Redden Returns to Connecticut

By Bruce Berlet

CROMWELL – Despite spending a pleasant summer in picturesque Kelowna, British Columbia, with his wife and young daughter, Wade Redden experienced a bit of an unsettling offseason, proving again that money can’t buy you complete happiness.

CT WhaleWhile pondering his future, nothing materialized with NHL teams other than the New York Rangers for Redden, the second overall pick by the New York Islanders in the 1995 draft, largely because of his $6.5 million contract, and talks with European teams never got past the preliminary stage.

Then came the coup de grace, the tragic plane crash Sept. 7 that claimed 44 lives, most of them the Yaroslavl Lokomotiv hockey team, including two friends. Former Rangers defenseman Karel Rachunek was Redden’s partner for several seasons in Ottawa, and Brad McCrimmon, who never got to make his head coaching debut after three years as an assistant with the Detroit Red Wings, was finishing his career as a Hartford Whalers defenseman as Redden embarked on his NHL career.

A week ago, Redden was in Farmington, Mich., attending McCrimmon’s funeral along with Red Wings coach Mike Babcock and his entire team and such NHL luminaries as former coach Scotty Bowman, Tampa Bay Lightning general manager Steve Yzerman, Toronto Maple Leafs president and general and former Whalers GM Brian Burke and NHL executive Cliff Fletcher.

“It was a tough one,” the 34-year-old Redden said Saturday after his first workout in his second season with the Whale. “My wife told me about it after seeing it on TV. I knew McCrimmon was the coach, but I didn’t know Rachunek was on the team until I saw the list (of those killed).”

Now, only seven days later, Redden and his 994 NHL games with the Senators and Rangers was among 10 players doing tests on and off the ice at Champions Skating Center on Saturday morning before a two-mile run Saturday night starting at St. Joseph’s College, not far from his house in West Hartford. They were joined Sunday by 21 players assigned by the Rangers on Saturday for the first full-day of Whale camp, highlighted by a morning scrimmage.

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

Redden worked out in Kelowna with several NHL players and members of the local Western Hockey League junior team, and after the workouts jokingly asked the media, “How do I look?”

The answer was still slim and trim. And he hadn’t changed in the skating tests, working up a good sweat while chatting with players who had to be thrilled just to be cruising around the rink with someone with Redden’s credentials.

Whale coach Ken Gernander again gave Redden “top marks” for a high level of professionalism and willingness to help young players trying to get where he had been for 13 seasons. Redden was especially beneficial to rookie Ryan McDonagh, who improved dramatically with help from his partner and assistant coach J.J. Daigneault, who handles the defense. On Jan. 3, McDonagh switched places with Michael Del Zotto, never returned to Hartford and finished the season as part of the Blueshirts’ No. 2 pairing with former Wolf Pack defenseman Michael Sauer.

“I don’t know how much more a guy can do (to be a leader), but I don’t think it’s on your to-do list,” Gernander said. “You don’t get up in the morning and say, ‘I’ve got to come to the rink and be a leader.’ It’s just something that you bring with you that’s part of your package. If you see something or an area where you can help, you put that on yourself as far as a leadership role. I certainly expect him to be one of our leaders, but like I said, I don’t think it’s on his to-do list. That’s just something that’s kind of instinctive.”

Gernander will be delighted to know Redden is ready to be an even more positive influence. Redden looked back at “a big number” of coaches and players who helped him when he was learning to become a NHL All-Star and top international competition. The group included former Whalers wing Randy Cunneyworth, Lance Pitlick, a Senators teammate in his first season who played with Gernander at the University of Minnesota, and McCrimmon’s brother, Kelly, who was Redden’s general manager in junior hockey with the Brandon Wheat Kings and “touched so many lives in hockey as far as tutelage and his impact on the game.”

“I feel more comfortable and better this year knowing the situation,” said Redden, who might consider coaching as a post-playing career. “I’m more settled, and I want to help these guys. I remember guys who helped me. I obviously want to take care of myself first, but I want to be there to help my teammates.

“I’ve always been that kind of guy where I tried to be a good teammate, and that’s not going to change. There are some good, young players here, not that they need a lot of direction, but there are the coaches, myself and people with experience who can help along.”

Tomas Kundratek, another defensive partner last season, and Pavel Valentenko were among the Rangers’ first 21 cuts Saturday and could be prime candidates for Redden’s help.

“You see young guys come in every year, and you see them make another step so hopefully they can keep progressing,” Redden said. “ ‘Tank’ (Valentenko) had a solid year all-around, and I’d like to see him keep going.”

Last season, Redden tied for fourth in Whale scoring with 42 points (eight points, 34 assists) and was their best player during a critical 14-4-0-1 run from early February to late March that allowed the team to make the playoffs.

“I have to be honest with myself that I don’t think I’ll go anywhere,” Redden said. “It’s a long shot that anybody is going to pick up my contract, so I’ll play and hopefully something will happen where I can be free of it and move on or something happens. Everything is up in the air.”

Redden considered opting out of his contract and playing for less money elsewhere but didn’t think that was possible under the current collective bargaining agreement. But there also was no assurance that another team would sign him.

“All I can do is keep a positive attitude and go from there,” Redden said. “I had some contact with people I know in Europe, but this was a good situation for me last season. I felt good here as far as the hockey and the situation that I was in. As far as my family was concerned, it was a nice area, and I didn’t want to shake things up too much that way.”

Others who tested Saturday after not being invited to Rangers camp were goalie Jerry Kuhn, defensemen T.J. Fast and Dan Lawson and forwards Max Campbell, Chris Chappell, Brendan Connolly, Jeff Prough, Connor Shields and Jordan Owens, who was signed as an undrafted free agent to an entry-level contract with the Blueshirts on June 12, 2007 and played parts of four seasons with the Wolf Pack before being traded to the Detroit Red Wings for center Kris Newbury on March 3, 2010.

Chappell, Connolly and Fast played last season with Greenville, the Whale’s ECHL affiliate. Owens had one goal and four assists in 17 games with the Grand Rapids Griffins at the end of the 2006-07 season and then had six goals and 14 assists in 60 games last season before an injury in early March ended his season and scared away a lot of teams, according to Owens.

“There’s no better place to be because this is where I started my (pro) career,” said Owens, who didn’t have any place to go until he got a call from the Rangers on Monday. “I’m in exactly the same position as I was coming out of juniors, trying to earn a contract. I was looking for a job, and I still am. I was away for a little bit, but I’m back for the time being. I don’t know if there are any spots, but the only thing at this point of my career is that you can’t really worry about that stuff. I just have to worry about coming and playing to the best of my ability.”

The players assigned to the Whale were goalies Chad Johnson, Jason Missiaen and Cameron Talbot; defensemen Kundratek, Valentenko, Lee Baldwin, Collin Bowman, Sam Klassen, Jyri Niemi and Jared Nightingale; and forwards Chad Kolarik, Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Tommy Grant, Tayler Jordan, Kale Kerbashian, Chris McKelvie, Matt Rust, Scott Tanski, Kelsey Tessier and Jason Wilson.

The Rangers also returned seven players to their junior teams: defensemen Peter Ceresnak (Peterborough, OHL) and Samuel Noreau (Baie-Comeau, QMJHL) and forwards Shane McColgan (Kelowna, WHL), J.T. Miller (Plymouth, OHL), Michael St. Croix (Edmonton, WHL), Christian Thomas (Oshawa, OHL) and Andrew Yogan (Peterborough, OHL).

“It was all the Rangers decision, and I’m not going to second-guess anything they did,” Gernander said. “It’s still training camp to some extent, so there might be varying reasons for different players who maybe get a little bit longer look because of experience or whatever the case may be. We’re all one big organization, and our job is to work the guys who are here and get them there.”

The Rangers still have 35 players, 12 more than the opening-night limit, including three goalies, 11 defensemen and 21 forwards. Surviving the first round of cuts were top prospects Dylan McIlrath, Ryan Bourque, Carl Hagelin and Tim Erixon, all of whom played in the Rangers’ first two preseason games.

After two days of practice and scrimmages, the Whale’s first preseason game is Tuesday at 7 p.m. against the Albany Devils at the Koeppel Community Sports Center on the campus of Trinity College in Hartford. The game benefits the Ryan Gordon/Connecticut Whale Community Scholars Fund, with donations accepted at the door in lieu of an admission charge. The fund memorializes longtime Wolf Pack fan Ryan Gordon, who died in 2006 from cancer and asked that the money set aside for his college education be donated to three charities, including the Connecticut Whale Community Foundation.

The Whale also will play at the MassMutual Center in Springfield on Wednesday at 7 p.m. against the Falcons and then host the Worcester Sharks at the TD Bank Sports Center on the campus of Quinnipiac University in Hamden on Friday at 7 p.m. ($5 admission benefits Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford) and on Oct. 2 at 2 p.m. at Champions Skating Center ($5 admission benefits Junior Wolf Pack youth hockey). The entire AHL preseason schedule is available at www.theahl.com.

STRONG DEBUT FOR RICHARDS

The Rangers made the biggest offseason splash when they signed Brad Richards to a nine-year, $90 million contract that put the former Dallas Stars center on the hot seat in the media capital of the world.

Richards provided immediate dividends in his debut Friday night, scoring once on a fortuitous bounce and setting up Gaborik’s power-play goal Friday night in a sweep of the teams’ two games at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.Y. In the afternoon, Ryan Bourque, son of Hockey Hall of Famer Ray Bourque, scored twice as the Rangers prospects team beat their Devils counterparts, 5-4.

While Bourque will be counted on by the Rangers in the near future, Richards is expected to be the key for the attack that had to work overtime to score most of last season.

Richards’ first Rangers goal came only 4:22 into his first game on his second shift as he got around David Steckel and rifled a pass from the low left circle intended for Wojtek Wolski on the other side of the crease that deflected off the skate of Devils defenseman Adam Larsson, the fourth overall pick in June, and past Martin Brodeur to tie the score.

“He (Richards) made some good plays with the puck,” said Tortorella, who again watched from the stands. “His passing ability, that’s a big part of his game. So I thought that line created a lot of offense. Hopefully, we’ll see, we’ll try some people along the way here and just see how it goes. I thought Richards played well.”

Richards skated between Gaborik and Wolski, as they have most of training camp. Richards, Gaborik and new defenseman Brendan Bell each had a goal and an assist for the Rangers, who escaped a potential overtime when Ilya Kovalchuk was denied a fourth point less than two minutes after Bell’s blast from the blue line had given the Rangers the lead. Kovalchuk had a goal and two assists, and his potential equalizer was denied with 2:22 left for Nick Palmieri’s interference on goalie Chad Johnson, who stopped the 10 shots he faced and got the win.

“We played a good first half of the game,” Richards said. “Then we let them back in it, they got momentum and made it a lot tougher. … But we ended up getting a goal when we needed it, and finished it out.”

The Rangers had a two-goal lead thanks to goals by Richards, Derek Stepan and Gaborik after Adam Henrique had scored on a backhand 92 seconds into the game. A series of penalties – Kris Newbury for slashing at 6:40, Newbury for tripping at 14:46, Tim Erixon for hooking at 16:10 and Valentenko for holding at 18:55 – helped the Devils tie the game. Jacob Josefsen scored on a 4-on-4 and Kovalchuk scored with one second left in a 5-on-3.

Martin Biron allowed the three Devils goals on 16 shots, giving way after two periods to Johnson, who was 10-for-10 in the third. It was Biron’s first competition since breaking his collarbone when hit by a shot in practice on Feb. 28.

“The timing is what needs to be back,” Biron said. “It felt good the last couple of days. We had real practices – we had 45 minutes to an hour, with 2-on-1s, 3-on-2s, plays down low, that kind of thing – where the first few days of camp, there’s a lot of scrimmages, and then if you have a practice with 14 guys on the ice, it’s a lot of flow and then some conditioning.”

Mike Rupp, who had five hits in his Rangers debut against his former team, got into a fight with Eric Boulton with 2:39 left in the third period and landed several solid shots after Boulton’s helmet came off. Boulton rallied a bit, but it was a win for Rupp – and shortly thereafter for the Rangers.

“Rupp had a good game, not a bad game forechecking,” Tortorella said. “We tried him a little bit killing penalties, see what he can do there. (The fight is) part of his responsibility. I’m not sure how it all started. I thought he stood in there really well, and Boulton’s a pretty good fighter.”

In his first game as Rangers captain, former Hartford Wolf Pack right wing Ryan Callahan had the primary assist on Gaborik’s goal, tied with Gaborik and Wolski for the team high in shots with four and led all Rangers forwards in ice team with 21:57. He was also part of a five-forward power play that also included Gaborik and Rupp up front and Richards and Wolski on the points.

Tortorella said All-Star defenseman Marc Staal might not go to Europe on Monday because of lingering post-concussion headaches from a hit by his brother, All-Star center Eric Staal, in a game against the Carolina Hurricanes on Feb. 22. He didn’t skate Thursday and Friday because he was seeing specialists but could join the Rangers during the week if he’s not on the plane Monday night.

“There’s all different options. It depends,” Tortorella said. “We’re trying to get him straightened out for the regular season. We feel the specialists that he’s seeing now are going to speed that up. So if he doesn’t make the first plane, he could come over the next day. We just haven’t gotten that far. He’s done a lot of testing, a lot of things over the past two days, and is doing it now. So we’ll find out more as we go into (Saturday) and Sunday.”

PACIORETTY, SHANNON SCORE TWICE; GRACHEV, JAGR KEY WINS

New Canaan native and former Taft School-Watertown standout Max Pacioretty showed no effects from the broken vertebra and concussion that ended his 2010-11 season early as he sparked Montreal’s comeback from a three-goal deficit with two power-play goals and then scored in the shootout as the Canadiens won 4-3 in Ottawa on Friday night.

Former Rangers center Scott Gomez tied the game with 36.5 seconds left in regulation when the puck went into the net off Senators captain Daniel Alfredsson. The line of Gomez, Pacioretty and prospect Brendan Gallagher combined for 19 shots, nine by Pacioretty.

“It seemed like we were controlling the puck really well every time we had it,” said Pacioretty, a first-round pick (22nd overall) in 2007. “It just shows how good Gomer is because most of the time the puck was on his stick down there and we were just trying to create some space for him.”

Last season ended for Pacioretty on March 8 when his head was bounced off a stanchion by Boston Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara, cracking a vertebra in his neck and leaving him with a concussion that had him lying on the ice unconscious for several minutes. The concussion symptoms did not last very long, which Pacioretty feels very lucky about considering the plight of players such as Sidney Crosby and former Wolf Pack and Rangers center Marc Savard.

“I don’t think I’m in the clear completely, I know some of these players many months down the road have experienced some symptoms,” Pacioretty said. “So I’m aware of that, and I hope to keep getting as lucky as I have with my situation.”

Darien native Ryan Shannon scored two second-period goals to lead host Tampa Bay to a 5-2 victory over cross-state rival Florida, spoiling the NHL coaching debut of former Hartford Whalers captain Kevin Dineen.

Shannon, a free-agent signee who played with Ottawa last season, beat Jacob Markstrom for a power-play goal at 6:31 and then made it 3-0 when he scored the winner at 12:55.

“Every day, I feel more comfortable,” Shannon said of getting used to coach Guy Boucher’s system. “He tells us exactly what he wants, so it’s our job to do it well.”

Evgeny Grachev, acquired from the Rangers on June 28 for a third-round pick in the draft, continued to make a case for a roster spot with the St. Louis Blues by scoring his third goal in four preseason games in a 3-2 win over the Colorado Avalanche.

“He’s finding a way to be effective, not only on the score sheet, but in a number of different areas, decisions on the ice with the puck, his defensive play,” Blues coach Davis Payne said of Grachev. “He’s come here to make a statement to our organization after picking him up in a trade this summer and he’s doing a very good job of it.”

Grachev’s power-play goal at 8:06 of the first period was the only score by either team through 40 minutes. Adam Cracknell made it 2-0 at 5:02 of the third period before Colorado rookie Tyson Barrie ended Jake Allen’s shutout bid with a shot from the top of the left circle at 12:48. It was Barrie’s second goal and third point in two nights.

Jaromir Jagr, playing in the NHL for the first time in three years after leaving as captain of the Rangers, had a goal and an assist in the Philadelphia Flyers’ 3-1 victory in Detroit.

“It may take me a while to get my timing back,” the highest-scoring European-born player in NHL history told philly.com. “I want to get – how do you say it? – to NHL (level) as quick as I can.”

Late in the first period, Jagr set up James Van Riemsdyk’s goal and then scored 52 seconds later to erase the Red Wings’ 1-0 lead. Jagr’s goal came when he took a pass from Scott Hartnell and wristed a 15-footer past goalie Jimmy Howard. … Several players with Connecticut ties were assigned to AHL teams. Former Wolf Pack wing Ryan Hollweg was sent to Portland, former Wolf Pack goalie David LeNeveu and former Salisbury Prep/Fairfield Prep/Yale forward Mark Arcobello of Milford went to Oklahoma City and Philip Samuelsson, the oldest son of former Whalers and Rangers defenseman and Wolf Pack assistant coach Ulf Samuelsson to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton.

WHALE KICKOFF SATURDAY IN WEST HARTFORD

The Whale will host its “Whale Blue & Green Block Party” season Face-off event Saturday, October 1 from 6-9 p.m. at Blue Back Square in West Hartford. It will resemble a pep rally, with introductions of the Whale players and coaching staff, who will be signing autographs.

The Face-off Fan Experience will feature live music by Hartford hockey legendary national anthem singer Tony Harrington & Touch, food specials available from local restaurants, Whale merchandise showcasing the latest apparel, outdoor movies, “Pucky” joined by other mascot friends in the Autograph Zone, prizes and the introduction of the new CT Whale Slap Shot Cage sponsored by XFINITY, where fans can test their puck-shooting skills. Fans also can enter to win tickets to the home opener Oct. 15 against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers or a Connecticut Whale replica jersey.

Admission is free and be in the area of Blue Back Square known as “The Square” on Isham Rd. next to Barnes & Noble. … Whale season and individual game tickets are now on sale. For information on season seats and all the Whale’s many ticketing options, visit www.ctwhale.com or call the Whale ticket office at 860-728-3366 to talk with an account executive. Individual tickets are on sale at Public Power ticket office at the XL Center. The Whale will play 90 percent of their 38 games at the XL Center on weekends and during vacation and holiday breaks. Tickets, starting at $14 for adults and $12 for youth, are available at the box office Monday through Friday from noon to 5 p.m. or online at www.ctwhale.com and through TicketMaster charge-by-phone at 1-800-745-3000. For information on season seats and mini-plans, call 860-728-3366 or visit www.ctwhale.com.

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

Morning Red Sox Delight – 9/25

Tim Wakefield (L), A.J, Burnett (R)

After losing yesterday and seeing their lead in the AL Wild Card race get even smaller, the Boston Red Sox look to salvage their season in the first game of a day/night doubleheader with the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium this afternoon.

Today’s first pitch for game is scheduled for 1:05 p.m. and can be seen on NESN in the Red Sox television market. If you live in the Yankees television market, you can catch the game on YES. If you don’t live in either market, you’re in luck as TBS will have national coverage (not in Red Sox or Yankees tv markets). And if you can’t catch the television broadcast, you can always listen to the game on the 2011 Red Sox Radio Network.

Tim Wakefield looks to get the Red Sox back on track in his 23rd start (33rd appearance) of the season. In his previous 32 appearances (22 starts), Wake is 7-7 with a 5.28 ERA. He’s made two appearances (one start) against the Yankees this season and is 1-0 with a 6.14 ERA. He’s made 57 appearances (35 starts) against the Yankees in his career and is 12-17 with a 4.98 ERA. 25 of those appearances (16 starts) have come in the Bronx where he is 7-7 with a 3.81 ERA. Three of those appearances in the Bronx (one start) have come at the new Yankee Stadium where he is 1-0 with a 4.22 ERA.

With his team in the playoffs, A.J. Burnett looks to push his credentials for the third spot in the Yankees playoff rotation in his 32nd start of 2011. In his previous 31 starts, Burnett is 10-11 with a 5.28 ERA. He’s made two starts against the Red Sox this season and is 0-1 with a 7.36 ERA (9 ER/11 IP). He’s made 17 career starts against the Red Sox and is 5-4 with a 5.07 ERA.

Click on the read more button below to see today’s lineups, batter/pitcher matchups and links from the overnight and day if you’re on the home page.

Here are this afternoon’s lineups:

Boston Red Sox88-69 New York Yankees96-61
1. Jacoby Ellsbury CF 1. Brett Gardner CF
2. Carl Crawford LF 2. Derek Jeter SS
3. Dustin Pedroia 2B 3. Alex Rodriguez 3B
4. David Ortiz DH 4. Alex Rodriguez DH
5. Adrian Gonzalez 1B 5. Andruw Jones LF
6. Conor Jackson
RF 6. Russell Martin C
7. Marco Scutaro SS 7. Chris Dickerson RF
8. Jarrod Saltalamacchia C 8. Brandon Laird 1B
9. Mike Aviles 3B 9. Ramiro Pena 2B
Tim Wakefield
SP A.J. Burnett
SP

And here is how the hitters have fared against today’s starting pitchers:

Boston Red Sox @ New York Yankees batter/pitcher matchups

Check back and/or refresh often as more links will be added if/when they become available before game time.

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

Jorge Posada: Red Sox could be ‘dangerous’ if they make playoffs [Clubhouse Insider]

Lester: ‘I’m not tired, I’m not hurt’ [CSN New England]

Ortiz: ‘All you can is put it behind you’ [CSN New England]

BBTN video: Previewing Sunday’s DH [ESPN Boston]

Soundtrack to a sorry September [ESPN Boston]

Buchholz to throw inning — in Fort Myers [ESPN Boston]

Buchholz to Instructional League [Extra Bases]

Pregame news from Yankee Stadium [Extra Bases]

Yankees honor Rivera before Game 1 [Extra Bases]

Red Sox’s failings not Francona’s fault [FoxSports.com]

Red Sox pregame notes: Buchholz to Florida, Drew getting closer [Full Count]

Adrian Gonzalez Insists Red Sox Are Not Panicking With Wild Card Odds in Their Favor [NESN.com]

Clay Buchholz to Pitch Instructional League Game Monday, Could Join Red Sox Wednesday [NESN.com]

July’s Greatness, September’s Struggles Speak to Red Sox’ Lack of Consistency in 2011 [NESN.com]

Niagara Falls — and so do the Sox [Projo Sox Blog]

Buchholz to throw inning in Fort Myers, aiming for return Wednesday [Projo Sox Blog]

J.D. Drew could be nearing return [Projo Sox Blog]

Twin bill in Bronx gives Red Sox an opportunity [RedSox.com]

Red Sox clubhouse is full of confusion [Yahoo! Sports]

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

Photo credits: Getty Images, Getty Images

Red Sox News & Notes – 9/25

Boston Herald, NY Post back covers for 9/25/2011

Some would say that Jon Lester stunk as bad as a certain rest stop leaving New York as you get on the New Jersey Turnpike on Saturday afternoon against the New York Yankees. After the game, the Boston Red Sox pitcher said “I stink”.

And by stink he didn’t mean from the sweat that he built up but rather another craptastic pitching performance that lead to the a 9-1 whooping by the Yanks.

The loss hurts because the Toronto Blue Jays and Oakland A’s were no help like they were on Friday night. With their win over the Jays, the Tampa Bay Rays are now 1.5 games behind the Red Sox. The magic number for the Red Sox to make the playoffs remains at four. And with their win over the A’s, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim are just 2.5 games back. The magic number to eliminate the Halos also remains at three games.

I’m not sure if total blame should fall on Lester though.

Had Mike Aviles covered third on Andruw Jones grounder to Marco Scutaro at short in the 2nd inning, Scutaro might have been able to get a force out for the second out of the inning. But Aviles inexperience at the position showed and it hurt the Red Sox.

We’ve seen Carl Crawford make some great catches against us when he was a member of the Rays. With the Red Sox though, we’ve seen maybe a glimpse but nothing more.

The next batter in that same inning, Yanks phenom Jesus Montero, hit a sinking liner to left. Crawford slid to make the catch but was unable to catch it allowing the first runner of the game to score. After Russell Martin singled in two more runs, Derek Jeter put the exclamation point on the rout with a three-run blast.

So you see, those two plays contributed to the desmise of Lester whether you want to believe it or not.

Either way, the Red Sox are not playing very good baseball. They’ve gone from a solid defensive club to one that looks like it belongs in little league at times. The offense is streaky and right now they are in one of those funks.

I always remember the saying, “baseball can be a funny game”. You can take it so many ways.

How many times have we seen everything click or not click between the offense, defense and pitching? You rarely ever see all three things not working at the same time but that’s exactly what’s going on right now.

It’s quite conceivable that end of the day today, the Red Sox could find themselves in a tie for the AL Wild Card with the Rays. All that needs to happen is the Red Sox lose the doubleheader to the Yanks and the Rays win. And just like that, what was once a comfortable lead will have vanished.

We certainly hope it doesn’t come to that.

We’ll be back later with this afternoon’s lineups for game one of the doubleheader, batter/pitcher matchups and links from the day. But for now, enjoy the overnight links by clicking on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

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

What happened to Carl Crawford’s defense? [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]

Lineup shuffled, team decked [Boston Globe]

Is Fenway affordable for the faithful? [Boston Globe]

In conditioning area, Sox need to shape up [Boston Globe]

Ace on his slump: ‘I stink’ [Boston Globe]

Moving and shaken [Boston Globe]

A September swoon to forget [Boston Globe]

Red Sox losing their grasp [Boston Herald]

Same old offense for new lineup [Boston Herald]

Jon Lester only adds to club’s pain [Boston Herald]

Carl Crawford moves up [Boston Herald]

Something ‘stinks’ [Boston Herald]

Unraveling continues as Yanks drub Sox, 9-1 [CSN New England]

Sox not panicking despite troubles [CSN New England]

Rapid Reaction: Yankees 9, Red Sox 1 [ESPN Boston]

Video: Kurkjian on Lester’s struggles [ESPN Boston]

Video: Lester and Ortiz after loss [ESPN Boston]

Video: Edes and Matthews on Sox-Yankees [ESPN Boston]

Sox slide continues [ESPN Boston]

Closing Time: Yankees beat up Lester, Sox in Bronx [Full Count]

Lester: ‘It’s not a good time to have this stretch’ [Full Count]

Red Sox Trapped In Psyche Of Collapse [Hartford Courant]

Jon Lester Suffers Third Straight Loss, Continuing Troubling Slide for Red Sox Lefty [NESN.com]

Red Sox Still Well-Suited for Playoffs, as Long as They Get There [NESN.com]

How Do You Feel About the Red Sox? [NESN.com]

In latest indignity, Lester KO’d early in Bronx [Providence Journal]

Few have rebounded from a season like Lackey’s [Providence Journal]

Yankees, Rangers, Phillies the teams to beat [Providence Journal]

Red Sox Journal: Crawford misses chance to stop bleeding in second inning [Providence Journal]

Red Sox need rotation to click [RedSox.com]

For more slices of Red Sox goodness, head over to the Boston Globe, Boston Herald, CSN New EnglandESPN Boston, NESN, Providence Journal, RedSox.com and WEEI websites.

And if you must check out the enemy news, head over to the New York Daily News, New York Post, New York Times and The Journal News websites. You can also check out our Bloguin brother, NYY Stadium Insider.

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

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 9/25

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 Football links

Big East helmet stickers: Week 4 [Andrea Adelson – ESPN.com]

Postgame Buffalo — 17-3 win [John Silver – Journal Inquirer]

Connecticut Defeats Buffalo, 17 – 3 [BigEast.org]

McEntee throws two TD passes, UConn rolls [CT Post]

UConn Beats Buffalo, 17-3 [Hartford Courant]

Notebook: UConn’s Running Game Falls Flat [Hartford Courant]

QB McEntee leads UConn to win over Buffalo [The Hour]

Bulls come up small in big moment [Niagara Gazette]

Huskies’ ‘D’ dogs UB [Buffalo News]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

UConn vs. Arizona in 2012 Carrier Classic [CBSSports.com]

Other UConn related links

M. Cross Country. Men’s Cross Country Finish Third At Ted Owens Invitational [UConnHuskies.com]

Field Hockey. Chloe Hunnable Leads No. 4 Huskies To 4-0 Shutout Over Providence [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Cross Country. Huskies Place 9th At Roy Griak Invitational [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Cole Schneider Featured on InsideCollegeHockey.com [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Matheson Nets Game Winner As Huskies Blank St. John’s 2-0 [UConnHuskies.com]

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Video: Jon Jones Submits Rampage Jackson To Retain Light Heavyweight Title at UFC 135

They say you aren’t a true champion until you’ve defended your title at least once.

Well now we can call Jon Jones, the true lightweight champion of UFC because he successfully defended his UFC Light Heavyweight belt on Saturday night at UFC 135 at the Pepsi Center when he submitted Quinton “Rampage” Jackson (rear naked choke) at 1:14 of the fourth round.

Jones was awarded $75,000 from Dana White after the event for fight of the night honors. Jones will next defend his belt against his former friend Rashad Evans in a future UFC event.

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Video: Josh Koscheck KO’s Matt Hughes At UFC 135

It’s quite possible that Matt Hughes has fought in The Octagon for the last time after his defeat on Saturday night at UFC 135 at the Pepsi Center in Denver, CO.

He was beaten by Josh Koscheck who knocked him out at 4:59 of the first round.

Koscheck was awarded a $75,000 bonus after the event from Dana White for knockout of the night.

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Video: Nate Diaz Submits Takanori Gomi at UFC 135

In the first fight in the main event at UFC 135 at Pepsi Center in Denver, CO on Saturday night, Nate Diaz submitted Takanori Gomi (armbar) at 4:27 of the first round.

Diaz was awarded the a $75,000 bonus from Dana White after the event for submission of the night honors.

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Huskies Stop The Bleeding With 17-3 Win Over Bulls

Connecticut's Nick Williams (31) races to the end zone

For the past two weeks, we’ve seen the UConn Huskies blow games in the fourth quarter. This week, Johnny McEntee and Nick Williams made sure that didn’t happen as they hooked for a touchdown that would ultimately give the Huskies a 17-3 win over the Buffalo Bulls in front of 18,215 at UB Stadium in Amherst, NY on Saturday night.

With the win, the Huskies even their record at 2-2. The Bulls fall to 1-3 (0-1 MAC) on the season.

During the first three games of the season, we’ve seen UConn head coach Paul Pasqualoni employ McEntee, Scott McCummings and Michael Nebrich at quarterback. After Saturday night, it looks like McEntee has emerged as the main guy at the helm.

The Bulls shot down the running game of the Huskies but McEntee was able to move the ball for the Huskies. After throwing four interceptions in the first three games, he rebounded with his best performance of the season. He was 12-of-21 for 213 yards and two touchdowns. The two touchdowns happen to be the first for the walk-on from California.

His first touchdown pass went to the Hawaiian Husky in Mark Hinkley with his second going to Williams. It was Williams who actually set up Hinkley’s touchdown after catching a pass and going 64 yards with it before being run down.

The defense was solid as they limited the big mistakes this week.

Yawin Smallwood picked up a big interception of Buffalo QB Chazz Anderson who had been driving the Bulls down the field in the third quarter. From that point forward, the Bulls never really threatened the Huskies defense.

It may not have been pretty at times but it was a solid team win for the Huskies. Hopefully we’ll see Pasqualoni going with McEntee at quarterback with McCummings coming in when situations warrant the Wildcat. You could see how much more efficient the Huskies were with just one QB in for most of the time.

Using one QB is also good for moral. You definitely want a guy back there you can trust and McEntee looked like he earned that on Saturday night.

Another win next Saturday against Western Michigan would be great for the Huskies before they enter Big East play.

Scoring:

Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Final
UConn Huskies 0 10 0 7 17
Buffalo Bulls 0 3 0 0 3

1st quarter

NONE

2nd quarter

BUF – 05:28 – Peter Fardon 28 Yd Field Goal

CON – 02:34 – Dave Teggart 47 Yd Field Goal

CON – 00:15 – Mark Hinkley 4 Yd Pass From Johnny McEntee (Dave Teggart Kick)

3rd quarter

NONE

4th quarter

CON – 04:52 – Nick Williams 49 Yd Pass From Johnny McEntee (Dave Teggart Kick)

To continue reading, the UConn Huskies vs Buffalo Bulls recap, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Offensive Player of the Game:

Nick Williams had a huge game when he touched the ball. He caught two passes for 113 yards and a touchdown. His first catch went for 64 yards to set up UConn’s first touchdown of the day. His second one of 49 yards was good for a touchdown and clinched the game for the Huskies.

Defensive Player of the Game:

Yawin Smallwood picks up the honors this week. He had the huge interception in the third quarter plus he led the Huskies with nine tackles (three solo, six assists)

Turning Point(s) of the Game:

Yawin Smallwood’s interception in the end zone of the third quarter stopped a big Buffalo drive and killed the momentum they’d built up.

Johnny McEntee’s 49 yard touchdwon pass to Nick Williams late in the 4th quarter ensured  that the Huskies would not blow a game in the 4th quarter for the third week in a row.

Offensive Notes:

Johnny McEntee was 12-of-21 for 213 yards and two touchdowns. Lyle McCombs had 30 carries for just 61 yards. He also had one reception for 15 yards. Nick Williams had two catches for 113 yards and two touchdowns. Isiah Moore led the Huskies with four catches that went for 49 yards. Kashif Moore has three catches for 23 yards.

Defensive Notes:

Yawin Smallwood led the Huskies with nine tackles (three solo, six assists) and an interception. Dwayne Gratz had seven tackles while Blidi-Wreh Wilson had six tackles and two pass breakups.  Tywon Martin had six tackles while Sio Moore, Gary Wilburn, Jesse Joseph and Jory Johnson all had five. Kendall Reyes, Teddy Jennings and Trevardo Williams all had sacks for the Huskies.

Special Teams Notes:

Dave Teggart went 2-for-2 on extra points and was 1-of-2 on field goals. He hit from 47 yards and his 49 yard attempt was blocked. Cole Wagner averaged 44.2 yards on eight punts with a long of 62. He had two of them downed inside the 20. Nick Williams had one punt return of 12 yards and one kickoff return for 27 yards.

Injuries:

Blidi-Wreh Wilson suffered a leg injury and didn’t return to the game.

Moe Petrus was shaken up after getting leveled while blocking. He only missed one play and did return to the game.

Mark Hinkley suffered a leg injury and didn’t return to the game.

Officials:

The crew on Saturday night was from the Big East.

Referee: Jerry McGinn; Umpire: Richard Feeney; Linesman: Steve Matarante; Line judge: Ralph Newell; Back judge: Ben Vasconcello; Field judge: Folayan Kindred; Side judge: James Downey;

Game Notes:

UConn Huskies @ Buffalo Bulls 9-24-11 box score

Here are the starters on both sides of the ball for the Huskies:

OFFENSE
LT 72 Bennett, Jimmy
LG 77 Friend, Kevin
C 57 Petrus, Moe
RG 63 Masters, Adam
RT 71 Ryan, Mike
TE 81 Manning, Corey
WR 85 Davis, Geremy
WR 6 Moore, Kashif
QB 18 McEntee, Johnny
RB 43 McCombs, Lyle
WR 83 Moore, Isiah

DEFENSE
LE 48 WILLIAMS, Trev.
NT 4 MARTIN, Tywon
DT 99 Reyes, Kendall
RE 98 JENNINGS, Teddy
LB 3 Moore, Sio
LB 33 SMALLWOOD, Yaw.
LB 28 Johnson, Jory
CB 7 Gratz, Dwayne
S 16 Jones, Byron
S 25 Agbor, Harris
CB 5 WREH-WILSON, B

Big East Games and Results:

Thursday, September 22

N.C. State 14
Cincinnati 41

Saturday, September 24

Toledo 30
Syracuse 33, OT

Notre Dame 15
Pittsburgh 12

Ohio 26
Rutgers 38

UTEP 24
#18 South Florida 52

#2 LSU 47
#16 West Virginia 21

Things to Work On:

  • Get Nick Williams some more touches on the offensive side of things. We saw how explosive he can be when he gets the ball. He needs to be used in ways the New England Patriots use Wes Welker.
  • Open up for more holes for McCombs. With most of the offensive line back, they should be able to help the running game. They haven’t been doing a good job of opening up holes for Lyle McCombs the past few weeks. The running game opens up the passing game.
  • Keep working on defensive technique. They did a great job of limiting their mistakes this week. But as competition gets better as the weeks go, they need to be ready.

Up Next:

The Huskies return home to Rentschler Field next Saturday afternoon at 3:30 p.m. to host the Western Michigan Broncos. This is the final non-conference matchup of the season for the Huskies before they start Big East play in two weeks against the West Virginia Mountaineers.

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Photo credit: AP Photo (No. 1 in gallery)

Afternoon Red Sox Delight – 9/24

Jon Lester (L), Freddy Garcia (R)

After being rained out on Friday, the Boston Red Sox will try again to thrust themselves into the playoffs as they finish up the regular season on the road for six games. This afternoon, they’ll kick it off with the first of three games against the New York Yankees in the Bronx.

Today’s first pitch is scheduled for 4:10 p.m. The game is scheduled to be broadcast on FOX to 87% of the country (including Alaska and Hawaii). And if you can’t catch the television broadcast, you can always listen to the game on the 2011 Red Sox Radio Network.

Jon Lester looks to push the Red Sox closer to the playoffs in his 30th start of 2011. In his previous 29 starts, Lester is 15-8 with a 3.15 ERA. He’s made four starts against the Bronx Bombers and is 2-1 with a 4.30 ERA. He’s had good success in his career against the Yankees as he is 8-2 with a 3.53 ERA in 16 starts. He’s fared just as well in the Bronx as he is 6-1 with a 2.67 ERA in nine starts.

Freddy Garcia makes 25th start (26th appearance) for the AL East champs this season. In his previous 25 appearances (24 starts), Garcia is 11-8 with a 3.77 ERA. He’s made four appearances (three starts) against the Red Sox this season and is 0-2 with a 6.92 ERA. Garcia is 8-4 with a 4.69 ERA in 20 career appearances (19 starts) against the Red Sox. Two of those starts have come at Yankee Stadium where he is 0-2 with a 10.29 ERA (8 ER/7 IP).

Click on the read more button below to see today’s lineups, batter/pitcher matchups and links from the overnight and day if you’re on the home page.

Here are this afternoon’s lineups:

Boston Red Sox88-68 New York Yankees95-61
1. Jacoby Ellsbury CF 1. Derek Jeter SS
2. Carl Crawford LF 2. Curtis Granderson CF
3. Dustin Pedroia 2B 3. Mark Teixeira 1B
4. David Ortiz DH 4. Alex Rodriguez 3B
5. Adrian Gonzalez 1B 5. Robinson Cano 2B
6. Mike Aviles 3B 6. Nick Swisher RF
7. Marco Scutaro SS 7. Andruw Jones LF
8. Josh Reddick RF 8. Jesus Montero DH
9. Jarrod Saltalamacchia RF 9. Russell Martin C
Jon Lester SP Freddy Garcia SP

And here is how the hitters have fared against today’s starting pitchers:

Boston Red Sox @ New York Yankees batter/pitcher matchups

Check back and/or refresh often as more links will be added if/when they become available before game time.

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

Carl Crawford: Batting lower in Red Sox’ lineup has been ‘very frustrating’ [Clubhouse Insider]

Buchholz may pitch Monday in Baltimore [CSN New England]

Epstein dismisses Yanks’ assertion on Crawford [CSN New England]

BBTN previews Red Sox-Yankees [ESPN Boston]

Lester, Sox look to get back on track vs. Yanks [ESPN Boston]

Tito restores Crawford to 2-hole; AGon 5th [ESPN Boston]

Pregame news from Yankee Stadium [Extra Bases]

Beckett waiting on a baby [Extra Bases]

Terry Francona engages in a rare lineup shuffle [Full Count]

Red Sox Reliever Matt Albers Wins Amica Pitcher of the Week [NESN.com]

Yankees General Manager Brian Cashman Downplays Offseason Interest in Carl Crawford [NESN.com]

Wild Card Contenders Stinking Up the Joint, Making Mockery of Final Playoff Spot [NESN.com]

Red Sox Catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia to Attend Baseball Dinner [OurSports Central]

Given time to think, Francona shuffles lineup [Projo Sox Blog]

Beckett, Bedard to start for Red Sox in Baltimore [Projo Sox Blog]

Mets’ Capuano knew nothing about trade talk [Projo Sox Blog]

In hostile territory, Red Sox can break from funk [RedSox.com]

Sox will get whatever they can from Youk [RedSox.com]

Crawford up to No. 2 as Sox look for spark [RedSox.com]

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Photo credits: Getty Images, Getty Images