Category Archives: CT Whale

Rangers Reassign Forward Chris Chappell to Whale

HARTFORD, January 11, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned forward Chris Chappell to the Whale from the club’s ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleChappell, a 6-4, 212-pound second-year pro, had 11 points, four goals and seven assists, and 19 penalty minutes in 24 games with Greenville.  Last year the 22-year-old Pickering, Ontario native skated in six AHL games with the Hartford Wolf Pack, going scoreless with five penalty minutes, and was limited to 11 games in an injury-marred campaign with the ECHL’s Charlotte Checkers.  In those 11 contests, Chappell had one goal and three assists for four points.

The Rangers signed Chappell as a free agent July 2, 2009 from the Ontario Hockey League’s Saginaw Spirit.  Chappell played four seasons of OHL action for the Spirit, totaling 248 games, with 70 goals and 84 assists for 154 points, along with 243 PIM.

CHRIS CHAPPELL’S stats

The Whale finish off a stretch of four straight road games this Friday night, January 14 in Portland against the Pirates (7:00 PM faceoff, WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com).  That is followed by a pair of home games at the XL Center, this Saturday night, January 15 and Sunday, January 16.

Saturday’s game vs. the Providence Bruins faces off at 7:00 and features a special appearance by former Boston Bruin greats Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin.  They will be meeting and greeting fans, and signing autographs, in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM to promote the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” at Rentschler Field.  Sunday the Whale will take on the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at 3:00, and there will be a free postgame skate, sponsored by Stone Academy.

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’s Jeremy Williams Earns AHL All-Star Classic Berth

HARTFORD, January 11, 2011:  The American Hockey League today named Connecticut Whale right-wing Jeremy Williams to the Eastern Conference squad for the 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross.

CT WhaleThe 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross is coming up January 30-31 at Giant Center in Hershey, PA.

Williams, a seventh-year pro who signed with the New York Rangers as a free agent July 12, 2010, has scored 20 goals in 41 games on the season, which ties him for the AHL lead in that department.  The former Toronto Maple Leaf has also added 12 assists in action with the Whale, giving him 32 points on the year, second-most on the Whale club.  Four of Williams’ goals have been game-winners, tying him for third in the league in that category, including a pair of overtime tallies, and 10 have come on the power play, a total that is good for second in the AHL.  He also ranks fourth in the league in shots on goal, with 140.  Williams has also gotten into one NHL game this year with the Rangers, in which he was scoreless.

Originally a seventh-round pick (220th overall) by the Maple Leafs in 2003 out of the Western Hockey League, Williams has played in 370 AHL games in his career, with the St. John’s Maple Leafs, Toronto Marlies, Grand Rapids Griffins and the Whale, and has scored 142 goals and added 135 assists for 277 points.  In 31 total NHL appearances with the Maple Leafs and Rangers, the 26-year-old Regina, Saskatchewan native has posted nine goals and two assists for 11 points.

Tickets for the 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross – which include admission to both the 2011 AHL All-Star Skills Competition at 3 p.m. on Sunday, January 30, and the 2011 AHL All-Star Game at 7 p.m. on Monday, January 31 – are nearly sold out. Tickets remain available for the 2011 AHL Hall of Fame Induction & Awards Ceremony (January 31, 11 a.m.) and the Post-Skills Party (January 30, 6 p.m.). Contact the Giant Center box office at (717) 534-3911 for information.

The Whale finish off a stretch of four straight road games this Friday night, January 14 in Portland against the Pirates (7:00 PM faceoff, WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com).  That is followed by a pair of home games at the XL Center, this Saturday night, January 15 and Sunday, January 16.

Saturday’s game vs. the Providence Bruins faces off at 7:00 and features a special appearance by former Boston Bruin greats Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin.  They will be meeting and greeting fans, and signing autographs, in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM to promote the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” at Rentschler Field.  Sunday the Whale will take on the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at 3:00, and there will be a free postgame skate, sponsored by Stone Academy.

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.

Defenseman Sam Klassen Reassigned to Whale

HARTFORD, January 11, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned defenseman Sam Klassen to the Whale from the club’s ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleKlassen, a 6-2, 199-pound rookie out of the Western Hockey League, has skated in 34 games for the Road Warriors this year and has scored one goal and added six assists for seven points, while serving 36 minutes in penalties.  Klassen’s plus/minus rating of +11 ranks second among Road Warrior defensemen and tied for fourth overall on the team.

The Rangers signed Klassen as a free agent July 27, 2009.  In four WHL years with the Saskatoon Blades Klassen, a 22-year-old native of Watrous, Saskatchewan scored seven goals and added 74 assists for 81 points, and had 345 PIM, in 249 games.

Sam Klassen stats

The Whale finish off a stretch of four straight road games this Friday night, January 14 in Portland against the Pirates (7:00 PM faceoff, WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com).  That is followed by a pair of home games at the XL Center, this Saturday night, January 15 and Sunday, January 16.

Saturday’s game vs. the Providence Bruins faces off at 7:00 and features a special appearance by former Boston Bruin greats Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin.  They will be meeting and greeting fans, and signing autographs, in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM to promote the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” at Rentschler Field.  Sunday the Whale will take on the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at 3:00, and there will be a free postgame skate.

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.

Newbury Recalled, Rozsival Traded

By Bruce Berlet

Kris Newbury said what a lot of people are thinking these days.

CT Whale“It’s like the Connecticut Rangers,” Newbury said with a chuckle Monday after participating in his first practice with the NHL Rangers.

The 28-year-old Newbury is the fifth Hartford Wolf Pack/Connecticut Whale summoned to New York in the first half of the season, compared to eight all of last season. Newbury, a center, is filling in on the Rangers’ M*A*S*H unit for wing Alex Frolov, who will undergo season-ending knee surgery this week after being injured in the third period of a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Blues on Saturday night.

“(Newbury) has had a pretty good year down there (Hartford),” Rangers coach John Tortorella told the Rangers media after practice. “He had a good camp with us, he’s dropped some weight, which we asked him to do, so we’re going to give him an opportunity.”

Newbury, the Whale’s leading scorer with five goals and a team-high 30 assists and 35 points, skated with former linemate Dale Weise and Rangers captain and Trumbull native Chris Drury at the team’s practice facility in Greenburgh, N.Y.

“This will be perfect for me,” Weise said via an e-mail. “I’m excited. I love playing with him (Newbury).”

Newbury, too, was excited about his sixth NHL stint, though 8-year-old son Jacob wasn’t initially enthused about dad having to leave West Hartford for the bright lights of Broadway.

“It caught me kind of off-guard because I didn’t know Frolov had got hurt because we were on the bus coming back from Norfolk (on Saturday night),” Newbury said when contacted Monday afternoon. “I took my family out for lunch Sunday and was watching some (NFL) football with my son when (Whale coach) Kenny (Gernander) called on my wife’s cell phone because I’d turned off my cell phone because it was dying. My son wasn’t too happy at first, but then he understood.”

Adjusting to a third NHL team in his career was made easy for Newbury by having so many familiar faces around the locker room from earlier in the season, especially Weise. Plus, Newbury will get to play with one of the all-time clutch players in sports and a legend in Connecticut circles.

To continue reading, click on the read more button below.

“Dale and I are familiar with each other, and Chris is a really smart player who really knows what he’s doing,” Newbury said. “Hopefully we can contribute in some way because the team has been going really good. But every night is challenging, and I always like challenges.”

The Rangers and Whale both have been plenty challenged this season because of all the injuries in New York.

“Every team goes through it, so you just have to keep on playing,” Tortorella said. “We’ve done a really good job with that all year long. Let’s face it, it’s been a year of some major injuries. It can’t affect you. It hasn’t, and it won’t.

“That’s the most important part of our team this year, that we’re a team. We’re finding a way to win hockey games, with everybody contributing. When you have injuries, that’s the definition of what you are. It almost forces you into that type of situation. It’s become our identity. … We’re a tight group, it’s a tight team, and we’re going to have to get tighter and better in the details of the game the second half here.”

The Rangers are an amazing 25-15-3 considering the injuries, starting with alternate captain Vinny Prospal having offseason knee surgery and needing more in October, preventing him for playing a single game this season. Drury broke his left wrist for the first time in the very first scrimmage in training camp and again in practice, then there were sniper Marian Gaborik (separated shoulder) and former Wolf Pack All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan (broken left hand) being hurt in the third game of the season, center Erik Christensen (sprained MCL), enforcer Erik Boogaard (concussion), defenseman Michal Rozsival (strained ribcage) and Frolov.

Rozsival was back skating Monday, but as Tortorella said, “He couldn’t get through practice, so I doubt he’ll play (Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden against the Montreal Canadiens).”

A few hours later, it was definite when Rozsival was traded to the Phoenix Coyotes for forward Wojtek Wolski, 24, who was the first-round pick (21st overall) of the Colorado Avalanche in 2004. Wolski had six goals and 10 assists in 36 games with the Coyotes a season after the native of Zabrze, Poland, set career highs in goals (23), assists (42), points (65), games played (80) and plus-minus (plus-minus) while splitting time between Colorado and Phoenix.

The 6-foot-3, 215-pound Wolski has 85 goals and 142 assists in 356 NHL games with the Avalanche and Coyotes, but despite his acquisition, Rangers president and general manager Glen Sather said there wouldn’t be any roster changes at least for Tuesday night. But that will change when the walking wounded start returning, no sooner than at least three more weeks, and Sather added $2.7 million in cap space – $1.2 million between the contracts of Rozsival and Wolski and $1.5 million for half of the one-year, $3 million contract that Frolov signed.

“I’d spoken to (Phoenix GM Don Maloney) about a month ago, but there wasn’t any way we could make a deal,” Sather said in a teleconference call. “When the injury happened (Sunday), things became more urgent. I was surprised last year when Colorado traded him. Things haven’t been going as well as he probably expected in Phoenix, and Donnie wasn’t as happy with him last year as they went to the playoffs. It happened fairly quickly (Monday).”

Wolski is in the first year of a two-year, $7.6 million contract, meaning he carries a $3.8 million cap hit. He becomes a restricted free agent after the 2011-12 season. Rozsival’s contract, which carries a $5 million charge, runs through next season. The trade deadline is Feb. 28.

“It gives us an opportunity to do some things that may come up in the future,” Sather said. “It was a situation that was easy for us to make for a lot of reasons.”

In his third trip to the playoffs with the Avalanche, Wolski had four goals and an assist in seven games. He has been a good contributor on the power play in his career but did not have a power-play goal this season with Phoenix, where he found himself in the doghouse of coach Dave Tippett, the former Hartford Whalers wing. As one of the Rangers’ biggest players, Wolski seems a natural linemate for Gaborik.

“We know this is a little risky,” Sather said. “But the opportunity to do something with a 24-year-old who’s been an obvious goal scorer with a pretty high talent level, it was just too good an opportunity to turn down.”

Callahan and Prospal skated on their own Monday, and Tortorella said they would be pushed harder by coaches in the next few days.

Meanwhile, the Rangers will continue to rely heavily on help from the Whale (24-18-2-5), who also have performed admirably with many of their top players on recall, a testament to Gernander and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller. The Whale is on a 13-2-0-3 run that has lifted them into tie for second with the Portland Pirates (21-11-4-1), who have four games in hand.

Last season, goalies Chad Johnson and Matt Zaba, defensemen Corey Potter, Bobby Sanguinetti and Ilkka Heikkinen and forwards P.A. Parenteau, Dane Byers and Corey Locke played in a total of 51 Rangers games, with Parenteau accounting for 22. Parenteau also had three of the group’s four goals and five of the six assists, the other coming from Johnson, the lone call-up last season still in the organization. Weise was called up but didn’t play in the last four games.

Wing Mats Zuccarello (one game-winning goal in overtime, three assists and two shootout goals, one a winner) has already nearly equaled the output of the 2009-10 group in only eight games.

Wings Weise (scoreless in six games in two call-ups) and Jeremy Williams (one game) have had limited ice time on Broadway, while rookie Ryan McDonagh has averaged about 12 minutes and is one of five former Wolf Pack or Whale players among the Rangers’ six defensemen.

McDonagh held his own in his first two NHL games against the tough Dallas Stars and St. Louis Blues on Friday and Saturday night, and he should stay unless he again trades places with Michael Del Zotto, a member of the NHL all-rookie team last season who set up game-winners by Tim Kennedy and Williams in his first three minor-league games last week. McDonagh and Del Zotto switched leagues Jan. 3, and both performed well in their initial games with their new teams.

Rozsival, who had three goals and 12 assists in 32 games this season, became expendable with the development of youngsters such as Del Zotto, McDonagh, Tomas Kundratek and Pavel Valentenko. Sather said Del Zotto will remain with the Whale, but that “could change tomorrow.”

“I think that the obvious reason (to be willing to trade Rozsival) is that we’ve got young defensemen progressing,” Sather said. “We’ve been happy with the youth, and when you get a player, and you move a guy that’s 33 years old with this year and next year on his contract, it gives us an opportunity to get younger and better and gives the kids a chance to play.”

The Rangers also have needed forwards Zuccarello, Weise, Williams and now Newbury because of the long-term injuries to Drury, Gaborik, Callahan, Prospal, Christensen, Boogaard and Frolov, who will have surgery to fix three damaged ligaments in his right knee injured when Blues defenseman Brad Winchester badly twisted Frolov’s leg when he fell on it in the third period of the Rangers’ 2-1 victory Saturday night. Frolov went to the dressing room and returned for one shift Saturday night, but he couldn’t function – for what turned out to be obvious reasons.

It’s an unfortunate end to a disappointing offensive season for Frolov, who had only seven goals and nine assists in 43 games after being signed to a one-year, $3 million contract on July 26. He started the campaign on the No. 1 line with Gaborik but recently was dropped to the fourth line with Drury and Weise. At the time of his injury, Frolov was pointless in his last seven games, and his last goal came in a 4-3 shootout loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Dec. 23.

But with so any other players sidelined, starting with Drury’s first wrist injury in the opening scrimmage of training camp, Tortorella trusted Frolov in most situations, used him on the second power-play unit and believed in his ability to protect the puck and thus be effective in a defensive role. That’s difficult with all but exceptional rookies and some veterans who are one-dimensional, though Newbury doesn’t fit that category and is the reason he and Williams were signed to $250,000 contracts at the AHL level. But when Frolov, who twice scored more than 30 goals in a season with the Los Angeles Kings, is placed on long-term injured reserve, it will create about $1.5 million in cap space for the Rangers, minus the $500,000 that Newbury earns at the NHL level.

Newbury will make his Rangers debut Tuesday night as his new team tries to win four in a row for the first time this season in the start of a difficult stretch of four games in six days against teams that lead or are tied for the lead in their divisions – two against the Canadiens and one each against the Vancouver Canucks and Philadelphia Flyers. Newbury and Weise played well in Hartford before the right wing was called up for the second time on Dec. 29.

While Newbury prepared to start with his third NHL team, Callahan skated for the first time Monday since breaking his left hand while blocking a shot in a 4-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Dec. 15. Amazingly, the Rangers are 7-2-2 despite losing the player who epitomizes their new gritty style and is expected to be out 3-to-5 weeks, along with Christensen.

Boogaard is still unable to practice because of continued concussion symptoms, and Prospal might not be back this season because of the two knee surgeries.

In the short term, Frolov’s loss is a good break for a hard-working good guy. Newbury, 28, led the Whale in assists (30) and points (35) to go with five goals and 87 penalty minutes while playing in all 41 games. He is 11th in the AHL in scoring, and his 30 assists are third in the league. He had a team-high, 10 multiple-point games, including two streaks of three games, and established a career high with an eight-game assist streak from Nov. 28 to Dec. 17.

Newbury also adds a physical presence and someone who can help kill penalties. It is the fifth NHL stint for Newbury, a fifth-round pick by the San Jose Sharks in the 2002 NHL entry draft whom the Rangers acquired from the Detroit Red Wings for forward Jordan Owens on March 3. Newbury, who played with the Grand Rapids Griffins and Wolf Pack last season, tied for the team lead in scoring with 18 points in 18 games after being acquired. He has four goals, three assists and 64 penalty minutes in 48 NHL games with the Red Wings and Toronto Maple Leafs.

ALL-STAR TEAMS TO BE ANNOUNCED TUESDAY

The Eastern Conference and Western Conference starters and reserves for the AHL All-Star Classic on Jan. 30-31 at the Giant Center in Hershey, Pa., will be announced Tuesday at 3 p.m. Starting lineups were decided by online fan voting, and the remaining All-Stars will be selected by a committee of AHL coaches, with all 30 clubs having to be represented.

The Hall of Fame Class of 2011, to be inducted Jan. 30 at 11 a.m., is Mitch Lamoureux, Larry Wilson and the late Harry Pidhirny and Maurice Podoloff, who grew up in New Haven and graduated from Yale. AHL Hall of Famer Bruce Boudreau, former coach of the Hershey Bears and now coach of the Washington Capitals, will be the keynote speaker, and AHL graduate and 2008 Foster Hewitt Award winner Mike Emrick will be master of ceremonies. Rookie head coaches John Hynes of Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and Jared Bednar of Peoria will be co-coaches of the Western Conference All-Star team. By virtue of winning the 2010 Calder Cup, Hershey Bears coach Mark French and assistant Troy Mann will coach the Eastern Conference All-Star team for the second consecutive year.

Tickets for the All-Star Classic, which includes admission to the skills competition (3 p.m., Jan. 30) and All-Star Game (7 p.m., Jan. 31), are nearly sold out. Tickets remain for the post-skills party (6 p.m., Jan. 30) and Hall of Fame induction and awards ceremony (11 a.m., Jan. 31). For information, contact the Giant Center box office at 717-534-3911. … Former Wolf Pack wing Nigel Dawes was named the Reebok/AHL Player of the Week on Monday after getting five goals and an assist and being plus-4 in three Chicago Wolves’ games. Dawes, who was selected to the Canadian All-Star team in 2008 while with the Wolf Pack but did not participate in the All-Star classic because he was on recall to the Rangers, set a Wolves AHL franchise record on Wednesday night when he scored four goals, including one shorthanded and the game-winner, in a 9-3 rout of the Toronto Marlies. A 25-year-old native of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Dawes has a team-high 19 goals, one off Williams’ league lead, and 13 assists in 36 games. The sixth-year pro set career highs with 35 goals and 67 assists as a rookie with the Wolf Pack in 2005-06 and has 95 goals and 98 assists in 202 career AHL games. He also has 39 goals and 44 assists in 205 NHL games with the Rangers, Coyotes, Calgary Flames and Atlanta Thrashers.

The Whale nominated Del Zotto, and other nominees included defenseman Mark Katic (Bridgeport) and former Wolf Pack wing Alexandre Giroux (Oklahoma City).

WHALE’S NEW ROAD JERSEYS DEBUT FRIDAY

The Whale concludes a four-game road trip Friday night at Portland, where their new blue road jerseys will debut. The jerseys are available at the XL Center or The Hartford Store, 45 Pratt Street in Hartford. Prices, including sales tax, are $289 (authentic), $125 (senior replica) and $99 (junior replica).

The Whale returns to the XL Center next Saturday at 7 p.m. to face the Providence Bruins in the start of a three-game homestand that will include former Boston Bruins standouts Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin signing autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6-7 p.m. and then dropping the ceremonial first puck. Middleton, who played 12 seasons with the Bruins after two with the Rangers, and Lemelin also will play on the Bruins legends team that will face the Hartford Whalers legends Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. before the Whale plays the P-Bruins at 7 p.m. The doubleheader is part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest” at Rentschler Field in East Hartford on Feb. 11-23.

Early commitments for the Whalers team are Jordy Douglas, Ray Neufeld, Gordie Roberts, Darren Turcotte, Nelson Emerson and the Babych brothers, Dave and Wayne. Tickets ($20 to $85) for the doubleheader can be purchased at Ticketmaster.com and the Bushnell box office in Hartford on Monday through Friday from noon to 5 p.m. or by calling the Whale at 860-728-3366. They also can be purchased online and printed immediately at Ticketmaster.com.

The homestand also will include visits from the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins on Jan. 16 and the Hamilton Bulldogs on Jan. 21, when former Wolf Pack standouts and close friends Terry Virtue and Todd Hall of Hamden will sign autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6-7 p.m. and then drop the first puck. Virtue is an assistant coach with Owen Sound of the Ontario Hockey League, and Hall is an assistant coach with the Hamden High hockey team, which won the state Division I title the last two years. It’s also a special Family Value Night at which New Britain Rock Cats mascot Rocky will be on hand with Whale mascots Pucky and Sonar. There will be a giveaway, a table setup and autograph session, and the New Britain High School marching band will perform the national anthem and during the first intermission. Tickets in the lower level are $16 and include a soda and pizza slice or hot dog. Visit www.ctwhale.com.

Virtue will be making a pit stop on his way from his home in Tara, Ont., to Worcester, Mass., where he’ll be one of the first six inductees into the Worcester Hockey Hall of Fame on Jan. 22 at the DCU Center. It’s “Salute to the IceCats Night,” the name of the AHL franchise that preceded the Sharks in Worcester, and Virtue will be inducted with former Whalers wing Scott Young, Kelly O’Leary, Eddie Bates, Larz Anderson and Marvin Degon Sr., father of former Wolf Pack defenseman Martin Degon.

BALDWIN SPEAKS TO EAST HARTFORD GROUP ON TUESDAY

Whalers Sports and Entertainment chairman and CEO Howard Baldwin will be the guest speaker at the East Hartford Chamber of Commerce breakfast series sponsored by AT&T Connecticut Tuesday at 8 a.m. at the Sheraton Hartford Hotel on East River Drive in East Hartford. Baldwin will speak about his efforts to revive the local hockey market, the Whalers Hockey Fest and other economic development opportunities.

“I am very excited to have a man of Howard Baldwin’s experience, energy and commitment to Connecticut and the Hartford area speaking at our Chamber event,” Chamber president Ron Pugliese said. “I invite anyone who has the desire to see the Hartford area grow and prosper economically to join us on January 11.” … The Whale’s eighth Tip-A-Player Dinner and Sports Carnival, presented by Aetna, will be Jan. 23 at the XL Center from 4-7 p.m. Tickets are $30 for adults and $20 for children, and proceeds benefit Gaylord Specialty Healthcare at Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford. For more information, contact Lori Leniart at 860-728-3366. … Howard Baldwin Jr., the new president and COO of WS&E, has a new Twitter account accessible to Whale fans at howardbaldwinjr.

Nelson Emerson and Darren Turcotte Added to Player Roster for Whalers vs. Bruins Legends Game at Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl

Hartford, CT …  Whalers Sports and Entertainment announced today that Nelson Emerson and Darren Turcotte will join the group of featured players for the Hartford Whalers legends vs. Boston Bruins legends game February 19, 2011 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford.

Whale BowlThe legends game comprises part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl,” the featured event of the two-week outdoor Whalers Hockey Fest spectacular at Rentschler Field that will include numerous collegiate, high school, prep school and youth hockey games.  The legends game will face off at 4:00 PM on February 19 and will be followed by the outdoor AHL game between the Connecticut Whale and the Providence Bruins at 7:00 PM.

Emerson, a winger from Hamilton, Ontario, played 147 games in a Hartford Whaler uniform during the 1995-96 and 1996-97 seasons and totaled 38 goals and 58 assists for 96 points in Whaler action.  The Bowling Green University product was acquired by the Whalers, for Turcotte, in a trade October 6, 1995 and finished third on the 1995-96 Whaler club in goals, and fourth in points, with 29 goals and 29 assists for 58 points in 81 games.  The following year, 1996-97, the Whalers’ last in Hartford, Emerson played 66 games, scoring nine goals and 29 assists for 38 points.

The winner of the 1989-90 Hobey Baker Award during his Senior season at Bowling Green and a third-round pick of the St. Louis Blues in 1985, Emerson would go on to play a total of 771 NHL games in a 12-year pro career.  He saw action with St. Louis, Chicago, Ottawa, Atlanta and Los Angeles in addition to his time with the Jets and Hartford/Carolina.  All told, Emerson scored 195 NHL goals and added 293 assists for 488 points.

Turcotte, a Boston native, played 66 games with the Whalers in the 1993-94 and 1994-95 seasons, as part of a 12-year career as an NHL centerman.  After four 20-goal-plus years with the New York Rangers, who drafted him in the sixth round in 1986 out of the Ontario Hockey League, Turcotte was traded to the Whalers November 2, 1993, with James Patrick, for Steve Larmer, Nick Kypreos, Barry Richter and a sixth-round draft pick.  Turcotte posted two goals and 11 assists for 13 points in 19 games with Hartford after the trade.  The next season, the lockout-shortened 1994-95 campaign, Turcotte was the second-leading point and goal-scorer on the Whaler club, with 17 goals and 18 assists for 35 points in 47 games.

Turcotte played five more NHL seasons after his trade to Winnipeg for Emerson, also spending time with San Jose, St. Louis and Nashville.  He finished his NHL career with 195 goals and 216 assists for 411 points in 635 games.

Tickets for the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl, which include admission to both the AHL game and the legends game, are on sale now at Ticketmaster.com., as well as at the Bushnell box office from Monday through Friday, 12 noon-5:00 PM.  Ticket prices range from $20 to $85 and can also be purchased by calling the Connecticut Whale at 860-728-3366.  Tickets purchased online can be printed immediately (via Ticketmaster).

Rangers Recall Kris Newbury from Whale

New York, January 9, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that forward Kris Newbury has been recalled from the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL).

CT WhaleNewbury, 28, has registered five goals and 30 assists for 35 points, along with 87 penalty minutes in 41 games with Connecticut this season. He is currently tied for 11th in the AHL in scoring with 35 points, while his 30 assists are tied for third in the league. He also leads the team in points and assists, and ranks fourth in penalty minutes. Newbury has registered a team-high, 10 multi-point performances this season, including two separate streaks of three games with multiple points – November 13 vs. Springfield to November 19 at Springfield (six assists), and December 3 at Providence to December 11 vs. Manchester (one goal, six assists). The 5-11, 213-pounder established a career-high with an eight-game assist streak from November 28 vs. Adirondack to December 17 vs. Worcester, recording three goals and 12 assists over the span.

Last season, Newbury split the season between Grand Rapids and Hartford, registering 15 goals and 36 assists for 51 points, along with 205 penalty minutes in 70 AHL contests. He tied for the Wolf Pack lead in scoring with 18 points (four goals, 14 assists) in 18 games after joining the team on March 3. He made his Hartford debut on March 6 at Hamilton. Prior to his trade, Newbury led Grand Rapids and tied for 19th in the AHL with 144 penalty minutes, and ranked third on the Griffins in points (33) and assists (22). He also recorded one goal in four games with the Detroit Red Wings, and has recorded seven points (four goals, three assists) and 64 penalty minutes in 48 career NHL contests over four seasons.

The Brampton, Ontario native was originally San Jose’s fifth round pick, 139th overall, in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. He was acquired by the Rangers from Detroit in exchange for forward Jordan Owens on March 3, 2010.

The Rangers’ practice schedule for tomorrow, January 10, is 11:00 a.m. at the MSG Training Center.

Connecticut Whale 3, Norfolk Admirals 2 (OT)

Norfolk, VA, January 8, 2011 – Jeremy Williams’ 20th goal of the season, with 37.2 seconds remaining in overtime, gave the Connecticut Whale a 3-2 win over the Norfolk Admirals Saturday night at the Norfolk Scope.

CT WhaleThe victory upped the Whale’s league-high overtime win total to five, and came after the Admirals tied the score at two on a goal by Stefano Giliati with only 1:39 left in regulation.  The Whale (20-14-2-5, 47 pts.) kept pace with the Portland Pirates, who beat the Manchester Monarchs 4-3 and remained tied with the Whale for second place in the Atlantic Division, and moved to within three points of the first-place Monarchs.

Cam Talbot, in just his second start in eight games, made 38 saves to get the win, improving to 11-6-2 on the season and 6-0-1 in his last seven decisions, as the Whale were outshot by a margin of 40-26.  Brodie Dupont and Kelsey Tessier also scored for the Whale, and Tim Marks had the other Admiral tally.  Dustin Tokarski make 23 saves in the Norfolk net.

It was the Whale’s first win in three tries on the season against the Admirals, who had taken the first two meetings between the two teams by a combined score of 10-3.

To continue reading, click on the read more button below.

Michael Del Zotto, in his third game with Connecticut after being assigned by the New York Rangers, did much of the work on the winning play.  Del Zotto carried the puck through the neutral zone and down the left-wing side in the Admiral end, before passing to Williams at the opposite post.  Tokarski slid to his left and robbed Williams on his first opportunity, but Williams battled for the rebound and jammed it in on second effort, as he was being knocked to the ice by a Norfolk defender.

The Whale carried a 2-1 lead into the third period and nearly made it stand up, despite being outshot 13-4 in the period.  Giliati, though, earned Norfolk a standings point at 18:21 with his fifth goal of the year, on a deflection from Talbot’s right.  The tip was on a shot from the center point by defenseman Radko Gudas.

The Whale had taken the lead at 17:50 of the second frame on Tessier’s seventh of the season, after dustup at 17:35 that saw Jared Nightingale fight 6-8, 246-pound Norfolk defenseman Vladimir Mihalik.

Todd White had a close-in shot stopped, but Tessier pushed the rebound back to him and then deflected White’s second try past a prone Tokarski.

Norfolk had by far the better of the play in the first period, but Talbot held strong in the Whale net stopping 14 shots.  Tokarski, looking to end an 0-5-1 run, faced only six in the Admiral cage.

And the Whale rewarded Talbot’s efforts with a quick start to the second period, taking a 1-0 lead just 1:31 in on Dupont’s second goal in as many games.

Dupont broke up a Norfolk pass in the Connecticut end and chipped the puck clear, setting up a two-on-one with Williams.  Using Williams, the Whale’s leading goal-scorer, as a decoy, Dupont got Tokarski to open up the five hole and slapped a shot through the goalie’s legs.

The Admirals finally solved Talbot at 13:24, as leading point-scorer Marc-Antoine Pouliot (9-22-31 in 28 games) heaved the puck at the net from the right-wing boards.  It was deflected by Marks at the side of the crease, hit Talbot’s arm and deflected into the net.

The game was the Whale’s 41st of the season, marking the start of the second half.  It was the third of a stretch of four straight road games, which the Whale will complete with a visit to Portland this Friday (7:00 PM faceoff).  They then return home for back-to-back games Saturday and Sunday vs. Providence and league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, respectively.  Ex-Boston Bruins greats Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin will be making a special appearance at Saturday’s game, which is a 7:00 faceoff, meeting and greeting fans and signing autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM to promote the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” at Rentschler Field.  Sunday’s game faces off at 3:00 PM.

Connecticut Whale 3 (OT) at Norfolk Admirals 2
Saturday, January 8, 2011 – Norfolk Scope

Connecticut 0 2 0 1 – 3
Norfolk 0 1 1 0 – 2

1st Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Jackson Nor (high-sticking), 0:27; Del Zotto Ct (slashing), 3:51.

2nd Period-1, Connecticut, Dupont 7   1:31. 2, Norfolk, Marks 2 (Pouliot, Labrie), 13:24. 3, Connecticut, Tessier 7 (White), 17:50. Penalties-Bickel Ct (fighting), 10:02; Valentenko Ct (hooking), 10:02; Angelidis Nor (fighting), 10:02; DiDiomete Ct (fighting), 12:44; Berry Nor (fighting), 12:44; Kennedy Ct (slashing), 17:35; Nightingale Ct (fighting), 17:35; Mihalik Nor (slashing, fighting), 17:35; Del Zotto Ct (hooking), 18:25.

3rd Period-4, Norfolk, Giliati 5 (Gudas, Berry), 18:21. Penalties-Williams Ct (delay of game), 11:23.

OT Period-5, Connecticut, Williams 20 (Del Zotto, Williams), 4:22. Penalties-No Penalties

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 6-12-4-4-26. Norfolk 14-11-13-2-40.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 1; Norfolk 0 / 4.
Goalies-Connecticut, Talbot 7-2-2 (40 shots-38 saves). Norfolk, Tokarski 6-11-1 (26 shots-23 saves).
A-4,888
Referees-Jeff Smith (49).
Linesmen-Mark Hamlett (81), Scott Pomento (25).

WHALE NOTEBOOK – Tragic Passing of Tom Cavanagh

By Bruce Berlet

The stunning news out of Providence again emphatically demonstrated how precious life is.

RIP Tom CavanaghTom Cavanagh, the all-time leading scorer for the Worcester Sharks (46 goals, 92 assists in 202 games), was found dead Thursday of an apparent suicide inside the parking garage of the Providence Place mall. He was only 28.

Police said Cavanagh’s body was discovered near the garage’s Level C around 11:25 a.m. Later in the day, his car was discovered in another part of the garage with his wallet inside. Health Department spokeswoman Annmarie Beardsworth said an autopsy by the state medical examiner showed Cavanagh died from “multiple traumatic injuries due to blunt force impact.”

In a statement Friday night, Cavanagh’s father, lawyer Joseph Cavanagh, said: “Our son, Tom, was a young man who bravely fought the demons of mental illness for many years. This private struggle far surpassed his public athletic accomplishments.  Our family will celebrate and always remember his beautiful but short life. We hope that his friends and supporters will pray for him and for us during these difficult days. We already have felt the love of so many people of our community.”

Cavanagh was a sixth-round pick of the San Jose Sharks in the 2001 NHL entry draft after an outstanding career at Harvard, where he became the first player to play in every game (138) at the school where his father is considered one of Crimson hockey’s all-time greats. Cavanagh, a native of Warwick, R.I., spent four seasons in the Sharks organization with the Cleveland Barons and Worcester and had one goal and two assists in 18 NHL games with San Jose.

“I’m still numb, to tell you the truth,” Worcester Sharks coach Roy Sommer told Worcester Telegram writer Bill Ballou, who has covered the team since Day 1. “He was quiet, but he was the ultimate team guy, and his teammates all liked him. He played with injuries, and every time he went over the wall, you knew what you were gonna get from him. He willed himself to do a lot of things.”

Cavanagh played for Sommer in Cleveland and went to Worcester when the franchise relocated for the 2006-07 season. Ballou wrote Cavanagh was “a quiet but personable and articulate presence in the dressing room.”

To continue reading, click the read more button below.

The feelings were similar 3,000 miles away in San Jose, Calif.

“I got to know him through hockey at Worcester, and I got the privilege of spending a Christmas together here,” Sharks left wing Jamie McGinn told reporters. “It’s kind of a big shocker. I’m still in shock; it’s really sad. He’s a great guy.”

Defenseman Jason Demers called Cavanagh “a happy-go-lucky guy.”

“He always came in happy,” Demers said. “He never brought a bad mood to the rink. That’s for sure something that he’ll be remembered for, and that’s what I remember most about him.”

Cavanagh, who turned pro in 2005, had a memorable first NHL shift on April 3, 2008, when he assisted on Joe Thornton’s goal and set a franchise record by registering a point only 36 seconds into his career. Last season, Cavanagh played for the AHL’s Manchester Monarchs and Springfield Falcons but wasn’t playing professionally at the time of his death.

From this writer and the entire Connecticut Whale family, condolences to the Cavanagh family for someone who fought bravely and died far too soon.

WHALE’S NEW ROAD JERSEYS DEBUT FRIDAY

The Whale concludes a four-game road trip Friday night at Portland, where their new blue road jerseys will debut. The jerseys are available at the XL Center or The Hartford Store, 45 Pratt Street in Hartford. Prices, including sales tax, are $289 (authentic), $125 (senior replica) and $99 (junior replica).

The Whale returns to the XL Center next Saturday at 7 p.m. to face the Providence Bruins in the start of a three-game homestand that will include former Boston Bruins standouts Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin signing autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6-7 p.m. and then dropping the ceremonial first puck. Middleton, who played 12 seasons with the Bruins after two with the Rangers, and Lemelin also will play on the Bruins legends team that will face the Hartford Whalers legends Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. before the Whale plays the P-Bruins at 7 p.m. The doubleheader is part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest” at Rentschler Field in East Hartford on Feb. 11-23.

Early commitments for the Whalers team are Jordy Douglas, Ray Neufeld, Gordie Roberts and the Babych brothers, Dave and Wayne. Tickets ($20 to $85) for the doubleheader can be purchased at Ticketmaster.com and the Bushnell box office in Hartford on Monday through Friday from noon to 5 p.m. or by calling the Whale at 860-728-3366. They also can be purchased online and printed immediately at Ticketmaster.com.

The homestand also will include visits from the AHL-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins on Jan. 16 and the Hamilton Bulldogs on Jan. 21, which is a special Family Value Night at which New Britain Rock Cats mascot Rocky will be on hand with Whale mascots Pucky and Sonar. There will be a giveaway, a table setup and autograph session, and the New Britain High School marching band will perform the national anthem and during the first intermission. Tickets in the lower level are $16 and include a soda and pizza slice or hot dog. Visit www.ctwhale.com.

DISCOUNTED TICKETS AVAILABLE TO WHALE FANS

Whalers Sports and Entertainment, in association with the XL Center, is offering a discount for the “Disney On Ice” show Sunday at 4:30 p.m. to Whale fans. For the special tickets, use the discount code WHALES and save $4. Discounted tickets start at $11 and can be purchased at the XL Center box office, online at Ticketmaster.com or by calling 800-745-3000. For groups of 15 or more, contact the XL Center group sales office at 860-548-2000.

WS&E chairman and CEO Howard Baldwin will be the guest speaker at the East Hartford Chamber of Commerce breakfast series sponsored by AT&T Connecticut Tuesday at 8 a.m. at the Sheraton Hartford Hotel on East River Drive in East Hartford. Baldwin will speak about his efforts to revive the local hockey market, the Whalers Hockey Fest and other economic development opportunities.

“I am very excited to have a man of Howard Baldwin’s experience, energy and commitment to Connecticut and the Hartford area speaking at our Chamber event,” Chamber president Ron Pugliese said. “I invite anyone who has the desire to see the Hartford area grow and prosper economically to join us on January 11.”

The Whale’s eighth Tip-A-Player Dinner and Sports Carnival, presented by Aetna, will be Jan. 23 at the XL Center from 4-7 p.m. Tickets are $30 for adults and $20 for children, and proceeds benefit Gaylord Specialty Healthcare at Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford. For more information, contact Lori Lenihart at 860-728-3366.

Howard Baldwin Jr., the new president and COO of WS&E, has a new Twitter account accessible to Whale fans at howardbaldwinjr.

ALL-STAR VOTING ENDS SUNDAY

On-line fan voting for the AHL All-Star Classic Jan. 30-31 at the Giant Center in Hershey, Pa., runs through midnight Sunday at theahl.com and facebook.com/theahl. Players receiving the most votes by position will earn berths in the starting lineups of the Eastern Conference and Western Conference teams. A committee of AHL coaches will select the remaining All-Stars, and all 30 clubs must be represented. By completing the official ballot, fans are entered to win a grand prize of a team-signed All-Star jersey. Ten more winners will receive an official All-Star Classic T-shirt.

The Hall of Fame Class of 2011, to be inducted Jan. 30 at 11 a.m., is Mitch Lamoureux, Larry Wilson and the late Harry Pidhirny and Maurice Podoloff, who grew up in New Haven and graduated from Yale. AHL Hall of Famer Bruce Boudreau, former coach of the Hershey Bears and now coach of the Washington Capitals, will be the keynote speaker, and AHL graduate and 2008 Foster Hewitt Award winner Mike Emrick will be master of ceremonies. … Rookie head coaches John Hynes of Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and Jared Bednar of Peoria have been named co-coaches of the Western Conference All-Star team. Hynes and Bednar earned the honor because their teams will have the best record in their respective conferences as of the pre-determined deadline, the end of play Sunday. The Penguins are tops in the Eastern Conference (29-8-0-0, .784), and the Rivermen lead the Western Conference (24-10-2-1, .689). By virtue of winning the 2010 Calder Cup, Hershey Bears coach Mark French and assistant Troy Mann will coach the Eastern Conference All-Star team for the second consecutive year.

Tickets for the All-Star Classic, which includes admission to the skills competition (3 p.m., Jan. 30) and All-Star Game (7 p.m., Jan. 31), are nearly sold out. Tickets remain for the post-skills party (6 p.m., Jan. 30) and Hall of Fame induction and awards ceremony (11 a.m., Jan. 31). For information, contact the Giant Center box office at 717-534-3911.

WOLF PACK/WHALE GRADUATES JUST KEEP ON HELPING

Former Wolf Pack/Whale players continue to make major contributions for the parent Rangers.

The littlest Ranger, wing Mats Zuccarello, again made the biggest impression with a second consecutive extra-time winner Friday night when he scored the only shootout goal to give the Rangers a hard-hitting, come-from-behind, 3-2 victory over the Pacific Division-leading Dallas Stars, extending their NHL high for road wins to 14. Zuccarello scored his first non-shootout NHL goal with 1:51 left in overtime Wednesday night for a 2-1 victory over the Carolina Hurricanes.

Zuccarello – with help from omnipresent goalie Henrik Lundqvist – got a chance at his second winner in his seventh NHL game after former Wolf Pack center Artem Anisimov tied it at 2 with a perfect snap shot just under the crossbar and inside the post at 8:04 of the third period, ending an 0-for-13 drought on the power play. Lundqvist set the play in motion with his career-high third assist of the season and second in as many games, a 125-foot headman pass to center ice to former Wolf Pack defenseman Marc Staal, who found Anisimov racing into the right circle for his brilliant finish.

“I’m on a streak,” Lundqvist, whose ability to move the puck has improved, joked to reporters after the game. “The last thing (president and general manager) Glen (Sather) told me before I went home for the summer was that I have to be better around the net (handling the puck). I don’t know if I’m betting passing the puck, but I’m better the way I place the puck for the defense in our own end. I’m not always great, but I have more confidence.”

Zuccarello, the “Norwegian Hobbit” and scoring leader and MVP of the Swedish Elite League last season, scored the winner with a brilliant deke and forehand finish in the bottom of the second round before Lundqvist stopped Mike Ribeiro’s backhand attempt in the top of the third to seal the victory. Zuccarello is now 2-for-2 in NHL shootouts in his first season in North America, injured Erik Christensen is 3-for-3, and the rest of the Rangers are 0-for-14, including four misses by rookie center Derek Stepan. But the Rangers are 5-9-3 when trailing after two periods, the best record in the NHL in terms of points (13) and percentage (.433).

“I practice against the world’s greatest goalie, so if you can score on him, you’ll be able to score on other goalies, too,” Zuccarello said. “I try and make up my mind, but I also want to see how the goalie reacts. He was patient, so I had to make a quick read. It was great feeling to help the team secure a win, but when you have Henrik at the other end, everyone knows, well, I think he’s the best in the league. Hank saved the three shots so he’s the key for us. And all of the other guys who played a helluva road game, and grinded it out for 65 minutes, helped us get these two points.”

Anisimov, who was named the game’s No. 1 star, also credited the man who had 28 saves in regulation and overtime and was 3-for-3 in the shootout.

“Hank made some big saves and gave us confidence,” said Anisimov, who scored his 10th goal but first in nine games. “We are a team, and everyone helps each other, and everyone can make big plays and score big goals at key times. Tonight it was me.”

With his secondary assist on Zuccarello’s winner on Wednesday, Lundqvist is the first Rangers goalie with a points streak since backup Wayne Thomas had assists on Oct. 25 and Dec. 5, 1980. He also is the first Rangers goalie with points in back-to-back games since the Original Six era.

Zuccarello’s shootout winner kept a Wolf Pack/Whale streak intact. The Rangers’ three overtime winners this season have come from Anisimov, fellow Wolf Pack grad Ryan Callahan and Zuccarello. And terrific plays by former Wolf Pack forward Brandon Dubinsky led to the winners by Callahan and Zuccarello.

Rookie defenseman Ryan McDonagh held his own in his NHL debut after being called up from the Whale on Monday in a switch of personnel with Michael Del Zotto, a member of the NHL all-rookie team last season.

McDonagh played 21 shifts for 12:03 as a replacement for veteran Michal Rozsival, who sat with a rib injury sustained Wednesday.

“He can skate in the National Hockey League,” Rangers coach John Tortorella said. “I think early he was a little tentative, he had a couple good shifts, held in there on the blue line, kept a couple pucks in offensively. But I want to look at the tape.”

McDonagh didn’t get a lot of ice time because Staal played 37 shifts and a game-high 33:06, with defensive partner and former Wolf Pack blueliner Dan Girardi (37 shifts, 31:31) not far behind. They were matched up against Stars star center Brad Richards.

Rozsival wasn’t expected to able to go again Saturday night against the St. Louis Blues, so McDonagh was slated to play his second NHL game, possibly paired again with former Wolf Pack blue liner Matt Gilroy.

Dale Weise, on his second recall of the season, fought Steve Ott 7:25 into the game.

Forward Vinny Prospal had offseason knee surgery, hasn’t played this season, had a second knee surgery Oct. 18 and is expected to resume skating Sunday at the Rangers training facility in Greenburgh, N.Y. He should be joined by former Wolf Pack right wing Ryan Callahan, who is likely will be out about another month with a broken left hand.

Photo credit: Flickr

Norfolk Admirals 5, Connecticut Whale 2

Norfolk, VA, January 7, 2011 – The Norfolk Admirals scored three goals in a span of 68 seconds in the third period Friday night at the Norfolk Scope, to break open a 2-2 game and score a 5-2 victory over the Connecticut Whale.

CT WhaleThe loss kept the Whale (19-14-2-5, 45 pts.) five points behind the first-place Manchester Monarchs, who lost 3-0 in Providence, in the Atlantic Division, and the Portland Pirates, who beat Springfield at home, 4-1, moved into a second-place tie with the Whale.

The Admirals, who improved to 19-9-6-2 for 46 points on the year, outshot the Whale 19-7 in the decisive third period, in which they got goals from Mike Vernace, Mike Angelidis and Chris Durno.

Norfolk dominated play throughout the period but were held at bay by Whale goaltender Chad Johnson (35 saves) until Vernace scored at 11:22.  The goal came immediately off of a faceoff win by Blair Jones, who beat Tim Kennedy on a draw and got the puck to the center point to Vernace, who beat Johnson high.

Twenty-three seconds later, at 11:45, Angelidis drove to the net and jammed in a centering pass from Jones out of the right-wing corner.  Durno, the Norfolk captain, then completed the quick burst at 12:30, when he gunned a drive from the right-wing circle past Johnson after Marc-Antoine Pouliot fed the puck across the slot.

To continue reading, click on the read more button below.

The Whale were outshot by a total of 40-26 in the game, and found themselves behind on the first shift, as Johan Harju, the Admirals’ leading goal-scorer, got his 15th of the year just 17 seconds after the opening faceoff.

After a pinch by Connecticut defenseman Tomas Kundratek failed to get the puck deep on the right-wing boards, the Admirals broke three-on-two, and Harju was able to get behind Kundratek’s partner, Pavel Valentenko, and snapped a shot past Johnson’s stick side.

The Whale took over a lot of the play shortly after that and, after several glittering saves by Norfolk goaltender Cedrick Desjardins, were able to even the score at 8:45, on a goal by Brodie Dupont.

The Admirals’ Pierre-Cedric Labrie attempted to pass across the slot in his own zone and Dupont intercepted.  After Desjardins stopped Dupont’s first shot, Kelsey Tessier worked the rebound back to Dupont in the slot, and his backhand shot eluded Desjardins (24 saves), who was seeing his first action since a callup to parent club Tampa Bay that saw him win both of his first two career NHL appearances.

The Whale built a 14-3 shots advantage at one point, but Desjardins yielded nothing else, and the Admirals got the final seven shots of the session.

The two teams also traded goals in a second period that saw Norfolk outshoot the Whale 11-5.

James Wright put the Admirals back on top at the 10:06 mark, after good work deep in the offensive zone with linemates Matt Fornataro and Paul Szczechura.  Fornataro dug the puck out behind the net and played it to Wright at the left-wing faceoff dot.  Wright fired a high shot into the net behind Johnson, through an effective screen by Szczechura.

The Whale got that one back at the 15-minute mark, though, on the second goal in four Whale games for Jason Williams.  Todd White pushed the puck down the left-wing wall to Williams near the corner.  Williams moved toward the slot and tried to center to Chad Kolarik, but the puck deflected off of Admiral defenseman Scott Jackson and squeaked between Desjardins and the goalpost to his right.

The loss was the Whale’s second in three games, but only their third regulation defeat in the last 19 outings (13-3-0-3).  The Whale and Admirals get together again at Scope on Saturday night at 7:15 PM, and Norfolk has won the first two games of the season series by a combined score of 10-3, having beaten the Wolf Pack 5-1 in the first meeting October 20 in Hartford.  The five goals-against came one game after the Whale and Johnson had shut out the Worcester Sharks, 2-0, in Worcester Wednesday night.

MCDONAGH MAKES RANGERS DEBUT

Rookie defenseman Ryan McDonagh became the third Whale player to make his NHL debut this season with the Rangers on Friday night against the Dallas Stars. McDonagh replaced Michal Rozsival, who aggravated a pulled rib muscle in a 2-1 overtime victory over the Carolina Hurricanes on Wednesday night. Wing Mats Zuccarello, the second Whale player to join the Rangers, won that game with his first NHL goal. Whale wing Dale Weise is on his second recall to the Blueshirts.

McDonagh was paired with Matt Gilroy after exchanging places on the Rangers roster with Michael Del Zotto, a member of the NHL all-rookie team last season who was assigned to the Whale on Monday and set up Tim Kennedy’s winner in a 2-0 victory over the Worcester Sharks on Wednesday night. Gilroy had four assists in five games with the Wolf Pack last season in a successful attempt to rediscover his game, as Del Zotto is trying to do now.

McDonagh, the Montreal Canadiens’ first-round pick (12th overall) in 2007, was reunited with rookie center Derek Stepan, a teammate for two seasons at the University of Wisconsin, which lost 5-0 to Boston College and top Rangers prospect Chris Kreider in the NCAA championship game in April. Since McDonagh is a left-handed shooter, it allowed Gilroy to move to his natural right side. Steve Eminger, a little more comfortable on the left side, was paired with former Wolf Packer Michael Sauer. The Rangers’ No. 1 pairing was two more former Wolf Pack players, Marc Staal and Dan Girardi.

McDonagh, Stepan, Weise, Zuccarello and Sauer are NHL rookies. Stepan centered Zuccarello and former Wolf Pack forward Brandon Dubinsky, and Weise was alongside center/captain and Trumbull native Chris Drury and Alex Frolov.

Left wing Sean Avery played his first game since an unfortunate 23-game stint with the Stars that was followed by a stint with the Wolf Pack before he joined the Rangers. Avery played with sniper Marian Gaborik and former Wolf Pack center Artem Anisimov.

The Rangers play at St. Louis on Saturday night, then return home to host the Canadiens on Tuesday night.

Wing Jamie Langenbrunner didn’t play for the Stars after being re-acquired from the New Jersey Devils for a conditional third-round draft pick. The conditional pick will become a second-rounder if the Stars win the first round of the playoffs or re-sign the former Devils captain before July 1. If the Stars re-sign him after July 1, the Devils swap their 2012 third-round pick with the Stars’ second-round pick.

The 35-year-old Langenbrunner scored 10 goals in the Stars’ run to the Stanley Cup in 1999. He was traded to the Devils on March 19, 2002 and won another Stanley Cup in 2003. But like the Devils, who have the NHL’s worst record, he struggled this season with four goals, 10 assists and a minus-15 in 31 games and missed eight games with a sore neck. He had only four goals in 20 regular-season games after being captain of Team USA that won a silver medal in the 2010 Olympics. He was a healthy scratch in the Devils’ game against the Philadelphia Flyers on Thursday night.

NEW ROAD JERSEYS TO APPEAR NEXT FRIDAY

The Whale has a rematch with the Admirals on Saturday night and then will debut their new blue road jerseys at the end of their four-game road trip next Friday at Portland. The jerseys are available for purchase at the XL Center or The Hartford Store, 45 Pratt Street in Hartford. Prices, including sales tax, are $289 (authentic), $125 (senior replica) and $99 (junior replica). … The Whale returns to the XL Center next Saturday at 7 p.m. to face Providence, the start of a three-game homestand that will include former Boston Bruins standouts Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin signing autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6-7 p.m. and then dropping the ceremonial first puck. Middleton, who played 12 seasons with the Bruins after two with the Rangers, and Lemelin will also be playing with the Bruins legends team that will face the Hartford Whalers legends Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. before the Whale plays the Providence Bruins. That doubleheader is part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest” at Rentschler Field in East Hartford on Feb. 11-23. Early commitments for the Whalers team include Jordy Douglas, Ray Neufeld and Gordie Roberts. Tickets ($20 to $85) for the Legends Game and Whale-Bruins game can be purchased at Ticketmaster.com and the Bushnell box office in Hartford on Monday through Friday from noon to 5 p.m. or by calling the Whale at 860-728-3366. They also can be purchased online and printed immediately at Ticketmaster.com. … The homestand also will include visits from league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (Jan. 16) and Hamilton (Jan. 21), which is a special Family Value Night at which New Britain Rock Cats mascot Rocky will be on hand. There will be a giveaway, a table setup and autograph session, and the New Britain High School marching band will perform the national anthem and during the first intermission. Tickets in the lower level are $16 and include a soda and pizza slice or hot dog. Visit www.ctwhale.com.

DISCOUNTED TICKETS FOR WHALE FANS

Whalers Sports and Entertainment, in association with the XL Center, is offering a discount for “Disney On Ice” shows to Whale fans. For discounted tickets, use the discount code WHALES and save $4. Discounted tickets start at $11 for shows Saturday at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday at 4:30 p.m. Tickets can be purchased at the XL Center box office, online at Ticketmaster.com or by calling 800-745-3000. For groups of 15 or more, contact the XL Center group sales office at 860-548-2000.

… Whale mascots Pucky and Sonar will appear at the University of Hartford women’s basketball game against Albany on Saturday at 3 p.m. at the Reich Family Pavilion in West Hartford. It’s Father/Daughter Day as daughters get a free ticket when dad buys a $15 ticket in the lower level. Pucky and Sonar will have a dance-off at halftime with Howie the Hawk, the Hartford mascot. So come and root on coach Jennifer Rizzotti’s team and enjoy some time with Pucky and Sonar.

… WS&E chairman and CEO Howard Baldwin will be the guest speaker at the East Hartford Chamber of Commerce breakfast series sponsored by AT&T Connecticut Tuesday at 8 a.m. at the Sheraton Hartford Hotel on East River Drive in East Hartford. Baldwin will speak about his efforts to revive the local hockey market, the Whalers Hockey Fest and other economic development opportunities.

“I am very excited to have a man of Howard Baldwin’s experience, energy and commitment to Connecticut and the Hartford area speaking at our Chamber event,” Chamber president Ron Pugliese said. “I invite anyone who has the desire to see the Hartford area grow and prosper economically to join us on January 11.” … Howard Baldwin Jr., the new president and COO of WS&E, has a new Twitter account accessible to Whale fans at howardbaldwinjr.

… Former Wolf Pack defenseman Terry Virtue and Hartford Whalers wing Scott Young will be among the first six inductees into the Worcester Hockey Hall of Fame on Jan. 22 at the DCU Center in Worcester. It’s “Salute to the IceCats” Night, in tribute to the franchise that preceded the Sharks in Worcester, and other inductees will be Kelly O’Leary, Eddie Bates, Larz Anderson and Marvin Degon Sr., father of former Wolf Pack defenseman Martin Degon.

… The Whale’s eighth Tip-A-Player Dinner and Sports Carnival, presented by Aetna, will be Jan. 23 at the XL Center from 4-7 p.m. Tickets are $30 for adults and $20 for children, and proceeds benefit Gaylord Specialty Healthcare at Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford. For more information, contact Lori Leniart at 860-728-3366.

ALL-STAR VOTING ENDS SUNDAY

On-line fan voting for the AHL All-Star Classic Jan. 30-31 at the Giant Center in Hershey, Pa., runs through midnight Sunday at theahl.com and facebook.com/theahl. Players receiving the most votes by position will earn berths in the starting lineups of the Eastern Conference and Western Conference teams. A committee of AHL coaches will select the remaining All-Stars, and all 30 clubs must be represented. By completing the official ballot, fans are entered to win a grand prize of a team-signed All-Star jersey. Ten more winners will receive an official All-Star Classic T-shirt.

The Hall of Fame Class of 2011, to be inducted Jan. 30 at 11 a.m., is Mitch Lamoureux, Larry Wilson and the late Harry Pidhirny and Maurice Podoloff, who grew up in New Haven and graduated from Yale. AHL Hall of Famer Bruce Boudreau, former coach of the Hershey Bears and now coach of the Washington Capitals, will be the keynote speaker, and AHL graduate and 2008 Foster Hewitt Award winner Mike Emrick will be master of ceremonies.

ORTMEYER SIGNS WITH WILD

Former Wolf Pack and Rangers right wing Jed Ortmeyer signed with the Minnesota Wild and cleared waivers but remained with the AHL’s Houston Aeros, where he signed a professional tryout contract earlier this season.

The gritty 32-year-old Ortmeyer has played 306 NHL games with the Rangers, Nashville and San Jose. He had his best season in 2009-10 when he had eight goals and 11 assists in 76 games with the President Trophy-winning Sharks.

Ortmeyer will continue to provide veteran leadership for the Aeros or take that strength to the Wild and possibility skate on a line with Eric Nystrom, a linemate for two years at the University of Michigan, where he also played with former Wolf Pack goalie Al Montoya.

“Hopefully I can play well enough (in Houston) to get back to playing in the NHL,” Ortmeyer said. “My game is pretty simple, working hard, good on the penalty kill and being an energy guy. Hopefully I can chip in some points and be a good role model for some of the younger guys (in Houston).” … Former Rangers goalie Jason LaBarbera, a two-time AHL goalie of the year with the Wolf Pack and named to the All-Time Wolf Pack team in November, made 34 saves in the Phoenix Coyotes’ 2-0 victory over the Colorado Avalanche on Thursday night. … Former Wolf Pack and Rangers wing Nigel Dawes had four goals in the Chicago Wolves’ 9-3 victory over the Toronto Marlies on Wednesday night. That same night, Peoria’s Derek Nesbitt had four goals and an assist in a 7-4 victory over the San Antonio Rampage. … The AHL suspended Wilkes-Barre/Scranton right wing Jesse Boulerice for 10 games for his actions in a 3-2 shootout victory over the Charlotte Checkers on Wednesday night. Boulerice was suspended under the provisions of AHL Rule 28.1 (supplemental discipline) after review of a third-period incident in which it was determined Boulerice deliberately applied physical force to an official without intent to injure. He began serving his suspension Friday night against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers and will be eligible to return on Jan. 28 against the Albany Devils.

Connecticut Whale 2 at Norfolk Admirals 5
Friday, January 7, 2011 – Norfolk Scope

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

1st Period-1, Norfolk, Harju 15 (Pouliot, Durno), 0:17. 2, Connecticut, Dupont 6 (Tessier), 8:45. Penalties-Mihalik Nor (holding), 1:55; Nightingale Ct (roughing), 15:20; Labrie Nor (roughing), 15:20.

2nd Period-3, Norfolk, Wright 11 (Fornataro, Szczechura), 10:06. 4, Connecticut, Williams 2 (White, Nightingale), 15:00. Penalties-No Penalties

3rd Period-5, Norfolk, Vernace 6 (Jones), 11:22. 6, Norfolk, Angelidis 12 (Jones, Berry), 11:45. 7, Norfolk, Durno 11 (Pouliot, Quick), 12:30. Penalties-DiDiomete Ct (interference, misconduct), 13:09.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 14-5-7-26. Norfolk 10-11-19-40.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 1; Norfolk 0 / 1.
Goalies-Connecticut, Johnson 13-13-3 (40 shots-35 saves). Norfolk, Desjardins 13-5-1 (26 shots-24 saves).
A-4,891
Referees-Jeff Smith (49).
Linesmen-Mark Hamlett (81), Scott Pomento (25).

Dave and Wayne Babych Added to Player Roster for Whalers vs. Bruins Legends Game at Outdoor Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” February 19

Hartford, CT …  Whalers Sports and Entertainment announced today that brothers Dave and Wayne Babych will be among the featured players for the Hartford Whalers legends vs. Boston Bruins legends game February 19, 2011 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford.

Whale BowlThe legends game comprises part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl,” the featured event of the two-week outdoor Whalers Hockey Fest spectacular at Rentschler Field that will include numerous collegiate, high school, prep school and youth hockey games.  The legends game will face off at 4:00 PM on February 19 and will be followed by the outdoor AHL game between the Connecticut Whale and the Providence Bruins at 7:00 PM.

Dave Babych, a defenseman, was the all-time Whaler franchise leader in points and assists by a blueliner, with 240 points and 196 assists in 349 games in a Hartford uniform.  Acquired in a trade November 21, 1985 from the Winnipeg Jets in exchange for Ray Neufeld, who will also be playing in the Whale Bowl legends game, Dave Babych also ranks fifth overall in franchise history in assists and ninth in points.  His 44 Whaler goals are also tied for second-most all-time among defensemen.

Dave Babych was the second overall pick in the 1980 NHL Draft by the Jets and would go on to amass 1195 games of NHL action in a 19-year career with the Jets, Whalers, Vancouver Canucks, Philadelphia Flyers and Los Angeles Kings.  The Edmonton, Alberta native finished with 142 NHL goals and 581 assists for 723 points, along with 970 PIM.

Wayne Babych, a winger and Dave’s older brother by three years, joined Dave for 37 Whaler games in 1985-86, after being acquired in a trade with the Quebec Nordiques January 17, 1986.  He notched 11 goals and 17 assists for 28 points that year, and played four more games with Hartford the nest season, 1986-87, his last as a pro.

That Whaler tenure concluded a career that saw Wayne Babych play 519 NHL games with the St. Louis Blues, Pittsburgh Penguins, Nordiques and Whalers.  He totaled 192 NHL goals and 246 assists for 438 points, along with 498 penalty minutes.  The Edmonton native’s best season was 1980-81, when he ripped home 54 goals and added 42 assists for 96 points for the Blues, who drafted Babych third overall in 1978.

Tickets for the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl, which include admission to both the AHL game and the legends game, are on sale now at Ticketmaster.com, as well as at the Bushnell box office from Monday through Friday, 12 noon-5:00 PM.  Ticket prices range from $20 to $85 and can also be purchased by calling the Connecticut Whale at 860-728-3366.  Tickets purchased online can be printed immediately (via Ticketmaster).