to achieve one of those goals.

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

“The guys had been having a tough time – 11 in a row (without a win) is a long time – and I just wanted to come down, work hard and get back to feeling like myself again,” Wolski said. “I didn’t feel any butterflies, just felt kind of exhausted because I hadn’t played that much the last 12 weeks. I’m feeling a lot better physically. Now it’s just starting to play again, feeling the puck and getting my confidence back where it needs to be.”

Wolski said playing with NHL-caliber players is a helpful bonus.

“Newbs and Zucc are very good, very smart players, so it makes it a lot easier,” Wolski said.

Especially on his winning goal against the Devils when he worked the give-and-go from the right circle and put a perfect one-timer in the top left corner behind Keith Kinkaid.

“Zucc always has his head up, he knows where the puck needs to be, and I just got it off as quick as possible and found the right spot,” Wolski said.

Wolski accepted the conditioning assignment after contemplation with his agent.

“I wanted to think about it, and it was nice to get the All-Star break to go away and kind of get some rest and clear my mind a little bit,” Wolski said. “In the end, I knew it was probably the best thing for me. I’ve got to get on the ice. I’ve got to play. Practicing and skating is great, but it’s nothing like the game. And if your team is in first place and you’re winning every single game, it’s very tough to get the minutes that I need to get back to where I’m supposed to be to be to play (in the NHL).”

Newbury delighted in playing with Wolski and Zuccarello, who was a linemate before missing 17 of 18 games after sustaining an injury in a 5-3 loss to Hershey on Dec. 9.

“Wolski is great with the puck,” said Newbury, who ironically played with the Polish winger in his last game with the Rangers in Montreal. “He’s got great vision and great hands, so when you get it into his hands or Zuccarello’s hand, they both make good plays. I think as time goes by here and he gets into a little bit better game shape, he’ll be even more of a factor.”

Woywitka, 28, was claimed off waivers from the Montreal Canadiens on Oct. 6 and got consistent playing time on the Rangers’ third pairing with Stu Bickel, who played well after being called up Dec. 19, until he was injured in a 3-2 victory over the Coyotes on Dec. 17. Before joining the Whale, Woywitka had missed 17 of the last 19 games, including the last 13 since a 4-1 victory over the Florida Panthers on Dec. 30.

“It was obviously nice to get out on the ice and to get in some action, play and start feeling comfortable again,” Woywitka said. “Obviously it’s nice to play those minutes and get into condition because you don’t get those minutes in the NHL. But it’s nice to get them here and contribute because it’s been over a month since I played. It’s been a tough go because you can skate all you want, but it’s not like playing a game.

“The first period (on Friday) I felt like I was getting my feet wet and wasn’t sure how it was going to go. It doesn’t matter what league you’re in, the American League is obviously a good league and you want to make sure you’re doing the smart things and not come down here and do too much, just do what you can do and play your game.”

“Wolski and Woywitka are obviously pretty good caliber players to have injected into your lineup,” Whale coach Ken Gernander said. “Wolski gave us a boost with the big goal (Friday night) and had another chance in the second (on a breakaway). You could see he’s a really skilled offensive guy, and Jeff shored up the defense and is a big body (6 feet 3, 215 pounds) who can log a lot of minutes for us, so like I said, they’re a good addition to our lineup.”

Wolski and Woywitka are scheduled to be with the Whale through games against the Syracuse Crunch on Tuesday night and at Springfield and Manchester on Friday and Saturday nights and at Bridgeport on Sunday afternoon. The Crunch (19-18-4-3) are 0-1-1-1 in their last three games, blowing third-period leads twice, and 1-3-1-1 in their last six starts, but have dangerous threats in left wing Patrick Maroon (22 goals, 26 assists), All-Star right wing Kyle Palmieri (25, 13) and center Peter Holland (16, 18). Former Wolf Pack defenseman Bryan Rodney is 4-15—19 in 38 games and former Wolf Pack forward Mark Bell is 6-10—16 in 35 games, but center Nick Bonino (6-16—22 in 19 games), a former standout at Farmington High, Avon Old Farms and Boston University, is on recall to the parent Anaheim Ducks.

BICKEL LEAVES HIS MARK(S)

Bickel certainly left his fist prints in fights with Wayne Simmonds and Tom Sestito in the Rangers’ 5-2 victory over Philadelphia on Sunday, their sixth in a row over the Flyers, including four and in the NHL Winter Classic.

Bickel received “high marks” from Tortorella after helping energize the Rangers (33-12-5) to a 4-0-1 run, a five-point lead over the Flyers in the Atlantic Division with two games in hand and a three-point lead over the Boston Bruins in the Eastern Conference with one game in hand.

“(Physical play) is a big part of our game,” Tortorella said. “That’s the way we have to play. When another team joins in, it mounts. Everybody gets involved. We’re the sum of our parts. That’s how we play. That’s the only way we can play. Everyone needs to join in in all areas like that.”

“It’s part of the game,” Bickel said of his pugilistic activities. “If I play a physical style, which is my game, I’m going to wind up doing that. It’s all part of the deal.”

And Bickel appeared to enjoy the physicality. He had a wide grin skating off the ice after his fight with Sestito, who got a rare game misconduct for three fights. And Bickel’s defensive partner Marc Staal, and fellow former Wolf Pack blueliner Michael Del Zotto, whose winner earned him the Broadway Hat, talked about how “hungry” Bickel seems to fight.

“It’s crazy,” Del Zotto said. “He’s probably one of the hungriest guys in the league to get a fighting major. He never backs up. It’s just amazing what he did for the team tonight.”

Del Zotto marveled at the strength and wildness Bickel puts into his punches, joking that he winds up from his heels. It led to Bickel’s right knuckles being bloody, and he said his hand was a little banged up.

But the Rangers again put the hurt on the Flyers thanks in part to former Wolf Pack center Artem Anisimov getting a goal off a deft deflection of a shot by All-Star defenseman Dan Girardi and two assists to end a 17-game streak without a point and forcing the turnover that led to Del Zotto’s winner. And All-Star wing Marian Gaborik was flying all game as he had a goal, an assist, a game-high eight shots and several key defensive plays in front of All-Star goalie Henrik Lundqvist (20 saves), who extended his career-best shutout streak to 182:37 before Brayden Schenn came out of the penalty box and scored on a breakaway at 12:02 of the second period.

“We have been neck and neck with those guys all year long,” said former Wolf Pack forward Brandon Dubinsky, who got into one of the three fights with Sestito and scored the back-breaking goal off Prust’s steal with 7:45 left to end a six-game pointless streak and make it 4-2. “Every game we’ve played against them has been physical, a playoff-type atmosphere and we knew it was going to be like that today. It’s always a fun game against those guys.”

WHALE, FALCONS FANS RESUME SERIES FRIDAY

Before Friday game’s game, Whale fans will try to get off the schneid in their inaugural seven-game series against their Falcons counterparts. Falcons fans have won the first five games, with Game 6 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield on Friday at 5 p.m. The final game is March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, at 4 p.m. at the XL Center and tickets ($16) will be available soon. For more information and tickets, visit 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 $750 for DBL.

WHALE TO SALUTE ALUMNI WHO GRADUATED TO RANGERS

The Whale and Whalers Sports and Entertainment will host “It All Starts Here” Night on Feb. 18, when the Worcester Sharks visit the XL Center. The night will pay tribute to players who spent time playing in the AHL in Hartford before moving on to the Rangers. It also will participate in USA Hockey’s “Hockey Weekend Across America” that is meant to spread the game throughout the country.

The night will include special ticket deals, as those wearing a youth hockey jersey to the XL Center’s Public Power Box Office will be able to purchase special $10 lower-level end zone seats. Also, 5,000 fans will receive an “It All Starts Here” poster, compliments of Webster Bank. The poster will feature Hartford Wolf Pack and Whale alumni who have made it to the Rangers, including former AHL All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan, who is now the captain on Broadway. For more information, contact www.ctwhale.com.

Sharks coach Roy Sommer is one victory from becoming only the fourth coach to win 500 AHL games. Sommer, the dean of AHL coaches, is 499-495-90 in 14 seasons and trails Hall of Famers Fred “Bun” Cook (636), Frank Mathers (610) and John Paddock (589), who led the Wolf Pack to the Calder Cup in 2000. Sommer’s newest player is former Wolf Pack center Tim Kennedy, acquired from the Florida Panthers for defenseman Sean Sullivan on Friday. Kennedy had three assists as the Sharks split two games at St. John’s on Friday and Saturday night. … Rochester center Paul Szczechura was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Week on Monday after getting four goals and two assists as the Americans went 2-0-1-0. A fifth-year pro in his first season with Buffalo organization, Szczechura has nine goals and 15 assists and is plus-10 in 28 games this season and has one goal and three assists in nine games with the Sabres. … Fans can bid on AHL All-Star Classic jerseys, helmets, gloves and pucks at www.theahl.com. Zuccarello and Audy-Marchessault represented the Whale, and Springfield Falcons rookie wing Cam Atkinson, a Greenwich native who starred at Avon Old Farms and helped Boston College win a national title, was also on the Eastern Conference team, which was captained by former Wolf Pack left wing Boyd Kane, captain of the Hershey Bears.

GERNANDER, LEETCH AMONG SEVEN NEW HALL OF FAME MEMBERS

Gernander and Hockey Hall of Famer Brian Leetch, a Cheshire native who spent most of his 16-year NHL career with the Rangers, are among the seven newly selected members of the Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame. Others to be honored on “Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame Night” on March 10 when the Norfolk Admirals are at the XL Center are 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 William E. Barnes, one of the founders of the New England Whalers who was involved in numerous charitable organizations before he died in 2006.

“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. “But you’re looking at hockey in Hartford and Connecticut, and this community is near and dear to my heart.”

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. The seven new members will be inducted before the game against the Admirals and will be recognized during the first intermission.

Fans will receive a special souvenir of the night as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given away, courtesy of SuperCuts. There also will be a special meet-and-greet event that night with details to be announced soon. 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. … College students can get discounted 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 at the XL Center can get $2 off upper-level tickets and $5 off lower-level seats.

ANOTHER HUMANITARIAN NOMINATION FOR YALE’S HUGHES

Congratulations to Yale women’s senior forward Aleca Hughes on being named one of five finalists for the 2012 BNY Mellon Wealth Management Hockey Humanitarian Award. Hughes, of Westwood, Mass., is the sixth Yale finalist, a record, and her second nomination, a first for the Bulldogs.

The Hockey Humanitarian Award recognizes male or female college hockey players at the Division I or Division III who give back to their communities in the true humanitarian spirits. Hughes’ efforts have been inspired by teammate Mandi Schwartz, whose battle with cancer led Hughes to start a number of initiatives, including the Mandi Schwartz Foundation.

Schwartz died last April after battling cancer for more than two years. Led by Hughes, Yale organized two major annual events in Mandi’s name. The Mandi Schwartz Marrow Donor Registration Drive at Yale, led each spring by the women’s hockey, football and field hockey teams, has added more than 2,500 potential marrow donors to the Be The Match registry for patients with life-threatening illnesses. The women’s hockey team also has held a “White Out for Mandi” fundraiser game at Ingalls Rink in New Haven each of the past two falls and raised more than $40,000.

Hughes also started the Mandi Schwartz Foundation to help keep her legacy of helping others alive. In addition to the White Out, the women’s and men’s hockey teams are raising money for the foundation by participating in the season-long “Goals for Good” campaign in which ECAC Hockey team compete against each other to see who can raise the most money for charity.

Hughes is also her team’s representative for Yale Athletics’ Thomas W. Ford ’42 Community Outreach Program and has been involved in many team events such as Youth Days and Skate with the Players. She and the Bulldogs also continue to spend time with their adopted teammate Giana, a local 10-year-old girl who recently had surgery for a brain tumor. Those community efforts helped Yale to earn the New Haven Register’s “Dave Solomon Memorial Sports Persons of the Year Award” for 2011.

Yale’s other Hockey Humanitarian Award finalists have been Julianna Schantz-Dunn (2000), Deanna McDevitt (2003), winner Kristin Savard (2007) and Crysti Howser (2009). An American studies major, Hughes is a graduate of Hotchkiss School in Watertown, where she was captain and All-New England and played for the Connecticut Stars, earning two bronze medals and one silver at the nationals.

The four finalists are Hughes, one of eight finalists last year, Shawn Baker (Norwich), Kevin McNamara (Colgate), Tucker Mullin (St. Anselm College) and Cody Reichard (Miami of Ohio). The winner will be introduced April 6 as part of the NCAA Frozen Four in Tampa, Fla.

Good luck to Aleca, who has certainly done plenty to earn the award. And congratulations to the memory of Schwartz as ECAC Hockey named its Student-Athlete of the Year Award in her memory. The announcement was made Friday on what would have been Mandi’s 24th birthday. She died April 3, 2011 after being a three-time ECAC Hockey All-Academic Team selection whose gentle nature and selfless approach to life endeared her to everyone she met. She attended Athol Murray College of Notre Dame prior to going to Yale.

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Connecticut Whale 4, Hershey Bears 1

By Brian Ring

Hershey, PA, February 4, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Hershey Bears, 4-1, Saturday night at the Giant Center to win their second straight game. Tommy Grant scored twice for the Whale and goaltender Chad Johnson made 39 saves in the victory.

CT WhaleThe win, coupled with Bridgeport’s loss to Manchester, moved the Whale back into a share of first place in the Northeast Division with 51 points.

“Johnson had a good game in net, we got a power-play goal, we got some secondary scoring with Tommy Grant getting two, there were a lot of things in our favor tonight,” said Whale head coach Gernander.

The two teams played exactly 16 minutes of scoreless hockey before Grant gave the Whale a 1-0 lead in the opening period. Grant carried the puck down the left wing boards, snapping a shot that squeaked under the left arm of Bears’ goaltender Dany Sabourin (17 saves). Grant’s goal, his fourth of the season, was assisted by Scott Tanski and Jared Nightingale.

Hershey, however, would tie the game right back up just 1:19 later, as former Whale Tomas Kundratek’s shot from the point was tipped past Chad Johnson by Cody Eakin.  Boyd Kane also registered an assist on the score, the eighth of the year for Eakin.

The Whale would retake the lead on the power-play 12:10 into the second period, as Kris Newbury shot a puck up and over Sabourin for his team-leading 17th goal, the eventual game-winner. Newbury was fed by Mats Zuccarello on the back-hand below the right faceoff circle, leaving the Whale veteran with an open chance. Tim Erixon also assisted on the play.

Andre Deveaux would extend the Whale advantage to 3-1 just 1:22 later, as he converted a nifty three-way passing play between himself, Casey Wellman and Jonathan Audy-Marchessault. Audy-Marchessault’s pass found a wide-open Deveaux as the trio crossed into the Hershey zone, with Deveaux promptly depositing the puck into the top right corner of the cage.  It was the first Whale point for Wellman, who was making his Whale debut after being acquired from the Minnesota Wild on Friday.

Grant would strike again to provide the game’s final tally, his second of the night, with 6:10 remaining in the third period. Kelsey Tessier won a draw to the right of Sabourin straight to Grant, who shot and scored for the first multi-goal game of his professional career and a 4-1 Whale lead.

“We got contributions from everyone and it was a good team win,” said Gernander.

The Whale will now return home on Tuesday, when they host the Syracuse Crunch in their only visit to the XL Center this season (7:00 PM).

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 4 at Hershey Bears 1
Saturday, February 4, 2012 – Giant Center

Connecticut 1 2 1 – 4
Hershey 1 0 0 – 1

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Grant 4 (Tanski, Nightingale), 16:00. 2, Hershey, Eakin 8 (Kundratek, Kane), 17:19. Penalties-Rechlicz Her (boarding), 3:03.

2nd Period-3, Connecticut, Newbury 17 (Zuccarello, Erixon), 12:10 (PP). 4, Connecticut, Deveaux 13 (Wellman, Audy-Marchessault), 13:32. Penalties-Miskovic Her (interference), 11:17; Parlett Ct (tripping), 15:49; Woywitka Ct (slashing), 19:18; Tessier Ct (roughing), 19:53; Bourque Her (roughing), 19:53.

3rd Period-5, Connecticut, Grant 5 (Tessier), 13:50. Penalties-Klassen Ct (hooking), 2:28; Bourque Ct (tripping), 8:58; Mitchell Her (elbowing), 11:20; Mink Her (tripping), 14:10; Bell Ct (interference), 17:14.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 10-7-4-21. Hershey 13-14-13-40.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 1 / 4; Hershey 0 / 5.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 12-9-5 (40 shots-39 saves). Hershey, Sabourin 10-7-2 (21 shots-17 saves).
A-10,883
Referees-Chris Ciamaga (24).
Linesmen-Jud Ritter (34), Bob Goodman (90).

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Connecticut Whale 3, Albany Devils 2

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, February 3, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Albany Devils, 3-2, Friday night at the XL Center in Hartford to snap an eleven-game winless streak. Kris Newbury, Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and Wojtek Wolski all scored for the Whale, while Mats Zuccarello and Brendan Bell added two assists apiece.

CT Whale“It’s a good feeling in here right now, the guys are happy,” said Newbury. “The good news is we get to get right back at it and try to have a good weekend.”

Albany staked themselves to an early 1-0 lead, as Eric Gelinas’ shot from the right point was ripped past Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (20 saves) just 1:39 into the opening period. Stephane Veilleux and Darcy Zajac each assisted on the goal.

The Whale would strike back just over a minute later, as Newbury tied the game in his return to the lineup after missing the last two games due to injury. The puck hit off the end boards to the left of Albany goaltender Keith Kinkaid (21 saves) and out to a streaking Zuccarello, who hit Newbury with a quick one-time pass. Bell would also assist on the equalizer.

Jonathan Audy-Marchessault would give the Whale a 2-1 lead that they would carry into the first intermission with a power-play goal, his 16th tally of the season, at 18:30. Audy-Marchessault managed to sneak a bad angle shot past Kinkaid, as the Whale All-Star had gathered the puck up and fired at the Devils’ goal line to the right of the cage. Bell recorded his second assist of the game on the score, with Andre Deveaux earning the secondary assist.

The Whale would extend their lead to 3-1 with 3:47 remaining in the second period, as Wolski tallied Connecticut’s second power-play score of the night for the eventual game-winner. Wolski fed Zuccarello for a quick give-and-go passing play, depositing the return pass in the top right corner of the Devils’ net. The goal came in Wolski’s first tilt with the Whale after he joined the team from the New York Rangers on a conditioning assignment, with fellow assignee Jeff Woywitka notching the secondary assist.

Joe Whitney would close the Albany deficit to 3-2 5:21 into the third period, as he stuffed a loose puck past Johnson. Zajac and Veilleux both collected their second assists of the night on the goal, Whitney’s team-leading 12th.

The Whale, however, would hang on in the third period to preserve their first win since Dec. 31.

“We need to build off of this win and keep it rolling in here for tomorrow,” said Newbury.

Connecticut now heads to Hershey to face the Bears Saturday night at the Giant Center (7:00 PM).

The Whale will return home on Tuesday, when they host the Syracuse Crunch in their only visit to the XL Center this season (7:00 PM).

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.

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Albany Devils 2 at Connecticut Whale 3
Friday, February 3, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Albany 1 0 1 – 2
Connecticut 2 1 0 – 3

1st Period-1, Albany, Gelinas 8 (Veilleux, Zajac), 1:39. 2, Connecticut, Newbury 16 (Zuccarello, Bell), 2:57. 3, Connecticut, Audy-Marchessault 16 (Bell, Deveaux), 18:30 (PP). Penalties-Tedenby Alb (interference), 9:46; Erixon Ct (hooking), 15:03; Palmieri Alb (interference), 17:24.

2nd Period-4, Connecticut, Wolski 1 (Zuccarello, Woywitka), 16:13 (PP). Penalties-Bell Ct (holding), 1:24; Zalewski Alb (high-sticking), 14:29; Parlett Ct (cross-checking), 16:37.

3rd Period-5, Albany, Whitney 12 (Zajac, Veilleux), 5:21. Penalties-Bouchard Ct (high-sticking), 17:40.

Shots on Goal-Albany 5-6-11-22. Connecticut 9-11-4-24.
Power Play Opportunities-Albany 0 / 4; Connecticut 2 / 3.
Goalies-Albany, Kinkaid 11-12-1 (24 shots-21 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 11-9-5 (22 shots-20 saves).
A-4,028
Referees-Ryan Hersey (46).
Linesmen-Luke Galvin (2), Jim Briggs (83).

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