Category Archives: CT Whale

Whale Loan Randy McNaught to ECHL Greenville

HARTFORD, February 2, 2012:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the Whale has loaned forward Randy McNaught to its ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleMcNaught, who signed an AHL contract with the Whale January 23, dressed for one game with the Whale, this past Saturday’s 2-1 home loss to Springfield, after going scoreless with 24 penalty minutes in 12 games with the University of Calgary.  McNaught was a seventh-round selection (190th overall) by the parent New York Rangers in the 2010 NHL Draft, out of the Western Hockey League.

The Whale finish off a five-game homestand tomorrow night, Friday, February 3, when they take on the divisional-rival Albany Devils at the XL Center in a 7:00 PM game.

Tickets to that contest, 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.

Whale Release Aaron Voros from PTO

HARTFORD, February 2, 2012:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the Whale has released forward Aaron Voros from his Professional Tryout (PTO) agreement.

CT WhaleSigned November 15, Voros skated in 23 games with the Whale, notching four goals and three assists for seven points while serving 23 minutes in penalties.

The Whale finish off a five-game homestand tomorrow night, Friday, February 3, when they take on the divisional-rival Albany Devils at the XL Center in a 7:00 PM game.

Tickets to that contest, 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.

Springfield Falcons 2, Connecticut Whale 1

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, January 28, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated by the Springfield Falcons, 2-1, Saturday night before a season-high crowd of 11,181 at the XL Center in Hartford. Maksim Mayorov scored the game-winning goal for Springfield in a low-scoring affair, with Mats Zuccarello tallying the only score for Connecticut.

CT WhaleThe defeat sent the Whale to their eleventh straight loss since 2012 began (0-6-3-2).

“We make a mistake there late, an odd man rush and we pay the price for it,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “Our margin of error isn’t one where we can afford a lot of mistakes.”

Springfield opened up a 1-0 lead with three minutes remaining in the first period, as Tim Spencer deflected Theo Ruth’s shot from the point past Whale goaltender Cam Talbot (27 saves). Tomas Kubalik received the secondary assist on the goal, the only scoring play of the opening frame. The Falcons outshot the Whale, 8-7, in the first despite the Whale being afforded three power-plays to Springfield‘s one.

The teams were headed for a scoreless second period before Zuccarello’s stellar one-man effort tied the game for the Whale. Zuccarello cut down the left wing boards through the face-off circle, and despite being impeded by a Falcon’ defender, managed to slide the puck in between the legs of Falcons goaltender Paul Dainton (24 saves). Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and Blake Parlett both assisted on the goal, Zuccarello’s ninth of the season.

Maksim Mayorov would give the Falcons a 2-1 lead 6:03 into the third period with the eventual game-winner, as he one-timed a pass from Cam Atkinson past Talbot. Martin St. Pierre set the whole play up with a long stretch pass to Atkinson, who perfectly timed his feed to Mayorov in front of the Whale net.

The Whale would not be able to get the equalizer the rest of the way, as Dainton stood tall in goal for the Falcons in a period that saw the home team outshoot Springfield, 14-12. Dainton made several key stops, including a game-saving effort on an Audy-Marchessault one-time bid.

“We’ve got to find a way to finish, do the little things, take advantage of this short break,” said Whale defenseman Jared Nightingale. “Every man in this locker room knows we can turn this thing around right away.”

Connecticut will now rest up during the AHL All-Star break, before returning to the XL Center to face the Albany Devils in a Northeast Division struggle 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.

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

Springfield Falcons 2 at Connecticut Whale 1
Saturday, January 28, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

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

1st Period-1, Springfield, Spencer 2 (Ruth, MacLeod), 17:00. Penalties-Cullity Spr (slashing), 1:04; Thuresson Ct (delay of game), 8:52; Calvert Spr (high-sticking), 9:08; Dainton Spr (delay of game), 12:00.

2nd Period-2, Connecticut, Zuccarello 9 (Audy-Marchessault, Parlett), 18:08. Penalties-Audy-Marchessault Ct (tripping), 5:19; Garlock Spr (hooking), 8:22; Prout Spr (delay of game), 14:08; Calvert Spr (roughing), 20:00; Erixon Ct (roughing), 20:00.

3rd Period-3, Springfield, Mayorov 4 (Atkinson, St. Pierre), 6:03. Penalties-Drazenovic Spr (checking to the head), 7:25.

Shots on Goal-Springfield 8-9-12-29. Connecticut 7-4-14-25.
Power Play Opportunities-Springfield 0 / 2; Connecticut 0 / 6.
Goalies-Springfield, Dainton 4-2-0 (25 shots-24 saves). Connecticut, Talbot 9-11-0 (29 shots-27 saves).
A-11,181
Referees-Francis Charron (46).
Linesmen-Luke Galvin (2), Jim Briggs (83).

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 3, Connecticut Whale 2 (OT)

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, January 27, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated by the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, 3-2 in overtime, Friday night before 4,163 at the XL Center in Hartford. Ex-Whale Jason Williams scored the overtime game-winner for the Penguins, while Whale goaltender Chad Johnson made 37 saves to keep the Whale in the game. Jonathan Audy-Marchessault and Sean Avery both scored for Connecticut.

CT Whale“Penalties, penalties, it’s all about discipline,” said Whale forward Kelsey Tessier. “Discipline is the key. We had the game in the pocket.”

The Penguins opened the scoring on the power-play, as Ryan Craig had an easy put-in score to give Wilkes-Barre/Scranton a 1-0 lead at 8:16 of the first period. Craig received a pass from Eric Tangradi at the far post of Whale goaltender Chad Johnson, with the secondary assist going to Bryan Lerg.

Sean Avery would tie the game up for the Whale 3:28 into the second period, tallying his second goal of the season for Connecticut. Avery snapped a shot through the legs of Penguins’ goaltender Brad Thiessen (20 saves) as he came in alone. Ryan Bourque recorded the lone assist on the score.

Johnson would keep the game tied in a period that saw the Penguins outshoot the Whale, 14-8, making numerous saves during a four minute penalty-kill following Avery’s score.

The Whale would take a brief 2-1 lead 4:46 into the third period, as Audy-Marchessault banged home a loose puck that Thiessen lost sight of. Andre Deveaux and Brendan Bell both assisted on Audy-Marchessault’s 15th goal of the season.

Robert Bortuzzo would tie the game back up just under a minute later at 5:44 on the power-play, as his wrist shot from the top of the left circle beat an apparently screened Johnson.

The teams would remain deadlocked the rest of the way, and for the third straight game the Whale headed to overtime after three periods.

Bourque would get called for tripping with 1:10 left in the extra session, giving the Penguins a man advantage the rest of the way, and Williams would cash in with the game-winning goal 16 seconds later to lift Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and send the Whale to their tenth straight defeat (0-5-3-2).

Saturday night, when the Springfield Falcons visit the XL Center for a 7:00 game, will feature a giveaway of additional sets of the first group of Whale trading cards.  That array included cards of All-Star Mats Zuccarello, Wade Redden, Kris Newbury, Chad Johnson and Carl Hagelin.  Also, after the game Saturday night, Audy-Marchessault and Zuccarello will conduct an autograph session in the XL Center atrium to sign their cards.

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.

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

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 3 (OT) at Connecticut Whale 2

Friday, January 27, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

W-B/Scranton 1 0 1 1 – 3
Connecticut 0 1 1 0 – 2

1st Period-1, W-B/Scranton, Craig 6 (Tangradi, Lerg), 8:16 (PP). Penalties-Zuccarello Ct (tripping), 3:32; Grant Ct (cross-checking), 6:45; Williams Wbs (hooking), 18:52.

2nd Period-2, Connecticut, Avery 2 (Bourque), 3:28. Penalties-Avery Ct (roughing, unsportsmanlike conduct, misconduct – unsportsmanlike conduct), 3:28; Sneep Wbs (interference), 18:19; Mormina Wbs (tripping), 19:38.

3rd Period-3, Connecticut, Audy-Marchessault 15 (Deveaux, Bell), 4:46. 4, W-B/Scranton, Bortuzzo 2 (Williams, Tangradi), 5:44 (PP). Penalties-Bell Ct (hooking), 5:37; MacIntyre Wbs (major – boarding, game misconduct – boarding), 6:47; Deveaux Ct (roughing), 6:59; Lerg Wbs (slashing), 10:04; Craig Wbs (roughing), 11:32; Deveaux Ct (roughing), 11:32; Bouchard Ct (slashing), 12:14.

OT Period-5, W-B/Scranton, Williams 6 (McDonald, Grant), 4:06 (PP). Penalties-Bourque Ct (hooking), 3:50.

Shots on Goal-W-B/Scranton 9-14-11-6-40. Connecticut 4-8-10-0-22.
Power Play Opportunities-W-B/Scranton 3 / 7; Connecticut 0 / 5.
Goalies-W-B/Scranton, Thiessen 17-11-2 (22 shots-20 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 10-9-5 (40 shots-37 saves).
A-4,163
Referees-Jean Hebert (43).
Linesmen-Kevin Redding (16), Glen Cooke (6).

Whale Announce New Benefits for Season Seat Purchasers

HARTFORD, January 27, 2012:  Whalers Sports & Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin, Jr. today announced two new benefits for Connecticut Whale full season-ticket purchasers.

CT WhaleSeason seat-holders who reserve their full-season 2012-13 Whale tickets by April 15 will receive access for four people to the luxurious CT Whale Director’s Suite at the XL Center, for one Whale 2012-13 home game.  This allows the opportunity to watch the game alongside Whale executive personnel and special guests, and to enjoy all of the high-end amenities of the Director’s Suite.

Additionally, all Whale full-season 2012-13 subscribers who purchase by April 15 will receive a custom-made, high-quality season ticket-holder jersey fleece sweatshirt.  The jersey fleece sweatshirt will be exclusive to Whale full-season ticket-holders, and will feature a “Season Ticket Holder 2012-13” patch that designates it as a unique item.

“We are always looking for ways to make Whale season seats an even more attractive package,” Baldwin, Jr. said.  “And these are two more great benefits to add to an already-long list.  Our season seat-holders are our most-valued supporters as we work to energize the Connecticut hockey market to its greatest potential, and we are proud to offer our best customers this premier luxury-level opportunity and this special apparel piece.”

Existing benefits for Whale season seat-holders also include: a skate-with-the-team party, convenient payment plan options, a ticket-exchange program, a meet-the-team party, a 10% discount on Whale merchandise, a personal account executive and guaranteed giveaway items.

For more information on purchasing Whale season tickets, the free night in the Director’s Suite and the exclusive season seat-holder sweatshirt, call (860) 728-3366, visit the Season Ticket Holder table behind Section 101 at a Whale home game or log on to www.ctwhale.com.

The Whale are in home-ice action tonight at the XL Center against the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, with faceoff at 7:00 PM.  That begins the Whale’s “Trading Card Weekend”, as 5,000 fans will receive the Whale’s second set of player trading cards, sponsored by Webster Bank.  The featured players for this set are All-Star Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Cam Talbot, Ryan Bourque, Kelsey Tessier, Jordan Owens and, in a historical tribute, former Hartford Wolf Pack star Ryan Callahan, now captain of the parent New York Rangers.

Then tomorrow night, this Saturday, January 28, when the Springfield Falcons visit the XL Center for a 7:00 game, will feature a giveaway of additional sets of the first group of Whale trading cards.  That array included cards of All-Star Mats Zuccarello, Wade Redden, Kris Newbury, Chad Johnson and Carl Hagelin.  Also, after the game tomorrow night, Audy-Marchessault and Zuccarello will conduct an autograph session in the XL Center atrium to sign their cards.

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.

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

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Zuccarello Hopes to Help Steer Whale out of Skid

By Bruce Berlet

After a 5-3 victory over the Springfield Falcons on Dec. 31, the Connecticut Whale (19-15-3-5) had a six-point lead over the Adirondack Phantoms in the AHL’s Northeast Division and were within two points of the Eastern Conference’s top spot. But entering a game at the XL Center on Friday night against the surging Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, the Whale is on a nine-game winless streak (0-5-1-3).

CT WhaleDespite the slump, the Whale still has a nine-game points streak (5-0-1-3) at home since a 5-3 loss to the Hershey Bears on Dec. 9 and a one-point lead over the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, who had an eight-game winning streak ended in a 4-3 shootout loss to the visiting Atlantic Division-leading St. John’s IceCaps on Wednesday night. The Whale is two points ahead of Adirondack, which hosts Bridgeport on Friday night, and Albany, which is at Binghamton.

No one has been more frustrated during the recent tough times than wing Mats Zuccarello, who has missed the last four games and 17 of 18 with an injury.

Zuccarello resumed workouts with the Whale on Monday and showed how much he enjoys being on the verge of returning to the lineup Thursday as he playfully feigned fighting with fellow All-Star forward Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, another 5-foot-7 dynamo, and tapped out a few bars of “Brass Bonanza” with his stick on the sideboards while catching his breath on the bench.

“It’s been a long time since I had fun with hockey, so it’s nice to be back,” said Zuccarello, who will make his career All-Star debut Sunday and Monday in Atlantic City, N.J. “It’s frustrating because you want to try and help, but at the same time, it’s like I don’t know if I could have made anything different.

“I know the team goes in stretches up and down, so I don’t think we have any worries. I think we’re going to get back on track. Everybody goes through (bad) stretches, so I don’t think it’s a huge deal.”

Zuccarello had to be the most surprised of the 48 players named to participate in the AHL All-Star Classic. The skilled Norwegian playing his second season in North America had missed 10 games when he and rookie Audy-Marchessault were among the selections for the Eastern Conference team that will be compete in the skills competition Sunday at 3 p.m. and the All-Star Game on Monday at 7 p.m.

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

When selected, Zuccarello was tied for third on the team in scoring with right wing Andre Deveaux with 22 points (eight goals, 14 assists) despite missing the Whale’s first four games while with the parent New York Rangers and the 10 games after being injured December 9 vs. Hershey. Zuccarello resumed skating on his own Dec. 28, practiced with the team for the first time Jan. 4 and returned to the lineup for a game at Norfolk on Jan. 13, only to be re-injured after assisting on Aaron Voros’ goal in a 3-1 loss.

“You need some time to get back to where you were before you were injured, but it’s just nice to be back so I can do all I can to help the team win,” said Zuccarello, who is still the Whale’s fourth-leading scorer despite playing in only 19 games. “I’m getting close (to 100 percent) but probably not going to be at the top of my game. I still need some time to get into how I like to play before I got injured. It’s mainly physical, timing, stuff like that. I’m not going to revolutionize the team, but I hope to help them win games again.”

It’s especially good time for Zuccarello’s return since veteran center Kris Newbury, the Whale’s leading scorer (15 goals, 24 assists), was injured in the third period of a 5-4 shootout loss to the Norfolk Admirals last Saturday night. Despite the injury, Newbury finished regulation and overtime and even took a shot in the skills competition.

“He’s a tough son of a gun, isn’t he?” Whale coach Ken Gernander said.

But Gernander didn’t rush Zuccarello back in the lineup.

“I think he’s more comfortable with the injury than he was last time coming back,” Gernander said. “He’s got to be able to perform because you don’t want to put him in a game where he’s not going to be able to perform to his standards. And a lot of times with a smaller guy, he has to use his agility and skating to keep himself from being put in a precarious position. But that being said, very few hockey players are 100 percent for 80 games, so he’s obviously pushing through some things but ready to go.”

Gernander said he and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller have worked on all facets of the game in four days of practice to try to help get the Whale out of their funk.

“I don’t think we’ve had one absolute glaring weakness where we haven’t been able to defend or generate any scoring,” Gernander said. “It’s a collection of little things, so we’re just trying to tighten up and hone things in all areas and had practices to have some flow, some offensive success and have done some battle drills and system work. We’ve been trying to keep things up-tempo with good execution so we’re ready to execute this weekend.”

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (25-12-2-4) had a six-game winning streak stopped by a 4-3 overtime loss to the Providence Bruins on Wednesday night but took a one-point lead in the East Division over Hershey, which is at Norfolk on Friday night. The Penguins have won eight in a row on the road since a 5-2 loss at Syracuse on Dec. 3, helping them to a 17-3-0-2 record away from the Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.

The Whale won the teams’ first meeting on Oct. 9, a 1-0 shootout victory as Chad Johnson made 41 saves in regulation and overtime and stopped three of five shots in the shootout, in which a goal by Audy-Marchessault was the winner. Audy-Marchessault is second on the Whale and third among rookies in scoring with 36 points (14 goals, 22 assists), 10 more than Deveaux (12, 14).

Right wing Randy McNaught has been practicing with the Whale since signing an AHL contract on Monday. The 6-foot-5, 221-pound native of Nanaimo, B.C., had been playing with the University of Calgary, where he was scoreless in 12 games. The Rangers’ seventh-round pick in 2010 played only eight games with the Western Hockey League’s Vancouver Giants last season before sustaining a season-ending injury on Oct. 11 at Kamloops. Center Erik Christensen has returned to the Rangers after finishing a two-week conditioning assignment.

“McNaught was brought in so we could evaluate him and see where he’s at,” Gernander said. “We’ll make an assessment to see where he’s best suited to start (with the Whale or Greenville in the ECHL).”

The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton roster includes the sons of two former Hartford Whalers defensemen, All-Star right wing Colin McDonald and rookie defenseman Philip Samuelsson. McDonald is a Wethersfield native and son of Gerry McDonald who leads the Penguins in scoring with 12 goals and 24 assists and is plus-14 in 39 games. He also is scoreless and plus-1 in two games with the Pittsburgh Penguins after leading the AHL with 42 goals last season while with the Oklahoma City Barons.

Samuelsson’s father Ulf played 16 seasons in the NHL with the Whalers, Penguins, Rangers, Detroit Red Wings and Philadelphia Flyers, winning two Stanley Cups in Pittsburgh. Ulf, whose retired No. 5 hangs in the XL Center rafters, was a Hartford Wolf Pack assistant coach for two years before becoming an assistant with the Phoenix Coyotes under former Whalers left wing Dave Tippett and is now head coach with MoDo in the Swedish Elite League. Philip, 20, was the Penguins’ second-round pick in 2009 after starring at Avon Old Farms and winning a gold medal with Team USA in the 2009 World Under-18 Championships. He played two years at Boston College, helping the Eagles win the NCAA championship in 2010 as a freshman, before signing a three-year, NHL entry-level contract. He continues to wear No. 5 and has one goal, seven assists and is plus-6 in his first 38 pro games.

The Penguins’ other leading scorers are left wing Bryan Lerg (17, 15), center Ben Street (15, 16), forward Eric Tangradi (14, 11) and former Whale right wing Jason Williams (5, 19). Former Wolf Pack left wing/enforcer Steve MacIntyre is scoreless with 16 penalty minutes in eight games. Scott Munroe (9-3-2, 2.57 goals-against average, .906 save percentage, three shutouts) and Brad Thiessen (16-11-2, 2.79, .890, two shutouts) have handled the goaltending for the Penguins.

The Whale’s five-game homestand continues Saturday night with the first meeting with Springfield since a 4-2 Falcon victory in Springfield Jan. 8, their second in as many nights and first in regulation after losing the first five meetings. The Falcons (19-20-1-2) had lost four in a row before a 4-2 victory at Worcester on Wednesday night as former Wolf Pack left wing Alexandre Giroux scored twice on eight shots and former Wolf Pack left wing and captain Dane Byers had a goal and an assist.

Rookie right wing Cam Atkinson, a Greenwich native and former standout at Avon Old Farms and Boston College, has eight goals in the last nine games, is fifth in rookie scoring with 23 goals and 10 assists and was named a starter for the Eastern Conference in the All-Star Game. Former All-Star center Martin St. Pierre leads the Falcons with eight goals and 29 assists, followed by Atkinson, Giroux (15, 14), Byers (9, 14), centers Nick Drazenovic (6, 17) and Ryan Russell (6, 15), the Rangers’ seventh-round pick in 2007 who is on recall to the Columbus Blue Jackets, and left wing Matt Calvert (8, 8). Former Wolf Pack center Ryan Garlock has four goals and nine assists.

Manny Legace, 38, the Whalers’ eighth-round pick in 1993, is 10-13-1 with a 2.55 GAA and .910 save percentage and had been joined by Mark Dekanich (1-2-1, 4.00, .867), who returned Jan. 7 for a 5-4 shootout victory over the Whale after missing the first 33 games with a high ankle sprain and groin injury. But Legace (hip flexor) and Dekanich (ankle) were injured last weekend, leading to the recalls of former UMass standout Paul Dainton from the ECHL’s Reading Royals and fellow rookie Allen York from the ECHL’s Chicago Express. Dainton had 37 saves, including a penalty shot by Brandon Mashinter, in the win Wednesday night, improving to 2-2-0 with a 3.66 GAA and .877 save percentage in four games with the Falcons. He also is 6-3-3 with a 3.25 GAA and .896 save percentage with the Express and 1-2-0 with a 3.03 GAA and .933 save percentage with the Royals. York is 1-1-0 with a 3.94 GAA and .871 save percentage in five games with the Falcons and has also seen time with the Express and parent Columbus Blue Jackets. Audy-Marchessault has 14 points (five goals, nine assists) in the seven games against the Falcons, while Giroux has one goal and five assists to lead Springfield against his former team.

It’s Trading Card Weekend, as 5,000 fans attending Friday’s game will receive a trading card set of Audy-Marchessault, Cam Talbot, Kelsey Tessier, Ryan Bourque, Jordan Owens and a historic tribute to New York Rangers captain and former Wolf Pack All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan, sponsored by Webster Bank. On Saturday night, fans will receive a trading card set of Zuccarello, Newbury, Johnson, Wade Redden and Carl Hagelin, now with the Rangers, sponsored by Webster Bank. Audy-Marchessault and Zuccarello will sign autographs after the game and then head to Atlantic City. … College students can get discounted tickets to weekday Whale games with the “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.

HAMDEN NATIVE QUICK CONTINUES ALL-STAR PLAY

Hamden native and former Hamden High/Avon Old Farms/UMass standout Jonathan Quick continued his All-Star form with a 27-save performance in a 4-1 victory over the Ottawa Senators that kept the Los Angeles Kings within two points of the Pacific Division-leading San Jose Sharks.

Quick’s bid to extend his league-high total of shutouts to seven was denied when All-Star captain Daniel Alfredsson scored his 16th goal at 8:37 of the third period. Quick is 21-12-9 with a 1.93 GAA and .934 save percentage in 42 games. Quick’s GAA and save percentage are fourth in the league behind St. Louis’ Brian Elliott (1.69, .938), Boston’s Tuukka Rask (1.82, .938) and the Rangers’ Henrik Lundqvist (1.87, .937).

Lundqvist got to those numbers thanks to an unscheduled 22-save performance in a 3-0 victory over the visiting Winnipeg Jets on Tuesday night that gave the Rangers the best record in the Eastern Conference (31-12-4) entering the All-Star break. Lundqvist was scheduled to watch Martin Biron, but Biron got the flu, leading to the Swedish standout playing and being backed up by Chad Johnson, called up from the Whale on an emergency basis and then returned to Hartford after the game. Lundqvist learned he was to replace Biron in the morning and then posted his fifth shutout of the season and 40th of his career, tying Dave Kerr for second on the Rangers’ all-time shutouts list behind Hall of Famer Ed Giacomin’s 49.

“I was already in vacation mode almost,” Lundqvist said. “I had time to regroup and think about what I had to do and how I had to play to have success today and it worked out. … Most importantly, we got two points going into the break, guys can relax and enjoy themselves. It was important to end it strong.”

Callahan scored the only goal Lundqvist and the Rangers needed 4:05 into the game, then John Mitchell tallied his fifth goal, third in five games, since being called up from the Whale on Nov. 24 at 13:22 of the second period off a nifty pass from former Whale defenseman Michael Del Zotto. Brad Richards clinched it with his first goal in eight games with 3:38 left off a steal and setup from Callahan.

“This game worried me,” said John Tortorella, who will be co-coach with San Jose’s Todd McLellan of Team Alfredsson, with Lundqvist as the assistant, in the NHL All-Star Game in Ottawa on Sunday. “After an emotional game in Boston (3-2 overtime victory), a (Winnipeg) team that played back-to-back, it’s a little banged up, you wonder how your players feel about it. But I think that’s why we’ve gotten the points this year that we have so far because I don’t think we have looked by anything.”

Lundqvist, Hagelin, right wing Marion Gaborik and former Wolf Pack defenseman Dan Girardi will represent the Rangers this weekend. Hagelin, who has eight goals and eight assists and is plus-13 in 29 games since being called up with Mitchell, was named to replace injured New Jersey Devils forward Adam Henrique on the Young Stars roster. Given Hagelin’s speed and the familiarity of Tortorella and Lundqvist with the Swede, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the goalie tab Hagelin for the speed-skating skills competition when the players are selected in the fantasy draft Thursday night at 8 (NBC Sports Network). Boston’s Claude Julien and his staff, which includes former Whalers players Doug Jarvis and Doug Houda, will coach Team Chara, captained by Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara, assisted by Toronto Maple Leafs wing Joffrey Lupul. It’s expected Chara, who hails from Slovakia, will opt for countryman Gaborik in the draft.

The six-event skills competition is Saturday at 7 p.m., and the All-Star Game is on Sunday at 3 p.m.

FORMER WOLF PACK CENTER TRADED TO SAN JOSE

The Florida Panthers traded former Wolf Pack center Tim Kennedy to the San Jose Sharks for defenseman Sean Sullivan on Thursday.

Kennedy, 25, has split the season between Florida and San Antonio. He had one goal and one assist in 27 games with the Panthers and first-year coach Kevin Dineen, the former Whalers standout right wing and captain who coached Kennedy with the Portland Pirates before he was traded to the Rangers and then joined the Wolf Pack. Kennedy also had three goals and six assists in 18 games with the San Antonio Rampage. In 112 career NHL games with Buffalo and Florida, he has 11 goals and 18 assists and also played in six playoff games in 2009-10 with the Sabres, registering one goal and two assists. He has 33 goals and 92 assists in 158 career AHL games with Portland, Connecticut, Rochester and San Antonio. He was the AHL’s leading scorer among rookies in 2008-09, when he had 67 points in 73 games playing for Dineen.

Sullivan, 27, has five goals and 19 assists and is plus-10 in 32 games with Worcester this season. The Boston native is in his fifth AHL season and has 38 goals and 110 assists in 288 AHL games with Worcester and San Antonio. He represented the Rampage at the 2010 AHL All-Star Classic. … Nice to see former San Jose and Worcester Sharks goalie Alex Stalock was finally back in net Saturday night for the ECHL’s Stockton Thunder, his first appearance since Feb. 4, 2010, when he sustained a potentially career-ending injury when a skate sliced a nerve behind his left knee in a game against Manchester. He finally resumed practicing Dec. 11, was sent to Stockton on a conditioning assignment and beat Las Vegas 7-5 despite allowing five goals on 29 shots. Stalock didn’t play Sunday, but the Thunder again beat Wranglers 4-2 despite being outshot by a staggering 50-14 margin. In his second start Tuesday night, Stalock stopped 29 of 30 shots in a 4-1 victory over the Idaho Steelheads. … Darien native and former Wolf Pack wing Hugh Jessiman, the Rangers’ first-round pick (12th overall) in 2003, had the winning goal and two assists in Lake Erie’s 4-1 victory over Hamilton. Jessiman’s 20th goal tied his career high with the Milwaukee Admirals in 2008-09 and 2009-10. His high with the Wolf Pack was 18 in 2007-08. … Rockford goalie Carter Hutton was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Week on Monday after allowing only five goals in four wins, stopping 121 of 126 shots as the IceHogs put together their longest winning streak of the season. He began the week with a 31-save effort in his first shutout of the season, 2-0 over Texas, as the IceHogs won more than two games in a row for the first time. A graduate of UMass-Lowell who started his AHL career with Worcester, Hutton is 9-5-1 with a 2.69 GAA, .911 save percentage and one shutout in 17 games this season. … Former Quinnipiac University standout wing Brandon Wong, who started last season with the Wolf Pack, had a goal and two assists as Greenville (24-16-2) beat Florida 6-3 Wednesday night to earn a share of first place in the ECHL’s South Division. … Former Wolf Pack left wing Devin DiDiomete was activated off injured reserve and scored a goal in the Chicago Express’ 4-3 victory over the Cincinnati Cyclones last Friday night. The feisty DiDiomete also got a roughing minor, unsportsmanlike conduct minor and then a spearing major and game misconduct with 26 seconds left. He has four goals, five assists and a team-high 151 penalty minutes in 18 games. … Edmonton Oil Kings center Michael St. Croix, the Rangers’ fourth-round pick last June, was named the Western Hockey League Player of the Week for the second time and the Canadian Hockey League Player of the Week for the first time this season after getting six goals and four assists and being plus-7 in three wins. St. Croix, the son of former NHL goalie Rick St. Croix, started the week with a natural hat trick in a 5-0 rout of Prince George on Wednesday night and had another hat trick and two assists in a 9-2 romp over Prince Albert on Saturday night. He ranks third in the WHL in scoring with 31 goals and 46 assists in 48 games in leading the Oil Kings (32-11-1-4) to first place in the WHL’s Eastern Conference. Right wing Christian Thomas of the Ontario Hockey League’s Oshawa Generals, the Rangers’ second-round pick in 2010 and son of former NHL wing Steve Thomas, was named CHL Player of the Week for Nov. 28-Dec. 4.

CONNECTICUT HALL OF FAME NIGHT ON MARCH 10

The Whale and Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame will host Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame Night at the XL Center on March 10 when the Norfolk Admirals are in town. A new class of members soon to be named will be inducted before the game at 7 p.m. The first class of inductees since 1990 also will be recognized on the ice during the first intermission. The Class of 2012 will be announced later this month, and fans will receive a special souvenir as 5,000 Hall of Fame posters will be given out courtesy of SuperCuts. For more information, visit www.cthockeyHOF.org.

NICE ‘WORK’ BY WHALE PLAYERS

Scott Tanski edged fellow rookie wing Ryan Bourque for the most “puck bucks” as the Whale’s ninth Tip-A-Player dinner and sports carnival raised $33,000 for Gaylord Specialty Healthcare on Sunday. Well done, guys and Whale staff.

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Rangers Recall Chad Johnson from Whale

New York, January 24, 2012 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that goaltender Chad Johnson has been recalled from the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL) on an emergency basis.

CT WhaleJohnson, 25, has posted a 10-8-5 mark with a 2.64 goals against average, .910 save percentage and one shutout in 25 appearances with Connecticut this season.  He leads the Whale in wins, goals against average and save percentage.  Johnson recorded wins in five consecutive decisions from November 18 vs. Bridgeport to December 3 at Springfield, posting a 5-0-0 mark with a 1.92 goals against average and .932 save percentage in six games.  He also registered a 41-save shutout, stopping three of five shootout attempts, in Connecticut’s season opener, a 1-0 shootout win on October 9 at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton.

The Calgary, Alberta native was acquired by the Rangers from Pittsburgh on June 27, 2009, in exchange for a fifth round pick in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft (Andy Bathgate).  He was originally selected by the Penguins as a fifth round choice, 125th overall, in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft.

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Whale Sign Forward Randy McNaught

HARTFORD, January 23, 2012:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the Whale has signed forward Randy McNaught to an American Hockey League contract.

CT WhaleMcNaught, a 6-5, 221-pound native of Nanaimo, B.C., comes to the Whale from the University of Calgary, where he was scoreless with 24 penalty minutes in 12 games this season.  Last year McNaught, 21, was with the Western Hockey League’s Vancouver Giants, but his season was limited to eight games by injury.  In those eight contests, McNaught had a goal and an assist for two points, along with 27 PIM.
A seventh-round (190th overall) selection by the parent New York Rangers in the 2010 NHL Draft, McNaught suited up for 154 total contests in a four-year WHL career with the Chilliwack Bruins, Saskatoon Blades and the Giants.  His career stats include 15 goals and 12 assists for 27 points, and 321 penalty minutes.

RANDY McNAUGHT’S AMATEUR RECORD

The Whale return to action this Friday night, January 27, as they host the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at the XL Center.  Faceoff is 7:00 PM, and that begins the Whale’s “Trading Card Weekend”, as 5,000 fans will receive the Whale’s second set of player trading cards, sponsored by Webster Bank.  The featured players for this set are All-Star Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Cam Talbot, Ryan Bourque, Kelsey Tessier, Jordan Owens and, in a historical tribute, former Hartford Wolf Pack star Ryan Callahan, now captain of the parent New York Rangers.

Then the next night, this Saturday, January 28, when the Springfield Falcons visit the XL Center for a 7:00 game, will feature a giveaway of additional sets of the first group of Whale trading cards.  That array included cards of All-Star Mats Zuccarello, Wade Redden, Kris Newbury, Chad Johnson and Carl Hagelin.  Also, after the game on Saturday night, Audy-Marchessault and Zuccarello will conduct an autograph session in the XL Center atrium to sign their cards.

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

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

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Norfolk Admirals 5, Connecticut Whale 4 (SO)

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, January 21, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated by the Norfolk Admirals, 5-4 in a shootout, Saturday night at the XL Center before a crowd of 5,557. Scott Tanski scored twice for the Whale and Kelsey Tessier added two assists, but it would not be enough to surpass the Admirals. The Admirals scored twice in the third period and the Whale once to send the game to overtime tied at four.

CT WhaleRichard Panik would score the shootout winner for Norfolk, also picking up one assist in the contest, and Carter Ashton had a goal and an assist for the Admirals.

“We had a good lead in the first, they got one back in the second,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “We put the emphasis on finishing the game strong, not sitting back. We were unable to maintain that third-period lead.”

The Admirals had taken a quick lead just 39 seconds into the game, when Tyler Johnson’s shot from the right circle seemed to fool Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (30 saves), deflecting off his stick and into the net. Ashton and Cory Conacher both assisted on the goal.

Andre Deveaux would get the goal right back on the power-play, as he tipped a Kris Newbury feed past Norfolk starting goaltender Dustin Tokarski at 1:26. Deveaux’s 12th goal was also assisted on by Erik Christensen, who gathered his third point in as many games (2-1-3).

The Whale would take a 2-1 lead on Tanski’s breakaway goal 3:49 into the period, as he flew down the left wing boards before beating Tokarski high to his glove side. Tanski’s third of the season was unassisted.

Ryan Bourque would cash-in just under three minutes later, roofing the puck for his third goal and chasing Tokarski from the game after he allowed three goals on three shots to start the night. Bourque was fed in the slot by Tessier. Jaroslav Janus (25 saves) would replace Tokarski.

The Admirals would get one back at the 3:58 mark of the second period, as Ondrej Palat fired a close-in shot past Johnson to close the Whale lead to 3-2. The goal was the third of the season for Palat, coming unassisted.

That would be all of the scoring in the second period, with the shots winding up identical to the first frame with Norfolk outshooting their hosts, 8-7.

Norfolk would tie the game at three 6:10 into the third period, as an open Carter Ashton received a pass from Richard Panik and backhanded a shot past Johnson. Scott Jackson received the secondary assist on the goal.

A quick power-play goal just 18 seconds later from the AHL’s leading goal-scorer Cory Conacher would put the Admirals briefly on top, 4-3. Conacher’s wrist shot from the left wing boards got past Johnson, and the Whale found themselves trailing for the first time since the opening minutes of the game.

Tanski, however, would bury his second of the night 8:13 into the third to tie the game at four. Tommy Grant passed the puck across the slot to Tanski at the far post, and he promptly one-timed it past Janus. Jordan Owens picked up the secondary assist on the goal.

Neither team could pull ahead in the rest of the third period or in overtime, and the teams headed to the shootout.

Erik Christensen would give the Whale a quick lead in the tie-breaker after the first round, but Mike Kostka would tie it and Panik would score the shootout winner in the tenth round to seal the victory and send the Whale to their ninth straight defeat (0-5-2-2).

“We’re gonna have a good week of practice, we’ve got two more big games next weekend headed into the All-Star break,” said Gernander. “We’d like to get some points headed into the All-Star break so everybody can relax and have a good feeling.”

The Whale are now off until “Trading Card Weekend” at the XL Center Friday and Saturday.  This Friday, January 27, when the Whale entertain the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (7:00 PM faceoff), 5,000 fans will receive the Whale’s second set of player trading cards, sponsored by Webster Bank.  The featured players for this set are All-Star Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Cam Talbot, Bourque, Tessier, Owens and, in a historical tribute, former Hartford Wolf Pack star Ryan Callahan, now captain of the parent New York Rangers.  Then the next night, Saturday, January 28, when the Springfield Falcons visit the XL Center for a 7:00 game, will feature a giveaway of additional sets of the first group of Whale trading cards.  That array included cards of All-Star Mats Zuccarello, Wade Redden, Newbury, Johnson and Carl Hagelin.  Also, after the game on January 28, selected Whale players will conduct an autograph session to sign their cards.

Tickets for these, and all Whale home games, are available 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.

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

Norfolk Admirals 5 (SO) at Connecticut Whale 4
Saturday, January 21, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Norfolk 1 1 2 0 – 5
Connecticut 3 0 1 0 – 4

1st Period-1, Norfolk, Johnson 14 (Ashton, Conacher), 0:39. 2, Connecticut, Deveaux 12 (Newbury, Christensen), 1:26 (PP). 3, Connecticut, Tanski 3 (Tessier), 3:49. 4, Connecticut, Bourque 3 (Tessier, Parlett), 6:33. Penalties-Ouellet Nor (slashing), 1:16; Angelidis Nor (roughing), 9:03; Owens Ct (roughing), 9:03; Bell Ct (interference), 10:55.

2nd Period-5, Norfolk, Palat 3   3:58. Penalties-Conacher Nor (goaltender interference), 0:19; Newbury Ct (goaltender interference), 5:41; Johnson Nor (boarding), 14:39.

3rd Period-6, Norfolk, Ashton 16 (Panik, Jackson), 6:10. 7, Norfolk, Conacher 24 (Kostka), 6:28 (PP). 8, Connecticut, Tanski 4 (Grant, Owens), 8:13. Penalties-Jackson Nor (fighting), 6:10; Nightingale Ct (fighting), 6:10; Voros Ct (cross-checking), 6:10.

OT Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Angelidis Nor (roughing), 3:40; Newbury Ct (roughing), 3:40.

Shootout – Norfolk 2 (Gudas NG, Ashton NG, Kostka G, Barberio NG, Conacher NG, Ouellet NG, Fornataro NG, Dimmen NG, Johnson NG, Panik G), Connecticut 1 (Christensen G, Audy-Marchessault NG, Bell NG, Newbury NG, Tanski NG, Bouchard NG, Thuresson NG, Bourque NG, Deveaux NG, Erixon NG).
Shots on Goal-Norfolk 8-8-13-5-1-35. Connecticut 7-7-11-4-0-29.
Power Play Opportunities-Norfolk 1 / 3; Connecticut 1 / 3.
Goalies-Norfolk, Tokarski 17-9-0 (3 shots-0 saves); Janus 8-6-2 (26 shots-25 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 10-8-5 (34 shots-30 saves).
A-5,557
Referees-Terry Koharski (10).
Linesmen-Derek Wahl (46), Luke Galvin (2).

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St. John’s IceCaps 2, Connecticut Whale 1 (OT)

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, January 20, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale were defeated in overtime, 2-1, by the St. John’s IceCaps Friday night at the XL Center. Jason Jaffray recorded the game-winning goal for St. John’s just 16 seconds into overtime on a tough deflection. Erik Christensen tallied the lone goal for the Whale in the contest.

CT Whale“We got better as the game went on, it was important to get a point,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “It was a much needed point at this juncture.”

The IceCaps got on the board first, as Riley Holzapfel cashed in on the third St. John’s power-play of the opening period. Holzapfel would stuff defenseman Paul Postma’s rebound past Whale goaltender Cam Talbot (35 saves) with 2:29 remaining in the frame. Spencer Machacek also assisted on the goal, registering his team-leading 29th point (10-19-29).

Neither team would score in the second period, despite each side receiving a pair of power-play opportunities. St. John’s goaltender Edward Pasquale (26 saves) kept the IceCaps out in front with an incredible diving save midway through the period, gloving Kris Newbury’s point-blank try with a last-ditch effort.

Christensen tied the game with his second goal in as many games at 16:33 of the third period, deflecting Tim Erixon’s shot from the point under the crossbar past Pasquale. Tommy Grant set up the play, earning the secondary assist.

That would be all of the scoring through regulation, as for the second straight period the IceCaps outshot the Whale 11-9. Talbot, however, stood tall for Connecticut and Pasquale’s efforts kept the Whale from taking the lead on multiple chances later on in the third frame.

The Whale and IceCaps headed to overtime knotted at just a goal apiece, but Jaffray would end the game on the first shift of the extra period. Jaffray got his stick on an Aaron Gagnon shot, which knuckled the puck through the air and past Talbot for the game-winner. Brett Festerling also assisted on the goal, which sent the Whale to their eighth straight defeat in 2012 (0-6-1-1).  The Whale did, though, get at least a standings point for the eighth consecutive home game (5-0-1-2).

“We have another big opponent (the Norfolk Admirals) tomorrow night, but it’s a starting point,” said Gernander. “We need a bigger, more concerted effort to get over the hump here.”

Saturday night, January 21, features a doubleheader of hockey action at the XL Center.  At 3:00 PM, the Boston Blades of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League, the top league in women’s pro hockey, take on Team Alberta in a CWHL regular-season contest, the “International Women’s Hockey Challenge”, presented by Aetna.  Then, at 7:00, the Whale face off against the Admirals.  A ticket to the Whale game is also good for admission to the CWHL contest.  Also on Saturday night, 3,000 fans receive a Wade Redden bobblehead, courtesy of Click It or Ticket.

Tickets to that game, and all Whale home games, are available 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.

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

St. John’s IceCaps 2 (OT) at Connecticut Whale 1
Friday, January 20, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

St. John’s 1 0 0 1 – 2
Connecticut 0 0 1 0 – 1

1st Period-1, St. John’s, Holzapfel 8 (Postma, Machacek), 17:31 (PP). Penalties-Klassen Ct (cross-checking), 1:49; Klassen Ct (boarding), 9:39; Christensen Ct (hooking), 15:48; Machacek Stj (hooking), 19:13.

2nd Period- No Scoring. Penalties-served by Gregoire Stj (bench minor – too many men), 5:52; Postma Stj (tripping), 7:59; Voros Ct (roughing), 12:31; Nightingale Ct (roughing), 17:28.

3rd Period-2, Connecticut, Christensen 2 (Erixon, Grant), 3:27. Penalties-Kulda Stj (fighting), 1:30; Newbury Ct (fighting), 1:30; Thuresson Ct (cross-checking), 7:02.

OT Period-3, St. John’s, Jaffray 12 (Gagnon, Festerling), 0:16. Penalties-No Penalties

Shots on Goal-St. John’s 14-11-11-1-37. Connecticut 9-9-9-0-27.
Power Play Opportunities-St. John’s 1 / 6; Connecticut 0 / 3.
Goalies-St. John’s, Pasquale 8-5-0 (27 shots-26 saves). Connecticut, Talbot 9-10-0 (37 shots-35 saves).
A-3,957
Referees-Jarrod Ragusin (54), Chris Brown (86).
Linesmen-Luke Galvin (2), Brent Colby (7).

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