Category Archives: CT Whale

Friday is First Whale Trading Card Giveaway Night

HARTFORD, December 6, 2011:  Fun is in the cards this Friday, as Whalers Sports & Entertainment announced today that December 9 is Connecticut Whale trading card collectible night, presented by Webster Bank.

CT WhaleThe first five-thousand fans at this Friday’s game at the XL Center vs. the Hershey Bears will receive the first of three special five-card collectible sets, consisting of Whale mainstays Wade Redden, Mats Zuccarello, Kris Newbury, Chad Johnson and Carl Hagelin, who is currently on recall to the parent New York Rangers club.

This is the first of three trading card giveaway nights that Webster Bank will be sponsoring throughout the Whale’s 2011-2012 season.  The other trading card nights are January 27 and March 16.  Each of these nights will include distribution of a five-player set to 5,000 fans.

Tickets to Friday night’s game, 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.

Webster Bank Announces Sponsorship Of Connecticut Whale Telecasts

HARTFORD, Conn., December 6, 2011 – Whalers Sports & Entertainment and Webster Bank today announced that Webster has entered a three-year agreement to be the official presenting television sponsor of the Connecticut Whale.

CT WhaleIn addition to in-arena signage and hospitality, Webster will receive promotional exposure across various forms of media.  Webster Bank will be the presenting sponsor of the “Whale TV” Connecticut Whale telecast package for the 2011-2012 season on Connecticut’s CW affiliate, WCCT-TV. This five-game slate of televised games represents a return of AHL action to the local TV airwaves for the first time since the 2006-07 Season.

“Webster Bank is pleased to share all the excitement of the Connecticut Whale hockey games with families and sports fans in the greater Hartford area.  This venture is an important investment in the future economic growth of our region and state, and we look forward to this valued relationship,” said Jerry Plush, vice chairman and chief operating officer of Webster Bank.

“We are excited to have Webster Bank on board for this major partnership package,” Whalers Sports & Entertainment President and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said.  “Our television schedule on WCCT, along with our new radio presence on WCCC-FM, is extremely key exposure as we strive to restore Hartford’s status as a premier hockey market, and Webster Bank’s support of the telecasts is invaluable to showcasing our great product.”

The televised home games are all prime, Saturday night dates, starting with a major-rivalry contest against the Providence Bruins this Saturday, December 10.  The full schedule is as follows (all games face off at 7:00 PM):

Saturday,   December 10   vs. Providence Bruins

Saturday,   January 28         vs. Springfield Falcons

Saturday,   February 18      vs. Worcester Sharks

Saturday,   March 10           vs. Norfolk Admirals

Saturday,   March 31           vs. Adirondack Phantoms

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.

Kolarik Battles through Long Knee Rehab

By Bruce Berlet

If you want to see the personification of tough luck, look no farther than Connecticut Whale right wing Chad Kolarik.

CT WhaleAfter persevering through nagging hamstring problems last season to earn kudos from New York Rangers coach John Tortorella for his work during four games with the parent club, returning to continue his solid play in the AHL playoffs and then getting a contract extension on June 17 and married on Aug. 5, Kolarik was primed to enjoy a run at a steady job on Broadway.

Then on Sept. 20, the fourth day of training camp, Lady (Bad) Luck reared her ugly head. As Kolarik went to make a play along the boards, he caught his right skate in a rut in the ice at the Rangers’ training facility in Greenburgh, N.Y. Kolarik went to the dressing room, and over the next few days, took several ACL tests and was evaluated by Whale athletic trainer Damien Hess, Rangers athletic trainer Jim Ramsay and Rangers physician Andy Feldman, an orthopedic surgeon. Kolarik’s exam was not conclusive for a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee, and he was scheduled to make his preseason debut against the Philadelphia Flyers six days later.

“It was an innocent play,” Kolarik said. “My skate got caught in a rut, and I just went the other way and my leg didn’t come with me. There was a little bit of a bump, but it wasn’t anything unusual. I just got stuck, and my knee went in. I felt something pop, but it just felt like a bone crack, something releasing. I honestly thought it was just something in my knee that cracked. Never once did I think it was my ACL. I could walk fine. It never swelled up. I even saw the doctor after the ACL tests and he said he thought I was fine.”

But when Kolarik tried to skate a few days later, the pain persisted and he couldn’t push off. He informed the trainers that something was wrong and went for an MRI on Sept. 26, the day the Rangers left for Europe. Kolarik then headed for Hartford, where he got the news, which wasn’t good. In fact, as hockey injuries go, it was as bad as it gets unless he had torn his Achilles tendon.

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“When I got the MRI, I thought it could be an MCL (medial collateral ligament) and I’ll be out for a couple months and then be back,” Kolarik recalled.

But when the doctor called, Kolarik learned the freak accident had resulted in a torn anterior cruciate ligament. Forget that preseason game. In fact, forget possibly 60 or 70 games, maybe the entire season.

“All I could think of was how long I would be out and if surgery was needed,” said Kolarik, sporting a four-inch scar on his left knee. “Josh Gorges on the Montreal Canadiens has played seven years without an ACL. You can strengthen the muscles around it, but I’m only 25 years old and hopefully have a long career ahead of me, so I figured I’d get it done now.”

After Kolarik prepared for surgery by strengthening the muscles around his torn ACL as much as possible, Dr. Brett Wasserlauf, an orthopedic surgeon and head team physician, performed a two-hour operation at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford on Oct. 5, taking the central third of Kolarik’s patella tendon and using it to replace the torn ACL. Using part of an athlete’s body prevents any chance of rejection, and a bone plug makes for a more secure fixation in the tunnels that are drilled.

“It’s generally the graft of choice with athletes who have torn ACLs,” Hess said. “The only thing that you have to be careful with is guys will sometimes get patella femoral pain, but that just comes from rehab because you’re pushing so hard. But, knock on wood, the guys who we’ve done here – Dane Byers, Michael Sauer, Brent Henley and Francis Lessard – haven’t had any significant patella femoral pain.”

The other two pieces of the patella tendon will eventually fill in with scar tissue so the tendon becomes whole again and hopefully makes the knee stronger than ever. But that will take countless hours of often tedious rehabilitation “to try to put a smile on my face” with Hess and Whale strength and conditioning coach/trainer Mark Cesari.

“I feel pretty good, but I’ve never had anything like this,” said Kolarik, who usually works out three hours a day, six days a week. “At first, it was tough mentally when you’re missing most of the season, out five to six months for sure. It wears on you in the first couple of weeks because you can’t do anything for yourself. I just got married this summer and thank God for my wife Kylee. She was taking care of me the first two weeks (after the surgery) because I could barely walk and couldn’t make any food for myself.

“Now I can do stuff on my own. I’ve still got a little bit of a limp, and I’m trying to train my brain how to get over that limp. When you’ve been limping for three weeks off crutches, you kind of get used to it. I don’t need to limp. I don’t have anything wrong with my knee anymore, but it’s just in your mind you have to get rid of it.”

Yes, the mental drain has been the most difficult part so far for Kolarik.

“It’s different for me coming to prepare (for rehab) and the guys going on the ice to be prepared for a game,” Kolarik said. “I have to be prepared to struggle a little bit and try to get over that hump. Two weeks ago I couldn’t do step downs, and now I can. It’s rewarding to achieve those little goals. The mental part is definitely crazy. You try not to look at the big picture.

“That six-month mark is tough to keep out of your mind because it will just eat at you, but if you can keep little goals and go week-by-week, day-by-day and try to get better, try to make little strides and do a new exercise every day, it helps mentally. You try to put that smile on my face to know that you’re progressing every day.”

Kolarik “warmed up” for his unprecedented rehab with several months of workouts to combat hamstring issues last season, when he was traded to the Rangers from the Springfield Falcons, the AHL affiliate of the Columbus Blue Jackets, for Byers, a left wing and Wolf Pack captain at the time. Kolarik had 17 goals and 14 assists in 36 games with the Whale and tied a franchise record for points in a period with four, including a team-record two shorthanded goals, in the first period of a 6-3 victory over Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Jan. 16. He also had one assist in four games with the Rangers before missing nearly the last two months of the regular season. He returned for the playoffs and had three goals and two assists in three games, but the Portland Pirates eliminated the Whale in six games.

Then came Kolarik’s contract extension, marriage and … disaster.

“I had never been out for any significant time until last season, but that’s nothing compared to major surgery and reconstructing your ACL,” Kolarik said. “I thought my chances to make the Rangers were all right. I wasn’t thinking I was going to make it right out of camp because they had 13 forwards on one-way contracts, but I hoped to play well in Hartford and get a call-up. Anything can happen, as it has this year (with Andre Deveaux, John Mitchell and Carl Hagelin) and last season, when six forwards got called up. I was hoping it would be a big year for me, but stuff happens and you have to roll with the punches.

“I don’t want to be cliché, but when these things happen, you have to just stay positive and keep the little goals in mind instead of thinking about that six-month mark. The good thing now is the doctors are real good at it, and Dr. Wasserlauf did a great job. We did a test two weeks ago, and he said the left knee is stronger than the other one.”

Whale coach Ken Gernander said Kolarik’s injury was “an unfortunate situation” after the right wing had a solid 2010-11 season and wanted to show himself in training camp and hopefully get to play in a preseason game or two and see where things took him.

“To be taken out of the equation by an injury, not anything that he could control himself, is tough,” said Gernander, whose worst injury in a 30-year playing career was being out for six weeks with a sprained knee and having to wear a brace for the remainder of the season. “If you came into camp in bad shape or played poorly, then you can kind of beat yourself up a little bit and learn from it. But an injury is just an unfortunate setback through no fault of your own. And it doesn’t matter how it happened because you’re left to deal with the injury, and he’s going to have to put a lot of hard work into rehabbing and getting himself back into top shape so his game picks up where it left off.”

Kolarik is thankful for the help from Hess, Cesari and Kylee, a star gymnast whom he met at the University of Michigan, where he was senior when Hagelin was a freshman. He also is indebted to Whale defenseman Jared Nightingale, who tore an ACL when his skate caught a rut on a seemingly innocent hit during his rookie pro season (2006-07) while he was with the ECHL’s Idaho Steelheads. Nightingale again showed why he was the Whale’s AHL Man of the Year last season when he spent time with Kolarik discussing what he faced and how to deal with it.

“He was really good helping me out for the surgery,” Kolarik said. “I picked his brain for a long time about everything, and he straight up told me, ‘This will be one of the hardest things you’ll ever have to do rehab-wise. It’s four months of hell before you actually start doing stuff.’ ”

Nightingale said he wanted to help because when he looked back on his surgery, he had wished he knew someone who had been through the same thing.

“I knew initially he was going to be down mentally, and you can look at it two ways,” Nightingale said. “You either have to dig you heels in or not really feel bad for yourself. I just wanted to let him know things I wish I would have known. The first few weeks after surgery are really important and tough to go through as far as comfort and battling through. With ACL surgery, I think it’s key to get after it right away and get your momentum back, and Chad has done a good job. He already has a good attitude about that kind of stuff, but I think just me being through it …

“I think I came back as a better player going through something like that because I’m mentally stronger. And when Chad looks back, I think he’ll be thankful that he went through it. As strange as that sounds, I think he’ll appreciate things a little more when he comes back as a better player. I know it was frustrating at the time, but now looking back, I appreciate what I’ve got because it still took me a couple years to get up to the AHL. Chad has already had a taste of the NHL, and I’m sure he could get frustrated thinking, ‘Ah, if only this hadn’t happened.’ But I think some of the best stories are guys who have overcome adversity, and Chad has been amazing. He comes in and does his work better than I did five years ago. He has a very strong work ethic and good attitude.”

But Kolarik can’t make it all the way back without plenty of help.

After consulting with Nightingale and having surgery, Kolarik began rehab with Hess, with regaining range of motion the first key element.

“Generally the more you can get out of him going into surgery, the better you are coming out,” Hess said. “We tried to keep him as strong as we could and had to focus on his hamstrings a lot from last year, and hamstrings are vital in terms of an ACL rehab, so he had that a little stacked up against him going in.”

But Hess and Cesari made sure there was a quick start to Kolarik’s rehabilitation.

“It’s a long rehab, and if you immobilize something for too long, it just makes it more difficult,” Hess said. “Years ago, they would immobilize guys for four-to-six weeks following an ACL surgery, and they find now that that’s the worst thing to do because of the atrophy that makes it so stiff.”

Kolarik was close to bed-ridden for about two weeks, then used crutches for a month and got out of a brace after six weeks. He continues to walk with a slight limp, but Hess said Kolarik got all his range of motion back “fairly quickly” and the focus is now on getting his strength back to normal.

“He has more than enough motion to walk,” Hess said, “but from being in a brace for so long and favoring it for eight weeks he’s trying to retrain his brain to understand that his knee can tolerate the stress of walking.”

Hess and Cesari said Kolarik is on schedule, and once he regains his strength, he can work on more sports-specific rehab such as getting back on the ice.

“There’s a lot of head games you have to play with guys because there’s a lot to focus on,” Hess said. “They want to see the big picture, but I always stress that you can have a goal for the end game but have got to have objectives and goals to meet along the way. Otherwise, all you’re thinking about is six months, and that’s just too much to focus on when you’re dealing with a rehab that long.”

The early part of rehab is difficult because Kolarik and other patients aren’t doing much, just working on motion and don’t feel like a normal person because they’re not doing normal things. Cesari allowed Kolarik to use a stick to play with a puck in his office area without any body rotation a few weeks ago, and Kolarik began shooting off ice at Champions Skating Center in Cromwell on Friday. He is moving better and getting closer to normal, so the next few weeks are vital in terms of training so he can start feeling like an athlete again.

Cesari said Kolarik’s recovery is a four-step program of range of motion, strength, running and skating, which constitutes his “squat to sprint” philosophy. If the athlete can’t squat, then he or she can’t jump, and if they can can’t jump, then they can’t run without risking the body breaking down. So the first step was to get Kolarik’s range of motion in his knee back so he could squat and move forward.

“Just because you have the range of motion doesn’t mean you can squat,” Cesari said. “About 95 percent of people cannot squat. They think they can, but they can’t do it properly. So the job is to get the muscles strong enough to allow him to do that squat, and that’s basically where we are right now. Eight-to-12 weeks is the time where things start to get a little more interesting in the sense that by 12 weeks he might be able to run. Then maybe he can start on the ice, but it all depends on the individual.”

Kolarik reached the eight-week mark last Wednesday, and again, the key is to keep him or anyone focused on the end result but setting goals along the way to divert his or her attention. Cesari said he has seen a lot of improvement the last few weeks as far as range of motion, strength and confidence.

“It’s a tough surgery for anyone to come back from, let alone try to come back as quickly as possible and still being strong enough to compete in your sport,” Cesari said. “My job is to make sure that he comes back only when he’s 100 percent and strong enough. And sometimes this surgery is a blessing in disguise in the sense that you break down the body, teach the body to re-walk, how to move and how to be strong. Once you have surgery, you’re off your feet for a couple of days, you forget how to walk, you’re not allowed to walk at first and muscles have to regenerate and learn how to use them again.

“And the brain plays a big part in the surgery. Let alone the physical demands of the rehab, the mental demands are probably just as high, if not more. So my goal is to get him as strong as possible, as functional as possible, so not only can he come back and be a force for us in the playoffs, but also so he can come back and not have to worry about hurting the knee again. Subconsciously, once you tear you ACL, it’s always in the back of your mind. My job is to make him as strong as he possibly can be so his confidence is there so he doesn’t have to stress about his ACL. It’s not an easy task.”

Once rehab began, Cesari monitored Kolarik’s progress and limitations, and they meet periodically with Dr. Wasserlauf to make sure Kolarik is progressing. Kolarik is to the point that he can now squat and has functional movement while strengthening his quads, hamstrings, glutes, outside hip and groin as much as possible. He rides the stationary bike, works on balance and does bridging to try to make his hamstrings strong. Most of the exercises that Kolarik is doing are what Cesari described as “two-leg stable activity. No rotation, all linear, front to back.”

“The graph is good, but we don’t want to test it too much because the body has to heal that graph,” Cesari said. “We basically want to make his balance as good as we can get it. Proprioception is a struggle of muscles, so it’s basically a tug of war. So when you’ve had a surgery and been off your feet for awhile – or even a regular day Joe – if you try to stand on one leg, you’re all over the place and your knee is buckling. That’s because your muscles are fighting each other, so one is pulling one way and the other is pulling the other way, so which one is going to win? I have to make sure that those within themselves within their respective strength are in the right range so they can be perfectly stable.

“The first eight weeks are the hardest because that’s where he can’t see the light at the end of the tunnel. Now I think he can start to see that, and he’s starting to get excited, which is why I let him start stickhandling a little bit to give him a taste of hockey while standing straight up. I’m not a psychologist, but I was a hockey player and understand how they think a little bit, so I’m giving him a little taste of the cake without letting him have the whole piece yet. I think he’ll be good because he’s dedicated, he’s strong mentally and he wants this.”

Players usually are back on the ice after 31/2-4 months of rehab, so Kolarik has about 4-5 weeks to get his strength and gait mechanics back to normal so he can do dry-land training before he resumes skating. The first two weeks on the ice is usually alone and/or in non-contact drills with the team. Then Kolarik hopefully can get cleared to play after two weeks of contract drills.

Hess said a mid-to-late March return would be good for Chad as far as something to work for, good for the coaches because they could play him in some games and feel comfortable that he’s ready to go and good because Chad would have some games under his belt before the playoffs.

Cesari reiterated that range of motion, strength and confidence are imperative, but in the end, it’s Dr. Wasserlauf’s call as to when Kolarik can return to the ice. Cesari has a list of things that Kolarik must accomplish before he can reach the running or skating plateau.

“We basically follow all of Dr. Wasserlauf’s recommendations, and he’s great because if we hit a snag, he asks my opinion,” Cesari said. “At the end of the day, his expertise is the surgery, and my expertise is the rehabilitation. Brett has been really good at asking for my advice and telling me, ‘Hey, as long as you stay within these limitations, whatever you think is going to get him better.’ ”

Surgery is always a last resort, but in Kolarik’s case and in his line of duty, it was a necessity, even though hockey is the easiest sport to play without an ACL because there’s not the kind of stopping that there is in a sport such as basketball, where the ACL is holding back the anterior translation.

“There are some athletes who choose not to do it, like Josh Gorges, who was OK for seven years and then his meniscus started acting up and they decided to do the surgery,” said Cesari, who has lived with a torn ACL for 13 years since he was injured at 16 playing soccer. “There’s guys in the NFL who play without an ACL, and that’s impressive because that is the biggest test of an ACL. But at the level that Chad is in his career, it needed to be done, and there’s no doubt in my mind that he will be a good skater again. I’ve never seen a guy go through ACL surgery and lose his skating stride.”

Cesari said that while the ACL is an important factor in skating, it’s not THAT important because the stride is an outward motion, and when you go out on a 45-degree angle and point your toe, the ACL is not under any weight-bearing stress. The most stress is when a player is going into a turn, losing an edge or getting his knee in a bad position against the boards, but he’s safe with a straightforward stride.

“Hockey is not straightforward, but if we do our job well and integrate him into practice correctly, he shouldn’t be hesitant, and that’s also a mental thing,” Cesari said. “If we can mentally get him strong enough, he should be fine.”

Cesari said he continually pushes Kolarik because he knows the body, and what it can and can’t handle from his athletic training background. His strength coach job is to determine what his mind can and can’t handle.

“As an athlete, I can relate, but since I didn’t have the surgery, I didn’t have that first six weeks of the muscles really atrophying,” Cesari said. “Walking is really hard to do when you don’t know how to do it because you’re relearning it. When my ACL was torn, I started rehab right away, and Chad’s biggest challenge still is walking without thinking about it. You want your subconscious to be just as good as your conscious walk, and that’s hard to do. Just like posture for everyone else. If you don’t think about it, you’re not in a good posture. You should think about it all the time.

“Those are the kinds of things that I’m working with Chad on now, to make him strong mentally, and the only way that I can do that is to let him see the progressions that we have going. And because it’s day to day to day to day, he sees the difference. The first little while progress is hard to come by, and most people will tell you that you’ll have five or six setbacks during the rehab process, usually about once a month. Those are hard to overcome because you feel you’re doing so well and then something happens, but he’s doing really well.”

Kolarik said he’s encouraged because he is able to do so much more than he could just a week ago. And he has March 23 etched in his mind. That will mark 24 weeks after the surgery and when he hopes to be back in the Whale lineup – if not sooner.

“That’s not a ‘hard’ date, and hopefully the doctor will clear me before that,” said Kolarik, who attends Whale home games with his wife. “But it’s something you don’t want to rush. It takes six months to fully heal, fully get that blood circulating back into the new ACL. At eight weeks, it’s actually dead in my body. The bones have adhered to my femur, but there’s no blood circulating in there yet, so this is the time where you have to be careful. It feels good and you want to do more, but you’ve got to relax a little bit and keep doing what you’re doing.

“The doctor said it’s stronger than the right knee because bone growing on bone is way stronger than any ligament you’ll ever have, which is why they do the bone-patella-bone instead of doing the hamstring. But it was just a freak accident like what happened to Dane (Byers). Fluke things happen in hockey, but it’s worse in football. I tend to notice now more guys tearing an ACL. I’m sure it’s the same, but now that I’ve had it, I see each week in a football game where a guy goes to cut and you can just tell when he injures his ACL.”

Yes, Kolarik is more cognizant of such injuries and empathizes with the victims of such mishaps. Here’s hoping Chad is a fast healer and is skating, passing and scoring before March 23. To paraphrase that McDonald’s theme, he deserves a break today, especially after what he has had to endure for more than a year.

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

CT Whale Partners with CPTV Sports

HARTFORD, December 5, 2011:  Whalers Sports & Entertainment (WSE) announced today the launch of a partnership with CPTV Sports that will see 18 Connecticut Whale games this season carried on the 24/7 public TV sports network.

CT WhaleThe games will air on a tape-delayed basis, with a “CT Whale Game of the Week” showing every Tuesday night, selected from the previous weekend’s action and edited down to 90 minutes.  Airing times of the games may vary;  viewers should check with CTWhale.com for exact airing times.

CPTV Sports, formerly the Connecticut Sports Network (CTSN), is Connecticut’s only 24-hour local sports network, covering statewide high school sports, college match-ups, professional sports competitions and more.

Launched on November 1, CPTV Sports is available on Comcast cable channels 185, 187 and 744 and on the Cox Communications cable system channel 144.

Combined with the “Whale TV” package of five live telecasts on WCCT-TV, this CPTV Sports schedule brings the total number of Whale telecast exposures for the 2011-12 season to 23.

“We believe that CPTV Sports is an exciting venture with great potential,” said Mark Willand, WSE senior vice-president of business operations.  “Although we are beginning this partnership with the re-broadcast games, we are confident that our collaboration will expand to include live games in the years ahead.”

According to WSE President and COO Howard Baldwin, Jr.: “Via ‘Whale TV’ and our other media properties, we will continue to expand the distribution of exciting CT Whale hockey action to our fans throughout greater Hartford and beyond.  Since last season, we have added a 50,000-watt radio partner (“The Rock”, 106.9 WCCC-FM), five live TV games (WCCT-TV), hundreds of videos to our extensive video library (accessible through the Whale’s official website, www.ctwhale.com) and now 18 re-broadcast games on CPTV Sports.  Taken as a whole, our lineup of media properties is one of the most extensive in the American Hockey League.”

The first CT Whale Game of the Week telecast on CPTV Sports is slated for this Tuesday, December 6.  That will be a replay of the Whale’s home game against the Binghamton Senators on December 4.

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The entirety of the Whale CPTV Sports schedule is as follows (selection of which game to replay is subject to change):

December 6     vs. Binghamton Senators        (replay from December 4)

December 13   vs. Hershey Bears                  (replay from December 9)

December 20   vs. Bridgeport Sound Tigers   (replay from December 16)

December 27   vs. Adirondack Phantoms       (replay from December 21)

January 3        vs. Springfield Falcons           (replay from December 31)

January 10       vs. Springfield Falcons           (replay from January 7)

January 17       Classic Game – 1976, New England Whalers vs. Soviet National Team

January 24       vs. St. John’s IceCaps            (replay from January 20)

January 31       vs. W-B/Scranton Penguins    (replay from January 27)

February 7       vs. Albany Devils                   (replay from February 3)

February 14     at Springfield Falcons            (replay from February 10)

February 21     vs. Worcester Sharks             (replay from February 18)

February 28     vs. Portland Pirates                (replay from February 24)

March 6           Classic Game – 2011 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl”

March 13         vs. Bridgeport Sound Tigers   (replay from March 9)

March 20         vs. Bridgeport Sound Tigers   (replay from March 16)

March 27         vs. Portland Pirates                (replay from March 23)

April 3             vs. W-B/Scranton Penguins    (replay from March 30)

April 10           vs. Manchester Monarchs       (replay from April 6)

April 17           vs. Manchester Monarchs       (replay from April 13)

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

Binghamton Senators 4, Connecticut Whale 3

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, December 4, 2011 – The Connecticut Whale fell to the Binghamton Senators, 4-3, Sunday afternoon at the XL Center. Mats Zuccarello scored twice for the Whale, while Binghamton’s Andre Petersson also scored twice, including the game-winner, to stop Connecticut’s winning streak at four games.

CT WhaleBinghamton rallied from a 2-0 first period deficit eventually to take the lead for good in the third period.

“I thought the first period we played well, we had some guys step up physically,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “The other guys didn’t respond to that.”

“We stopped playing and that’s not acceptable,” said Zuccarello. “This was a game we should have won for sure.”

The Whale had scored the first goal of the game at 12:57 of the first on the power-play, the sixth straight goal for Connecticut that came via the man advantage in their last two games. Zuccarello, foiled by the post in an early-period attempt against Senators goaltender Robin Lehner (23 saves), buried Kris Newbury’s pass for his sixth goal of the season.

Andreas Thuresson pushed the Whale lead to 2-0 just 19 seconds later, firing a shot from the high slot past Lehner. Thuresson took a pass from Ryan Bourque, whose assist gave him points in back-to-back games for the first time this season (1-1-2).

The Senators struck back at 6:01 of the second period, as Rob Klinkhammer gathered his third goal of the year off of a rebound from Whale goaltender Cam Talbot (30 saves). Klinkhammer’s goal was assisted by both Stephane Da Costa and Patrick Wiercioch.

Binghamton tied the game just moments later, as Petersson’s hard wrist-shot got past Talbot’s stick side at 7:20 for his sixth goal. Klinkhammer received his second point of the period with the primary assist.

Derek Grant gave the Senators the lead with their third unanswered goal at 15:35, deflecting Mike Bartlett’s shot past Talbot. The Whale were outshot by the visitors by a 19-5 margin in the second period.

The Whale managed to tie it on Zuccarello’s second goal of the night with 1:10 remaining in the second, as he corralled a loose puck and fired it over the sprawling Lehner for the equalizer. Andre Deveaux collected the assist, his third point in his last two games (2-1-3).

Petersson struck again at 8:07 of the third period, burying his second goal of the night on a slap shot from the left circle. The eventual game-winner was assisted on by Matt Carkner and Da Costa.

“We didn’t play our game at all,” said Zuccarello. “You can’t win games in this league when you don’t play 100 percent.”

The Whale are back in home action twice this coming weekend, taking on the Hershey Bears on Friday, Dec. 9 (7:00 PM), before hosting the Providence Bruins the next night, Saturday, Dec. 10, also a 7:00 PM start at the XL Center.

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Binghamton Senators 4 at Connecticut Whale 3
Sunday, December 4, 2011 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Binghamton 0 3 1 – 4
Connecticut 2 1 0 – 3

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Zuccarello 6 (Newbury, Bell), 12:57 (PP). 2, Connecticut, Thuresson 6 (Bourque), 13:16. Penalties-Carkner Bng (hooking), 12:50; Carkner Bng (fighting), 15:18; Bickel Ct (fighting), 15:18; Borowiecki Bng (fighting), 18:20; Nightingale Ct (fighting), 18:20.

2nd Period-3, Binghamton, Klinkhammer 3 (Da Costa, Wiercioch), 6:01. 4, Binghamton, Petersson 6 (Klinkhammer, Gryba), 7:20. 5, Binghamton, Grant 4 (Bartlett, Borowiecki), 15:35 (PP). 6, Connecticut, Zuccarello 7 (Deveaux), 18:50. Penalties-Thuresson Ct (interference), 14:14; Bell Ct (holding), 19:36.

3rd Period-7, Binghamton, Petersson 7 (Carkner, Da Costa), 8:07. Penalties-Valentenko Ct (major – boarding, game misconduct – boarding), 15:50; Klinkhammer Bng (high-sticking), 16:25; Carkner Bng (slashing), 18:00; Newbury Ct (unsportsmanlike conduct), 18:00; Bell Ct (tripping), 19:29.

Shots on Goal-Binghamton 8-19-7-34. Connecticut 10-5-11-26.
Power Play Opportunities-Binghamton 1 / 4; Connecticut 1 / 1.
Goalies-Binghamton, Lehner 6-8-1 (26 shots-23 saves). Connecticut, Talbot 6-4-0 (34 shots-30 saves).
A-2,669
Referees-Dan Dreger (51).
Linesmen-Derek Wahl (46), Luke Galvin (2).

Connecticut Whale 6, Springfield Falcons 3

By Brian Ring

Springfield, MA, December 3, 2011 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Springfield Falcons, 6-3, Saturday night in Springfield, rallying from a two-goal deficit with the help of five power-play goals in the third period.

CT WhaleAndre Deveaux scored twice for the Whale, while Jonathan Audy-Marchessault collected a goal and two assists, helping to move the Whale’s winning streak to four straight games, and their record against the Falcons to 4-0-0-0. Chad Johnson made 39 saves for Connecticut in game that saw them heavily outshot, 41-26.

Dane Byers scored twice for Springfield.

“The power-play really cranked it up at the end there,” said Whale coach Ken Gernander. “There were a lot of players that had a big third…that stepped up in the third.”

“Even if we’re not playing our best hockey we find ways to win,” said Johnson. “Five minutes or one period can make the game.”

The Whale were outshot, 10-2, in the game’s opening period, a result of spending nearly half of the period killing penalties during a run of four straight infractions from 3:48-8:14. Brilliant penalty-killing work by Connecticut for the second straight night helped to keep the two teams scoreless headed into the first intermission.

Byers finally helped the Falcons break through with the man-advantage at 2:34 of the second period, putting Springfield ahead with the first goal of the game. Byers was left with an easy rebound stuff-in opportunity against Johnson, with the assists going to Alexandre Giroux and Nick Holden.

The Falcons extended their lead to two goals at the five minute mark, as Tim Spencer notched his first goal of the season, assisted by Wade MacLeod and Ryan Garlock.

Ryan Bourque got the Whale on the board at 8:09 of the second, his shot from the left-wing half-boards going through Falcons goaltender Allen York (21 saves).  Audy-Marchessault assisted on the goal, extending a personal points streak to six games, as did Wade Redden.

Byers put the Falcons ahead by two goals with his second of the night just 2:17 into the third period. That would be the end of the scoring for Springfield, who ended up taking 25 minutes worth of penalties in a wild third period.

The Whale began their comeback at 7:44, scoring their first of five power-play goals in the frame. A Pavel Valentenko slapshot from the point was tipped past York by Deveaux for his first of the night, getting the Whale within a goal at 3-2. Deveaux scored again less than four minutes later, tying the game up for Connecticut.

Audy-Marchessault netted the game-winner at 14:22, putting a Francois Bouchard rebound into an empty net for his eighth goal of the season.

The Falcons’ Adam Mair took a five-minute major and was ejected from the game for a high hit on Deveaux, which gave the Whale a power-play from 16:25 on.

The Whale went on to put the game out of reach, scoring another two goals, on Newbury’s seventh of the season, coming at 16:56 on a stuff-in chance, and Aaron Voros’ second of the year with just 59 seconds remaining in the final period.

Connecticut’s five power-play goals tied the team’s records for both power-play goals in one game and in a single period, while the Whale penalty kill successfully stopped six of seven Falcons opportunities.

“We just battled through it, battled through the penalties, killed them, just stayed the course and worked to the very end,” said Johnson.  “It was a big win and we have to focus on tomorrow now.”

The Whale, looking to make it five straight wins, returns home Sunday afternoon, when Connecticut will host former Wolf Pack forward Corey Locke and the defending Calder Cup champion Binghamton Senators at the XL Center (3:00 PM).

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Connecticut Whale 6 at Springfield Falcons 3
Saturday, December 3, 2011 – MassMutual Center

Connecticut 0 1 5 – 6
Springfield 0 2 1 – 3

1st Period- No Scoring. Penalties-Newbury Ct (hooking, unsportsmanlike conduct – disputing decision), 3:48; Nightingale Ct (hooking), 7:28; served by Voros Ct (bench minor – too many men), 8:14.

2nd Period-1, Springfield, Byers 5 (Giroux, Holden), 2:34 (PP). 2, Springfield, Spencer 1 (MacLeod, Garlock), 5:00. 3, Connecticut, Bourque 2 (Audy-Marchessault, Redden), 8:09. Penalties-Giroux Spr (hooking), 0:26; Redden Ct (tripping), 1:54; Ruth Spr (boarding), 5:36; Bickel Ct (tripping), 11:55; Atkinson Spr (hooking), 13:08; Deveaux Ct (unsportsmanlike conduct), 18:10; Garlock Spr (unsportsmanlike conduct), 18:10; served by Voros Ct (bench minor – delay of game), 20:00.

3rd Period-4, Springfield, Byers 6 (Calvert, Lebda), 2:17. 5, Connecticut, Deveaux 5 (Valentenko, Redden), 7:44 (PP). 6, Connecticut, Deveaux 6 (Audy-Marchessault, Zuccarello), 11:08 (PP). 7, Connecticut, Audy-Marchessault 8 (Bouchard, Valentenko), 14:22 (PP). 8, Connecticut, Newbury 7 (Zuccarello, Bell), 16:56 (PP). 9, Connecticut, Voros 2 (Tessier, Parlett), 19:41 (PP). Penalties-St. Pierre Spr (hooking), 6:01; Newbury Ct (roughing), 10:42; Giroux Spr (slashing, roughing), 10:42; Holden Spr (interference), 13:16; Holden Spr (slashing), 16:04; Mair Spr (major – interference, game misconduct – interference), 16:25.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 2-8-17-27. Springfield 10-19-13-42.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 5 / 9; Springfield 1 / 7.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 8-3-2 (42 shots-39 saves). Springfield, York 1-1-0 (27 shots-21 saves).
A-3,523
Referees-Graham Skilliter (48).
Linesmen-Rich Patry (52), Kevin Redding (16).

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Connecticut Whale 4, Providence Bruins 1

By Brian Ring

Providence, RI, December 2, 2011 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Providence Bruins, 4-1, Friday night before 7,352 at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center in Providence.  Mats Zuccarello scored and added an assist for the Whale, while Jordan Owens and Jared Nightingale both had two assists. Scott Tanski collected his first professional goal in the game for Connecticut.

CT WhaleThe win was the third straight for the Whale, who climbed to 29 points and remained in first place in the Northeast Division.

Tanski put the Whale ahead 1-0 at 6:13 of the first period, as he scored the first goal of his AHL career, getting his stick on a Nightingale shot that trickled through the pads of Providence goaltender Anton Khudobin (20 saves). Nightingale and Jordan Owens both assisted on Tanski’s goal, which just had enough momentum to cross the goal line for the Whale advantage.

“The Owens, Tanski, Tommy Grant line had two big goals to start the game for us… we’ll take them from any source,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander.

The Whale extended their lead to 2-0 at 5:02 of the second period, as Grant cut up the slot in the Providence zone before wristing a shot past Khudobin. Owens recorded his second assist of the night on the goal, the third of the season for Grant.

Connecticut escaped the period with their 2-0 lead intact, despite the Bruins being afforded five straight power-plays, including a pair of odd-man opportunities in the second frame. The Whale were outshot, 22-14, through two periods.

The Whale would score again to make it 3-0 on the power-play at 5:23 of the third period, taking advantage of a five-on-three chance. Zuccarello dished the puck from the corner into the slot to Kris Newbury, who tipped the puck past Khudobin in his first game since serving a four-game suspension. Wade Redden also assisted on the goal.

Zach Hamill cut the Whale lead to 3-1 with a shorthanded goal less than a minute later, his shot beating Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (28 saves). The Bruins would not get any closer, however, as the Whale struck back with another five-on-three power-play tally, when Zuccarello scored at 15:46 to ice the game for Connecticut.

The Whale finished the night a perfect seven-for-seven on penalty kills, while also going two-for-five with the man advantage.

“A lot of times your best penalty killer is your goaltender,” said Gernander. “I thought Johnner (Johnson) had a good night tonight.

“Both special teams [had a good night], we had two power-play goals and several kills tonight, fortunately.  We don’t want to take so many penalties, though.”

The Whale are back in road action Saturday night in Springfield, as they take on the Falcons at MassMutual Center (7:00). Connecticut returns home to the XL Center on Sunday afternoon, as the Whale hosts the defending Calder Cup champion Binghamton Senators (3:00).

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Connecticut Whale 4 at Providence Bruins 1
Friday, December 2, 2011 – Dunkin’ Donuts Center

Connecticut 1 1 2 – 4
Providence 0 0 1 – 1

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Tanski 1 (Nightingale, Owens), 6:13. Penalties-Randell Pro (tripping), 2:47; Grant Ct (tripping), 14:04; Zuccarello Ct (slashing), 18:00; Bickel Ct (cross-checking), 19:37.

2nd Period-2, Connecticut, Grant 3 (Owens, Nightingale), 5:02. Penalties-Valentenko Ct (interference), 8:48; Audy-Marchessault Ct (interference), 13:17.

3rd Period-3, Connecticut, Newbury 6 (Zuccarello, Redden), 5:23 (PP). 4, Providence, Hamill 7 (Caron, Bodnarchuk), 6:13 (SH). 5, Connecticut, Zuccarello 5 (Audy-Marchessault), 15:46 (PP). Penalties-Deveaux Ct (fighting), 0:51; Miller Pro (fighting), 0:51; Whitfield Pro (tripping), 4:46; Cunningham Pro (holding), 5:05; Bouchard Ct (tripping), 7:10; Parlett Ct (tripping), 13:01; Bodnarchuk Pro (tripping), 14:51; Arniel Pro (high-sticking), 15:11.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 9-5-12-26. Providence 11-11-7-29.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 2 / 5; Providence 0 / 7.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 7-3-2 (29 shots-28 saves). Providence, Khudobin 7-11-1 (26 shots-22 saves).
A-7,352
Referees-Tim Mayer (19).
Linesmen-Brian MacDonald (72), Bob Paquette (18)

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Statement from Howard Baldwin, Jr. Regarding Hartford Hockey

HARTFORD, December 2, 2011:  Since returning to Connecticut in 2010, we here at Whalers Sports & Entertainment have worked tirelessly, and accomplished much, in our goal of returning Hartford to preeminence as a hockey market.

CT WhaleWe put on a Whaler Fan Fest two summers ago that delighted 5,000 Whaler enthusiasts, with a celebration of the great Whaler tradition.  We took over the operations of the market’s AHL franchise and re-branded it with a new identity, leading to a significant increase in the franchise’s revenues.  We expended tremendous amounts of capital and resources in a landmark outdoor hockey festival, which culminated in the first professional outdoor hockey game in Connecticut, the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl this past February.  And just last month, we outlined and articulated a vision for renovating the XL Center and re-energizing it as a catalyst for downtown activity and atmosphere.

We will continue to leave no stone unturned in our quest to prove to the hockey world that the Hartford market is a tremendous hockey hotbed and deserves to be mentioned alongside some of the most passionate and committed in the sport.  As we do that, we challenge the fan base of the area to step up with a similar level of intensity and sense of urgency.

The holiday season not only signals the arrival of festive celebrations, but also the real meat of the hockey season.  We are over a quarter of the way through the season, and the rivalries are picking up, the points are getting more important and each game means more and more.  So there is no better time than now to jump in with both feet and help make a statement that this market cares deeply about the sport and is willing to support it in a significant way on a nightly basis.

We have great faith that there is more than enough interest and passion in the sport of hockey in Connecticut to make it the top market in the American Hockey League, with the potential for much more.  We need every hockey enthusiast in the area, though, to share our vision and the excited anticipation of five-figure crowds on a regular basis at the XL Center, and what a dynamic atmosphere, and eye-opening buzz, that would create.

Together we need to eliminate the lulls like the crowd of less than 2,000 that attended Tuesday  night’s Whale game, which turned out to be a great, gut-check win, a 4-2 victory over the Hershey Bears in the first-ever pro meeting between Hall of Famer Ray Bourque’s two sons, Ryan Bourque of the Whale and Chris Bourque of the Bears.  And we need to make the highs higher, get 10-12,000 rocking the XL Center on the good Friday and Saturday-night dates, which there is plenty of potential to do, with many excellent weekend dates coming up after the First of the Year.

With more than three-quarters of the home schedule still left to be played, a multi-game plan, or even a season ticket, is still a great investment. Hire software programmers with Echo.  And Whale single-game tickets are as affordably priced as any entertainment option you could possibly find.

Now is the time to push the Whale to new heights, and we have to do it together

Lee Baldwin Reassigned to ECHL Greenville

HARTFORD, December 1, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned defenseman Lee Baldwin from the Whale to its ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleBaldwin, a second-year pro, is scoreless and +1 in eight games this year with the Whale, with eight shots on goal.  In four ECHL games with the Road Warriors, he has no points, with a +2 and six shots on goal.

Baldwin was signed as a free agent by the Rangers March 22, 2010, out of the University of Alaska-Anchorage.

The Whale return to action tomorrow night, Friday, December 2, visiting the Providence Bruins for a 7:05 PM game.  All the CT Whale Rockin’ Hockey action can be heard live on “The Rock”, 106.9 FM, WCCC, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  The Whale’s next home game is coming up this Sunday, December 4, as the defending Calder Cup-champion Binghamton Senators come to the XL Center for a 3:00 game.  Fans are invited to bring their skates to the game that day, for a free postgame skate on the XL Center ice.

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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Whale Weathering the Storm of Personnel Losses

By Bruce Berlet

Connecticut Whale defenseman Pavel Valentenko is sometimes self-conscious about his English.

CT WhaleBut the personable Russian has certainly improved on the official language of the United States since arriving in Hartford two years ago. And he was right on in the clearest terms Tuesday night, when asked why the Whale has won five of six games to move into first place in the Northeast Division.

“We had some guys get called up, and the guys (in Hartford) are doing a pretty good job working hard every shift,” Valentenko said after his laser from the left point through a screen broke a 2-2 tie and sparked a 4-2 victory over the Hershey Bears. “And every practice we’re doing a good job, so that’s why we’re winning.”

Well said, Pavel – in any language.

Yes, the Whale (12-5-1-2) had plenty to be thankful for a week after Thanksgiving, despite the veteran defensive pairing of Wade Redden and Jared Nightingale having been sidelined for several games by injuries, veteran center Kris Newbury being suspended for four games and veteran center John Mitchell and rookie wing Carl Hagelin, their leading scorers, missing the last three games while starring on Broadway after being called up by the New York Rangers last Thursday, to help fill the void left by the three-game suspension of call-up right wing Andre Deveaux, reassigned to the Whale on Thursday. Hagelin batted in his own rebound for his first NHL goal, off a rebound of a shot by former Wolf Pack defenseman Ryan McDonagh, set up by Mitchell, in a 2-0 victory over the Philadelphia Flyers on Sunday. Then Mitchell tallied his first goal with the Rangers off Hagelin’s nifty drop pass in a 4-3 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday night. Each has points in the three wins they have played in and were awarded “The Broadway Hat” as the team’s top player in a vote of their teammates.

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

Meanwhile, the Whale has soldiered on, thanks to contributions from all sides that led to four of the first five victories in their current run coming after they trailed in the third period. Goalies Chad Johnson and Cam Talbot have been solid behind a veteran defense helped by the reassignment of rookie Tim Erixon, who sat out Tuesday night with an injury. Rookie Jonathan Audy-Marchessault has been a godsend at center and wing while taking over the team scoring lead (seven goals, 11 assists). Wings Aaron Voros, who signed a professional tryout contract on Nov. 15, and Chris McKelvie each scored his first goal of the season Tuesday night, with McKelvie’s tally going into an empty net after unselfish plays by Kelsey Tessier and Jordan Owens, who had two assists.

And fittingly, rookie left wing Ryan Bourque had his best game as a pro in his first game against older brother Chris, the best player on the ice Tuesday night, who had a goal and an assist. The victory ended a six-game losing streak to Hershey, with their last win being 3-1 on Jan. 13, 2008 when they were still the Hartford Wolf Pack.

“I’m proud of the way we worked hard as a unit,” Bourque said. “With the guys that we have out of the lineup, it says a lot for our team to take out a great team like Hershey. Hopefully we can keep it rolling.”

Ditto for Bourque, who, like most rookies, is in an adjustment stage of his career after excelling with Audy-Marchessault with the Quebec Remparts in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, and for Team USA in international competition.

“I think every game you get more and more experience,” Bourque said. “Your first year as a pro is tough. It’s a grind at first, and you just have to get through that bump and hump in the first part of the season. I’m just trying to work hard every day in practice and progressively get better and better. I think once my confidence comes back, you’re going to see a real improvement with my game and what I do on the ice. I think it’s starting to come in bits and pieces every game, and I think (Tuesday night) was a real good start. You might not see it on the score sheet, but I think I had a pretty solid game and in my opinion – I’m probably harder on myself than anyone – I think it was my best game of the season.”

The speedy Bourque said Whale coach Ken Gernander has been working with him on defensive situations and positioning and on timing the play to be in the right position to receive the puck, not be too ahead of the passing lanes and developing plays.

“I’m just trying to find holes and sit back if I have to and then have bursts of speed,” said Bourque, who has one goal and two assists in 13 games. “He has been really helpful, and I’m thankful for what he has told me so far.”

With Newbury and Mitchell not available and the Whale having only 11 healthy forwards, veteran defenseman Brendan Bell and wing Mats Zuccarello took some shifts at forward, with “The Norwegian Hobbit” playing center throughout Tuesday night’s game. That won’t be necessary Friday night, when Newbury returns for a game at Providence after serving his four-game suspension for an illegal check to the head of Bridgeport Sound Tigers wing Justin DiBenedetto in a 3-2 overtime victory on Nov. 18. DiBenedetto missed four games before returning Sunday.

Despite missing five games while on recall to the Rangers and the four games because of the suspension, Newbury is fifth on the Whale in scoring (five goals, six assists) and a key figure on the power play, penalty kill and faceoffs. He attended three of the four games that he couldn’t play, missing only a 6-2 loss at Bridgeport last Friday night.

“It (stunk), was awful,” Newbury said of the longest suspension of his nine-year pro career. “I had to skate after practice to stay in shape, and it was tough to watch. It was just one of those things that happened, I guess. It was a split-second decision, and I made the wrong one. So I learn from it and will be more aware, but at the same time I have to stay physical.”

The Whale also will be bolstered by the return of another physical presence, Deveaux, a right wing who cleared waivers Thursday after completing a three-game suspension for an elbow to the face of Florida Panthers center Tomas Fleischmann on Nov. 23. Deveaux, signed to a free-agent deal on Aug. 16, had four goals, two assists and 23 penalty minutes in nine games with the Whale before being called up Oct. 30. In nine games with the Rangers, he played a strong fourth-line role with one goal, 29 penalty minutes and a plus-3 rating.

Deveaux found out at noon Thursday that he had gone unclaimed, and the Rangers assigned him to the Whale, who assigned defenseman Lee Baldwin to Greenville of the ECHL. The Whale welcome Deveaux as they face three games in three days for the second time this season. They visit Providence on Friday night before going to Springfield on Saturday night and hosting Binghamton on Sunday at 3 p.m.

Johnson, who gutted out a 26-save victory Tuesday night while fighting a flu bug that caused him to become ill after the game, feels the Whale has developed an identity that could carry them a long way.

“I don’t feel we played our best hockey the last two games consistently, but I think we have formed an identity and are playing well and sticking to it,” Johnson said. “We’re a team that doesn’t quit, battles to the very end, does what it takes to win and play like a little board hockey. We’re doing the little things like battling in front and battling along the boards.”

Gernander has frequently commended his team for its tenacity and resiliency, and he did it again Tuesday night.

“The guys again stuck with it and got the goal for the win,” he said. “I’m pretty pleased because the guys are continuing to win games, and that’s first and foremost. I’m never going to thumb my nose at a win. There’s going to be mistakes, but I think the guys have shown the effort and perseverance to get the two points. That, maybe more than anything, is encouraging because it’s a character trait. It’s an intangible, but it’s pretty critical to being successful.”

After a much-deserved day off Wednesday, the Whale got back to work Thursday in preparation for their busy weekend. They’ll start against the Bruins (8-13-1-1), who are on an 0-5-0-1 slide since a 3-2 victory over Worcester on Nov. 13. The Bruins have been outscored 25-12 in that stretch, including a 3-2 shootout loss in their only meeting with the Whale on Nov. 20, when third-period goals by Bell and Owens got the visitors to overtime before Mitchell and Hagelin scored in the shootout.

Rookie right wing Carter Camper (5, 11) and veteran center Zach Hamill (6, 7) lead the Bruins in scoring, and rugged left wing Lane MacDermid, son of former Hartford Whalers right wing Paul MacDermid, has two goals, four assists and a team-high 50 penalty minutes. Anton Khudobin (7-10-1, 2.98, .913, one shutout) has done most of the goaltending. The Bruins were helped Thursday when the defending Stanley Cup Bruins assigned forward Jordan Caron and defenseman Steven Kampfer to the P-Bruins. Caron, a first-round pick (25th overall) in 2009, had one goal and two assists in 11 games with the NHL Bruins. Kampfer missed the first six games of the NHL season because of an injury sustained in preseason and then had one assist in five games. He had five goals and five assists in 38 games in Boston last season.

The Whale has won their first three meetings with the Falcons (10-10-0-0), capped by a 3-2 victory on Saturday night in which they trailed 2-0, before Valentenko scored his first goal of the season on left-point howitzer and Andreas Thuresson tallied twice in the third period, including the winner with only 21.6 seconds left. The Falcons lost their third in a row Sunday, 3-2 to Albany, though former Wolf Pack left wing and captain Dane Byers (four goals, six assists) returned from a two-game suspension.

Former All-Star center Martin St. Pierre (5, 16) missed games Saturday night and Sunday with an injury sustained last Friday night, so Nick Drazenovic (5, 15) moved to the No. 1 line between Greenwich native and former Avon Old Farms and Boston College standout right wing Cam Atkinson (5, 15) and former Wolf Pack left wing and 2009 AHL MVP Alexandre Giroux (6, 4 in 10 games), who had one goal in nine games with the parent Columbus Blue Jackets before returning to the Falcons on Nov. 7. The Falcons are expected to be bolstered by the return of St. Pierre, and Allen York (1-0-0, 2.87, .907) was reassigned by the Blue Jackets after previously playing with the Chicago Express in the ECHL. He will join 38-year-old Manny Legace (3-5-0, 2.53, .910), the Whalers’ eighth-round pick in 1993.

The Whale completes their tough stretch against Binghamton (7-12-1-1), which has had a post-Calder Cup hangover after winning its first AHL title as assistant coach Steve Stirling, former coach of the Sound Tigers and New York Islanders, was in a hospital recovering from a hasty quadruple heart bypass on June 5, two days before the Senators’ clinching victory in Houston. The Senators opened the season with three losses and are now last in the East Division and next-to-last in the overall standings to Hamilton (6-11-1-1).

Veteran right wing Mark Parrish (8, 6) leads the Senators in scoring, followed by left wings Nikita Filatov (7, 5), called up by the parent Ottawa Senators on Monday, and Mike Hoffman (4, 7) and defenseman Patrick Wiercioch (2, 9). Former Wolf Pack center Corey Locke, the AHL MVP last season after getting 21 goals and 65 assists in 69 games, has no goals and seven assists in eight games after starting the season on the injured list. Mike McKenna (3-5-0, 3.01, .912) and Robin Lehner (4-8-1, 3.05, .913) have shared the goaltending. Fans can participate in a post-game skate but make sure you bring your own blades. … With the calendar hitting December, Movember was over and razors out. All the Whale players participated in the month formerly known as November, when people worldwide sprout moustaches to raise money and awareness for men’s health issues, particularly prostate cancer and other cancers that affect men. The only players still sporting some kind of facial hair Thursday were Johnson, Nightingale, Tessier, Owens, Voros, Tommy Grant and Bell, who had shaved the bottom part of his Fu Manchu and planned to get rid of the rest later in the day.

STAAL SKATING AND TALKING AGAIN

After being completely shut down from physical activity for more than a month, Rangers’ All-Star defenseman Marc Staal has resumed skating and light training as he works his way back from a post-concussion symptoms sustained when hit by his brother, All-Star center Eric Staal, in a game against the Carolina Hurricanes on Feb. 22.

Until skating with his teammates Thursday morning for the first time since Sept. 25 before the Rangers tried for a fourth consecutive victory against the Carolina Hurricanes, Staal’s last previous skate with other players was with the Whale on Sept. 30 and Oct. 1. He had had acupuncture treatment, an MRI and a cortisone shot in his neck, but after the skates with the Whale, his recurring headaches happened again, so Boston-based specialist Dr. Robert Cantu told him to shut down all exercise down for a month.

Thursday, for the first time since his skates with the Whale, Staal talked to reporters in – of all places – the RBC Arena, where his brother’s injurious check occurred.

“I think (given) the rate of improvement the last month or so, I feel like I’ll be back (this season),” said Staal, who talked with reporters for 71/2 minutes. “That’s the plan. I just want to make sure I’m healthy, get back and start playing.”

Staal added that he has been symptom-free for seven weeks but even thinking about a return date “is a ways away.” And he holds no resentment toward his brother.

“I put that behind me, maybe the day after it happened, not right away, because I was pretty upset,” Staal said. “It was tough because it was my brother and it’s a whole different situation when that happens and you get hit hard like that and get injured. We play hard against each other, that’s just the way we play. I play the same against Jordan. I caught Jordan in a hit and it could have gone a different way than it did and that’s just the way it is.

“We understand that’s the game and we’re not going to take it easy on ourselves just because we are brothers, and if we did. it would be noticeable and people wouldn’t be very happy about that. We understand it’s a game. It’s been tough but we’ve been fine.”

Staal skated with Mike Rupp, who has not played since Oct. 24 and was declared out for 4-to-6 weeks after surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his left knee on Nov. 9. Staal and Rupp, who are on injured reserve, played 2-on-2 against Rangers assistant GM/assistant coach/Whale GM Jim Schoenfeld and video coordinator Jerry Dineen, brother of Florida Panthers coach Kevin Dineen, the former Hartford Whalers star right wing and captain.

Left wing Wojtek Wolski has also resumed skating after sports hernia surgery on Nov. 8 and hopes to return in 10 days. Wolski, who has played in only six games because of a groin injury and the surgery, was expected to be out four weeks and put on injured reserve with Staal and Rupp. The three are on the trip to Carolina and Tampa Bay, where the Rangers play the Lightning on Saturday night before returning to MSG to host Toronto on Monday night.

GRUMET-MORRIS A WORLD TRAVELER

Norway yesterday, Rockford today, British Columbia tomorrow.

That was the hectic last week for goalie Dov Grumet-Morris, the Whale’s MVP last season.

Grumet-Morris was in Oslo, Norway, playing for Loresnskog IF in the Norwegian Elite League, when he got a call to come play for the San Antonio Rampage, not far from where his wife is working in Houston. The six-year veteran hopped on a plane and headed seven time zones west to Rockford, Ill., before he and his new teammates continued on to Abbotsford, British Columbia.

“That’s the way it goes sometimes,” Grumet-Morris told John Wishler of the Express News in San Antonio. “All of a sudden, you’re there and playing for your new team. So you want to make a good impression.”

Grumet-Morris did better than good, after signing an AHL contract with the affiliate of the Florida Panthers, the surprise of the NHL under Dineen. After Rampage coach Chuck Weber had Grumet-Morris sit as the backup for a game in Rockford the day after he arrived in the United States to allow him to adjust, he stopped 21 shots in a 5-0 victory over the West Division-leading Abbotsford Heat on Friday night. Two days later, he made 30 saves in a 3-1 victory, knocking the Heat out of first place. The shutout was only the second time in franchise history that a Rampage goalie recorded a shutout in his season debut. Former Rangers goalie Alex Auld blanked the Milwaukee Admirals 7-0 on Nov. 24, 2007.

“We got him acclimated, and the guys played hard in front of him,” Weber said. “He made some big saves at the right time.”

The addition of Grumet-Morris helped the Rampage to a 4-2 record on a road trip, and the back-to-back victories lifted them out of the West Division cellar. Grumet-Morris was the catalyst, but the return of Jacob Markstrom, sent back down Monday, has created a bit of a goaltender controversy. Rookie Brian Foster was sent to the team’s ECHL affiliate in Cincinnati, leaving Grumet-Morris and Markstrom to battle for the top job.

Grumet-Morris is just happy to be back with an NHL organization after being in Norway a few weeks ago.

“I was happy there,” said Grumet-Morris, who played one game with the Rampage in 2005-06. “I’d played in 14 straight games, so I was in a rhythm when I got over here.”

And in nearly perfect rhythm as his AHL career resumed. … Syracuse Crunch assistant coach Brad Lauer was named an assistant under Bruce Boudreau, who was named coach of the Anaheim Ducks on Wednesday night after Randy Carlyle was fired after a 4-1 victory over the Montreal Canadiens. Lauer, 45, had been named an assistant coach of the Crunch, the Ducks’ AHL affiliate, on July 12 and helped the team to a 9-7-2-1 record. Boudreau was fired as coach of the Washington Capitals on Monday and replaced by Dale Hunter, who lost his debut to the St. Louis Blues 2-1 on Tuesday night. … Jason Missiaen made 37 saves to notch his first pro victory, as Greenville scored the final five goals in a 5-2 victory over Kalamazoo on Wednesday night. Brendan Connolly, who also was in Whale training camp, scored two goals in a three-goal third period as the Road Warriors improved to 10-7-0.

WHALE, FALCONS FANS PLAY DOUBLEHEADER THIS WEEKEND

Whale fans will look to get even in their seven-game series with Falcons fans in Game 2 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield on Saturday at 4 p.m. (doors open at 3:30). Falcons fans notched a 10-6 victory on Oct. 23 at the XL Center in the inaugural game of the historic series originated by Seth Dussault of Easthampton, Mass. Matt Marychuk of Glastonbury created a Facebook page to see if there were any interested players, and he and Dussault managed the social media page as interest grew. They used the page to sign up fans to play and communicate between the players and managed to fill rosters for each fan team. The idea caught the attention of the Falcons and then Whale front office, leading to players of all ages and skill levels participating in the series.

Tickets include admission to the AHL game. A portion of ticket sales benefits Defending the Blue Line, an organization that helps children of military families play hockey. Game 1 raised $200, and ticket sales for Games 2 and 3 have already added $400 to the donation. Game 3 is Sunday at noon (doors open at 11:30 a.m.) at the XL Center before the Whale hosts the defending Calder Cup champion Binghamton Senators at 3 p.m.

For games this weekend, fans can email whalefalconsfangame@gmail.com and tell Dussault that they want tickets that he can bring on game day. Dussault can’t get more tickets on game day, so fan have to email him by Friday for the game on Saturday and by Saturday for the game on Sunday. Tickets are available in advance for games in Springfield by contacting Damon Markiewicz at dmarkiewicz@falconsahl.com. Advance tickets in Hartford are available by contacting Dussault at whalefalconsfangame@gmail.com. All future tickets must be purchased at least 10 days before the game. Information on all the games and the series is available at www.facebook.com/WhaleFalconsFanGame.

Tickets for Game 4 on Jan. 7 in Hartford at 4 p.m. and Jan. 8 in Springfield at 12:30 p.m. will go on sale Monday. Tickets for the final two games on Feb. 10 in Springfield at 5 p.m. and March 17 in Hartford at 4 p.m. will be available in the near future.

And mark Jan. 22, 2012 on your calendar. That’s when the Whale’s annual Tip-A-Player Dinner will be held from 4-7 p.m. at the XL Center. More information will be coming soon.

‘WHITE OUT FOR MANDI’ AT YALE ON FRIDAY

The Yale women’s ice hockey team is dedicating its game against Princeton at Ingalls Rink in New Haven on Friday to Mandi Schwartz, utilizing it as a fundraiser for the Mandi Schwartz Foundation. Senior forward and captain Alecz Hughes started the charity in memory of Schwartz, the Yale center who died in April after battling cancer for more than two years.

The goal is to pack Ingalls Rink, with everyone wearing white as a “White Out for Mandi” show of support. No admission will be charged, and donations for the foundation will be accepted at the door. The team is also lining up pledges from donors based on the attendance total, so every person who attends will count towards the final donation total. Special white t-shirts will be sold, and youth hockey teams are encouraged to come wearing white jerseys. The Bulldogs will honor Mandi in a special pregame ceremony.

The event also will help raise awareness of the need for marrow donors and umbilical cord blood donors. In an effort to save her life last year, Mandi had a stem cell transplant utilizing blood from two anonymous umbilical cord blood donations. Stem cells for patients with life-threatening illnesses like Mandi’s can also come from marrow donors. Yale hosts an annual Mandi Schwartz Marrow Donor Registration Drive every spring to help add potential donors to the Be The Match Registry. At least six matches for patients in need of transplants have been identified through the efforts. One of the matches was a Yale field hockey player Lexy Adams.

The Bulldogs hope to set an attendance record for a women’s game at Ingalls Rink. The current record is 1,539, set on Nov. 1, 2005, when Team USA played an exhibition game against the ECAC Hockey All-Stars. Last year’s “White Out for Mandi” drew 1,066, the most for a Yale women’s hockey game. The Ingalls Rink capacity is 3,500.

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