Category Archives: CT Whale

Whale Bowl Appreciation Night Promotion

HARTFORD, February 23, 2011: Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. announced today a “Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl Appreciation Night” promotion for the Connecticut Whale’s next home game at the XL Center, which is next Wednesday, March 2 against the Springfield Falcons.

CT WhaleWhale 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 Whale game, and receive a second of equal or lesser value free. On top of that, the Whale will add a coupon for 15% off Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl merchandise for the night of March 2.

“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 held at Rentschler Field,” 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 Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl drew an all-time AHL high of 21,673 to Rentschler Field this past Saturday, as the Whale lost a 5-4 shootout thriller to the Providence Bruins, following a celebration of some of the great names in Connecticut hockey history, in a Whalers legends vs. Boston Bruins legends game.

Tickets for the March 2 game, and 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.

The Whale’s next action is a two-game set in Charlotte, NC vs. the Charlotte Checkers, this Thursday, February 24 and Saturday, February 26. Both games face off at 7:00 PM (WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com).

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

Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 a Memorable Event

By Bruce Berlet

The untimely Arctic Invasion on Saturday aside, the historic Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 proved quite the bonanza for fans, hockey and Whalers Sports and Entertainment.

Whale BowlThe 12-day, 45-game extravaganza at Rentschler Field in East Hartford survived all forms of Mother Nature, from record snowfall in January to 65-degree temperatures on Friday giving way to the sub-zero wind chill for the event’s featured attraction, the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl, pitting the Hartford Whalers legends against the Boston Bruins legends followed by the AHL’s second outdoor game in its 75-year history between the Connecticut Whale and Providence Bruins.

To show The Great Hockey God in the Sky was loving things so much, the Whale-Bruins game went the distance, though a storybook ending didn’t materialize as Michael Hutchinson stopped five Whale shootout attempts and Maxime “Whale Killer” Sauve scored the only goal in the skills competition to give the Bruins a 5-4 victory.

Still, the 28,700 tickets sold and distributed for the game shattered the 21,508 sold and distributed for the AHL’s first outdoor game last year, when the host Syracuse Crunch beat the Binghamton Senators 2-1 on former Hartford Wolf Pack defenseman David Liffiton’s goal. A total of 15,234 hearty souls showed up for various amounts of time Saturday, with several thousand still around when the P-Bruins put a frozen damper on the close of Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl.

A public skate was canceled Tuesday because of poor ice conditions that caused construction manager Jim Hartnett to call it the most difficult of the seven rink projects he has done. But Hartnett and his crew managed to overcome the most trying problems, as did the Whalers Sports and Entertainment staff, some of whom worked more than 100 hours in the week leading up to Whale Bowl.

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

“I just think it was a tremendous event – and it was cold,” Whalers Sports and Entertainment chairman and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said Tuesday. “The people who came out were amazing fans, and what I’m most proud of is how we as an organization battled through to put on a great, great event.”

For those who braved the cold and wind, it was a hockey celebration, complete with plenty of “Brass Bonanza,” the Whalers’ famed theme song. Fans in Whalers shirts began tailgating in the parking lot hours for the 4 p.m. alumni game as a high school game was being played. A steady stream of hockey jerseys and hats filled the concourse and stands, and “The Zambonis,” a hockey-themed band from Bridgeport, performed during the legends and AHL games. Tony Harrington, who sang the national anthem at Whalers games for years, returned to belt it out again before the alumni game, and fireworks lit up the rink after the national anthem before the Whale-Bruins game.

The event’s original budget was $300,000, but it ballooned to nearly $400,000 because of the cost of extra snow removal required in the Rentschler Field stands and parking lots. Because WSE didn’t get the 32,000 fans needed Saturday to break even, it lost money, but Baldwin said it was money well spent.

“Even though we lost money, the public relations and the exposure for the American Hockey League and the Connecticut Whale was just amazing,” Baldwin said. “For the money we lost, it was definitely worth the investment.”

Despite the losses, WSAE donated $5,000 to the official charity of the Hockey Fest, “Sam’s Race for a Place,” a fund-raising effort spearheaded by West Hartford resident Samantha Udolf that benefits the Ronald McDonald House. Since Udolf, a successful competitive skier, founded Sam’s Race for a Place in June of 2008, it has generated donations of more than $43,500. For more information about Sam’s Race for a Place, visit www.samsraceforaplace.com. Donations also can be made through that web address.

Because of the adverse conditions, Baldwin Jr. said fans who purchased tickets but did not attend because of the weather could redeem them for a ticket to “Howe Family Night” at the XL Center on March 26 against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers or another game of their choice. 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 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 XL Center rafters with the Whalers’ No. 2 (Rick Ley), 5 (Ulf Samuelsson), 10 (Ron Francis), 11 (Dineen) and 19 (John McKenzie). Whale coach Ken 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. If fans want to redeem a ticket from Whale Bowl, they should contact Baldwin at hlb@whalerssports.com.

Baldwin’s most immediate goal is to help assure the Whale (28-22-2-6) reaches the playoffs in a tightly bunched Eastern Conference in which seven teams are vying for the final four spots. The Whale notched one of their more stirring wins of the season Monday when veteran defenseman Wade Redden scored his first game-winning goal in the minors, converting a shorthanded 2-on-1 with Tim Kennedy at 1:23 of overtime for a 2-1 victory over the Portland Pirates.

Kennedy, a member of the AHL All-Rookie Team in 2008-09 while with the Pirates, also assisted on Evgeny Grachev’s second-period goal, which stood up until Mark Mancari, the AHL’s leading goal-scorer, notched his 32nd in the third period. But Kennedy set up Redden after a steal, rush and pass that led to his seventh point in seven games against his former team. Two of his three goals were overtime winners in Portland in successive games Dec. 29 and 31.

“I like this rink and, when I played here two years ago, I really liked it,” Kennedy told the Portland Press-Herald. “When I play here, it’s almost not like a road game. It’s more of a home game for me. It just happens that when I’m playing here, things happen to be going my way.”

Pirates coach Kevin Dineen, the former Hartford Whalers star right wing and captain, has heaped lavish praise on Kennedy in the past, but he wasn’t speaking kindly of his team after the loss, the Pirates’ third in a row thanks largely to a season-low 16 shots. They were outshot 18-4 in the first period but escaped with a scoreless tie thanks to goalie Jhonas Enroth, whose handful of stellar stopped included one on Kelsey Tessier’s breakaway.

“It was our worst (game) of the year,” Dineen said in typically no-nonsense fashion. “We can’t get any worse than that in all aspects, from our structure to our work ethic. … More than anything else, we always have a strong work ethic, and we got outworked in our own building.”

The victory extended the Whalers’ 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 were off Tuesday and are back on the road Wednesday, when they fly to Charlotte, N.C., for games Thursday and Saturday against the Charlotte Checkers, their former ECHL affiliate. The Whale (then the Hartford Wolf Pack) beat the Checkers 4-2 in the season opener Oct. 9 at the XL Center. The Checkers (32-20-2-4), 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 four straight and six of seven.

The Checkers have won two in a row and are on a 6-2-1-0 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 Jacob Micflikier (22, 23) and Chris Terry (22, 23), center Zach Boychuk (15, 28) and left wing Oskar Osala (13, 28). Zac Dalpe leads the rookie scoring race (17 goals, 21 assists) despite playing in only 39 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 has won six straight games and is 15-2-0 in his last 17 starts, capped by 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 on March 2 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.

By then, Baldwin might have decided if the Whale will try to host the AHL All-Star Game or another Whalers Hockey Fest in 2012. Baldwin is putting together a bid for the All-Star Game and will decide by March if there will be a Hockey Fest next year.

“I think we’re a little late in the game (for the All-Star Game), so I don’t think that we’ll get it,” Baldwin said. “But I told (AHL executive vice-president of marketing and business development Chris Nikolis that I have to fill out the packet, but I know they’ve got other teams ahead of us that have already put in a bid. We had to put that on the back burner because of Hockey Fest, but I think it would be great to have. Twenty-five years ago, we hosted the NHL All-Star Game, so it would great to have an All-Star Game back. It’s not a NHL All-Star Game, but we would be one of only a few cities OR the only city to have a WHA, NHL and AHL All-Star Game.”

Baldwin said WSE would rather do an All-Star Game rather than another Hockey Fest.

“That outdoor game was really a tremendous, tremendous undertaking,” Baldwin said. “I had no idea how big it really was.”

The Whalers Reunion and Fan Fest in August wasn’t nearly as extensive or time-consuming, but both demonstrated the determination and resolve of the Baldwins and Whalers Sports and Entertainment to revive the local hockey market.

MONTOYA FINALLY MAKING HIS MARK

After years of frustration languishing in the minors, former Wolf Pack goalie Al Montoya, the Rangers’ first-round pick (sixth overall) in 2004, got in the record book for a second organization last week and nearly registered a second consecutive shutout Monday.

Mike Santorelli’s power-play goal with 9:26 left denied Montoya another goose egg, but a hat trick by fellow castoff Matt Moulson made it easy for Montoya and the New York Islanders to rout the Florida Panthers, 5-1.

“This is something neat, this group here,” the 26-year-old Montoya told reporters after the game. “I’ve been waiting for this chance my whole career, and I’m going to take advantage of it.”

Two days earlier, Moulson scored twice against his brother-in-law, Milford native Jonathan Quick, as the Islanders beat Los Angeles 3-0, ending the Kings’ 11-game points streak.

“No talking today,” Moulson told reporters. “We had dinner (Friday night), but he didn’t let me cook. He thought I was going to put something in there. So we went to our in-laws, went to neutral ground and had a good dinner. (I was) lucky to get a couple on him.”

Moulson promised not to gloat about any bragging rights.

“He wasn’t bragging when he shut me out,” he said, “so I think I’ll just keep it low key.”

No one could blame Montoya about being excited after he made 35 saves in his first NHL start since April 9, 2009 with the Phoenix Coyotes and became the first goalie in franchise history to post a shutout in his first start as an Islander. But that was nothing new for Montoya, who became the first goalie in Coyotes/Winnipeg Jets franchise history to record a shutout in his NHL debut. On April 1, 2009, Montoya stopped 23 shots in a 3-0 victory over the Colorado Avalanche.

“I had nothing to lose,” said Montoya, named the No. 1 star. “I play the game with nothing to lose. Maybe I should have more (NHL) starts under my belt, but I don’t look at it like that. I come out here to give the team a chance, and I don’t want nerves to get the best of me. I left it all out on the ice, and that was my mindset going into the game.”

Monday’s game was the continuation of a remarkable turnaround for Montoya, Moulson and the Islanders. Moulson leads the Isles with 26 goals, one more than rookie Michael Grabner, claimed off waivers from the Panthers in training camp. The Islanders are 8-3-0 in their last 11 games and 18-12-2 since a 1-17-3 slide in mid-December appeared to ruin their season.

“Obviously, you look back at that, and what could’ve been,” said Moulson, a ninth-round pick of the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2003 who signed a free-agent deal with the Kings on Sept. 1, 2006 and was often a pest to the Wolf Pack while with the Manchester Monarchs. “But it’s not over yet. We still have a lot of games to play.”

It seems inconceivable the Islanders have a chance to make the playoffs, but if they do, Jack Capuano, elevated from the Bridgeport Sound Tigers to interim coach on Long Island on Nov. 15, should be NHL Coach of the Year.

If the Islanders complete an improbable run to the postseason, it could be on the shoulders of Montoya, who won 86 games in three years at the University of Michigan but needed nearly seven years to win six NHL games. And half of them resulted after the misfortune of others.

Rick DiPietro, who has been injury-prone since being the first overall pick by the Islanders in 2000 and signing an unprecedented 15-year contract, was sidelined 4-to-6 weeks when he sustained facial fractures when hit in a fight with Penguins goalie Brent Johnson on Feb. 2. Six days later, rookie goalie Kevin Poulin, recalled from the Sound Tigers on an emergency basis, sustained a season-ending dislocated kneecap when he stepped in a rut during warm-ups before a game against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Islanders general manager Garth Snow, a former NHL goalie, went into immediate scramble mode and acquired Montoya for a sixth-round draft pick the next day.

“To tell you the truth, I was excited,” Montoya told NHL.com. “This is unbelievable. This is an opportunity that I’ve been waiting for however many years I’ve been pro … six years? I’ve had a couple of injuries that set me back a couple of years, but at the same time, I’m excited. I knew I’d get a chance here.”

Montoya, buried behind Henrik Lundqvist with the Rangers and especially inconsistent after being upended after racing to the blue line to clear a puck, thought he might finally get a shot at the NHL when traded to the Coyotes on Feb. 26, 2008. But what Montoya hoped would be a fresh start soon became more of the same as he got only a brief look in the 2008-09 season, going 3-1-0 with a 2.08 goals-against average and .925 save percentage in five appearances.

But injuries limited Montoya to 45 games with the Rampage between the fall of 2008 and spring of 2010. Before the trade to the Islanders, Montoya split time with Matt Climie in San Antonio, where he was 11-8-0 with a 3.19 GAA and .891 save percentage and no shutouts in 21 games. In one relief appearance and two starts with the Islanders, he’s 3-0-0 with a 1.34 GAA, .950 save percentage and one shutout.

“I wish things would have gone differently,” Montoya said. “I came back from a shoulder surgery and I probably played consecutive nights one time. It’s just putting it together. The other goalie I was working with was a good goalie. Even the year before I got hurt, it wasn’t a good situation for me. It’s just a matter of getting my game back and going out there and doing what I can do and knowing what I can do.

“This is a good situation for me. I’m going to take full advantage of this, and I thank this organization for giving me that chance. I’m still young. I still feel good, and I’m still learning to this day. It’s time to run with it.”

It’s also time for something good to finally happen to someone who deserves a few good breaks.

POTTER AMONG AHL’S BEST PLUS-MINUS GUYS AGAIN

Former Wolf Pack defenseman Corey Potter is again in the chase for the plus/minus title with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. Potter is plus-24, one behind Sean Collins of Hershey. Former Wolf Pack defenseman Brian Fahey of Hershey is seventh at plus-21, one ahead of teammate and former Wolf Pack wing Boyd Kane. In fact, eight of the top nine in plus-minus are from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton or Hershey. The Whale leader is Grachev at plus-13, which is tied for 41st in the league. … Wilkes-Barre/Scranton continues to sit atop the AHL standings (42-15-0-0, 84 points) and entered the week on a 7-1-0-0 run despite recently playing without its top seven scorers – Dustin Jeffrey, Nick Johnson, Brett Sterling, Eric Tangradi, Ryan Crag, Tim Wallace and Joe Vitale – who were on recall to the NHL Penguins. No. 1 goalie Brad Thiessen (24-5-0, 1.77 goals-against average, .930 save percentage) returned from injury Feb. 7 and has allowed only four goals on 164 shots in seven games (.976), posting six victories and three shutouts. Meanwhile, two newcomers have carried the offensive load. Ben Street arrived Feb. 3 and has eight goals and two assists in eight games, and former second-round draft pick and fellow rookie Keven Veilleux has a point in five of six games (two goals, four assists) from Feb. 7-18. … The AHL’s Clear Day deadline, when all 30 teams must submit their 22-man Clear Day lists, is March 7 at 3 p.m. Only those players listed on a team’s Clear Day roster are eligible to play in the remainder of the AHL regular season and in the Calder Cup playoffs, unless emergency conditions arise as a result of recall, injury or suspension. Teams may also add signed junior players or players on amateur tryout contracts, but only after their respective junior or college seasons are complete.

Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 Public Skating Canceled

Hartford, CT … Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin, Jr. announced today that the public skating sessions planned tomorrow, Tuesday, February 22, at the Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 outdoor rink at Rentschler Field have been canceled. This includes the sessions open to the general public and the Connecticut Whale season ticket-holder skate.

Whale Bowl“Taking into account all that the ice has been through with the extreme weather conditions, we feel strongly that this is the safe thing to do,” Baldwin, Jr. said. “We are tremendously grateful for the support that we have received from all of our great fans who have attended the Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest events. And we look forward to welcoming fans to open skates at the XL Center following our remaining Sunday Whale home games, and our season ticket-holders to their exclusive skate with the Whale players at the XL Center next Monday, February 28.”

The Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 concludes tonight with youth hockey action, and cthockeyleague.com recreational games. The highlight of the biggest event in Connecticut hockey history was this past Saturday’s Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl, which drew an American Hockey League-record crowd of 21,673 to an AHL battle between the Whale and the Providence Bruins, preceded by a Whalers legends vs. Boston Bruins legends game.

Cameron Talbot Assigned to Greenville

HARTFORD, February 21, 2011: Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned goaltender Cameron Talbot from the Whale to the team’s ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleTalbot, a rookie out of the University of Alabama-Huntsville, has been out of action since being injured in a 6-3 win January 16 vs. the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, missing a total of 14 games. Talbot has compiled an 8-3-2 record in 13 games of action with the Whale this year, and carries a 2.42 goals-against average and a 91.9% save percentage, and has one shutout.

Talbot signed with the Rangers as a free agent March 30, 2010, after three seasons at UAH.

The Whale are next in action this Thursday night, February 24, in their first of two games in Charlotte, NC against the Charlotte Checkers (7:00 PM faceoff, WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com). Connecticut and Charlotte will tangle again Saturday night at 7:00, before the Whale return to the XL Center for a home game Wednesday, March 2 against the Springfield Falcons at 7:00.

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.

Connecticut Whale 2, Portland Pirates 1 (OT)

Portland, ME, February 21, 2011 – Wade Redden scored a shorthanded goal at 1:23 of overtime, to give the Connecticut Whale a 2-1 win over the Portland Pirates Monday afternoon at the Cumberland County Civic Center.

CT WhaleWith Jeremy Williams in the penalty box for tripping, Tim Kennedy grabbed the puck in the Whale zone, after Portland point man Marc-Andre Gragnani had a pass go off of his stick.  Redden joined Kennedy on a two-on-one, and after Kennedy stickhandled down the left-wing side he passed in front to a wide-open Redden, who slapped the puck past Pirate goaltender Jhonas Enroth for the winner.

That was after the Whale had nursed a 1-0 lead into the final three-and-a-half minutes of regulation, only to see Portland’s Mark Mancari tie the score with 3:28 left.

The victory was the Whale’s sixth overtime triumph of the season, and their third in the season series against the Pirates.  Connecticut already led the AHL in overtime wins coming into the game.  The two points widened the third-place Whale’s lead over the fourth-place Worcester Sharks, who were idle Monday, to three points.  The Whale are now 28-22-2-6 for 64 points.

The one-goal verdict was the sixth in seven games between Connecticut and Portland on the season.  The Whale finished 3-1-0-0 on the season in Portland, where the Pirates are 18-4-4-1, and are 4-3-0-0 overall on the year against the Pirates.  The Whale are 4-0-0-1 in five games since a 9-2 loss at Toronto February 9, and have won four straight on the road.

Chad Johnson made 15 saves in net to get the win, in his first appearance in six games and his first start in seven.  Enroth stopped 29 shots, as the Whale enjoyed a 31-16 shots advantage for the game.

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

The Whale dictated play in the first period, outshooting the Pirates 18-4, but couldn’t solve Enroth, who came into the game with an 0-3 record against Connecticut, with a 3.67 goals-against average and an 87.6% save percentage.

The Whale capitalized on a turnover at 6:19 of the second period, to dent Enroth for the first time.  Kennedy, an ex-Pirate, broke up a Gragnani pass in the Portland zone.  Kennedy found Dale Weise on the right-wing side and Weise dished to Evgeny Grachev on the opposite side of the slot, and Grachev banged it into the net off of Enroth for Grachev’s 14th goal of the season.

Johnson then held the Pirates at bay until Mancari’s late score, which was on a rebound after Johnson made a fine left-pad save on a Dennis McCauley shot.  Mancari was able to slide a second-chance backhander from 15 feet out in the slot underneath Johnson’s pads.

The Whale got a big opportunity late in regulation when Portland’s Tim Conboy was hit with an unsportsmanlike conduct minor by referee Terry Koharski with 1:15 left.  Connecticut was not able to convert, though, and Koharski whistled Williams off only six seconds into the OT, leading to Redden’s shorthanded heroics.

Redden’s shorthanded winner was the only shot of overtime, and was the Whale’s sixth shorthander of the season.

With his two assists, Kennedy now has seven points (three goals, four assists) in seven games against his old club.

TWO FORWARDS MAKE WHALE DEBUTS

Center Francis Lemieux and right wing Alexandre Imbeault made their Whale debuts after signing professional tryout contracts after playing all or most of the season with the Florida Everglades of the ECHL. They joined defensemen Lee Baldwin and Blake Parlett, who were recalled from Greenville of the ECHL last week. The quartet was needed because the Whale was without center Kris Newbury (recall to the New York Rangers), injured forwards Todd White (concussion), Ryan Garlock, Chad Kolarik (hamstring) and Chris McKelvie (foot surgery), defenseman Tomas Kundratek (flu) and goalie Cam Talbot (high ankle sprain). Only Johnson and 11 of the 18 skaters in the lineup were with the team when the season started.

The Whale remains on the road with their first two games against the Charlotte Checkers, their former ECHL affiliate, on Thursday and Saturday in Charlotte, N.C. The Checkers (32-20-2-4), the new AHL affiliate of the Carolina Hurricanes, have won two in a row and are on a 6-2-1-0 run. Their leading scorer, All-Star right wing Jerome Samson (26, 28), is on recall to the Hurricanes. The top remaining scorers are left wings Jacob Micflikier (22, 23) and Chris Terry (22, 23), center Zach Boychuk (15, 28) and left wing Oskar Osala (13, 28). The Checkers have gone all season with 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 has won six straight games and is 15-2-0 in his last 17 starts, capped by 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 on March 2 to face the Springfield Falcons, 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.

SOUND TIGERS ROOKIE CENTER NAMED AHL PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Bridgeport Sound Tigers rookie center David Ullstrom was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Week after getting six goals and one assist in three games.

Ullstrom entered the week without a goal in his previous 21 games but had a goal and an assist in a 4-3 shootout loss at Springfield on Wednesday night. He scored twice in a 6-4 loss at Hershey on Saturday and notched his first professional hat trick in a 4-2 victory over Atlantic Division-leading Manchester on Sunday that ended the Sound Tigers’ 11-game winless streak (0-10-0-1). Ullstrom’s six-goal week matched his previous output this season, giving him 12 goals and 18 assists in 50 games. The 21-year-old native of Jonkoping, Sweden, was a fourth-round pick of the New York Islanders in 2008 and won a Swedish Elitserien championship with HV71 Jonkoping last season.

Other nominations included former Wolf Pack forwards Jeff Taffe (Rockford), wing Matthew Ford (Lake Erie) and Houston wing Jon DiSalvatore, a native of South Windsor. … Former Wolf Pack and Rangers goalie Al Montoya made 20 saves and Matt Moulson had a hat trick as the Islanders beat the Florida Panthers 5-1 on Monday afternoon. Moulson completed the hat trick with a shorthanded goal into the empty net with 2:37 left. Former Wolf Pack wing P.A. Parenteau had the primary assist on Moulson’s second goal.

GORDIE HOWE’S NUMBER TO BE RE-RETIRED

Hall of Famer Gordie “Mr. Hockey” Howe will have his No. 9 re-retired March 26 before the Whale hosts the Bridgeport Sound Tigers at the XL Center.

Howe is one of seven players with his number in the XL Center rafters, the others from the Whalers being 2 (Rick Ley), 5 (Ulf Samuelsson), 10 (Ron Francis), 11 (Kevin Dineen) and 19 (John McKenzie). Whale coach Ken Gernander’s No. 12 is the only number to be retired in the 14-year history of the AHL team.

“I think we’ll have a big crowd,” Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said. “I love Ronnie Francis (the Whalers’ only Hall of Famer), 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 and his sons, Mark and Marty, played together for the first time with the Houston Aeros in 1973 before they came to Hartford and signed 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 in 80 games and was named a NHL All-Star for the 23rd time while helping the Whalers make the playoffs at 52 years old.

Fans who didn’t attend the Whale Bowl outdoor game against the Providence Bruins on Saturday night at Rentschler Field in East Hartford because of the frigid weather can redeem their ticket for one to “Gordie Howe Night” or another game of their choice. Contact Baldwin at hlb@whalersports.com.

Connecticut Whale 2 (OT) at Portland Pirates 1
Monday, February 21, 2011 – Cumberland County Civic Center

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

1st Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Tuzzolino Por (hooking), 2:24; DiDiomete Ct (instigating, fighting, misconduct – instigating), 12:29; Conboy Por (tripping, fighting), 12:29; Lemieux Ct (cross-checking), 14:56; O’Hanley Por (interference), 16:20; Soryal Ct (hooking), 19:53.

2nd Period-1, Connecticut, Grachev 14 (Kennedy, Weise), 6:19. Penalties-Bickel Ct (boarding), 11:08.

3rd Period-2, Portland, Mancari 32 (McCauley), 16:32. Penalties-Soryal Ct (elbowing, unsportsmanlike conduct), 2:03; Gragnani Por (unsportsmanlike conduct), 8:16; Gragnani Por (slashing), 11:59; Conboy Por (unsportsmanlike conduct), 18:45; Conboy Por (game misconduct – unsportsmanlike conduct), 20:00.

OT Period-3, Connecticut, Redden 5 (Kennedy), 1:23 (SH). Penalties-Williams Ct (tripping), 0:06.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 18-7-5-1-31. Portland 4-7-5-0-16.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 5; Portland 0 / 6.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 16-18-3 (16 shots-15 saves). Portland, Enroth 18-16-2 (31 shots-29 saves).
A-5,574
Referees-Terry Koharski (10).
Linesmen-Joe Andrews (32), Landon Bathe (80).

Whale Sign Forward Alexandre Imbeault to PTO

HARTFORD, February 21, 2011: Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the team has signed forward Alexandre Imbeault to a Professional Tryout (PTO) agreement.

CT WhaleA 24-year-old fourth-year pro, Imbeault is currently the leading goal-scorer in the ECHL, with 31 goals and 15 assists for 36 points in 43 games with the Florida Everblades. Imbeault, a 6-0, 180-pound native of Montreal, split last season between the Alaska Aces of the ECHL, for whom he had 18 goals and 30 assists for 48 points in 44 games, and Slavia Praha HC of the Czech Extraleague (four games, no points, four penalty minutes).

Imbeault has previous AHL experience with the Providence Bruins and Peoria Rivermen, totaling 18 games and including five goals and four assists for nine points. In 207 career ECHL games with the Johnstown Chiefs, Aces and Everblades, Imbeault has amassed 95 goals and 108 assists for 203 points, along with 191 PIM. Prior to turning pro with the Chiefs in 2007-08, Imbeault played five seasons of Quebec Major Junior League action, with the Quebec Remparts, Victoriaville Tigres and Chicoutimi Sagueneens.

ALEXANDRE IMBEAULT’S AMATEUR AND PROFESSIONAL RECORD

The Whale in Atlantic Division action today, visiting the Portland Pirates for a 1:00 PM holiday matinee (WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com). Connecticut’s next home game is Wednesday, March 2 against the Springfield Falcons at 7:00.

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 Notebook 2-20

By Bruce Berlet

There is never a good time to lose a lead after two periods, but Connecticut Whale picked one of the worst Saturday night.

CT WhaleDespite an error-prone opening 10 minutes of the second period that helped the Providence Bruins to three goals and a 3-2 lead, the Whale got goals from All-Star Jeremy Williams and defenseman Jared Nightingale 1:59 seconds apart to regain control.

But Bruins goalie Michael Hutchinson’s stop of Dale Weise’s breakaway with 3:08 left in the period and Evgeny Grachev missing an open net 18 seconds later proved a portent of things to come.

All-Star Jamie Arniel’s second goal of the game with 6:08 to go in regulation tied it, then after the Whale failed to convert on an overtime power play, Hutchinson stopped five shootout shots and Maxime “Whale Killer” Sauve scored the only goal in the skills competition to give the Bruins a 5-4 victory before an AHL record crowd of 21,673 in the highlight of the Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011.

It was only the fourth time in 20 games (16-1-0-3) that the Whale (27-22-2-6) failed to win when leading after two periods. But Sauve scored in regulation and the shootout after getting two goals in each of the Bruins’ two wins in their previous visits to the XL Center.

“We let them back in the game,” said Whale center Kris Newbury, who turned 29 on Saturday and was recalled by the Rangers on Sunday for the fourth time this season after Marian Gaborik sustained a concussion in the first period of a 4-2 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers. “I guess the turning point was when we had the bad 10 minutes or they had the good 10 minutes, however you want to put it. Then their goalie made a big save on (Tim Kennedy) in the shootout, and Dov (Grumet-Morris) played good but they were able to get one (goal) and we weren’t, and that was the difference.”

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

Everyone’s margin for error gets smaller as the season progresses and teams are going extra hard to try to reach the playoffs in the tightly bunched Eastern Conference. Manchester (75 points), a 4-2 loser to the last-place Bridgeport Sound Tigers on Sunday, and Portland (72) have virtually clinched playoff spots in the Atlantic Division, and Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (84) and Hershey (74), a 5-0 loser to Charlotte on Sunday, appear shoo-ins in the Eastern Division.

Then it’s a crapshoot among eight teams for four spots. The sixth-place Bruins (25-28-3-2) have crept within seven points of the Whale, who are one point ahead of Worcester (26-22-3-6), a 4-3 shootout winner over Providence on Sunday, in the race for the Atlantic Division’s third and final guaranteed playoff spot. The Sharks have two games in hand on the Whale, while the Springfield Falcons (27-25-3-1), who have won three in a row to get within four points of the Whale, have played the same number of games.

But the Whale (62 points), Worcester (61), Springfield (58) and Providence (55) are also vying for the final playoff berths with Charlotte (70), Norfolk (66) and Binghamton (66) in the East Division. Right now, fifth-place Binghamton in the East Division has the edge on fourth-place Worcester in the Atlantic Division, so it should be a wild scramble in the final six weeks.

“Those little stretches of time can really kill you,” center Tim Kennedy said of the Whale’s second-period lapse. “If they don’t get those three goals, we’re still up 2-0, and the game is probably not as close as it was and we probably win. So we have to work on not going through such a lull for those short periods of time.”

Kennedy had a goal and an assist and was robbed by Hutchinson leading off the shootout when the Bruins goalie made a diving glove save. Kennedy and Newbury had scored in a shootout Friday night to give the Whale a 2-1 victory over Adirondack.

“We watched tape on (Hutchinson), and it seemed like when you gave him one move, he kind of went down,” Kennedy said. “So I came in slow, just gave him a fake at the hash mark and he went down, and I don’t know how I shot it in his glove. But I’ll give him credit because he stretched out there and there was an open net. He didn’t give up on the play, but that should have been in the back of the net and I shot it right in his glove. He made a good save, but I also shot it right in his glove.”

And those are the type of things that will end three-game winning streaks and decide who reaches the postseason and who starts teeing it up early.

“It would have been a nice finish to get the two points,” Whale coach Ken Gernander said. “Obviously two points are critical for us, given where we are in the standings right now and with our efforts for a playoff push, so that was a pretty important point to give up.”

Weise also bemoaned the first half of the second period.

“I don’t think we played well in that span, and it shouldn’t be that way,” Weise said. “We’re playing with the wind. It should be easy for us to get on our horse and get going, and that wasn’t the case at all. They took it to us, we made some dumb plays turning the puck over.”

The Whale actually regained the lead this time when Ryan Garlock picked up a Grachev dump-in and found Nightingale cruising in from the right point for a laser over Hutchinson’s blocker shoulder for his second goal of the season.

But Arniel’s second goal and the shootout loss made it a bummer of an ending for the several thousand who braved brutal weather conditions of 18 degrees and sub-zero wind chill by game’s end. About 28,600 tickets, including 7,000 in sponsorships, were sold, and Whalers Sports and Entertainment chairman and CEO Howard Baldwin said 15,234 tickets were scanned. But the 28,600 tickets shattered the record AHL crowd of 21,508 at the first outdoor game in which the host Syracuse Crunch beat the Binghamton Senators 2-1 at the New York State Fairgrounds a year ago to the day, Feb. 20, 2010. The 21,508 also included sponsorship tickets that are distributed at virtually every major sporting event.

Because of the adverse conditions, Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said Sunday that fans who purchased tickets but did not attend because of the weather could redeem them for a ticket to Gordie Howe Night on March 26 against the Sound Tigers or another game of their choice. To redeem a ticket, contact Baldwin at hlb@whalerssports.com.

“The weather is out of my control, but it was cold out there,” Baldwin Sr. said Saturday. “But the fact this many people came out in these elements is amazing to me.”

Baldwin told other members of the media: “If you’re asking whether I’m disappointed, I can look all of you in the eye and say, ‘Hell, no.’ … I’m thrilled with it, how could you not be? Some of (the fans) came in shifts. A lot of people braved this weather. I don’t have any complaints.

“This is different than anything that has been done. This is the first one over a (12)-day period and 45 games. We didn’t do it just for the AHL or the alumni, but all the young people playing. For me, this is huge and a great thing to build off.”

WHALE CONTINUES TO BE ROAD WARRIORS NEXT WEEK

With Whale Bowl behind them, the Whale went back on the road Sunday, making a bus ride to Portland, Maine, for a President’s Day game at 1 p.m. against the pesky Pirates. Then they will play their first two games in Charlotte, N.C., against the Checkers, their former ECHL affiliate, on Thursday and Saturday. The Whale, who have won three in a row on the road since a 9-2 loss at Toronto on Feb. 9 that tied franchise records for goals allowed and margin of defeat, finally return to the XL Center on March 2 to face the Springfield Falcons. Their ensuing home game is March 11 against the defending Calder Cup champion Hershey Bears, ending a brutal stretch of 10 road games in 12 starts.

The Pirates (33-16-4-2) had won four in a row and 15 of 19 starts before a 4-3 shootout loss to the Bruins on Friday night and a 5-4 loss to Manchester on Saturday night that dropped them three points behind the division-leading Monarchs. The four straight wins included a 3-2 victory over the Whale at the XL Center on Feb. 6 that tied the season series at 3 in the teams’ fifth one-goal game. The Pirates are led by 2010 All-Star right wing Mark Mancari, who leads the AHL in goals (31) and is third in points (61). He’s followed by defenseman Marc-Andre Gragnani (9, 31), 2011 All-Star center Luke Adam (17, 18) left wing Derek Whitmore (20, 13) and left wing Colin Stuart (10, 22). David Leggio (15-4-0, 2.49, .919) has been tough on the Whale, including his first of two shutouts, 3-0 in Portland on Jan. 14. Jhonas Enroth is 18-15-2, 2.82, .910, no shutouts.

The Whale will be without Newbury, their second-leading scorer (9, 33) to Williams (25, 19), goalie Cam Talbot (high ankle sprain), defenseman Tomas Kundratek (flu) and forwards Chad Kolarik (hamstring) and Chris McKelvie (foot surgery). The Whale signed center Francis Lemieux to a professional tryout contract. He played the last six seasons with Grand Rapids and Hamilton and was leading the ECHL in scoring this season, getting 28 goals and 44 assists in 55 games with the Florida Everblades. He also was scoreless in two AHL games with the Manitoba Moose.

The Checkers (32-20-2-4), the new AHL affiliate of the Carolina Hurricanes, have won two in a row and are on a 6-2-1-0 run. Their leading scorer, All-Star right wing Jerome Samson (26, 28), is on recall to the Hurricanes. The top remaining scorers are left wings Jacob Micflikier (22, 23) and Chris Terry (22, 23), center Zach Boychuk (15, 28) and left wing Oskar Osala (13, 28). The Checkers have gone all season with 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 made 20 saves, and former Wolf Pack defenseman and 2011 All-Star Bryan Rodney had one goal and two assists, in the romp in Hershey on Sunday.

The Whale hopes to iron out the kinks in the final drive to the playoffs in the last 22 games – 10 at home, 12 on the road.

“We’re not going to change our style, but there has to be a heightened sense of awareness,” Gernander said. “I’m sure things are going to pick up emotionally as we get toward the end jockeying for playoff position, so we have to try to continue to squeeze out mistakes and pick things up emotionally because that’s the nature of season as it winds down, so it becomes all that more critical.

“I’d like to see us generate a little more 5-on-5 and get more shots on the net. Not all of them would have to be scoring chances, but a little more quantity of pucks to the net could lead to second and third chances that would probably increase our 5-versus-5 offense. I don’t see anything that’s absolutely deficient where we have to change anything or make some adjustments. I just think we need to squeeze mistakes and raise the bar a little bit.”

Defenseman Wade Redden has been through countless playoff races and runs in 13 NHL seasons, the last two with the Rangers, but doesn’t expect anything to be different in his first go-round in the minor leagues.

“We just tried to keep it simple (Saturday) night – dump pucks in and dump pucks out – and I think that’s the style we have to play all the time, just a simple game, especially with the games being tight down the stretch,” Redden said. “One goal is going to make difference, so you don’t want give teams opportunities easily with turnovers.

“And we want to get the forecheck going and play as little as we can in your own end because that definitely adds up to good things when you’re out of your end quickly and in their end and getting pressure on them. I think that’s probably the key to playing at this time of year.”

Teams also play harder, as Adirondack, last in the East Division throughout the season until last week, demonstrated Friday, when the Whale needed a Newbury goal with 2:49 left in regulation to get to overtime and eventually win a shootout on Newbury’s goal.

“They forechecked hard, played hard, didn’t give us much,” Redden said. “We did a good job to stay with it and keep battling, and I thought our third period was our best period. Just getting the puck in and getting some pressure eventually leads to good things happening for you, so that’s the mentality that you’ve got to have.”

The Whale has had a roller-coaster season, from a 1-9-2-1 slide that included a team-record, nine-game winless streak (0-7-0-2) followed by a 14-2-0-3 run that vaulted them from last place to second. And the Whale has a better road record (15-9-0-4) than at home (12-13-2-2), which again leads credence to keeping things simple.

“We’ve put ourselves in a position to pick up points, so it’s just a matter of bearing down in the important parts of the game,” said Nightingale, who has been Redden’s defensive partner the last few weeks. “Every game is different, whether you need a big save, a big (penalty) kill or your power play gets a goal for you. Each game is a different story, so I think it’s just bearing down and going out and playing.

“Hockey is a game of momentum, and the quicker we can get that back on our side the better. Lulls are natural, but the quicker you get out of them the better, and easiest way of doing that is keeping it simple. It’s all about teamwork.” … The Sound Tigers’ victory Sunday ended an 11-game winless streak (0-10-0-1) since Jan. 22 and was only their second win in 2011 (2-15-2-2). Rookie center David Ullstrom had his first pro hat trick when he scored into an empty net with 1:08 left as the last-place Sound Tigers (20-29-3-4) scored on two of only three shots in the third period. Justin DiBenedetto had the primary assist on each of Ullstrom’s goals, and Mikko Koskinen made 20 saves. … The Bruins overcame two two-goal deficits to force overtime on power-play goals by Zach Hamill and David Ling before losing a shootout when Dan DaSilva scored in the sixth round for Worcester.

QUENNEVILLE RETURNS HOME

Great to hear former Whalers defenseman Joel Quenneville, coach of the reigning Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks, has returned home after being hospitalized on Wednesday with a bleeding ulcer caused by the use of aspirin.

“We will continue to monitor him and still anticipate a full recovery,” Blackhawks physician Dr. Michael Terry said in a statement. “We are working to determine when it is best from him to return to his coaching duties.”

Mike Haviland has taken over as interim coach, but Quenneville should be able to return to his spot behind the bench next week. We wish him as speedy a recovery as possible. Fans and former teammates were talking about him over the weekend. Little wonder. He’s one of the classiest guys in the world.

Rangers Recall Kris Newbury from Whale

HARTFORD, February 20, 2011: New York Rangers president and general manager Glen Sather announced today that the Rangers have recalled forward Kris Newbury from the AHL’s Connecticut Whale.

CT WhaleNewbury leads the Whale in assists, and is second on the team in points, with totals of 9-33-42, along with 105 penalty minutes, in 51 games. The eighth-year pro has one assist and 35 PIM in eight NHL games with the Rangers this season.

The Whale are back in action tomorrow, Monday, February 21, visiting the Portland Pirates for a 1:00 PM holiday matinee (WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com). Connecticut’s next home game is Wednesday, March 2 against the Springfield Falcons at 7:00.

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 Sign Forward Francis Lemieux to PTO

HARTFORD, February 20, 2011: Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the team has signed veteran forward Francis Lemieux to a Professional Tryout (PTO) agreement.

CT WhaleLemieux, a sixth-year pro, was leading the ECHL in point-scoring with the Florida Everblades, having struck for 28 goals and 44 assists for 72 points in 55 games. He was also second among ECHL players in assists and third in goals, and led the Everblades club in goals, assists and points. Lemieux has also played two AHL games this season with the Manitoba Moose, and was scoreless with no penalty minutes.

Last season Lemieux, a 5-10, 195-pound native of Sherbrooke, Quebec, played 21 AHL games with the Grand Rapids Griffins, scoring two goals and adding eight assists for 10 points with 20 penalty minutes. The 26-year-old Lemieux also played 13 games with the Las Vegas Wranglers of the ECHL, action in which he had nine goals and three assists for 12 points, along with 43 PIM, and spent four games in Austria with Vienna, scoring one goal and serving six minutes in penalties.

Lemieux has played 251 AHL games in his career, with the Hamilton Bulldogs, Griffins and Moose, notching 45 goals and adding 68 assists for 113 points, with 233 penalty minutes. He won a Calder Cup with the Bulldogs in 2007. In 68 career ECHL contests, Lemieux has 37 goals and 47 assists for 84 points, as well as 130 PIM. Lemieux was originally signed as a free agent by the Montreal Canadiens December 8, 2005, after a four-year Junior career with the Chicoutimi Sagueneens of the Quebec Major Junior League.

Francis Lemieux

The Whale are back in action tomorrow, Monday, February 21, visiting the Portland Pirates for a 1:00 PM holiday matinee (WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com). Connecticut’s next home game is Wednesday, March 2 against the Springfield Falcons at 7:00.

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.

Providence Bruins 5, Connecticut Whale 4 (SO)

By Bruce Berlet

EAST HARTFORD, Conn. – The players’ mood was anticipatory and festive, the crowd that shattered the record for an American Hockey League game included some of the greats of hockey and the elements brought everyone back to their roots of skating on frozen ponds from Alaska to the Czech Republic.

Whale Bowl 2011But there also were two very important points at stake Saturday night for the Connecticut Whale and Providence Bruins, both fighting desperately to make the Eastern Conference playoffs and coming off stirring shootout victories Friday night, the Bruins’ win over the Portland Pirates ending a season-high, seven-game losing streak.

On a night of “Ice Dreams” on which winds gusted to 30 mph and dropped the wind chill below zero, the proceedings went the limit, with Maxime Sauve continuing to be a nemesis for the Whale as he scored the only shootout goal to give the Bruins a 5-4 victory before 21,673 at Rentschler Field.

About 28,500 tickets reportedly were sold, but many purchasers didn’t brave the frigid elements. Still, those who showed beat the previous record AHL crowd of 21,508 at the first outdoor game in which the host Syracuse Crunch beat the Binghamton Senators 2-1 at the New York State Fairgrounds a year ago to the day, Feb. 20, 2010.

“The weather is out of my control, but it was cold out there,” Whalers Sports and Entertainment chairman and CEO Howard Baldwin said. “But the fact this many people came out in these elements is amazing to me. Now we have to keep going. We’re in the hockey business 12 months a year, so we finish out the season, we get some crowds for the team and the playoffs and sell season tickets (for 2011-12).”

Bruins All-Star center Jamie Arniel’s second goal of the game with 6:08 left in regulation sent the game to overtime. The Whale had the only shot of the five-minute extra session before the Bruins won another skills competition.

Sauve then did in the Whale again, as he did with two goals in each of the Bruins’ two wins at the XL Center.

“It was just like indoor,” Sauve said of his shootout winner. “You have to play the same. Do the same thing you would do in an indoor rink. Control the puck.”

Whale goalie Dov Grumet-Morris stopped all four shootout attempts in a 2-1 victory over Adirondack on Friday night but gave Sauve credit for the winner.

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

“He took a shot fake and with a quick move went to my glove side,” said Grumet-Morris, who had 28 saves in regulation and overtime. “I thought that was the side he was committing to, and he ended up pulling it quickly to the other side. It was a very good move, and he beat me wide. It was unfortunate. Trust me, I wish I could have had it, but I have to tip my cap to him. He made a very good move.”

Meanwhile, Michael Hutchinson denied Tim Kennedy, Dale Weise, Kris Newbury, Kelsey Tessier and Whale All-Star Jeremy Williams, enabling the Bruins (25-28-3-1) to win their second in a row after a seven-game losing streak. Arniel and Zach Hamill scored in the shootout in a 4-3 victory over Portland on Friday night.

“It definitely was different than normal circumstances with all the environmental factors,” said Grumet-Morris, who had 28 saves in regulation and overtime. “The puck was bouncing, so it was a little more like a ground ball situation. The lighting wasn’t too bad, but there weren’t too many high plays from like 100 feet.”

The Whale (27-22-2-6) might have won their fourth in a row since a 9-2 loss at Toronto on Feb. 9 except for a mistake-filled 10 minutes to start the second period that helped the Bruins rally from a 2-0 deficit.

“We had momentum after the first period,” Whale coach Ken Gernander said. “I thought it was one of our better periods. We made some mistakes and took some penalties in the second period and gave them a bit of life. Then you know it’s game on.

“Obviously two points are critical for us, given where we are in the standings and our playoff push, so it was a pretty important point to give up.”

The Whale remained three points ahead of Worcester, a 3-2 overtime loser to Springfield, for the Atlantic Division’s third and final guaranteed playoff spot. The Sharks have three games in hand on the Whale, while the Falcons are four points behind but have played the same number of games.

After the Whale misfired on two power plays, Kennedy gave them a 1-0 lead when he intercepted Matt Bartkowski’s clearing attempt and beat Hutchinson to the stick side at 11:13.

The Whale made it 2-0 with 21.3 seconds left in the period off a nifty three-way play as Tessier made a back pass to Devin DiDiomete, who put the puck through the slot to a wide-open Jyri Niemi, moved from defense to left wing for the second consecutive game.

But the Bruins scored three times in the opening 9:42 of the second period to take the lead.

Sauve scored his fifth goal in three road games against the Whale, getting inside defenseman Pavel Valentenko to deflect Arniel’s centering pass between Grumet-Morris’ legs at 1:21.

Jordan LaVallee-Smotherman then outmuscled Lee Baldwin for the puck, whirled in front and converted Hamill’s rebound at 6:42. The Bruins completed their hat trick as Jeremy Reich deflected in Sauve’s shot at 9:42.

The Whale got even at 12:15 as Williams’ shot deflected off Bruins defenseman Andrew Bodnarchuk for his 25th goal and 44th point, both team highs.

The Whale regained the lead as Ryan Garlock found defenseman Jared Nightingale 30 feet out in the slot with 6:44 left in the period.

Hutchinson stopped Dale Weise’s breakaway with 3:08 to go in the period, and it remained tied until Arniel’s second goal late in regulation.

“We have to find a way to kind of close them out,” said Newbury, who turned 29 on Saturday. “When you’re up two goals, you have to shut the door and kind of put them asleep and at the same time not let off the gas and just play our game. But we let them back in the game, and that was the turning point when we let them back in the game.”

Kennedy also bemoaned the second-period lull.

“We would have liked to win the game, but it was a good experience,” said Kennedy, who a goal and an assist on Williams’ goal. “I wasn’t quite sure how it was going to go with the wind, but it really wasn’t a factor. Each team got kind of a fluky goal, and the shootout is kind of a crapshoot. Sometimes you win like (Friday) night, sometimes you lose.

“It’s just tough when you think you should have got the two points because the goal they scored in the third was kind of fluky through bodies, but that’s how it goes sometimes. We had some mistakes in the second period not taking care of the puck and they found a way to get it in the back of our net. Then we had a breakdown here or there, and there’s your little stretch of time that really kill us.”

Despite losing the shootout, Grumet-Morris applauded those who put together the historic night.

“It was definitely a carnival atmosphere,” he said. “It looked like it took a lot of people a lot of work, and even today people working all day and through the night tonight they’re going to be working. We don’t, as players, get to see a lot of that, so we’re definitely appreciative of everything that everyone put into it, from our ownership group all the way down to the guys who are cleaning the stuff in the stands and try to make sure it’s warm in our locker room.

“And our trainers have slept about two hours in the last 48, so there are a lot of people who work behind the scenes and we do appreciate it.”

KUNDRATEK OUT AGAIN

Whale rookie defenseman Tomas Kundratek missed his second game with the flu.

Other Whale scratches were goalie Cam Talbot (high ankle sprain), center Todd White (concussion) and wings Chad Kolarik (hamstring) and Chris McKelvie (foot surgery). The Bruins scratched right wing Brian McGrattan and defenseman Sean Zimmerman. … All 30 AHL teams played Saturday night, and it was only the third time that occurred in the first season that each team was affiliated with a NHL team.

WHALE CONTINUES TO BE ROAD WARRIORS NEXT WEEK

The Whale is back on the road at Portland on Monday at 1 p.m. and then will play their first two games in Charlotte, N.C., against the Checkers, their former ECHL affiliate, on Thursday and Saturday. They finally return to the XL Center on March 2 to face the Springfield Falcons. Their ensuing home game is March 11 against the defending Calder Cup champion Hershey Bears, ending a brutal stretch of 10 road games in 12.

The Pirates (33-16-4-2) had won four in a row and 15 of 19 before a 4-3 shootout loss to the Bruins on Friday night and a 5-4 loss to Manchester on Saturday night that dropped them three points behind the division-leading Monarchs. The four straight wins included a 3-2 victory over the Whale at the XL Center on Feb. 6 that tied the season series at 3 in the teams’ fifth one-goal game. The Pirates are led by 2010 All-Star right wing Mark Mancari, who leads the AHL in goals (31) and is third in points (59). He’s followed by defenseman Marc-Andre Gragnani (9, 29), left wing Derek Whitmore (20, 13), 2011 All-Star center Luke Adam (15, 18) and left wing Colin Stuart (10, 22). David Leggio (15-4-0, 2.49, .919) has been tough on the Whale, including his first of two shutouts, 3-0 in Portland on Jan. 14. Jhonas Enroth is 18-14-2, 2.83, .910, no shutouts.

The Checkers (30-20-2-4), the new AHL affiliate of the Carolina Hurricanes, have lost two in a row after a five-game points streak (4-0-1-0). Their leading scorer, All-Star right wing Jerome Samson (26, 28), is on recall to the Hurricanes. The top remaining scorers are left wings Jacob Micflikier (22, 23), Chris Terry (20, 22) and Oskar Osala (13, 28) and center Zach Boychuk (15, 25). The Checkers have gone all season with only two goalies, rookie Mike Murphy (15-9-2, 2.95, .907, no shutouts) and Justin Pogge (15-13-2, 3.13, .906, no shutouts).

GORDIE HOWE’S NUMBER TO BE RE-RETIRED

Hall of Famer Gordie “Mr. Hockey” Howe will have his No. 9 re-retired and retired March 26 before the Whale hosts the Bridgeport Sound Tigers at the XL Center.

Howe is one of six players with his number in the XL Center rafters, the others being 2 (Rick Ley), 5 (Ulf Samuelsson), 10 (Ron Francis), 11 (Kevin Dineen) and 19 (John McKenzie). Connecticut Whale coach Ken Gernander’s No. 12 is the only number to be retired in the 14-year history of the AHL team.

“I think we’ll have a big crowd,” Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said. “I love Ronnie Francis (the Whalers’ only Hall of Famer), 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 and his sons, Mark and Marty, played together for the first time with the Houston Aeros in 1973 before they came to Hartford and signed 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 in 80 games and was named a NHL All-Star for the 23rd time while helping the Whalers make the playoffs at 52 years old.

HELMER JOINS 1,000 CLUB

Oklahoma City Barons defenseman Bryan Helmer became the seventh player in the AHL’s 75-year history to skate in his 1,000th regular-season game Friday in a 3-1 victory over the Abbotsford Heat. Former Wolf Pack wing Alexandre Giroux scored the winner with 1:06 left off an assist from fellow All-Star Colin McDonald, son of former Whalers defenseman Gerry McDonald.

Others to reach that milestone include Willie Marshall (1,205 career games), Fred Glover (1,201), Harry Pidhirny (1,071), Mike Nykoluk (1,069), Jody Gage (1,038) and Bruins coach Rob Murray (1,018). Marshall, Glover, Pidhirny, Nykoluk and Gage are members of the AHL Hall of Fame.

A 38-year-old native of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada, Helmer was undrafted after playing Junior A hockey and made his professional debut with the AHL’s Albany River Rats on Oct. 8, 1993. He played five seasons with the River Rats and then moved on to the Worcester IceCats (1998-2000), Manitoba Moose (2001-03), Springfield Falcons (2003-04), Grand Rapids Griffins (2004-06), San Antonio Rampage (2006-08) and Hershey Bears (2008-10), where he captained the team to back-to-back Calder Cup titles. He signed with Oklahoma City on Jan. 7.

Helmer is the AHL’s all-time leader among defensemen in games played, assists (402) and points (526), and he has played more Calder Cup Playoff games (138) than any player in AHL history. He was a First Team AHL All-Star in 1997-98 and a Second Team AHL All-Star in 2005-06. Helmer also has played in 146 NHL games with Phoenix, St. Louis, Vancouver and Washington.

BRUINS 5, WHALE 4 (SO)

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

First period: 1, Connecticut, Kennedy 12   11:13. 2, Connecticut, Niemi 2 (DiDiomete, Tessier), 19:38. Penalties-Roussel Pro (roughing), 5:16; DiDiomete Ct (roughing), 5:16; Alexandrov Pro (hooking), 6:21; Whitfield Pro (delay of game), 8:10; Reich Pro (roughing), 8:49; Newbury Ct (roughing), 8:49.

Second period: 3, Providence, Sauve 14 (Arniel, Ling), 1:21. 4, Providence, LaVallee-Smotherman 7 (Hamill, Roussel), 6:25. 5, Providence, Reich 12 (Arniel, Hamill), 9:42 (PP). 6, Connecticut, Williams 25 (Redden, Kennedy), 12:15 (PP). 7, Connecticut, Nightingale 2 (Garlock, Grachev), 13:14. Penalties-McIver Pro (fighting), 7:14; Grachev Ct (hooking), 7:14; Nightingale Ct (fighting), 7:14; Valentenko Ct (hooking), 9:06; Alexandrov Pro (high-sticking), 11:37.

Third period: 8, Providence, Arniel 16   13:52. Penalties-No Penalties

Overtime:  No scoring. Penalties-Valabik Pro (roughing), 1:52; Dupont Ct (slashing), 1:52; Penner Pro (holding), 3:50.

Shootout: Providence 1 (Hamill NG, Arniel NG, Whitfield NG, Sauve G), Connecticut 0 (Kennedy NG, Weise NG, Newbury NG, Tessier NG, Williams NG).

Shots on goal-Providence 8-14-10-0-1-33. Connecticut 13-12-6-1-0-32.
Power Play Opportunities-Providence 1 / 2; Connecticut 1 / 4.
Goalies-Providence, Hutchinson 9-7-0 (32 shots-28 saves). Connecticut, Grumet-Morris 4-2-1 (32 shots-28 saves).
A-21,673
Referees-Ghislain Hebert (49).
Linesmen-David Spannaus (8), Luke Galvin (2).