Connecticut Whale 3, Bridgeport Sound Tigers 2

By Brian Ring

Hartford, CT, March 16, 2012 – The Connecticut Whale defeated the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, 3-2, Friday night at the XL Center, moving into sole possession of first place in the AHL’s Northeast Division.

CT WhaleKris Newbury had the game-winning goal and an assist, and Casey Wellman had his second straight three point game with a goal and two assists, to back a 38-save performance by goaltender Chad Johnson.

“I thought Johnson had a great game,” said Whale head coach Ken Gernander. “There were stretches in the second, late in the third, where he made numerous saves.

“I thought that was really the catalyst as far as getting us going.”

Justin DiBenedetto got the Sound Tigers on the board first, scoring his 18th goal of the season 7:20 into the first period. DiBenedetto deflected Jon Landry’s shot from the left point perfectly past the blocker of Johnson, just seconds after the Whale finished killing off an Andreas Thuresson minor penalty.

The Whale would outshoot the Sound Tigers, 10-9, in the first period, but Bridgeport goaltender Kevin Poulin (31 saves) was strong, stopping several key chances.

Wellman would tie the game for Connecticut with 3:07 left to play in the second period, burying a Jonathan Audy-Marchessault rebound past a sprawling Poulin for his 21st goal of the season. Newbury also assisted on the score.

Johnson kept the Whale alive in a second period that saw the home team outshot, 18-10, and at one point, 15-5.

Tim Erixon would put the Whale ahead, 2-1, while on a five-on-three power-play 3:30 into the third frame. Erixon’s shot snuck through traffic in front, clipping the glove of Poulin on the way into the net for Erixon’s third goal of the season. Audy-Marchessault and Wellman would both register their second points of the game with assists on the score.

The lead would be increased to 3-1 on Newbury’s 22nd goal of the season with 2:27 remaining, as he beat Poulin with a wrist shot from the right face-off circle, providing the Whale with the eventual game-winning tally. Newbury’s goal was assisted by Wellman, notching his third point of the game.

The Sound Tigers would score with Poulin pulled for the extra attacker with 1:08 left in the final period, when Trevor Frischmon forced a rebound past Johnson. Bridgeport, however, would not be able to pull even in the frantic final moments, as the Whale went on to win, 3-2.

The Whale will be back in action Saturday night at the XL Center for another divisional tilt, against their I-91 rivals, the Springfield Falcons (7:00 PM).

Tickets to all 2011-12 Whale home games are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

College students can get discounted tickets to Whale weekday games with the Whale’s “Ditch the Dorms” deal.  For Monday through Friday home games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center can get $2 off Upper Level tickets and $5 off Lower Level seats.

Save on your tickets, and get the best seats, with a ticket plan for the Whale’s 2011-12 AHL campaign, which are on sale now. For information on season seats, mini plans and great group discounts, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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

Bridgeport Sound Tigers 2 at Connecticut Whale 3
Friday, March 16, 2012 – XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Bridgeport 1 0 1 – 2
Connecticut 0 1 2 – 3

1st Period-1, Bridgeport, DiBenedetto 18 (Landry), 7:20. Penalties-Wishart Bri (tripping), 3:45; Thuresson Ct (interference), 5:04.

2nd Period-2, Connecticut, Wellman 21 (Audy-Marchessault, Newbury), 16:53. Penalties-Grant Ct (hooking), 3:25; Gillies Bri (fighting), 15:08; Nightingale Ct (fighting), 15:08; Erixon Ct (tripping), 18:09.

3rd Period-3, Connecticut, Erixon 3 (Audy-Marchessault, Wellman), 3:30 (PP). 4, Connecticut, Newbury 22 (Wellman), 17:33. 5, Bridgeport, Frischmon 9 (Haley, McNeely), 18:52. Penalties-Landry Bri (holding), 1:32; Marcinko Bri (slashing), 3:01; Tanski Ct (hooking), 14:58.

Shots on Goal-Bridgeport 9-18-13-40. Connecticut 10-10-14-34.
Power Play Opportunities-Bridgeport 0 / 4; Connecticut 1 / 3.
Goalies-Bridgeport, Poulin 17-16-3 (34 shots-31 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 21-13-5 (40 shots-38 saves).
A-4,177
Referees-Marcus Vinnerborg (45).
Linesmen-Brent Colby (7), Jim Briggs (83).

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Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/16

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 some of the other sports. 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

Jim Calhoun’s Take [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Wrapping Things Up From L’Ville [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Shabazz: ‘Some People Could Leave, Some Could Stay. I’m Not Sure’ [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Iowa State 77, UConn 64: the wrap (really) [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

UConn becomes first defending champion since ’96 to lose in first round [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Notes/Quotes from Iowa State: “More often than not, you end up sitting here talking about what you could have done and should have done.” [Kevin Duffy – CT Post]

Post-game breakdown: Iowa State [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

It’s a wrap; UConn’s season ends with 77-64 loss [Neill Ostrout – Journal Inquirer]

Same Sad Song [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Iowa State ousts UConn from NCAA tournament [CT Post]

UConn’s Season Ends With Loss To Iowa State, 77-64 [Hartford Courant]

Calhoun Declines To Talk About What Lies Ahead For Him [Hartford Courant]

Season Ends With A Night Of Futility [Hartford Courant]

Iowa State eliminates Huskies from NCAA tournament 77-64 [New Haven Register]

Over before it began for UConn men [The Day]

Drummond, Lamb are at a crossroads [The Day]

UConn fortunate it didn’t get a date with Kentucky [CBSSports.com]

UK-UConn? Iowa St. says no thanks [ESPN.com]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Where 29-4 Requires Something More [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Stewart Named National Gatorade Player Of The Year [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Hayes Returns To Practice Today [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Tickets Sales Slow In Bridgeport; Price Of Tickets Could Be Why [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Hayes and Hartley Earn Spot on WBCA All-Region I Team [UConnHuskies.com]

Youthful Prairie View A&M took some lumps, then rose to the occasion [CT Post]

UConn Women’s Chase For Eighth National Title Begins Saturday In Bridgeport [Hartford Courant]

UConn Football links

cDan Orlovsky signs with Buccaneers as Josh Freeman backup [AP]

Other UConn related links

Baseball. Coast to Coast: Huskies Visit CCU for Weekend Classic [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Tennis. Huskies Sweep On Spring Break Trip [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Schneider Named AHA First Team; Gerke Second Team [UConnHuskies.com]

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UConn 2012 NCAA 2nd Round Postgame Quotes

From left, UConn's Ryan Boatright, Shabazz Napier and Alex Oriakhi were having a rough time with Iowa State at the KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Ky., Thursday.

Here are the postgame quotes from UConn Huskies players Shabazz Napier, Jeremy Lamb and Ryan Boatright as well as head coach Jim Calhoun after their 77-64 loss to the Iowa State Cyclones in the second round of the 2012 NCAA Tournament.

Transcript courtesy of ASAP Sports:

THE MODERATOR:  We’re going to go ahead and get started with the University of Connecticut press conference.  We’ll begin with a brief opening remark from Coach Calhoun.  Coach?

COACH CALHOUN:  I’m as surprised as anybody.  Clearly.  I imagine our players are too.  Fred and the Iowa State team showed up at a different speed, a different level than what we played.

At times we certainly made a dent and came back, but the opening few minutes kind of set the tone for the game.  When we did come back, we didn’t have enough whatever it may be to stay with it.  I thought we still had opportunities to win the basketball game.

Give them all the credit, Iowa State.  There wasn’t too many ways in which they didn’t beat us tonight.  It’s very disappointing to have to end the season this way.  I’ve cared about these kids all through the season.  I continue to care about them.

Somebody asked me was it a disastrous season?  If UConn goes to the tournament and wins 20 or more games every year, I’m pretty happy.  I’m not happy with the way we played tonight.  I’m sure the players aren’t happy with the way they played tonight.  If I were Fred, the Mayor of Ames, I’d be happy with the way they played tonight.  They played at a different speed, and that’s why they won tonight’s game.

THE MODERATOR:  We’re going to take questions for the student‑athletes.

Q.  Shabazz, could you just talk about how the opening minutes went for you?  Coach mentioned he thought they came out at a different speed.  Is that what you saw and what you felt out there?

SHABAZZ NAPIER:  Yeah.  They came out, and they threw the first punch.  We weren’t ready for it.

It’s my fault I didn’t get my guys ready for the game, and as a point guard, you’re supposed to guard the speed, and I didn’t allow myself to do that.  Just not playing as well as we should have.  We lost the game in the first half.  We gave up a lot of points, down 24 points.

You do that in the NCAA Tournament, more often than not, you lose the game.  The team you’re playing against is a great team.

Q.  Ryan, you had it down to eight a couple of times, but both times they had three‑point plays to go back to 11.  Then you had those shots back to back where you got it down to 6.  Did you think at that point you guys had the momentum that maybe you could get back and at least tie it?

RYAN BOATRIGHT:  Yeah.  Once we cut it to six, I felt like if we dug down a little deeper and tied it up, maybe it’s going to crack.

I felt like they had made their run and it was our time to make our run.  But they made plays at the end and we didn’t.

Q.  Jeremy, did they do anything special defensively on you early in the game?  Looks like you had trouble getting free a couple times?

JEREMY LAMB:  They didn’t do nothing special.  They were a good defensive team, but I was able to get free.  I just had open shots and wasn’t able to knock them down.

Like I said, they played good team defense, and they contested my shots.  A couple of them they contested, I could have made, but I just missed some easy shots.

Q.  Shabazz, you’ve played on a championship team now and now one that went out in the first round.  Can you sort of define what the fundamental difference between the two teams and the seasons were?

SHABAZZ NAPIER:  Effort and attitude.  We had a great player last year who brung it every single day.  And as a point guard, it’s my job to bring that.  When you don’t bring that effort and attitude to be that leader for your teammates, you lose games.

More often than not, you sit up here talking about what you could have done and what you should have done. 

To see what Calhoun had to say about the loss, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

THE MODERATOR:  Thank you.  We’ll open it up for questions for Coach Calhoun.

Q.  Jim, can you just talk a little bit about the foul trouble Andre had, and how did that impact what you wanted to do?

COACH CALHOUN:  I don’t think any single foul situation‑‑ except for us missing foul shots‑‑ really didn’t have anything to do with the game.

The game was the fact they played 40 minutes full hard and fast.

At times we came back and played pretty good basketball.  But in the main, we had too many shots at the beginning of the game, getting down to 24, back up to 8, back up to 14, down to 6.  They played 40 minutes.  We played sporadically and thus was the game.  Foul situations really had nothing to do with it anything.

Q.  Jim, I’d like to ask you the same question that I asked Shabazz.  You had a lot of the same players on this year’s squad that you had last year.  Obviously, you lost Kemba.  What do you think was the difference between last year and this year?

COACH CALHOUN:  We won the first game last year, and we lost the first game this year.  I don’t know what to tell you.  You saw the game.  We played very poorly.  We deserved to lose the game.  They deserved to win the game.  Last year we played Bucknell and beat them by 25 points.  We deserved to win.  They deserved to lose.

Mike, we played very poorly.  I don’t know really what to tell you.  I’m sure our kids are‑‑ I feel badly that Shabazz is trying to take credit for it.  Shabazz wasn’t the problem.  We collectively didn’t play like Iowa State did.

And last year during the six games, or whatever games, and last year is last year.  This year in the past couple weeks, we played much better basketball collectively together for 40 minutes.  Tonight, we were very sporadic in the way we played.  We’d get back into the game, then out of game.

A lot of that was self‑induced, but it was taking advantage because of the way Iowa State played.  Any comparisons to last year, as I said to a thousand people, we won the National Championships last year, the trophy is tucked away, safe, locked.  We’re starting this season in the NCAA Tournament with an opportunity, and that’s what tonight was, and we didn’t take advantage of a great opportunity.

I thought that Iowa State took great advantage of the opportunity.  I’m not trying to be a jerk to you, but last year and this year have nothing to do with each other.  They really don’t.

Q.  Jim, what will be the process you’re going to go through here to decide if you’re going to come back and coach next year?

COACH CALHOUN:  We’re talking about tonight’s game.  We’re not talking about me.  I think we’re talking about that.  I’m going to get on the plane tomorrow, go home, and do what I usually do, and meet up with the team on Monday.

So as far as my own personal thing, I don’t think it has any relevance here, to be honest with you.

Q.  The disappointing result tonight notwithstanding, do you look back at this season as more of one that’s disappointing or one that’s rewarding.

COACH CALHOUN:  That’s a good question because it has got to do with tonight’s game.

More importantly, I discovered being away from the team for eight games and almost four weeks, that this team‑‑ and I think I might have expressed this yesterday‑‑ put a great deal of pressure on itself for no reason.  So when you ask about last year, last year is last year.  It’s done, finished, complete.  To make any comparisons is not valid because it’s not the same team.  You change one player, you change it, leadership and go‑to guy and all those kinds of things.

The only thing I can deal with is I think this team got better at particular points in time.  But I always felt until recently‑‑ tonight was an exception.  You’re right, it’s a disappointing ending.  That there were some things that made me feel good about this team.  I like coaching basketball.  I hated the ending today because I didn’t think we were typical to the way we played the last couple of weeks.

I really thought we competed a couple times against Syracuse, beating West Virginia, and some of the games against Pittsburgh, 3 out of 4 games.  The most important thing, and it will always be rewarding when dealing with young guys.  It’s always great to stand on the podium.  You only get so many chances to do that.

Tonight’s game was a disappointment.  This season was not a disappointment for me because I knew, quite frankly, that this team could be very good, and we just didn’t reach the level.

There’s been a lot of people saying this happened, that happened, so this should happen.  I still go back to Roy Williams’ team in 2009 after the National Championship and how much they struggled.  And at times, that’s who we were, trying to find who we were.  Always fighting ourselves‑‑ I don’t mean fighting each other, but fighting ourselves, who’s going to be what.

If they just kind of grew up a little bit, we were much better off.  But I always felt badly this team fought itself so much and probably could have achieved a little bit more.  As far as kids, they came together to get themselves in the NCAA Tournament.  We keep producing 20‑game seasons at UConn and getting into the tournament, have better results than we did tonight, I think we’ll be happy.

Q.  Jim, young players being young players, human nature, do you think there’s any chance they may have peeked ahead a little bit to the possibility of playing Kentucky?

COACH CALHOUN:  I really don’t know that.  It’s obviously a valid question because we had two great‑‑ we played Kentucky last year in the classic game of the semifinals in the National Championship, and the kids do know each other.  If they did, they made a hell of a mistake.  I don’t think they did.

For whatever reason, we got caught as being nothing more than a street sign as they went by us a thousand miles an hour in that first ten minutes of basketball.  We did regroup, came back, which I was very happy to see, but I can’t‑‑ I never felt we weren’t ready for the game.

As a matter of fact, I felt we were really ready for the game and obviously disappointed that we didn’t play better.

THE MODERATOR:  Thank you, Coach.

Here’s the Iowa State postgame transcript if you’re interested as well.

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photo credit: Bettina Hansen – Hartford Courant (No. 9 in gallery)

Video: Iowa State Beats UConn 77-64 in 2012 NCAA Tournament

What started out as a promising season for the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team, ended in disappointment in Louisville, KY on Thursday night.

Connecticut guard Jeremy Lamb reacts near the end of the team's 77-64 loss to Iowa State in an NCAA men's college basketball tournament second-round game in Louisville, Ky., Thursday, March 15, 2012.The Iowa State Cyclones used a 16-0 run in the first half to put the Huskies in a deficit they would never recover from as they fell 77-64 in the second round of the 2012 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at the KFC! Yum Center.

The Cyclones (23-10) advance to the the third round where they’ll face No. 1 overall seed, the Kentucky Wildcats on Saturday. For UConn, their season ends at 20-14.

Chris Allen led the way for Iowa State with 20 points. Royce White had a big game with a double-double of 15 points and 13 rebound while Scott Christopherson also had 15 points. Melvin Ejim rounded out the Cyclones in double digits with 11 points.

Shabazz Napier paced the Huskies with 22 points and six assists. Jeremy Lamb was the only other member of the Huskies to hit double figures with 19 points while Ryan Boatright had nine points. Roscoe Smith led the Huskies with five rebounds to go along with his five points scored.

Here are the highlights of the game:

UConn Huskies vs Iowa State Cyclones 2012 NCAA second round box score

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Photo credit: AP Photo

Another Whale-Sound Tigers Showdown

By Bruce Berlet

Connecticut’s two AHL entries have reached a share of first place in the Northeast Division from quite different directions, yet neither is anywhere near clinching a playoff berth, something both coaches and former Hartford Wolf Pack teammates have espoused on numerous occasions.

CT WhaleThe Bridgeport Sound Tigers hold a tie-breaker lead over the Connecticut Whale, making their ninth of 10 meetings in the GEICO Connecticut Cup on Friday night at the XL Center that much more significant. The Sound Tigers (32-20-3-5) were in the division cellar after a 2-10-0-1 slide from Thanksgiving to the end of 2011, but a stunning 20-2-0-2 run vaulted them into first place before they lost three straight last weekend for the first time this season, the first two via shootouts, starting against the Whale.

“The guys have worked really hard, but we really haven’t done anything yet,” Sound Tigers first-year coach and former Wolf Pack defenseman Brent Thompson said before a 4-3 shootout loss to the Whale last Friday night.

Meanwhile, the Whale (31-20-5-5) had a six-point division lead entering 2012 before an 11-game winless streak (0-6-3-2) in January dropped them behind the Sound Tigers. But the Whale has rallied with a 12-4-1-0 run to tie the Sound Tigers, who have a game in hand and own the first tie-breaker, which is most non-shootout wins (28-25).

The closeness of the two teams doesn’t end there either, as the Sound Tigers have scored only three more goals than the Whale (185-182) while allowing only four more (173-169). And each team has a goalie named Reebok/AHL Goaltender of the Month, the Whale’s Chad Johnson in October and the Sound Tigers’ Anders Nilsson in February. Johnson was called up again by the parent New York Rangers on an emergency basis Thursday to back up Martin Biron because Henrik Lundqvist was still slowed by the flu and had to miss a critical showdown with the Pittsburgh Penguins and superstar center Sidney Crosby, playing his first game since Dec. 5 and only the ninth of the season because of post-concussion symptoms. The Rangers also were again without right wing and captain Ryan Callahan (right foot) and another former Whale/Wolf Pack, defenseman Michael Del Zotto (right hip).

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

The Sound Tigers are 5-1-1-1 against the Whale, though three of the wins have come in overtime or a shootout. The Whale is 3-0-0-1 in four home games against the Sound Tigers, including last Friday night, when Kris Newbury scored a sixth-attacker goal with 4.9 seconds left in regulation before Johnson stopped three shots in a shootout as All-Star Mats Zuccarello, Casey Wellman and Brendan Bell were scoring for the Whale.

But after playing with as many eight players on professional tryout contracts because of injuries and call-ups, the Sound Tigers are a lot more whole as Nilsson and rugged wing Micheall Haley were reassigned by the parent New York Islanders on Monday, though captain Jeremy Colliton is doubtful and fellow forwards Scott Howes and Kael Mouillierat questionable because of injuries. The only players on the Sound Tigers’ “Clear Day” list still with the New York Islanders are All-Star wing David Ullstrom and center Casey Cizikas. The Whale are currently without Zuccarello, who was called up by the New York Rangers on Sunday.

Cizikas (15 goals, 29 assists, plus-25 in 51 games) is the Sound Tigers’ leading scorer, followed by defenseman Matt Donovan (7, 28), right wing Rhett Rakhshani (13, 21 in only 35 games with a six-game point streak), left wing Justin DiBenedetto (17, 12), Colliton (11, 16) and Ullstrom (19, 4). Nilsson (15-6-2, 2.32 goals-against average, .925 save percentage, one shutout) and Kevin Poulin (17-15-3, 2.94, .903, two shutouts) are the goalies.

The Sound Tigers’ work ethic has impressed the Whale the most.

“They have decent personnel, especially when Cizikas and Ullstrom are there, and they’re a hard-working team,” said Whale coach Ken Gernander, who used just that style of play to become one of the seven new inductees into the Connecticut Hockey Hall of Fame last Saturday night. “A lot of their players who complement their high-end players are really hard-working and hard-nosed guys who have that desperation or hunger or what have you.

“Teams that are hard working are always in the game, so if you make a mistake or two, they’re going to capitalize on it. And they have a pretty good defensive corps, as do we, and have good goaltending, just as Chad has been going well for us lately.”

Johnson has got a good up-close look at the Sound Tigers, having started six of the eight games against the intrastate rival, including the last four.

“From start to finish, they’re always coming after us, especially on the forecheck with a lot of speed,” said Johnson, who is 3-2-1 against the Sound Tigers. “And they play a really good team game. It’s hard to kind of get them out of position or get really good quality scoring chances because they’re always in good position and just play a sound game together. It’s really hard to generate anything or sort of sustain any momentum because their team is really structured and on top of you all the time, especially on the forecheck for our defense.”

The Sound Tigers have rebounded from their poor start largely because of players that were signed to PTOs and later AHL contracts that Thompson had known from coaching in the ECHL, where he led the Alaska Aces to the regular season and playoff titles last season.

“They don’t give you a lot of time and space to make plays, so when a team can do that consistently throughout a game, you’re going to have success if you’re skilled or not,” Johnson said. “Some of their (top) guys are called up right now, but with the way they play, it doesn’t really matter who’s in the lineup. That’s why after (last Friday night’s) game, we said it was probably one of the hardest games we played and hardest battles we’ve had all season because of how physical they were.”

Players such as Howes, Mouillierat, Steve Olesky, Jon Landry, Russ Sinkewich and Blair Riley have graduated from the ECHL and become integral parts of the Sound Tigers’ success. But the injuries to Colliton, Howes and Mouillierat caused the Sound Tigers to sign right wing Ethan Cox, who played for Thompson last season and with the Alaska and Reading this season.

“If you can skate, you can play for that team because they’re well structured and obviously well coached,” Johnson said. “You can generate a lot of good scoring chances and win a lot of games just from your hard work. If you dump the puck and battle in the corners, you’re going to generate scoring chances no matter who you are.”

It’s similar to the Whale’s so-called fourth line of Tommy Grant, Jordan Owens and Scott Tanski, which is constantly in the opposition’s face providing energy and more offense lately.

“They’re always consistently one of our top lines because of their work,” Johnson said. “They’re always going in there banging bodies, getting pucks and winning battles, so you’re going to get scoring chances. That’s why they’ve been so consistent and given us such momentum. And that’s why Bridgeport does so well because all four of their lines do that, so there’s no letup or our team a chance to get any momentum. That’s why we have to work even harder to generate any momentum.”

Newbury (21, 32) is the Whale’s leading scorer, followed by All-Star rookie forward Jonathan Audy-Marchessault (20, 31), Wellman (20, 17, including six goals and six assists in 12 games with the Whale), right wing Andre Deveaux (19, 18), Zuccarello (12, 24) and defensemen Tim Erixon (2, 30) and Bell (7, 23). Audy-Marchessault leads the Whale in scoring against the Sound Tigers with six goals and four assists. Johnson (20-13-5, 2.36, .922, one shutout) has started the last eight games and 15 of 17 while Cam Talbot (11-12-0, 2.92, .904, two shutouts) has backed up.

Despite a 3-1 loss to the Norfolk Admirals last Saturday night that ended a seven-game winning streak at the XL Center, the Whale still has the AHL’s best home winning percentage at .714 (17-5-2-4), including only two regulation losses in their last 19 games (12-2-2-3). Five-thousand fans will receive the third and final set of Whale trading cards, sponsored by Webster Bank, of Deveaux, Wellman, Erixon, Tanski and Pavel Valentenko, along with Gernander on a Wolf Pack card.

Thompson told Mike Fornabaio of the Connecticut Post that every game takes on added intensity and energy this time of the season, especially when the teams are tied for first place and involved in a possible four-point swing.

“They’ve got great goaltending, great defense, so we want to be strong on the puck and don’t want to give up easy chances, make them work for everything they get,” said Thompson, who played with Gernander in the Wolf Pack’s first two seasons (1997-99).

Haley, scoreless in nine games with the Islanders after getting 14 goals and eight assists in 44 games with Bridgeport, said the Sound Tigers want to regain the roll that they were on before last weekend and get ready for the playoffs.

“Obviously they’ve got some forwards who can score,” Haley told Fornabaio. “You can be all over them, and it takes one shift (for them to score). Every time we play, it’s a physical game, an emotional game, so we’ve got to be ready. … We don’t want to think too far ahead. When we’re playing our way, the outcome is usually in our favor. As long as we play our game, we should be good.”

Despite the importance of Friday night’s game, the Whale also has key conference matchups with the Springfield Falcons on Saturday night and the Portland Pirates on Sunday afternoon as part of a five-game homestand, which ties a season high.

Entering the 12th and final meeting with their I-91 rival, the Whale is 7-3-0-1 against the Falcons (28-28-3-3), including 3-1-0-1 at the XL Center. But Springfield won the last meeting 2-0 on Feb. 25 at the MassMutual Center behind 30 saves by former UMass standout Paul Dainton, the Falcons’ only shutout this season and the first time the Whale had been blanked since the second game of the season

The Falcons have lost five of six (1-3-1-1) and host Portland before visiting the Whale. They have struggled since All-Star wing Cam Atkinson, a Greenwich native and former standout at Avon Old Farms and Boston College, was called up by the Columbus Blue Jackets on Feb. 27 and former Wolf Pack captain Dane Byers last Saturday.

Former All-Star center Martin St. Pierre (10, 46) leads the Falcons in scoring, followed by former Wolf Pack wing Alexandre Giroux (23, 25), Atkinson (29, 15), Byers (14, 16), center Matt Calvert (13, 13), defenseman Brent Regner (2, 23) and center Nick Drazenovic (6, 18 in only 28 games). Drazenovic is one of numerous players that the Falcons have been without for long stretches because of injuries or call-ups. Rugged forward Cody Bass is out for the season after having surgery on his right shoulder on Thursday. Dainton (10-8-1, 2.90, .896, one shutout) and 39-year-old Manny Legace (11-17-1, 2.83, .903), the Hartford Whalers’ eighth-round pick in 1993, have handled most of the goaltending. Audy-Marchessault has a stunning six goals and 13 assists in 11 games the Falcons, while Giroux leads the active Falcons in scoring against the Whale with six goals and three assists.

Five-thousand fans will receive green Whale koozies, courtesy of Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over.

Entering the sixth of eight meetings with Portland, the Whale is 2-2-1 against the Pirates, winning in overtime and regulation at the XL Center. The Pirates (28-27-3-3), who are fourth in the Atlantic Division and two points out of an Eastern Conference playoff spot, are led by All-Star left wing Brett Sterling, who has 24 goals and 27 assists, including two goals and one assist in four games with Portland after the St. Louis Blues loaned him from the Peoria Rivermen for former All-Star wing Patrick Sullivan. At the same time, goalie Peter Mannino and forward Kenndal McArdle were loaned to Portland from St. John’s for All-Star center Brock Trotter, the Pirates’ leading scorer who was injured and has yet to play. Sterling is followed in scoring by rookie center Andy Miele (11, 32), the Hobey Baker Award winner last year at Miami of Ohio, right wing Brett MacLean (18, 17), defenseman Nathan Oystrick (10, 21) and right wings Matt Watkins (9, 21) and Ryan Duncan (14, 15). Erixon leads the Whale in scoring against the Pirates with five assists, while Miele has seven assists against the Whale. Mannino (5-6-0, 2.99, .909, one shutout) and Justin Pogge (13-13-3, 3.25, .883) are the Pirates’ goalies after Curtis McElhinney was injured and traded to Columbus as part of the trade that sent veteran center Antoine Vermette to Phoenix.

Fans are encouraged to bring their skates for a postgame skate. … Left wing Andrew Yogan and defenseman Peter Ceresnak will finish their Ontario Hockey League seasons with Peterborough on Sunday. Yogan, the Rangers’ fourth-round pick in 2010, has eight goals and seven assists in the last six games to increase his season totals to 37 goals and 36 assists and is plus-5 in 64 games. Yogan, 21, had two goals and an assist in the Whale’s last two regular-season games last season. Ceresnak, 19, the Rangers’ sixth-round pick in 2011, has six goals and 10 assists in 59 games. Yogan and Ceresnak are the only Rangers picks not to qualify for the CHL playoffs.

FALCONS FANS GO FOR THE SWEEP

Falcons fans will go for a series sweep in their seventh and final meeting with their Whale counterparts on Saturday at 4 p.m. at the XL Center. Tickets ($16) and more information are available at facebook.com/whalefalconsfangame. The series was originated by Seth Dussault of Easthampton, Mass. Matt Marychuk of Glastonbury created a Facebook page to see if there were any interested players, and he and Dussault managed the social media page as interest grew. They used the page to sign up fans to play and communicate between the players and managed to fill rosters for each fan team. The idea caught the attention of the Falcons and then Whale front office, leading to players of all ages and skill levels participating in the series. A portion of ticket sales benefits Defending the Blue Line, an organization that helps children of military families play hockey. The first five games raised $850 for DBL. … College students can get discounted Whale tickets to weekday games with a “Ditch the Dorms” deal. For Monday through Friday games, students who show a valid student ID at the Public Power Ticket office can get $2 off upper-level tickets and $5 off lower-level seats. … Fans can bid on AHL All-Star Classic jerseys, helmets, gloves and pucks at www.theahl.com. Zuccarello, Audy-Marchessault and Atkinson were on the Eastern Conference team, which was captained by former Wolf Pack left wing Boyd Kane, captain of the Hershey Bears.

ADMIRALS CLOSE IN ON AHL WINNING STREAK RECORD

The Norfolk Admirals spotted Wilkes-Barre/Scranton an early lead and then rallied for a 4-1 victory on Wednesday night to run their winning streak to 16 games, two shy of the AHL record.

Center Tyler Johnson, the Reebok/AHL Player of the Week last week, started a run at a second straight award with a goal and two assists to increase his rookie totals to 25 goals and 30 assists in 63 games. He has 10 goals and 17 assists and is plus-15 in the 16-game winning streak. Jaroslav Janus had to make only 12 saves to notch his franchise record-tying eighth consecutive victory while filling in for Dustin Tokarski, the AHL wins leader who made his first NHL start for the Tampa Bay Lighting on March 8. Janus became the first Admirals goalie to win three times in three days last weekend, with the second being at the XL Center on Saturday night, when he had 26 saves.

The Admirals (43-18-1-2), who joined the league in 2000-01, have tied for AHL’s second-longest winning streak. It’s the longest streak since the Syracuse Crunch won a record 18 straight regular-season games from March 9 to Oct. 17, 2008. During the Crunch’s streak, they won 15 games to end the 2007-08 regular season and three games to start the 2008-09 season. The longest AHL winning streak in a season was 17 in a row by the Philadelphia Phantoms from Oct. 22 to Nov. 27 2004, and the Admirals tied the 16 straight by the Baltimore Skipjacks in 1984-85. The Admirals will try to tie the single-season record Friday night at Charlotte. If they win that game, they could tie the all-time record when they host the Checkers on Sunday afternoon.

The Admirals have set a franchise record with eight consecutive road victories, passing the previous mark of seven from Dec. 29, 2002 to Feb. 7, 2003. They’ve outscored the opposition 64-27 since a 4-2 loss at Springfield on Feb. 5 and lead the league in points (89), goals scored (230) and goal differential (plus-65) as they have opened a 10-point lead in search of their first East Division title since 2003. … In another amazing series of stats, all 18 skaters who played for the St. John’s IceCaps in a 6-0 victory over the Hamilton Bulldogs on Wednesday night finished as a plus player, led by defenseman Paul Postma and Jason DeSantis at plus-2. Spencer Machacek had three goals, including the winner, on six shots, which was half the number for the Bulldogs, who were outshot 47-12. Eddie Pasquale had to make only 12 saves for his third shutout of the season. Fifteen of the 18 Hamilton skaters finished as minus players. … Before the loss to the Admirals, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton won three consecutive shootouts last weekend in Providence, Bridgeport and Springfield. The Penguins’ shooters were only 5-for-14, but Scott Munroe (10-for-10) and Patrick Killeen (4-for-5) stopped 14 of 15 attempts. All-Star right wing Colin McDonald, son of former Hartford Whalers defenseman and announcer Gerry McDonald, scored on all three of his chances after being 5-for-20 in his career. Cal O’Reilly had been 2-for-8 but went 2-for-3 in those shootouts.

YALE’S O’NEILL SIGNS WITH KINGS

Yale senior forward Brian O’Neill signed a one-year, two-way contract with the Los Angeles Kings, reported to the  Manchester Monarchs and flew to St. John’s, Newfoundland, for his pro debut this weekend. The 5-foot-8, 165-pound O’Neill had a career-high 21 goals and 25 assists in 35 games with the Elis this season, ending his four-year career with 69 goals and 94 assists in 138 games.

O’Neill, 23, of Yardley, Pa., reportedly received the maximum signing bonus for rookies allowed under the NHL’s collective bargaining agreement, including a guaranteed AHL salary. Several teams were interested in O’Neill, but he felt the Kings were the best fit, though he turned down a similar deal last summer to return for his senior season and led the Elis in scoring for the third straight time.

O’Neill is the second former Elis forward on the Monarchs roster, but David Meckler has been sidelined since Dec. 18 with a hand injury after getting six goals and five assists in 31 games. He is now day-to-day and could return soon.

NEW ICING RULE IN NHL

NHL general managers made a good move at their meetings in Boca Raton, Fla., when they recommended the adoption of hybrid icing to the competition committee in June. It will give linesmen the authority to whistle an icing play dead if a defenseman beats an opposing forward to the faceoff dot as they race for the puck.

The GMs plan to tweak the rule that already exists in the NCAA and the United States Hockey League, but their intent is to eliminate collisions that have led to serious injuries and that several defenseman, including Rangers and former Wolf Pack blueliner Michael Del Zotto, have spoken out against.

But the GMs rejected the idea of reinserting the red line to prevent two-line passes. They will ask the AHL to test the concept of the ringette line, which is painted across the top of the faceoff circles that players must cross before passing the puck past the red line.

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Patriots Grab Gregory from Chargers

Chicago Bears wide receiver Earl Bennett makes a catch as San Diego Chargers' Steven Gregory (R) tackles him in the first half of their NFL football game in Chicago, Illinois, November 20, 2011. The Bears won the game 31-20.

The New England Patriots dipped into the free agent market again and this time came out with safety Steven Gregory, formerly of the San Diego Chargers.  Gregory signed a three year contract worth between $2 million and $3 million a season.

The 5′ 11″, 195 pound safety, who grew up in Staten Island, went to Syracuse University.  He has also played cornerback as well as special teams since coming to the Chargers as an undrafted free agent in 2006.  In 2010, he was suspended for 4 games for PED use.

The speedy Gregory, 29, is expected to play along side S Patrick Chung and solidify the defensive backfield.

Follow Steve on Twitter @SteveMichaelsII

Photo credit: Reuters Pictures

Rangers Recall Chad Johnson from Whale

New York, March 15, 2012 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that the club has recalled goaltender Chad Johnson from the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL) on an emergency basis.

CT WhaleJohnson, 25, dressed as Martin Biron’s backup in a 4-2 win on Tuesday vs. Carolina following his recall from Connecticut earlier in the day.  He has registered a 20-13-4-5 record, along with a 2.36 goals against average, .922 save percentage and one shutout in 41 games with Connecticut this season.  He ranks 12th in the AHL in goals against average, is tied for ninth in the league in save percentage and seventh in wins.  Johnson has won three of his last four games with Connecticut, posting a 2.46 goals against average and .928 save percentage over the span.  He made 34 saves in a 5-3 win at Manchester on Sunday to post his 20th win of the season, marking the second time in his three AHL seasons he has reached that mark.  Johnson has held opponents to two or fewer goals in 25 games this season, including in 10 consecutive games from February 3 vs. Albany to February 28 vs. Worcester.  During that stretch in February, he tied his AHL career-high for longest winning streak, winning five consecutive games from February 3 to February 11, and finished the month with a record of 7-2-0-0 with a 1.49 goals against average and .952 save percentage.

The Calgary, Alberta native was acquired by the Rangers from Pittsburgh in exchange for a fifth round pick in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft (Andy Bathgate) on June 27, 2009.  He was originally selected by Pittsburgh as a fifth round choice, 125th overall, in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft.

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Patriots Re-Sign Connolly

Dan Connolly #63 of the New England Patriots waits for Tom Brady's signal in the first half against the Dallas Cowboys on October 16, 2011 at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts.

Late Thursday afternoon it was learned that the New England Patriots have re-signed C/G/KR Dan Connolly.

Connolly filled in admirably at center for 13 games (11 starts) this season when C Dan Koppen was placed on the injured reserved.  Connolly also has the longest kick off return in NFL history by an offensive lineman when he returned a kick off 71-yards against Green Bay on December 19, 2010.

Connolly, 29, has been with the Patriots since 2007 when he was signed to the practice squad out of Southeast Missouri State after having previously been signed as an undrafted free agent by Jacksonville.

This could mean the end of Koppen, who is also a free agent, as Connolly was looking for starters money on the market.  Rumor was the Patriots preferred to move forward with Connolly instead of Koppen because he is three years younger.  Until the terms of the contract are released we won’t know how the Patriots view Connolly and if there is still a possible return in the making for Koppen.

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Photo credit: Getty Images

Friday is Final Whale Trading Card Night

HARTFORD, March 15, 2012:  The Connecticut Whale’s home game at the XL Center tomorrow night, Friday, March 16, a GEICO Connecticut Cup battle, and first-place showdown, with the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, will feature the last of three Whale trading card giveaways, sponsored by Webster Bank.

CT WhaleFive-thousand fans will receive the last of three sets of Whale player cards on Friday.  The cards are of Andre Deveaux, Tim Erixon, Scott Tanski, Pavel Valentenko and Casey Wellman.  The set also includes a bonus Hartford Wolf Pack card of Whale head coach, and newly-inducted CT Hockey Hall of Famer, Ken Gernander.  Faceoff is 7:00 PM.

Fans can also take advantage of a special food combo deal, available for all remaining Whale regular-season Friday-night home games, tomorrow night.  A hot dog and a 12-ounce soda can be purchased for only $5.

Tickets to Friday night’s game, and all 2011-12 Whale home games, are on sale now at the Public Power Ticket Office at the XL Center, as well as on-line at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster Charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000.

Save on your tickets, and get the best seats, with a ticket plan for the Whale’s 2011-12 AHL campaign, which are on sale now. For information on season seats and mini plans, visit www.ctwhale.com, or call the CT Whale ticket office at (860) 728-3366 to talk with an account executive today.

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