UConn Football’s 2013 Big East Opponents Announced

For those of you UConn Huskies football fans hoping to travel to the blue turf field in Boise, ID or have the Boise State Broncos come to the Rent next year, well you're out of luck.

UConn Huskies footballThe Big East announced the home and away opponents for the 2013 football season and this is how it breaks down for UConn.

Home – Louisville, Rutgers, San Diego State, South Florida

Away – Central Florida, Cincinnati, Temple, SMU

As long as Michigan honors its contract with UConn, the home schedule is quite impressive.

Along with the four Big East games and Michigan, that former head coach's team the Maryland Terrapins and Towson State will come to Rentschler Field next year.

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Here's the full release from UConn:

STORRS, Conn. – The University of Connecticut football team will play a highly-attractive seven-game home schedule in 2013, which was finalized on Tuesday as the BIG EAST Conference announced its schedule breakdown for next season.

UConn will play home BIG EAST Conference games against Louisville, Rutgers, San Diego State and USF. The Huskies’ non-league home games will be Maryland (Sept. 14), Michigan (Sept. 21) and Towson State (Aug. 29). The exact dates for BIG EAST games will be announced in early 2013.

“I am very excited for the home schedule that our football team will play in 2013 and I think our fans should be too,” said UConn Director of Athletics Warde Manuel. “As I continue to say, it is important for UConn to have the Rentschler Field full for every game. Our football team will be working hard to prepare for the 2013 season and we need the support from our loyal Husky followers more than ever.”

Road conference games for the Huskies in 2013 will be Central Florida, Cincinnati, SMU and Temple. UConn’s lone non-conference road game will be at Buffalo (Sept. 28).

UConn’s home schedule features four teams that will play in bowl games this year, including: Louisville in the Allstate Sugar Bowl vs. Florida on Jan. 1; Michigan in the Outback Bowl vs. South Carolina on Jan. 1; Rutgers in the Russell Athletic Bowl vs. Virginia Tech on Dec. 28; and San Diego State in S.D. County Credit Union vs. BYU on Dec. 20.

The Huskies also play road games against three bowl teams: Central Florida in the Beef ‘O’ Brady’s Bowl vs. Ball State on Dec. 21; Cincinnati in the Belk Bowl vs. Duke on Dec. 27; and SMU vs. Fresno State in the Sheraton Hawaii Bowl on Dec. 24.

The BIG EAST Conference will have 12 football playing schools in 2013 split into two divisions. Each team plays eight conference games and face each team in their division (five games) and three teams in the other division for a total of eight league games.

The East Division in 2013 is comprised of: Central Florida, Cincinnati, UConn, Louisville, Rutgers and USF. The West Division in 2013 is comprised of: Boise State, Houston, Memphis, San Diego State, SMU and Temple.

The following is the complete 2013 BIG EAST football schedule breakdown:

EAST DIVISION
UCF
Home: Connecticut, Houston, Rutgers, USF
Away: Cincinnati, Louisville, SMU, Temple             

Cincinnati
Home: Boise State, UCF, Connecticut, Louisville
Away: Memphis, Rutgers, San Diego State, USF

Connecticut
Home: Louisville, Rutgers, San Diego State, USF
Away: UCF, Cincinnati, SMU, Temple

Louisville
Home: UCF, Memphis, Rutgers, San Diego State
Away: Boise State, Cincinnati, Connecticut, USF

Rutgers
Home: Cincinnati, Houston, USF, Temple
Away: Boise State, UCF, Connecticut, Louisville

USF
Home: Cincinnati, Louisville, Memphis, SMU
Away: UCF, Connecticut, Houston, Rutgers

WEST DIVISION
Boise State
Home: Houston, Louisville, Memphis, Rutgers
Away: Cincinnati, San Diego State, SMU, Temple

Houston
Home: Memphis, San Diego State, SMU, USF
Away: Boise State, UCF, Rutgers, Temple

Memphis
Home: Cincinnati, San Diego State, SMU, Temple
Away: Boise State, Houston, Louisville, USF

San Diego State
Home: Boise State, Cincinnati, SMU, Temple
Away: Connecticut, Houston, Louisville, Memphis

SMU
Home: Boise State, UCF, Connecticut, Temple
Away: Houston, Memphis, San Diego State, USF

Temple
Home: Boise State, Houston, UCF, Connecticut
Away: Memphis, Rutgers, San Diego State, SMU

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/11

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men's basketball and women's basketball teams as well as the other sports the student-athletes engage in. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you're on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

To open the links up in a new tab or window, use Control+click

UConn Men's Basketball links

Kentan Facey Impressive as Senior Season Begins [dom amore – hartford courant]

Lamb recalled to Thunder [kevin duffy – ct post]

UConn Football links

Season review: Quarterbacks [john silver – journal inquirer]

Other UConn related links

Tennis Programs Spend The Afternoon At Local Elementary Schools [uconnhuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Alvarez, Blake and Diouf Named College Soccer News All-Americans [uconnhuskies.com]

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

Houston We Have A Problem

Donte' Stallworth #19 of the New England Patriots dives across the goal line to score a touchdown in the third quarter against the Houston Texans during the game at Gillette Stadium on December 10, 2012 in Foxboro, Massachusetts.

In the history of Monday Night Football never had two teams this good matched up this late in the season.  The problem was one team clicked in a well rounded team effort between the offense and the defense while the other team struggled mightily.

We’ve seen this late season act in Foxboro many times but in the past it was the New York Jets or the Indianpolis Colts or the Denver Broncos on the other end of a beat down.  This time it was the Houston Texans, who came in at 11-1, who got a dose of Belichick football in a 42-14 loss to the New England Patriots.

The Texans were looking at this as the biggest game in the history of their franchise, despite having played a pair of playoff games last year.  Maybe the hype caught up to them.  For the Patriots, under Belichick, this is old hat this team lives for games like this.

Offensively New England struck early and often with Tom Brady throwing three TD passes in their first three possessions two to TE Aaron Hernandez and one to WR Brandon Lloyd.  Then Brady and the offense sputtered a bit but in the third quarter Brady found WR Donte Stallworth on a 63-yard bomb that he one handed and deked and juked Texans defenders into the end zone.

After an Arian Foster TD got Houston on the board, the Patriots came back to score again early in the fourth quarter when RB Danny Woodhead after hauling in a screen was caught from behind by Texans DE J.J. Watt who punched the ball loose.  But it was hardly the turnover that Houston was looking for as the ball bounded into the end zone into the awaiting hands of Lloyd who was ahead of the play blocking.

RB Stevan Ridley then made the blow out official as he scampered for a 14-yard TD as the Patriots increased their lead in the 4th quarter to 42-7.  Houston got a garbage time TD from back up QB T.J. Yates on a one yard sneak for the final score and to cover the spread.

The story thought for the Patriots was the strong play of the defense.  The front line was stout doing a good job on the run game, the linebackers helped with pass coverage and pass rush and the secondary was absolutely wonderful with several batted passes, an interception and some good tackling after the catch.

DT Vince Wilfork was a monster in the middle, LB Jerod Mayo kept blitzing Schaub and putting hits on him and busting up plays in the backfield while CB Aqib Talib, CB Kyle Arrington, CB Alfonzo Dennard, S Steve Gregory and McCourty all had big plays in the secondary to break up passes.

The defense held Foster to a mere 46 yards rushing on 15 carries he also had 39 yards receiving and WR Andre Johnson was held to under 100 yards as he had 8 grabs for 95 yards.

When the offense lulled the defense picked the team up.

Once again it’s December and the Patriots are playing football exactly as Bill Belichick has drawn it up.

At least the Texans will look good in those letterman jackets on the flight home.

Texans at Patriots Gamebook includes the box score, all the stats, play by play, drive charts and more.

Texans at Patriots Game Recap.

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Turning Point of the Game

Patriots S Devin McCourty picked Matt Schaub at the goaline on the Texans second drive.  It lead to a Patriots TD and 14-0 lead.

Offensive Players of the Game

Patriost WR Brandon Lloyd (7 catches for 89 yards and 2 TDs – 1 on a fumble recovery) and TE Aaron Hernandez (8 catches for 58 yards and 2 TDs) combined for 4 TDs (3 receiving, 1 fumble recovery), 15 catches and 147 yards to lead the Patriots offense.

Defensive Player of the Game

Patriots DT Vince Wilfork had 4 tackles (3 solo), 1 sack, 1 forced fumble, 1 tackle for loss and 1 pass defensed.

Game Notes

Starters for the Patriots were:

On Offense:

LT Solder

LG Mankins

C Wendell

RG Connolly

RT Vollmer

TE Hernandez

TE Hoomanawanui

WR Welker

WR Lloyd

QB Brady

RB Ridley

On Defense:

DE Scott

DT Wilfork

DT Deaderick

DE Ninkovich

LB Mayo

LB Spikes

LB Hightower

CB Talib

CB Dennard

S Gregory

S McCourty

Inactives for the Game:

Patriots

1. TE Rob Gronkowski (forearm/hip)

2. S Derrick Martin

3. RB James Develin

4. DE Ron Brace (back)

5. OL Markus Zusevics

6. DE Jake Bequette

7. G Nick McDonald (shoulder)

Texans

1. CB Alan Ball (foot)

2. LB Brooks Reed (groin)

3. G Antonio Caldwell (hamstring)

4. G Cody White

5. T Derek Newton (knee)

6. TE Garrett Graham (concussion)

7. NT Terrell McClain

The spread (Patriots MINUS 3) WAS covered.  The over/under (51.5) WAS/NOT COVERED.  I TOOK the points (Texans) and took the OVER.  I am now 3-10 vs. the spread and 9 of 13 calling the under/over.

New England is 22-22 all-time on Monday Night Football.

The Patriots are 11-8 at home on MNF.

This was the second meeting between the teams at Gillette Stadium.

The Patriots lead the overall series 3-1.  They are 2-0 vs. Houston at home.

Since 1999 the Patriots have the best record in the NFL at 157-64.

New England now has a 7-game winning streak after starting the season 3-3.

Since 2001 the Patriots are 72-16 in games played on Thanksgiving or later.

Since 2001 New England is 43-5 in December games.

The Patriots are now a combined 21-0 in the second half of the season since 2010. 

Their last loss in the second half was in 2009 season finale at Houston.

The Patriots have not lost a December home game since December 22, 2002 to the New York Jets, 30-17.

The Patriots are 23-1 in December home games since 2002.

The Patriots have won 13 consecutive December games dating back to 2009.  They are the fourth team to have won at least 12 consecutive December games.  San Diego won 18 (2006-09); Dallas 13 (1968-72) and New England 12 (2006-08).

Since Gillette Stadium opened in 2002, the Patriots are 72-14 at home in the regular season.

New England is 81-47-1 against the teams that make up the AFC South. 

Bill Belichick is now 202-107 including playoffs in his career.

Belichick’s 202 wins are good for 7th all-time.

Belichick coached teams are 3-1 vs. Houston.

Belichick is 16-8 on Monday Night Football, 15-5 as the Patriots head coach.

Tom Brady is 3-1 vs. the Texans. Overall including playoffs he is 150-44.

Brady is 13-4 all-time on Monday Night Football.  He has won his last 5 appearances and 10 out of the last 11. 

Brady has 329 TD passes in his career he is now 5th all-time.  Hall of Famer Fran Tarkenton is 4th with 342.

Brady has thrown at least 1 TD pass in 45 consecutive games.

The Patriots are 89-16 when Brady throws at least 2 TD passes in a game.

Brady has 14 games with 4 TDs and 0 INTs in his career it is the most in NFL history.

WR Wes Welker now has catches in 114 consecutive games including playoffs, 97 as a Patriot.  The last time Welker did not have a catch in a game was 12/24/05 as a Dolphin.

His first quarter punt return for 31-yards was his longest since 2009.

TE Aaron Hernandez had his first 2 TD game since his rookie year in 2010.  He know has 4 TD’s on the year.

WR Brandon Lloyd caught a 39-yard pass for his 4th TD of the season.  He added a fumble recovery for his 5th TD later in the game.

Veteran WR Donte Stallworth who was just re-signed this week caught his first TD pass of the season a 63-yard bomb from Brady in the 3rd quarter that he one handed.

That was the 2nd longest pass play of the season only to the 83-yard pass to Shane Vereen against the Jets in Week 11.

RB Stevan Ridley had his 10th rushing TD of the season.

DE Rob Ninkovich had his team leading 7th sack in 1st quarter.

DT Vince Wilfork had a forced fumble (2nd) on a strip sack in the first quarter and a pass defensed (6th) in the second quarter.  He also had a sack (2nd).

DE Chandler Jones returned to action and had his 3rd pass defensed of the season in the second quarter.

CB Kyle Arrington had his 9th pass defensed on the season in the second quarter on a 4th down attempt by Houston.  He added his 10th pass defensed on a 3rd and 3 late in the 3rd quarter.  He is 2nd on the team in passes defensed.

Arrington also led the team in tackles on special teams with two.

CB Aqib Talib had a pass defensed, his second as a Patriot late in the 2nd quarter.  Talib was hurt on the play (hip) and missed the rest of the game.

S Devin McCourty had his 4th INT of the year at the goal line in the first quarter.  He is now tied for the team lead with rookie S Tavon Wilson.  He also had a pass defensed his team leading 12th.

Rookie CB Alfonzo Dennard had a big defensed pass (7th) on Andre Johnson in 3rd quarter.

LB Jerod Mayo (4, 5), LB Donta Hightower (6, 7) and DE Justin Francis (3, 4)each had 2 QB Hits while Ninkovich (10) and DE Trevor Scott (3) had 1 each.

Hightower had 2 tackles for loss while DY Brandon Deaderick, Wilfork and Jones, Mayo and McCourty had 1 each.

Roster moves this week:

  • RB Brandon Bolden rejoined the 53-man roster after serving a four game NFL suspension for violating the drug policy.
  • WR Julian Edelman broke his foot against Miami and has been placed on the season ending IR.
  • Signed WR Donte Stallworth.
  • Waived G Mitch Petrus.
  • Signed OL Tommie Draheim and OL Colin Miller to the practice squad.

The Patriots sacked Houston QB Matt Schaub 2 times, while Brady was sacked 1 time.

New England is PLUS 24 in turnover differential. The offense has given up 5 INT and 5 fumbles, while the defense has 15 INTs and 19 fumble recoveries. 

The Patriots were 3 for 3 (100%) in the red zone.  They had 3 TDs.

New England was 6 for 12 (50%) on third down conversions and 0 for 0 on 4th down attempts.

The Texans are 12-11 all-time against the AFC East.

Houston is 2-5 on Monday Night Football.

Texans are 20-26 all-time in December.

They had a franchise record 6-game road win streak snapped and 6-game winning streak overall snapped as well.

This was the final game of three consecutive road games for the Texans, they had won the previous two.

The Texans have allowed the fewest sacks in the NFL this season, 16 (tied with New York Giants).

Houston was the last undefeated road team in the NFL.

The Texans were shut out in the first half for the first time this season.

Houston head coach Gary Kubiak, is in his 7th season, he is 58-51 and 1-1 in the post season for an overall record of 59-52.

Kubiak is 1-2 vs. New England.

He is 2-4 in Monday Night Football games.

Texans QB Matt Schaub is 43-36 in his career.

He is 1-2 vs. New England in his career, 1-1 with Houston and 0-1 with Atlanta.

RB Arian Foster scored his 16th TD of the season, 14th rushing in the 3rd quarter.  He leads the NFL in TD’s.

Houston was 4 for 14 (29%) on 3rd down conversions and 0 for 2 (0%) on 4th down attempts.

The Texans were 2 for 2 (100%) in the red zone.  They had 2 TDs.

Houston is PLUS 14 in turnover differential, tied for 2nd in the NFL. The offense has given up 11 INT and 2 fumbles, while the defense has 15 INT and 12 fumble recoveries.

Terry McAulay was the game referee.  The temp at kickoff was 59, rainy and warm.

Attendance – 68,756 at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro MA. 

Post Game Interviews

Patriots head coach Bill Belichick and Patriots QB Tom Brady post game press conference via patriots.com.

This Week in the AFC East

Jets beat the Jaguars, 17-10

Rams edged the Bills, 15-12

49ers downed the Dolphins, 27-13

AFC East Standings

Patriots                 10-3/5-0

Jets                        6-7/2-3

Dolphins                  5-8/1-3

Bills                        5-8/1-3

Next Week

The Patriots host the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday night at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro MA.  Kick off is at 8:20 p.m. on NBC.

Follow Steve on Twitter @SteveMichaelsII

photo credit: getty images

2013 NCAA Men’s Basketball Rankings – Week 6 (Dec. 10)

AP & USA Today Coaches Polls

The NCAA men's basketball rankings are out and the UConn Huskies remain among the others receiving votes in both polls.

The Indiana Hoosiers are still the No. 1 team in the land. They are followed by the Duke Blue Devils, Michigan Wolverines, Syracuse Orange and Florida Gators in both polls.

Joining Syracuse from the Big East in the top 25 are the Louisville Cardinals (6/6), Cincinnati Bearcats (11/12), Georgetown Hoyas (15/21) and Notre Dame Fighting Irish (22/24).

The Pitt Panthers join UConn among the others receiving votes in both polls. The Marquette Golden Eagles are among the others receiving votes in the AP Poll.

For a full look at the 2013 NCAA Men's Basketball Rankings – Week 6 (Dec. 10), please click on the continue reading button below if you're on the home page.

AP Top 25 USA Today Coaches Poll
RK TEAM REC PTS PVS RK TEAM REC PTS PVS
1 Indiana (44) 9-0 1,580 1 1 Indiana (25) 9-0 769 1
2 Duke (20) 9-0 1,551 2 2 Duke (6) 9-0 749 2
3 Michigan 9-0 1,444 3 3 Michigan 9-0 705 3
4 Syracuse 8-0 1,378 4 4 Syracuse 8-0 663 4
5 Florida 7-0 1,319 6 5 Florida 7-0 644 5
6 Louisville 8-1 1,303 5 6 Louisville 8-1 609 6
7 Ohio State 6-1 1,211 7 7 Ohio State 6-1 586 7
8 Arizona 7-0 1,178 8 8 Arizona 7-0 568 8
9 Kansas 7-1 1,087 9 9 Kansas 7-1 537 9
10 Illinois 10-0 991 13 10 Illinois 10-0 465 14
11 Cincinnati 9-0 944 11 11 Missouri 8-1 450 11
12 Missouri 8-1 877 12 12 Cincinnati 9-0 447 12
13 Minnesota 10-1 714 14 13 Creighton 9-1 338 13
14 Gonzaga 9-1 699 10 14 Gonzaga 9-1 325 10
15 Georgetown 7-1 577 15 15 San Diego State 7-1 292 15
16 Creighton 9-1 525 16 16 Minnesota 10-1 225 21
17 New Mexico 10-0 512 18 17 UNLV 7-1 224 18
18 San Diego State 7-1 491 17 18 North Carolina 7-2 222 16
19 Michigan State 8-2 328 19 19 Michigan State 8-2 213 17
20 UNLV 7-1 305 21 20 New Mexico 10-0 207 20
21 North Carolina 7-2 298 20 21 Georgetown 7-1 163 23
22 Notre Dame 8-1 283 22 22 Kentucky 6-3 125 19
23 Wichita State 9-0 280 24 23 Oklahoma State 7-1 116 22
24 Oklahoma State 7-1 251 23 24 Notre Dame 8-1 110 25
25 North Carolina State 6-2 213 25 25 North Carolina State 6-2 93 24
Dropped from rankings: Dropped from rankings:
None None
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
Oregon 177, Pittsburgh 177, Kentucky 44, Wyoming 15, Connecticut 10, Marquette 8, Virginia Commonwealth 6, Maryland 5, Butler 5, Murray State 4, Miami (FL) 3, Alabama 3, Virginia Tech 3, LSU 1 Wichita State 88, Pittsburgh 74, Oregon 32, Connecticut 10, Murray State 10, Wyoming 8, Butler 4, Ole Miss 2, Virginia Commonwealth 2

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UConn Football Announces 2012 End of Year Awards

Here's the release from UConn announcing the end of the season awards for the 2012 UConn Huskies football team.

STORRS, Conn. – The University of Connecticut football team held its annual awards ceremony Sunday evening at The Burton Family Football Complex, honoring 10 senior student-athletes.

UConn Huskies footballCornerback Blidi Wreh-Wilson (Edinboro, Pa.) was named the Team Most Valuable Player.  A second team All-BIG EAST selection, Wreh-Wilson provided a steady presence in the UConn secondary as a four-year starter.  He started 11 games in his final season and produced one crucial interception in overtime to set up an eventual game-winning field goal at No. 18 Louisville on November 24.  For his career, Wreh-Wilson collected eight interceptions, totaling 171 return yards and ran back a pair for scores in 2010.

Tight end Ryan Griffin (Londonderry, N.H.), who earned his second-straight second team honor from the BIG EAST and was on the Mackey Award Watch List to start the year, was honored as the Huskies’ Offensive Player of the Year.  Griffin assaulted the UConn record book for receptions by a tight end throughout his career and after catching 29 passes; six for touchdowns and 484 yards in 2012, his 10 career and 116 receptions are both second all-time by a tight end.

Defensive end Trevardo Williams (Bridgeport, Conn.) was honored with the Defensive Player of the Year award after being named a unanimous All-BIG EAST First Team selection last week.  He leaves Connecticut as the all-time sacks leaders with 30.5 as he led the BIG EAST with 0.96 sacks per game as a senior.

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Wide receiver and kick returner Nick Williams (Windsor, N.J.) took home the honor of Special Teams Player of the Year.  A second team selection, Williams was twice named the BIG EAST Special Teams Player of the Week in 2012.  He ran back punts for touchdowns of 58 yards at Maryland (Sept. 15) and 80 yards against Pittsburgh (Nov. 9).

The Jasper T. Howard Award, given to a strong team player who best exemplifies a “battle to the end” spirit, was awarded to defensive tackle Ryan Wirth (Medford, N.J.).  The award is named in honor of former Husky Jasper Howard, who passed away in October 2009.  Wirth, who played primarily on special teams in his first three seasons, started all 12 games for the Huskies this year.  He totaled 51 tackles, 3.5 sacks and was fourth on the team in tackles for a loss with 10 after earning the starting job and filling the spot of 2012 NFL second round draft pick Kendall Reyes.

Offensive Guard Adam Masters (Bethesda, Md.) was honored with the Football Alumni Award.  Masters earned a nod to the All-BIG EAST Second Team, despite playing just seven games this season; all starts at right guard.  He started 30 games over the course of his career, playing in 37 overall.

The Kendall Madison Award, given to a strong player whose dedication, hard work and outstanding citizenship best exemplify the strong spirit of the UConn Huskies, was awarded to linebacker Sio Moore (Apex, N.C.).  The award is named for the former Husky who passed away in the mid-1990s.  Moore, who earlier was named to the All-BIG EAST First Team, finished second on the team with eight sacks and second in the league at 0.67 per game.  At outside linebacker, he was second on the team with 15.5 TFLs and second in the league with a 1.29 average.

The Joseph M. Gianelli Unsung Hero Award, named in honor of the former UConn assistant football coach, head golf coach and athletic administrator, went to tight end John Delahunt (Ottawa, Ont.).  Delahunt started 23 games in his career and had a career year offensively as a senior with 18 receptions for 223 yards and a touchdown.

Linebacker Jory Johnson (Mobile, Ala.) was named the winner of the John L. Toner Scholar Athlete Award.  The award is named in honor of the former NCAA President, UConn athletic director and head football coach.  In his final season at Connecticut, Johnson played opposite Moore at linebacker and finished second on the team with 95 tackles, including 6.5 for a loss.

The Brian Kozlowski Award, given to the player that is the most courageous, hard-working and productive, was awarded to cornerback Dwayne Gratz (Piscataway, N.J.).  Playing opposite of Wreh-Wilson, Gratz had a superb senior season, leading the UConn defense with three picks, including a 37-yard run back for a score in the season-opener against Massachusetts (Aug. 30).  In 41 career starts, he totaled eight interceptions for 152 return yards, including a 46-yard interception return for a touchdown against Oklahoma in the 2011 Fiesta Bowl.

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 12/10

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

Paw Prints is our daily look at the happenings for the UConn Huskies football, men's basketball and women's basketball teams as well as the other sports the student-athletes engage in. We will do our best to bring you the links from all of the media that covers the Huskies on a daily basis. As always, links can be found by clicking on the read more button below if you're on the home page.

Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.

To open the links up in a new tab or window, use Control+click

UConn Women's Basketball links

Grading the Huskies at the season's trimester mark [the hour]

UConn Men's Basketball links

Grading the Huskies at the season's trimester mark [the hour]

D-League: Lamb Making The Most Of His Time [hoopsworld.com]

UConn Football links

ESPN.com All-Big East team [andrea adelson – espn.com]

Other UConn related links

UConn Remembers WTIC's Arnold Dean [uconnhuskies.com]

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

Albany Devils 1, Connecticut Whale 0

By Wil Goldsholl

Hartford, CT, December 9, 2012 – After suffering a 9-2 loss at the hands of the Manchester Monarchs the night before, the Connecticut Whale sought to turn things around against the division rival Albany Devils in Hartford on Sunday afternoon. Despite a slew of quality scoring chances and near-misses, the Whale fell, 1-0.

CT WhaleKeith Kinkaid stopped all 30 Whale shots to get the shutout win, and Joe Whitney’s second-period goal was the only scoring.  Cam Talbot made 26 saves in the Whale net.

Kris Newbury found his way to the box early when he bumped Kinkaid in his own crease 53 seconds in. Newbury’s deliberateness was unclear, but if he was looking to rattle Kinkaid early, the goaltender was unaffected in the first period. He stopped all 12 shots he faced in the first 20 minutes.

Connecticut occupied the Albany zone for minutes at a time, seeing both earned and unearned opportunities to beat Kinkaid. Newbury redirected a puck handily that was kicked away. Christian Thomas was denied when he nearly scored by simply allowing the puck to hit his body and Kyle Jean also hit a post.

Albany had scattered chances on Talbot, including a three-on-one and a wrister that hit the stick side post in the last minute of the period.

Whitney scored the game’s lone goal 6:48 in to the second period with a stick side laser. The left-hander scooped the puck up on his own blueline and tore through the neutral zone before firing a snap shot from the right dot and past Talbot.

J.T. Miller, who had his first pro two-goal game last week against Bridgeport, nearly tied it up several minutes later. Miller came from underneath the goal line and stole the puck from a breaking Albany defenseman. He made a cross-crease move with Kinkaid sprawled and did not score, but drew a tripping minor on Eric Gelinas.

The early going of the third period rolled by uneventfully. Mike Sislo was called for holding early but the Whale power play struggled. Chris Kreider was sent off for hooking at 11:05, but Connecticut, who has the league’s 29th ranked penalty kill, managed to keep it a one-goal game.

Jean did everything but score in the later parts of the period. The rookie drew a roughing call on Tim Sestito in the offensive corner with 6:14 to go. He nearly tipped one in on Kinkaid just as that penalty was expiring when Michael Haley won a faceoff cleanly. Blake Parlett snapped the puck from the point and Kinkaid turned him away yet again. Jean would see yet another opportunity with 1:45 to play when he let a one-timer go from the slot, but Albany’s defense blocked it on the way to the net.

The Whale put up a fight with the sixth attacker on the ice and the net empty. Kreider got in on a rebound with 35 seconds to play but Kinkaid was able to smother it, making his thirtieth save and earning his second shutout of the year.

The loss dropped the Whale to 10-11-2-0 on the year, while Albany moved to 7-8-0-5.

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Albany Devils 1 at Connecticut Whale 0
Sunday, December 9, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Albany 0 1 0 – 1
Connecticut 0 0 0 – 0

1st Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Newbury Ct (goaltender interference), 0:53; Pesonen Alb (tripping), 16:43.

2nd Period-1, Albany, Whitney 4 (Butler), 6:48. Penalties-Corrente Alb (fighting), 8:06; Haley Ct (fighting), 8:06; Gelinas Alb (tripping), 9:44; Miller Ct (holding), 18:03.

3rd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Sislo Alb (holding), 2:33; Kreider Ct (hooking), 11:05; Sestito Alb (roughing), 13:46.

Shots on Goal-Albany 6-15-6-27. Connecticut 12-6-12-30.
Power Play Opportunities-Albany 0 / 3; Connecticut 0 / 4.
Goalies-Albany, Kinkaid 4-5-3 (30 shots-30 saves). Connecticut, Talbot 8-8-0 (27 shots-26 saves).
A-2,692
Referees-Ryan Fraser (14).
Linesmen-Jim Briggs (83), Derek Wahl (46).

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