Category Archives: CT Whale

Whale Sign Forward Derek Couture to PTO

HARTFORD, March 1, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the team has signed forward Derek Couture to a Professional Tryout (PTO) agreement.

CT WhaleCouture, a 6-1, 205-pound sixth-year pro, spent most of last season with the Hartford Wolf Pack, skating in 67 games with the Pack and recording AHL career highs of 11 goals and 20 points, along with 104 penalty minutes.  This year, Couture was playing in the ECHL with the Victoria Salmon Kings, for whom he has logged 25 games, scoring eight goals and adding 11 assists for 19 points, while serving 76 minutes in penalties, fifth-most on the team.

A 26-year-old native of Calgary, Alberta, Couture has played 273 career AHL games with the Omaha Ak-Sar-Ben Knights, Quad City Flames, Binghamton Senators and Wolf Pack and has totaled 33 goals and 38 assists for 71 points, plus 418 penalty minutes.  In 50 career ECHL games with the Elmira Jackals, Charlotte Checkers and Salmon Kings, Couture has rung up 12 goals and 38 assists for 50 points, along with 118 PIM.

DEREK COUTURE’S AMATEUR AND PROFESSIONAL RECORD

The Whale’s next action is tomorrow night, Wednesday, March 2, as they return to the XL Center to host the Springfield Falcons in a 7:00 PM game.  There will be a “Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl Appreciation Night” promotion for that game, as Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl ticket purchasers who present their Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl ticket stub at the XL Center ticket office can purchase one $19 or $12 ticket for the March 2 game, and receive a second of equal or lesser value free.  On top of that, the Whale will add a coupon for 15% off all Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise.  The coupon is redeemable at the Whale Pro Shop, which is located in the Hartford Store at 45 Pratt St. in downtown Hartford and is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 AM to 4:30 PM.  The coupon is good only for Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise.

Tickets for all 2010-11 Whale home games are available now at the XL Center box office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day.

For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call (860) 728-3366.

Whale Finally Return to XL Center

By Bruce Berlet

You’ll have to excuse the Connecticut Whale if they feel a bit lost at the XL Center on Wednesday night.

CT WhaleOther than a handful of practices, the I-91 rival Springfield Falcons have been in the downtown Hartford arena as many times as the Whale in the last 26 days: Zero.

The Whale hasn’t played at their “real” home venue since a 3-2 loss to the Portland Pirates on Feb. 6. They had a “home” game on Feb. 19, but that was at Rentschler Field in East Hartford against the Providence Bruins in the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl

The Whale lost 5-4 in a shootout on a memorable evening that drew an AHL-record crowd of 21,673 in frigid weather to watch a doubleheader that also included the Hartford Whalers legends playing a 4-4 tie with the Boston Bruins legends.

The Whale (28-24-2-6) will be in desperate need of a victory at the XL Center Wednesday night in the return of coach Ken Gernander, defenseman Michael Del Zotto and right wing Derek Couture; the XL Center debuts of center Francis Lemieux and right wing Alexandre Imbeault, signed to a second professional tryout contract on Monday; and the Whale debut of forward John Mitchell, acquired by the parent New York Rangers on Monday from the Toronto Maple Leafs for a seventh-round draft pick in 2012. And center Tim Kennedy, tied for second on the Whale in scoring (12 goals, 30 assists in 53 games), won’t be around after he and a third-round pick in the June NHL draft were traded to the Florida Panthers for veteran defenseman Bryan McCabe on Saturday.

Gernander missed his first two games as Hartford Wolf Pack/Whale coach in four seasons because of pain and swelling in his lower extremities and didn’t return from the team’s first visit to Charlotte, N.C., until Monday. He wasn’t at practice Tuesday but is expected to be back at the pregame skate Wednesday morning and behind the bench Wednesday night after assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller ran the team for five days.

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“(Tuesday) was a goal-scoring practice, an offensive practice,” Daigneault said, alluding to the Whale scoring one power-play goal in 5-1 and 1-0 losses to the Charlotte Checkers on Thursday and Saturday nights. “The Checkers have a darn good team, and (goalie) Mike Murphy was their best player. But we can’t rely just on our power play. We need more offense five-on-five. We’ve gone through these funks before and have to be better.”

The 20-year-old Del Zotto, the Rangers’ No. 1 pick (12th overall) in 2008, had seven assists in 10 games in two previous assignments to the Whale as he tries to rediscover the game that made him an All-NHL rookie selection last season when he led Rangers defensemen and was fourth on the team overall in scoring with nine goals and 28 assists in 80 games. He has two goals and nine assists in 47 games with the Rangers this season.

The 26-year-old Mitchell had two goals and one assist in 23 games with the Maple Leafs and one goal and four assists in 10 games with the Toronto Marlies this season. The Oakville, Ontario, native has 20 goals and 35 assists in 159 career games with the Maple Leafs, who selected him in the fifth round in 2003. The 6-foot-1, 204-pound Mitchell also has 42 goals and 67 assists in 215 AHL games with the St. John’s Maple Leafs/Marlies and played in Toronto with All-Star right wing Jeremy Williams, the Whale’s leading scorer (25 goals, 19 assists).

The 26-year-old Couture, who was playing with the ECHL’s Victoria Salmon Kings, signed a PTO with the Whale on Tuesday. Originally signed to a PTO by the Wolf Pack on Oct. 31, 2009, Couture had 11 goals, nine assists and 104 penalty minutes in 67 games last season. He had eight goals, 11 assists and 76 PIM in 25 games this year with the Salmon Kings.

Lemieux, who shares the ECHL scoring lead with 28 goals and 45 assists in 56 games with the Florida Everblades, and linemate Imbeault, who is tied for the ECHL goal-scoring lead with 31 in 44 games, were scoreless in three games with the Whale. They returned to play one game with the Everblades on Sunday and then re-signed with the Whale.

The Whale is 2-1-1-1 against the Falcons (30-26-1-3) but won the last two meetings 5-2 and 5-1 in Springfield on Nov. 19 and Jan. 22. But the Whale had only the one goal against the Checkers and fell into a fourth-place tie with the Falcons, who had won three in a row and six of seven before a 5-4 loss at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Sunday. The Falcons have 19 games left, one fewer than the Whale and two fewer than the Worcester Sharks (27-21-3-8), who played the second-place Portland Pirates on Tuesday night after moving into the third and final guaranteed playoff spot in the Atlantic Division with a 5-2 victory over first-place Manchester on Sunday.

The Falcons’ balanced attack is led by right wing Tomas Kubalik (19, 21), who is second in the AHL in rookie scoring, and centers Trevor Smith (18, 21) and Ben Guite (12, 24). Left wing and former Wolf Pack captain Dane Byers had nine of his 12 goals and 16 of his 22 assists after being acquired from the New York Rangers for Chad Kolarik on Nov. 11, until he and defenseman Rostislav Klesla were traded from the Columbus Blue Jackets to the Phoenix Coyotes on Monday for forward Scottie Upshall and defenseman Sami Lepisto. Byers was reunited with former Rangers assistant general manager Don Maloney, the Coyotes’ GM.

But another former Wolf Pack captain, forward Greg Moore, will make his Falcons debut after being dealt from the Philadelphia Flyers/Adirondack Phantoms with center Michael Chaput on Monday for center Tom Sestito, who had been on the Falcons’ No. 1 line with Byers and center Kyle Wilson. Moore had seven goals and 13 assists in 57 games with the Phantoms after not scoring in his first 32 games after being signed as a free agent in the offseason. The Falcons have been helped by the Blue Jackets reassigning two veterans, Wilson (11, 9 in 18 games), a two-time Calder Cup champion with Hershey, and defenseman Mike Commodore (two assists in 10 games), a Stanley Cup winner with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006. Former Wolf Pack goalie David LeNeveu (16-13-2, 2.92 goals-against average, .898 save percentage, no shutouts) and Gustaf Wesslau (12-13-1, 3.07, .902, no shutouts) have split the goaltending.

In their first season as the Blue Jackets’ top affiliate, the Falcons are trying to reach the postseason for the first time since 2003 and end the longest playoff drought in AHL history. First-year coach Rob Riley’s team has reached as many as 30 victories for the first time since the 99-point season of 1997-98 and already has surpassed their win total for all but one of the previous seven seasons.

Kolarik has 16 goals and 13 assists in 34 games with the Whale but will miss his sixth game due to injury. The Whale also will continue to be without center Todd White, wing Chris McKelvie and defensemen Tomas Kundratek and Jyri Niemi, who are all out of action because of illness or injury.  And center Ryan Garlock was hurt in the loss to the Checkers on Saturday.

“We can’t look at who we don’t have,” Daigneault said. “We’re in the business of winning, and that’s what we have to do. This is a great opportunity for a lot of guys, and there will be a lot of ice time for different people. We might have lost some players, but we lost a lot earlier in the season because of injuries and call-ups. Regardless of who’s here, we still have to win.”

Whalers Sports and Entertainment is offering “Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl Appreciation Night” on Wednesday night. Ticket purchasers from the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl on Feb. 19 can present their ticket stub at the XL Center box office to purchase a $19 or $12 ticket and receive a second of equal or lesser value free. The Whale also will add a coupon for 15 percent off Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise. The coupon is redeemable at the Whale Pro Shop, which is located at the Hartford Store at 45 Pratt Street in Hartford and is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The coupon is good only for Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise.

“We would sincerely like to thank all of the fans who bought tickets for Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl as part of the 2011 Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011,” Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said. “Whale fans helped to set an AHL attendance record on February 19, braving the frigid elements in order to do so, and we are deeply grateful for all of their support of this historic event.”

Tickets for Wednesday night and all other Whale home games are available at the XL Center box office, through TicketMaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and online at www.ctwhale.com. Tickets start at $7 at the XL Center ticket office on game day. For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call 860-728-3366.

The official Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl video DVD is also available with highlights of the two Feb. 19 games and special behind-the-scenes features. Visit www.ctwhale.com to order. The video will be shipped when available.

After Wednesday night, the Whale is back on the road again with games at Springfield, Worcester and league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Saturday, Sunday and Tuesday to end a brutal stretch of 10 away games in 12 starts. They will finish their 14th regular season with 10 of their last 16 games at home, starting March 11 against the defending Calder Cup champion Hershey Bears.

KENNEDY GETS WISH

Kennedy requested a trade from the Rangers in December and finally got his wish as the Blueshirts acquired a veteran they hope provides leadership for a young defensive corps that consists of six Wolf Pack/Whale graduates and adds a spark to a sporadic power play.

Kennedy had 10 goals and 16 assists in 78 games with the Buffalo Sabres last season. But after winning an arbitration case in which he was to receive $1 million, the Sabres waived him and bought him out for $350,000, making him a free agent. It was an historic event, the first time a NHL team bought out a player’s contract reached in arbitration. Kennedy’s agent, Allain Roy, reportedly offered to accept $835,000 before arbitration, but the Sabres wanted to pay less, so they signed the center and bought him out.

On Aug. 30, the Rangers signed Kennedy to a one-year, $550,000 contract as a low-risk player to perhaps fill out the roster on Broadway. But he was outplayed in training camp by tryout wing Ruslan Fedotenko and rookie center Derek Stephan and sent to the Whale on Oct. 13. That added to an already bizarre odyssey for the 24-year-old, who finally got his trade wish 21/2 months later.

Kennedy was the Whale’s most gifted center, starting slowly but finishing with 12 goals and 30 assists in 53 games while being one of the team’s assistant captains. He was especially tough on his former team, the Pirates, for whom he was a member of the AHL All-Rookie Team in 2008-09. He had overtime winners in back-to-back games on Dec. 29 and 31 and then set up veteran defenseman Wade Redden for the first shorthanded overtime winner of his distinguished career, again in Portland on Feb. 21. In his Amerks’ debut Sunday, Kennedy had an assist in a 2-1 overtime victory over Syracuse.

Ironically, White, acquired by the Rangers on Aug. 2 for disgruntled forwards Donald Brashear and Patrick Rissmiller, beat out Kennedy for the final forward spot on the Rangers’ roster. But after getting only one goal and one assist in limited ice time in 18 games, White was placed on waivers and assigned to the Whale on Dec. 29. Since arriving in Hartford, he has sustained several injuries and has missed the last 12 games after getting three goals and two assists in nine games.

Coupled with Kris Newbury being on his fourth recall to the Rangers, the Whale was missing their top three centers Saturday night, plus Garlock got injured, not the ideal situation at the three-quarters pole in a frantic pursuit of a playoff berth. Meanwhile, five of the six teams they are battling against for a final spot – Worcester, Springfield, Charlotte, Binghamton and Norfolk – got at least one point that night. Those five, plus Providence, had added points the previous night, and Worcester, Norfolk and Binghamton added two more points Sunday.

The Whale got through the NHL trade deadline on Monday without any more losses, and added Mitchell, so here’s hoping they get Newbury back soon. And here’s hoping Tim Kennedy gets a legitimate shot at the NHL after being a solid player and citizen in Hartford. … The AHL’s Clear Day deadline, when all 30 teams must submit their 22-man lists, is Monday at 3 p.m. Only those players listed on a Clear Day roster are eligible to play in the remainder of the regular season and the playoffs unless emergency conditions arise as a result of recall, injury or suspension. Teams also can add signed junior players or players on amateur tryout contracts, but only after their respective junior or college seasons are complete. The Rangers did a paper transaction of sending Newbury, Zuccarello and defenseman Ryan McDonagh to the Whale so they would be eligible for the Whale’s Clear Day list.

O’SULLIVAN, KOZUN AND THIESSEN NAMED AHL’S BEST IN FEBUARY

Houston Aeros center Patrick O’Sullivan, Monarchs right wing Brandon Kozun and Wilkes-Barre/Scranton goalie Brad Thiessen were named Reebok/AHL player, rookie and goaltender of the month for February.

O’Sullivan had nine goals and nine assists to keep the Aeros in the thick of the wild playoff race in the West Division. He had a hand in 46 percent of Houston’s 39 goals during the month and ranks second in the AHL in scoring (12 goals, 13 assists in 19 games) since being assigned to Houston by the parent Minnesota Wild on Jan. 14. Other nominees included Wilson, Bridgeport Sound Tigers left wing Justin DiBenedetto and former Wolf Pack forwards Corey Locke (Binghamton) and Nigel Dawes (Hamilton).

Kozun had eight goals and seven assists in 13 games, recording a point in nine of his last 10 games, including a 5-3 win over Springfield on Feb. 13 in which he scored the game-tying and game-winning goals in the third period. He’s now third among AHL rookies in goals (19) and points (38) in 56 games. Other nominees included Sound Tigers center David Ullstrom.

Thiessen was 8-2-0 with a 1.28 goals-against average, .943 save percentage and three shutouts in 12 appearances. After missing six games, plus the AHL All-Star Classic, because of injury, Thiessen returned to the Penguins on Feb. 7 with a 21-save shutout of Albany and was named the Reebok/AHL Player of the Week after stopping 99 of 102 shots in five games from Feb. 7 to 13. He ended up stopping 199 of 211 shots in February and leads the AHL with 26 wins. Other nominees included Murphy and the Whale’s Dov Grumet-Morris.

AMERICANS GOALIE NAMED AHL PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Americans goaltender Tyler Plante was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Week after going 4-0-1 with a 1.71 GAA, .945 save percentage and one shutout in five appearances. He lost his first shutout of the season in a 1-0 shootout loss to the Manitoba Moose after making 32 saves through 65 minutes.

A second-round pick by the Florida Panthers in 2005, the 23-year-old Plante has started 12 consecutive games for the Amerks and has an 8-3-1 record. The fourth-year pro from Milwaukee, Wis., is 13-10-2, 2.88, .917, and his 13 victories are already an AHL high.

The Whale nominated Grumet-Morris, and other nominees included three former Wolf Pack players, Dawes, defenseman Ethan Graham (Charlotte) and wing Jeff Taffe (Rockford).

NHL – FINALLY!!!!! – FOR DARIEN NATIVE JESSIMAN

Darien native Hugh Jessiman, the Rangers’ No. 1 pick (12th overall) in 2003, is no longer the unwanted answer to a trivia question.

Jessiman became the 30th and final first-round selection nearly eight years ago to play in a NHL game when the Florida Panthers called up the right wing from the Amerks on Sunday and he played 12 shifts for 9:03 in a 2-1 loss to the New Jersey Devils.

“It finally hit me,” Jessiman told reporters after the game. “It was almost the perfect day and would have been had we won. It was just a great experience. It was pretty intense.”

Jessiman’s problems started with a severe ankle injury that wiped out most of his junior year at Dartmouth and stunted his development.  Jessiman was chosen before such current NHL standouts as Zach Parise, Mike Richards, Ryan Kesler, Thomas Vanek, Ryan Suter, Dion Phaneuf, Dustin Brown, Brent Seabrook and Anaheim Mighty Ducks linemates Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry.

Jessiman remained at Dartmouth for two more years before signing an entry-level contract in 2005 that included a $1 million signing bonus and playing that season with the Wolf Pack and ECHL’s Charlotte Checkers. He was subsequently traded by the Rangers, Predators and Blackhawks before finally getting a shot with the Panthers.

Good luck, Hugh, and congratulations for your perseverance.

TRADE OF FRANCIS, SAMUELSSON PICKED AS NO. 2 IN DEADLINE TRADE HISTORY

NHL.com’s Corry Masisak chose the Pittsburgh Penguins’ acquisition of future Hall of Famer Ron Francis, Ulf Samuelsson and Grant Jennings for John Cullen, Zarley Zalapski and Jeff Parker from the Whalers on March 4, 1991 as the second most influential trade deadline deal to help a team win the Stanley Cup in the last 30 years. The Penguins were in fifth place in the Eastern Conference when they acquired the trio, but they went 9-3-2 to finish the second and erase a 12-point deficit to win a division title. They had to rally past New Jersey in seven games in the opening round but eventually claimed the Stanley Cup for the first time and then repeated in 1992.

“I had been in contract talks with Hartford,” Francis, now an assistant coach with the Carolina Hurricanes, told Masisak. “They said they wanted to sign me and we’ll get the deal done after the trade deadline, and they said, ‘We’re not going to trade you.’ Right before the trade deadline, they called me and said I was traded to Pittsburgh.

“I had spent my entire career with Hartford (after being the fourth overall pick in 1981), and then I get the call at like 9 p.m. on a Sunday night and I was on a flight at 8 o’clock Monday morning to Pittsburgh. It was a little crazy.”

Not as crazy as Whalers fans went after Eddie Johnston’s trade of the team captain and two of its toughest defensemen. Francis went on to have seven goals and 10 assists in the postseason, and Samuelsson made a controversial hit on Boston Bruins star right wing Cam Neely that changed the momentum of that series and led to the future Hall of Famer’s early retirement because of leg problems.

“We were sort of right in the middle of things (in the Eastern Conference),” Francis said, “but I remember Ulf and I talking after we’d played two or three games, and we both thought this team had a lot of pieces in place to possibly be a Cup champion and if we could stay healthy and get all the breaks you have to have.”

Francis became the Penguins’ No. 2 center behind future Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux, making them one of the most potent pivot combos in NHL history. And Samuelsson and Jennings added toughness to a defense that included future Hall of Famers Paul Coffey and Larry Murphy.

Francis had a tougher go of it the following season but excelled in the playoffs with eight goals and 19 assists as the Penguins lost future Hall of Famer Joey Mullen to a knee injury and Lemieux’s hand was broken by a slash.

“Guys sucked it up and got the job done,” Francis said, “and eventually Mario was able to come back and we accomplished what we wanted to do. It was a special group of guys.”

JERSEY AUCTION TO BENEFIT MARCH OF DIMES

March 12 could be a hat trick of pleasure and benefit for Whale fans.

They not only can watch their favorites at the XL Center in a key Atlantic Division game against Worcester, but they also can win players’ jerseys and help a great cause at the same time.

During the game, fans can bid on jerseys on display throughout the evening. Winners will be announced at the end of the game and invited on the ice to receive their jersey, meet the players and have photos taken. Proceeds will benefit the March of Dimes, which works to help develop stronger, healthier babies. The auction has raised nearly $20,000 in the first two years.

“The annual jersey auction has been a great event for our March of Dimes family and the hockey community,” said Deb Poudrier, executive director of the March of Dimes Greater Hartford Division. “The Whale organization has been an incredible supporter of the March of Dimes, not only with the jersey auction but as a March for Babies sponsor and team as well. They truly are a great community partner.”

The March of Dimes is the leading non-profit organization for pregnancy and baby health. With chapters nationwide, the March of Dimes works to improve the health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant mortality. Visit www.marchofdimes.com or www.nacersano.org for the latest resources and information.

WHALE TO HONOR HOWE FAMILY ON MARCH 26

The Whale will host “Howe Family Night” at the XL Center on March 26 against the Sound Tigers. The No. 9 of “Mr. Hockey,” one of seven numbers in the XL Center rafters, will be lowered and then raised and re-retired as he and his sons, Mark and Marty, whom he played with for seven seasons in Houston and Hartford, look on. The matriarch of the family, Colleen Howe, who died in 2009, will be honored.

“That old (jersey) is a little worn,” Baldwin Jr. said. “I think we’ll have a big crowd. I love Ronnie Francis (the only Hall of Famer to play mostly with the Whalers), but Gordie is the one who put the team on the map. He needs to have the respect of the people coming out to see him, and it’ll be a great opportunity for it.”

Howe’s No. 9 is in the rafters with the Whalers’ No. 2 (Rick Ley), 5 (Ulf Samuelsson), 10 (Ron Francis), 11 (Dineen) and 19 (John McKenzie). Gernander’s No. 12 is the only number to be retired in the 14-year history of the AHL team.

The Howes played together for the first time with the Houston Aeros in 1973 before coming to Hartford and signing with the World Hockey Association’s New England Whalers in 1977. Howe ended his legendary 32-year career in the Whalers’ first NHL season (1979-80), when he had 15 goals and 26 assists and was named a NHL All-Star for the 23rd time while helping the Whalers make the playoffs at 52 years old.

Fans who did not attend the Whale’s game against Providence at Rentschler Field in East Hartford because of the weather can redeem their tickets for one to “Howe Family Night” or another game of their choice. If fans want to redeem a ticket, they should contact Baldwin at hlb@whalerssports.com.

Forward John Mitchell Acquired by Rangers, Assigned to Whale

New York, February 28, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that the club has acquired forward John Mitchell from the Toronto Maple Leafs in exchange for a seventh round draft pick in the 2012 NHL Entry Draft.  Mitchell will report to the Connecticut Whale (AHL).

CT WhaleMitchell, 26, has registered 20 goals and 35 assists for 55 points in 159 career regular season contests in three seasons with the Toronto Maple Leafs.  As a rookie in 2008-09, Mitchell established career-highs in games played (76), goals (12), assists (17), points (29), penalty minutes (33), power play goals (two), and shots on goal (98).  He made his NHL debut on October 9, 2008 at Detroit, and registered his first career point with an assist on October 13 vs. St. Louis.  On November 1, 2008, Mitchell recorded a career-high, three points (two goals, one assist), including his first career goal, and posted a career-high, plus-four rating vs. the Rangers.  The Oakville, Ontario native has registered two goals and one assist in 23 games with Toronto this season.  Mitchell has also recorded one goal and four assists in 10 AHL games with the Toronto Marlies this season.

The 6-1, 204-pounder has skated in 215 career AHL contests in five seasons with the St. Johns Maple Leafs/Toronto Marlies, registering 42 goals and 67 assists for 109 points, along with 126 penalty minutes.  Mitchell established AHL career-highs in games played (79), goals (20), assists (31), points (51), penalty minutes (56), and shots on goal (167) during the 2007-08 season.  He led the Marlies in goals, ranked second in points, and third in assists and shots.  He posted AHL career-highs with four assists and a plus-five rating on April 9, 2008 vs. Chicago.  Mitchell made his professional debut on April 3, 2005 at Rochester.  He has also registered eight goals and four assists in 21 career AHL playoff games with the Marlies.

Prior to turning professional, Mitchell skated in 258 career regular season games in four season with the Plymouth Whalers of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), registering 80 goals and 150 assists for 230 points, along with 158 penalty minutes and a plus-47 rating.  He led Plymouth in assists and points during the 2003-04 and 2004-05 seasons, and established career-highs in goals (28), assists (54) and points (82) in 2003-04.  Mitchell also recorded 10 goals and 17 assists for 27 points, along with 18 penalty minutes in 37 career OHL playoff contests.

Mitchell was originally selected as Toronto’s fifth round choice, 158th overall, in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft.

Whale Re-sign Francis Lemieux, Alexandre Imbeault to PTOs

HARTFORD, February 28, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that forwards Francis Lemieux and Alexandre Imbeault are returning to the Whale on Professional Tryout (PTO) agreements.  The two had been released from their original PTOs yesterday to return for one game to their ECHL club, the Florida Everblades.

CT WhaleLemieux, originally signed February 20 by the Whale, is scoreless with two penalty minutes and nine shots on goal in three games in a Whale uniform.  Imbeault, who inked his original PTO February 21, also has gone without a point in three Whale games and has four shots on goal.

Lemieux currently ranks second in the ECHL in points, just one point off the lead, with 28-45-73 in 56 games with the Everblades.  Imbeault, meanwhile, is tied for the ECHL lead in goals-scored, having posted numbers of 31-16-47 in 44 Everblade games.

The Whale’s next action is this Wednesday, March 2, as they return to the XL Center to host the Springfield Falcons in a 7:00 PM game.  There will be a “Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl Appreciation Night” promotion for that game, as Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl ticket purchasers who present their Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl ticket stub at the XL Center ticket office can purchase one $19 or $12 ticket for the March 2 game, and receive a second of equal or lesser value free.  On top of that, the Whale will add a coupon for 15% off all Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise.  The coupon is redeemable at the Whale Pro Shop, which is located in the Hartford Store at 45 Pratt St. in downtown Hartford and is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 AM to 4:30 PM.  The coupon is good only for Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise.

Tickets for all 2010-11 Whale home games are available now at the XL Center box office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day.

For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call (860) 728-3366.

Whale Release Francis Lemieux, Alexandre Imbeault from PTOs

HARTFORD, February 27, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the team has released forwards Francis Lemieux and Alexandre Imbeault from their Professional Tryout (PTO) agreements.  Lemieux and Imbeault will re-join the Florida Everblades of the ECHL.

CT WhaleLemieux, signed February 20 by the Whale, was scoreless with two penalty minutes and nine shots on goal in three games in a Whale uniform.  Imbeault, who inked his PTO February 21, also went without a point in three Whale games and had four shots on goal.

Prior to joining the Whale, Lemieux was leading the ECHL in points with 28-44-72 in 55 games with the Everblades, and Imbeault was the top goal-scorer in the league, with 31-15-46 in 43 Everblade games.

The Whale’s next action is this Wednesday, March 2, as they return to the XL Center to host the Springfield Falcons in a 7:00 PM game.  There will be a “Whale Bowl Appreciation Night” promotion for that game, as Whale Bowl ticket purchasers who present their Whale Bowl ticket stub at the XL Center ticket office can purchase one $19 or $12 ticket for the March 2 game, and receive a second of equal or lesser value free.  On top of that, the Whale will add a coupon for 15% off all Whale Bowl merchandise.  The coupon is redeemable at the Whale Pro Shop, which is located in the Hartford Store at 45 Pratt St. in downtown Hartford and is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 AM to 4:30 PM.  The coupon is good only for Whale Bowl merchandise.

Tickets for all 2010-11 Whale home games are available now at the XL Center box office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day.

For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call (860) 728-3366.

Rangers Return Michael Del Zotto to Whale

HARTFORD, February 26, 2011:  New York Rangers president and general manager Glen Sather announced today that the Rangers have returned defenseman Michael Del Zotto to the AHL’s Connecticut Whale.

CT WhaleIn 47 games with the Rangers this season, Del Zotto has scored two goals and added nine assists for 11 points, while serving 20 minutes in penalties.  In ten AHL games earlier in the year with the Whale, the second-year pro chipped in seven assists, and was Even with eight penalty minutes.

The Whale’s next action is this Wednesday, March 2, as they return to the XL Center to host the Springfield Falcons in a 7:00 PM game.  There will be a “Whale Bowl Appreciation Night” promotion for that game, as Whale Bowl ticket purchasers who present their Whale Bowl ticket stub at the XL Center ticket office can purchase one $19 or $12 ticket for the March 2 game, and receive a second of equal or lesser value free.  On top of that, the Whale will add a coupon for 15% off all Whale Bowl merchandise.  The coupon is redeemable at the Whale Pro Shop, which is located in the Hartford Store at 45 Pratt St. in downtown Hartford and is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 AM to 4:30 PM.  The coupon is good only for Whale Bowl merchandise.

Tickets for all 2010-11 Whale home games are available now at the XL Center box office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day.

For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call (860) 728-3366.

Charlotte Checkers 1, Connecticut Whale 0

Charlotte, NC, February 26, 2011 – Mike Murphy made 28 saves, and Matthew Pistilli’s second-period power-play goal was the only score of the game, as the Charlotte Checkers eked out a 1-0 win over the Connecticut Whale Saturday night at the Time Warner Cable Arena.

CT WhaleThe result gave the Checkers a sweep of a pair of home games against the Whale, whom Charlotte had pounded by a 5-1 score on Thursday night.  With the loss, the Whale (28-24-2-6, 64 pts.) dropped into a third-place tie in the Atlantic Division with Springfield, which defeated Portland at home by a score of 4-1.  It was the Whale’s sixth shutout loss in sixty games on the season and their second 1-0 loss.

The Whale were without Head Coach Ken Gernander for a second straight game.  Gernander remained in a Charlotte hospital as a precautionary measure, after experiencing pain and swelling in his lower extremities the morning of the Whale’s Thursday loss.  Connecticut also lost Tim Kennedy, who was tied for second on the team in points (12-30-42 in 53 games), before the game, as he was traded by the parent New York Rangers earlier in the day to the Florida Panthers, along with a third-round draft pick, in exchange for veteran defenseman Bryan McCabe.

Kennedy’s absence forced the Whale to play with only seventeen skaters, one fewer than the normal roster limit of 18, but Connecticut dominated much of the first period, outshooting Charlotte 14-2.

The Whale got a bad break, though, with only 23 seconds left in the first, when referee Jeff Smith called Devin DiDiomete for a major penalty for checking to the head, after a hit by DiDiomete on Checker defenseman Zack FitzGerald.  The head-hit infraction also carried with it a game misconduct, so the Whale not only had to kill a major power play, but also lost DiDiomete for the game, reducing their lineup to 16 skaters.

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The Whale came close to killing the penalty, but with 27 seconds still left in it, Pistilli cashed in a second rebound to put Charlotte on top.  Whale goaltender Dov Grumet-Morris (21 saves) stopped Zac Dalpe’s one-timer from the center point, and former Wolf Pack defenseman Ethan Graham’s rebound try went off the post to Grumet-Morris’ right, but Pistilli, at the left side of the goalmouth, was perfectly positioned to bury the third try with Grumet-Morris down.

That was all the offense Murphy needed, as he improved his season record to 19-9-3 and his record in his last nine decisions to 8-0-1.

The Checkers are in their first year as an AHL franchise, after 17 seasons of play in Charlotte as an ECHL team.  For 16 of those years, the Checkers were the Rangers’ ECHL affiliate, developing players for the then-Hartford Wolf Pack and before that the Binghamton Rangers.

The Whale return to action this Wednesday, March 2 in their first XL Center home game in three-and-a-half weeks, hosting the Springfield Falcons in a 7:00 PM game.  There will be a “Whale Bowl Appreciation Night” promotion for that game, as Whale Bowl ticket purchasers who present their Whale Bowl ticket stub at the XL Center ticket office can purchase one $19 or $12 ticket for the March 2 game, and receive a second of equal or lesser value free.  On top of that, the Whale will add a coupon for 15% off all Whale Bowl merchandise.  The coupon is redeemable at the Whale Pro Shop, which is located in the Hartford Store at 45 Pratt St. in downtown Hartford and is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 AM to 4:30 PM.  The coupon is good only for Whale Bowl merchandise.

Tickets for all 2010-11 Whale home games are available now at the XL Center box office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day.

Connecticut Whale 0 at Charlotte Checkers 1
Saturday, February 26, 2011 – Time Warner Cable Arena

Connecticut 0 0 0 – 0
Charlotte 0 1 0 – 1

1st Period- No Scoring.Penalties-DiDiomete Ct (fighting), 1:00; Blanchard Cha (fighting), 1:00; Bickel Ct (roughing, fighting), 5:11; FitzGerald Cha (fighting), 5:11; DiDiomete Ct (fighting, major – checking to the head, game misconduct – checking to the head, game misconduct – third major), 19:37; Bellemore Cha (roughing, fighting), 19:37.

2nd Period-1, Charlotte, Pistilli 5 (Graham, Dalpe), 4:10 (PP). Penalties-Dupont Ct (fighting), 7:29; Herauf Cha (fighting), 7:29; Redden Ct (hooking), 8:01; Boychuk Cha (interference), 8:35; Boychuk Cha (slashing), 15:10; Weise Ct (roughing), 16:04; Dalpe Cha (roughing), 16:04.

3rd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Redden Ct (high-sticking), 7:54.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 14-8-6-28. Charlotte 2-16-4-22.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 2; Charlotte 1 / 5.
Goalies-Connecticut, Grumet-Morris 4-3-1 (22 shots-21 saves). Charlotte, Murphy 19-9-3 (28 shots-28 saves).
A-12,933
Referees-Jeff Smith (49).
Linesmen-Mike Sheehan (90), Alex Stagnone (7).

Tim Kennedy Traded by Rangers in Deal to Acquire Bryan McCabe

New York, February 26, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that the club has acquired defenseman Bryan McCabe from the Florida Panthers in exchange for forward Tim Kennedy and a third round draft pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft.

CT Whale“Bryan McCabe adds an established veteran presence to our young defensive corps,” stated Sather.  “He can help provide offense with his strong shot on the power play, and his versatility allows him to play either the left or right side effectively.  Bryan also brings outstanding leadership qualities, having served as team captain for Florida for the past two seasons.”

McCabe, 35, has eclipsed the 40-point plateau five times, including three seasons of 50 or more points, and was named to the NHL Second All-Star Team in 2004.  The 15-year NHL veteran skated in his 1,000th career game on November 6, 2009 vs. Washington, and was named Florida’s captain on September 23, 2009.

McCabe has registered five goals and 17 assists for 22 points, along with 28 penalty minutes in 48 games with Florida this season.  He ranked third on the Panthers in assists, and ranked second among all Florida defensemen in points and tied for second in goals.  He was also tied for third on the team with five power play assists, and fourth with seven power play points and a plus-three rating.  McCabe tied a career-high and established a Panthers’ franchise record for defensemen with four assists on October 16 vs. Tampa Bay.  He also posted a season-high, five-game scoring streak from December 15 vs. Carolina to December 23 at Buffalo, registering six points (three goals, three assists) over the span.

The 6-2, 223-pounder enjoyed his most productive season in 2005-06 with the Toronto Maple Leafs, establishing career-highs with 19 goals, 49 assists and 68 points in 73 games.  He also set career marks with 13 power play goals, 32 power play assists, 45 power play points, and six game-winning goals.  McCabe ranked third among NHL defensemen in points and goals, and sixth in assists.  He was named the NHL’s Offensive Player of the Week for the period ending November 19, 2005, registering seven points (three goals, four assists) in three games.

The St. Catharines, Ontario native has skated in 1,116 career regular season games with the New York Islanders, Vancouver Canucks, Chicago Blackhawks, Toronto Maple Leafs, and Florida Panthers, registering 143 goals and 379 assists for 522 points, along with 1,726 penalty minutes and a plus-35 rating.  As a rookie with the Islanders in 1995-96, McCabe registered seven goals and 16 assists for 23 points, along with 156 penalty minutes in 82 games.  He made his NHL debut on October 7, 1995 at Boston, and recorded his first NHL point with a goal on October 31, 1995 at Florida.  McCabe has also skated in 51 career playoff contests with Toronto, registering 10 goals and 16 assists for 26 points, along with 70 penalty minutes and a plus-six rating.

Internationally, McCabe has won four gold medals as a member of Team Canada, including the 1997 World Championship in Finland.  McCabe was also selected to represent Canada at the 2006 Winter Olympic Games in Torino, Italy, registering 18 penalty minutes in six tournament contests.

McCabe was originally selected as the New York Islanders’ second round choice, 40th overall, in the 1993 NHL Entry Draft.

Kennedy, 24, has registered 12 goals and 30 assists for 42 points, along with 44 penalty minutes in 53 games with the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL) this season.  He signed with the Rangers as a free agent on August 30, 2010

Charlotte Checkers 5, Connecticut Whale 1

Charlotte, NC, February 24, 2011 – The Connecticut Whale’s streak of five straight games with at least a standings point came to an end with a thud Thursday night, in a 5-1 loss to the Charlotte Checkers in the Whale’s first-ever visit to Time Warner Cable Arena.

CT WhaleWhale assistant coaches J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller ran the Connecticut bench for the game, as Whale head coach Ken Gernander missed the contest.  Gernander was hospitalized overnight as a precautionary measure, after experiencing pain and swelling in his lower extremities earlier in the day.

Chris Terry scored a pair of goals for Charlotte in the win, Zac Dalpe had a goal and two assists and Drayson Bowman added a goal and an assist.

Charlotte jumped on top at 8:57 of the first period, on the fourth goal of the season for Matthew Pistilli.  Dalpe started a three on two break out of the Charlotte end, and Bowman found Pistilli unguarded between the circles.  Pistilli’s hard shot beat Whale starting goaltender Chad Johnson to the stick side.

The Checkers made it 2-0 at 14:13, just 18 seconds after the Whale had finished killing a penalty.  Kelsey Tessier blocked Bowman’s shot on the left-wing side, but Bowman was able to re-gather puck and work all the way around to the top of the right-wing circle, where he unloaded a drive that went through a screen and past Johnson.

Charlotte then broke the game open with three second-period goals, starting with a tally by Dalpe only 53 seconds in, again shortly after the Whale had killed a penalty.

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With Blake Parlett just out of the box after serving a slashing minor, Dalpe fanned on a shot from the right-wing side but got the puck right back, and was able to slip it between Johnson’s left skate and the post.

Terry then got the next two goals, his 24th and 25th of the season.

On a Charlotte power play at 11:47, Terry had Dalpe’s pass get by him in the right circle but was able to pick it up off the boards.  He then snapped a shot past Johnson from the faceoff dot.

Terry made the margin 5-0 at 15:13.  A Wade Redden attempted clearing pass was broken up near the Whale blueline, and Terry was able to stickhandle away from Redden and move from his backhand to his forehand, ultimately beating Johnson from the bottom of the right circle.  At the next stoppage, Johnson, who allowed five goals on 16 shots, was replaced by Dov Grumet-Morris, who would shut the door on the Checkers thereafter, stopping all 14 shots he faced.

The game became chippy in the third period, with the two teams combining for 46 penalty minutes, and the Whale were finally able to get on the scoreboard on a power play at 13:54.  The goal was credited to Evgeny Grachev, who jammed the puck into the goalmouth from the right-wing side after Redden threw it at the net, but replays seemed to indicate that Brodie Dupont, who had been knocked down in the crease, directed the puck in.  The goal ruined the shutout bid of Charlotte goaltender Mike Murphy, who finished with 26 saves.

The loss snapped a four-game road winning streak for the Whale, who fell to 28-23-2-6.  Fourth-place Worcester was idle, so the third-place Whale’s lead on the Sharks in the Atlantic Division standings remained at three points.

The Whale and Checkers battle again at Time Warner Cable Arena on Saturday night, with faceoff at 7:00 PM.

The Checkers are in their first year as an AHL franchise, after 17 seasons of play in Charlotte as an ECHL team.  For 16 of those years, the Checkers were the Rangers’ ECHL affiliate, with players going back and forth between Charlotte and Hartford, and before that, the Binghamton Rangers.

Connecticut Whale 1 at Charlotte Checkers 5
Thursday, February 24, 2011 – Time Warner Cable Arena

Connecticut 0 0 1 – 1
Charlotte 2 3 0 – 5

1st Period-1, Charlotte, Pistilli 4 (Bowman, Dalpe), 8:57. 2, Charlotte, Bowman 11 (Micflikier, Graham), 14:13. Penalties-Bickel Ct (interference), 11:55; Parlett Ct (slashing), 18:45.

2nd Period-3, Charlotte, Dalpe 18 (Rodney, Murphy), 0:53. 4, Charlotte, Terry 24 (Dalpe, Rodney), 11:47 (PP). 5, Charlotte, Terry 25 (Sutter), 15:13. Penalties-Bickel Ct (roughing), 1:47; Eizenman Ct (hooking), 11:25.

3rd Period-6, Connecticut, Grachev 15 (Dupont, Redden), 13:54 (PP). Penalties-McKenzie Cha (tripping), 2:51; Williams Ct (holding, unsportsmanlike conduct), 7:43; Blanchard Cha (roughing), 7:43; Nightingale Ct (roughing), 8:27; Weise Ct (fighting), 8:27; Boychuk Cha (roughing, roughing), 8:27; Terry Cha (fighting), 8:27; Bickel Ct (roughing), 9:35; Matsumoto Cha (slashing), 9:35; DiDiomete Ct (fighting), 12:10; Blanchard Cha (fighting), 12:10; Bellemore Cha (slashing), 12:22; Weise Ct (roughing), 14:50; Micflikier Cha (boarding), 14:50; FitzGerald Cha (slashing), 19:42.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 9-8-10-27. Charlotte 10-6-14-30.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 1 / 4; Charlotte 1 / 5.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 16-18-3 (16 shots-11 saves); Grumet-Morris 4-2-1 (14 shots-14 saves). Charlotte, Murphy 17-9-3 (27 shots-26 saves).
A-4,511
Referees-Jeff Smith (49), Ghislain Hebert (49).
Linesmen-Paul Carnathan (93), Terry Wicklum (58).

Last-minute Additions Help Whale to Big Road Win

By Bruce Berlet

Oh, for the love of hockey.

CT WhaleYes, it’ll always be known as Memorable Monday for Alexandre Imbeault.

It started with a 4 a.m. wakeup call in Fort Myers, Fla., and ended with a much-deserved snooze on the Connecticut Whale team bus after a 2-1 victory on veteran defenseman Wade Redden’s first shorthanded overtime winner in Portland, Maine.

What transpired in between is what helps make hockey the great game it is and demonstrates just what players will do to try to enhance their careers.

Only hours after Florida Everblades linemate Francis Lemieux was called by the Whale, Imbeault, the ECHL’s leading goal-scorer, learned he would be rejoining the ECHL’s leading point-scorer.

But Lemieux and the Whale were in snowy Maine, while Imbeault was still in 80-degree temperatures in Florida.

So after the early wakeup call, Imbeault boarded a 6 a.m. flight from Fort Myers to New York that took off late and landed at 9:05, which was 10 minutes AFTER his scheduled takeoff from New York to Portland.

“I had to run from the first flight to other flight so I wouldn’t miss it,” a smiling Imbeault said after his first practice with the Whale on Wednesday morning before they departed for two games in Charlotte, N.C. “Everybody was already sitting on the plane, but they told me I could go because they hadn’t closed the (door) yet.”

That’s because the second flight was delayed while snow was removed from the plane’s wings, plus Imbeault was one of four passengers on the first flight with a connection to Portland. So the plane in New York was held 20 minutes and departed at 9:50 a.m., landing in Portland at 11:05, less than two hours before the Whale was to face off against the Pirates.

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Imbeault had to wait for his bags at the Portland airport, where he was picked up and taken to Cumberland County Civic Center, arriving at 11:45 a.m., 75 minutes before faceoff. Imbeault missed the pre-game team meeting and had a pre-game “meal” of a Red Bull and an energy bar. He started the pre-game warm-up about 35 minutes later with the somewhat reassuring knowledge that he would be on a line with Lemieux and Whale tough guy Justin Soryal.

Neither Imbeault nor Lemieux registered a point, but Whale coach Ken Gernander was happy with the two newcomers and the rest of the team, especially when Redden scored off a 2-on-1 with former Pirates standout center Tim Kennedy. It was a fitting ending to a game which the Whale (28-22-2-6) had more shots in the first period (18) than the Pirates had in the game (16).

“We won a big road game in a tough building and gave up only 16 shots, so I thought everybody played pretty good,” Gernander said. “We had a great start, then they got a late goal (by league goal-scoring leader Mark Mancari) that was tough, but the guys rebounded in overtime. It was a good win, but they all are. Portland had some injuries, so they’ll get stronger once they get some guys back, but they had a good lineup and are (in second place) in our division, right there with Manchester. So to go in there and get a win was good.”

Gernander used Imbeault and Lemieux together because they comprised two-thirds of the Everblades’ top line. At the time of their promotions, Imbeault had an ECHL-high 31 goals (plus 15 assists in 43 games), and Lemieux was No. 1 in points with 72 (24 goals and 48 assists in 55 games). They skated with Soryal the first half of the game Monday, and Devin DiDiomete and Oren Eizenman rotated in the rest of the game.

“They weren’t a minus,” Gernander said of Lemieux and Imbeault. “Frank had a couple of good chances, so it was good. They were good together, so we’ll leave them together.”

The Whale needed Lemieux and Imbeault because they were without centers Kris Newbury (recall to New York Rangers), Todd White (concussion) and Ryan Garlock (ankle) and wings Chad Kolarik (hamstring) and Chris McKelvie (foot surgery). Garlock will return Thursday night, but Jyri Niemi, who had been moved from defense to left wing to help the depleted forward corps, will be out 4-to-6 weeks with a separated shoulder sustained when hit by Tim Conboy.

Defenseman Blake Parlett, recalled from Greenville of the ECHL last Thursday, said Lemieux and Imbeault are solid additions to the Whale. Parlett, who led ECHL defensemen in points (31) when he was called up, sees plenty of Lemieux and Imbeault as Greenville and Florida play 15 games in a season.

“They’re good players together and were on the same power play together,” Parlett said. “They’re good passers and so good at finding that open guy.”

It’s also good for the Whale that two newcomers arriving in the midst of a playoff drive on the road know each other so well. The Everblades (30-24-0-3) are in third place in the South Division of the Eastern Conference, five points behind the first-place Road Warriors (33-20-1-1), who have a shared affiliation with the Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers.

“It helps a lot to have someone around that you know, and (Lemieux) played five years in the AHL so he knows the game and a lot of guys,” Imbeault said. “For me to come here when he’s already here makes it easier to get adjusted. You feel more comfortable when you’ve got someone you know, especially your linemate. We’ve got a little chemistry together, so I think it helps in the game situations. Plus, we know the guys from Greenville because they’re in our division.”

Parlett, McKelvie and defenseman Lee Baldwin played in Greenville this season, and DiDiomete spent some of last season with the ECHL’s Charlotte Checkers.

“It’s good to play with someone you know already, that you’re used to playing with all season,” Lemieux said. “We were rooming together in Florida, too, so we’re used to being together and makes it a lot easier for both of us to get in the lineup. It’s not a big adjustment.”

Imbeault, 24, played most of last season with the ECHL’s Alaska Aces and then signed with Slavia Praha HC of the Czech Extraleague. The 6-foot, 180-pound native of Montreal previously played 18 AHL games with Providence and Peoria, getting five goals and four assists. He has 95 goals and 108 assists in 207 career ECHL games with Johnstown, Alaska and Florida after playing five seasons in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League with three teams.

“I’ve been all over the place,” Imbeault said. “I signed in the Czech Republic at the end of last season but played only four games and only one in the playoffs because the coach didn’t think I was ready to play in the defensive system. They pay pretty well, but it’s not a league I’d recommend for imports just because of the language. The coach didn’t speak any English. There are some players who spoke English, but not many, so it’s a tough place to go for an import.

“I understood the system, but the coach just thought I wasn’t comfortable. I’m a lot more comfortable here. It’s pretty similar to Florida, and the style of hockey is the same. Over there, there’s still hooking and interference, and I thought when you go to Europe it’s a more wide-open league with a bigger rink. But most of the rinks are small, so it was completely the opposite of what I thought. You can play one day on a rink that’s like a football field, and the next day you go in and it’s like a little barn because there are a lot of little towns.”

After returning home, Imbeault didn’t want to return to Alaska because of the distance. He said he had always heard good things about Florida.

“It’s a nice place to play, and they always have good teams, so I thought it would be a good fit for me,” he said.

Imbeault requested a trade and then considered going to Europe but decided he wanted to remain in North America. He was traded to Florida on Sept. 15 and has been thrust into a couple of playoff races, one of which now includes a team that the Whale is battling in the AHL.

“It’s tense, so every game is important,” he said. “It’s the same thing down in Florida.”

So what about Memorable Monday?

“It was fun,” Imbeault said, smiling again. “I think the game went pretty well, and I think our line played pretty well. So I think we’ll just going to be even better as we get more confident. It was an exciting day, and I can say I was gassed when we came back on the bus. I could barely keep my eyes open watching the movie.”

Things weren’t as hectic for Lemieux, who arrived in Portland from Tampa on Monday at 5:30 p.m., about the time the Whale was busing in from Hartford. But he also didn’t have a practice or pre-game skate with the Whale because the game against the Pirates started at 1 p.m.

The 5-10, 180-pound Lemieux got his second AHL call-up this season two days before his 27th birthday. Originally signed by the Hamilton Bulldogs for the 2005-06 season after a strong showing in Montreal Canadiens training camp as a tryout player, Lemieux has now played in 252 AHL games, including two in December with the Manitoba Moose. He spent last season with the Grand Rapids Griffins, where his teammates included Newbury and Whale All-Star right wing Jeremy Williams.

This season, Lemieux’s 28 goals are tied for third and his 44 assists rank second in the ECHL, and most have come while on the ice with Imbeault. Lemieux also considered going to Europe this season after it was difficult finding a contract in North America, so he decided to sign in the ECHL, try to get good statistics and get a chance to play in the AHL.

“I didn’t know exactly what was going to happen,” Lemieux said, “so I decided to go to Florida, get some ice time, try to get my confidence back and hope for call-ups. It has worked out pretty well, and this was an early (birthday) present.”

Lemieux and the rest of the Whale players had Tuesday off, so he celebrated by going to see the movie “Unknown.” It’s about a man going to a conference in Berlin, Germany, who gets into a car accident, loses his memory and is trying to get his life back.

It’s kind of like anyone trying to find their way, especially hockey players trying to find their way to the NHL.

REDDEN HAPPY WITH FIRST SHORTHANDED OT WINNER

Redden has played hockey for 28 of his 34 years but had never done what he did Monday, getting a shorthanded winner in overtime. Redden scored at 1:23 off a 2-on-1 with Kennedy, who again haunted his former team. Kennedy, a member of the AHL All-Rookie Team in 2008-09 while with the Pirates, scored overtime winners in Portland in back-to-back games on Dec. 29 and 31.

“It was a good feeling,” Redden said after practice. “They were coming into the zone, and we kind of stayed up and they made a pass across that (Marc-Andre Gragnani) bobbled and Tim jumped him. (Gragnani) made a dive for it as a last-ditch effort, missed it, so he was out of the play and it was just 2-on-1 all the way down the ice. And Mancari, a forward, was back. I was just standing in the slot waiting, and it was an open netter.

“It was disappointing to give up the goal so late (3:28 left in regulation) after having control and several power plays that could have put the game away. But we found a way to get the two points, so that’s the biggest thing.”

So did anyone give Redden the puck for his first overtime shorthanded winner?

“No, I didn’t get the puck,” he said with a smile. “I’ll have to remember next time.”

WHALE PLAY FIVE OF NEXT SIX ON THE ROAD

The victory Monday was the Whale’s fourth in a row on the road since a 9-2 loss at Toronto on Feb. 9 that tied franchise records for most goals allowed and largest margin of defeat. It also extended their points streak to 4-0-0-1 and gave them a 4-3 series lead on the Pirates after the sixth one-goal game between the teams this season.

The Whale plays Thursday and Saturday nights against their former ECHL affiliate, which moved to the AHL this season. The Whale (then the Hartford Wolf Pack) beat the Checkers 4-2 in the season opener Oct. 9 at the XL Center. The Checkers (32-20-2-5), the new affiliate of the Carolina Hurricanes, are 15-11-1-4 at home, and the Whale is 16-9-0-4 on the road, where they have won six of seven.

The Checkers suffered a 4-3 shootout loss at Syracuse on Tuesday night but are on a 6-2-1-1 run, which has moved them into third place in the East Division. Their leading scorer, All-Star right wing Jerome Samson (26, 28), is on recall to the Hurricanes. The top remaining scorers are left wings Chris Terry (23, 23) and Jacob Micflikier (22, 24), center Zach Boychuk (15, 30) and left wing Oskar Osala (13, 28). Center Zac Dalpe leads the rookie scoring race (17, 21) despite playing in only 40 games.

The Checkers have used only two goalies, rookie Mike Murphy (17-9-2, 2.80, .911, one shutout) and Justin Pogge (15-13-2, 3.13, .906, no shutouts). Murphy had won six straight games before Tuesday night and is 15-2-1 in his last 18 starts, including a 20-save shutout Sunday in a 5-0 victory over the defending Calder Cup champion Hershey Bears. Former Wolf Pack defenseman and 2011 All-Star Bryan Rodney had one goal and two assists in the romp.

The Whale finally returns to the XL Center next Wednesday to face Springfield, then are at Springfield, Worcester and Wilkes-Barre/Scranton to end a brutal stretch of 10 road games in 12 starts. They will finish the season with 10 of their last 16 games at home, starting March 11 against Hershey.

The home game against Springfield will be “Harvest-Properties.com Whale Appreciation Night.” Ticket purchasers from the Whale Bowl at Rentschler Field in East Hartford on a frigid Saturday night can present their ticket stub at the XL Center box office to purchase a $19 or $12 ticket and receive a second of equal or lesser value free. The Whale also will add a coupon for 15 percent off Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise that night.

“We would sincerely like to thank all of the fans who bought tickets for Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl as part of the 2011 Harvest-Properties.com Hockey Fest,” Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said. “Whale fans helped to set a new AHL attendance record on February 19, braving the frigid elements in order to do so, and we are deeply grateful for all of their support of this historic event.”

The Whale Bowl drew 21,673 as the Whale lost a 5-4 shootout to the Providence Bruins after the Hartford Whalers legends and Boston Bruins legends played to a 4-4 tie.

Tickets for the remaining Whale home games are available at the XL Center box office, through TicketMaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and online at www.ctwhale.com. Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day. For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call 860-728-3366.

ONE IF BY LAND …

While the Whale coaches, players and most of the staff flew to Charlotte on Wednesday afternoon, assistant equipment manager Chris Gray and DAATCO bus driver Johnny Davis, who has chauffeured the Wolf Pack/Whale since their inception in 1997, drove the equipment to North Carolina.

“It’s 741 miles from Cromwell to Charlotte and should take 13 hours, plus a stop or two,” Davis said.

After practice ended at 11:15 a.m., players quickly packed their equipment bags so Gray and other members of the Whale off-ice staff could pack the equipment van. Gray and Davis hoped to leave around noon, meaning they should arrive in Charlotte around 1:30 a.m. Thursday.

TALBOT BACK AS A WINNER

Rookie goalie Cam Talbot, on a conditioning loan from the Whale to Greenville, made 25 saves in a 7-1 victory over Gwinnett on Tuesday night. It was the first ECHL start for Talbot, who had missed 13 Whale games with a high ankle sprain sustained in a 6-3 victory over Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Jan. 16. Talbot allowed only a goal by Pat Galivan at 12:54 of the first period on a backhander that deflected off a body in front.

Brandon Wong, the former Quinnipiac University standout who began the season with the Whale, started a four-goal barrage in the second period with his 18th goal. After Talbot stopped Akim Aliu’s breakaway, Marc Olivier-Vallerand put the Road Warriors ahead to stay with his 19th goal, breaking a tie with Wong for the team lead. Vallerand added his 20th goal in the third period, and Wong had three assists for the Road Warriors’ second four-point effort this season. … The NHL trade deadline is Monday, and then the AHL’s Clear Day deadline, when all 30 teams must submit their 22-man lists, is March 7 at 3 p.m. Only those players listed on a Clear Day roster are eligible to play in the remainder of the regular season and the Calder Cup playoffs unless emergency conditions arise as a result of recall, injury or suspension. Teams also can add signed junior players or players on amateur tryout contracts, but only after their respective junior or college seasons are complete.

WHALE TO HONOR HOWE FAMILY ON MARCH 26

The Whale will host “Howe Family Night” at the XL Center on March 26 against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers. The No. 9 of “Mr. Hockey,” one of seven numbers in the XL Center rafters, will be lowered and then raised and re-retired as he and his sons, Mark and Marty, whom he played with for seven seasons in Houston and Hartford, look on. The matriarch of the family, Colleen Howe, who died in 2009, will be honored.

“That old (jersey) is a little worn,” Baldwin Jr. said. “I think we’ll have a big crowd.  I love Ronnie Francis (the only Hall of Famer to play mostly with the Whalers), but Gordie is the one who put the team on the map. He needs to have the respect of the people coming out to see him, and it’ll be a great opportunity for it.”

Howe’s No. 9 is in the rafters with the Whalers’ No. 2 (Rick Ley), 5 (Ulf Samuelsson), 10 (Ron Francis), 11 (Dineen) and 19 (John McKenzie). Gernander’s No. 12 is the only number to be retired in the 14-year history of the AHL team.

The Howes played together for the first time with the Houston Aeros in 1973 before coming to Hartford and signing with the World Hockey Association’s New England Whalers in 1977. Howe ended his legendary 32-year career in the Hartford Whalers’ first NHL season (1979-80), when he had 15 goals and 26 assists and was named a NHL All-Star for the 23rd time while helping the Whalers make the playoffs at 52 years old.

Fans who did not attend the Whale’s game against Providence at Rentschler Field in East Hartford on Saturday night because of the weather can redeem their tickets for one to “Howe Family Night” or another game of their choice. If fans want to redeem a ticket, they should contact Baldwin at hlb@whalerssports.com.