Whale Training Camp Opens this Weekend

HARTFORD, September 21, 2011:  The Connecticut Whale will be opening its training camp for the 2011-12 season this weekend at Champions Skating Center in Cromwell, CT.

CT WhaleThe team will be conducting on and off-ice testing this Saturday, September 24, starting at 12:15 PM.  Then, the first training camp scrimmage is scheduled for this Sunday, September 25, from 10:40 to 11:40 AM.  The Whale is tentatively scheduled to have practices immediately before and immediately after the scrimmage.

A scrimmage is also scheduled for this Monday, September 26 from 10:00-11:00 AM, with practices immediately before and after.

The Whale training camp schedule is subject to change, so all interested media are asked please to double-check on times with either Bob Crawford or Brian Ring before attending a scrimmage or practice.

The Whale’s first preseason game is this Tuesday, September 27 at Trinity College’s Koeppel Community Sports Center, a 7:00 PM game against the Albany Devils.  The Koeppel Community Sports Center is located at 175 New Britain Ave. in Hartford, and the September 27 game is a benefit for the Ryan Gordon/Connecticut Whale Community Scholars Fund, with donations accepted at the door in lieu of an admission charge.  The fund memorializes young fan Ryan Gordon, who passed away in 2006 and asked that a portion of the monies set aside for his college education be donated to the Connecticut Whale Community Foundation.

The Whale’s regular-season home opener is coming up Saturday, October 15, a GEICO Connecticut Cup game vs. the Bridgeport Sound Tigers.  Tickets to that 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.

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

Brady Named AFC Offensive Player of the Week…Again

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady reacts after the Patriots scored a touchdown against the San Diego Chargers in the fourth quarter of their NFL football game in Foxborough, Massachusetts September 18, 2011.

The NFL named New England Patriots QB Tom Brady the AFC Offensive Player of the Week for the second consecutive week and 19th time in his illustrious career.

Brady became the first quarterback to ever follow up a 500-yard game with a 400-yard game when he threw for 423 yards on 31 of 40 passing with three TD’s against the San Diego Chargers on Sunday in the Patriots home opener.

He is the first NFL player to win the award twice in the first two weeks of a season and he won it back-to-back for the fourth time in his career.

Only Indianapolis Colts QB Peyton Manning has won the award more than Brady being given the honor a record 20 times since 1998.

Follow Steve on Twitter @djstevem

Photo credit: Reuters Pictures

Johnson Taking Positives from Last Season

By Bruce Berlet

Chad Johnson experienced about the ultimate in good news-bad news last season.

CT WhaleThe good? The New York Rangers called up the goalie from the Connecticut Whale on Feb. 28 after backup Martin Biron sustained a broken collarbone when hit by a shot in practice.

The bad? Johnson played only 20 minutes in two months while backing up Henrik Lundqvist.

And things didn’t start all that well this season when the first shot of warm-ups in the Rangers’ first scrimmage went off Johnson’s facemask, requiring him to go to the bench for repairs.

But Johnson, who struggled much of the season before being summoned by the Rangers, insists spending weeks with the Rangers and goaltending coach Benoit Allaire far outweighed having virtually no playing time.

“It was good to be here with Benoit and work on kind of really getting my game back, tweaking all the little things and getting my habits back,” said Johnson, who wasn’t scheduled to play Wednesday night in the Rangers’ preseason opener against the New Jersey Devils in Albany, N.Y., home of the Devils’ AHL affiliate.. “In that aspect, it was good for me to be up and be around the atmosphere, the crunch of trying to make the playoffs and then obviously the playoffs, too.

“The experience of being around that atmosphere helped me for sure. Just being exposed to that sort of environment with the fans and the media was good for me. Obviously you want to play games and showcase your skills and help your team win in Hartford or New York, but that was the situation. Being in the minors, you have to anticipate certain situations like that, so I took everything that I could from it.”

The 25-year-old Johnson was 16-19-0 with a 2.72 goals-against average, .901 save percentage and two shutouts in 40 games when called up. Though he benefitted from his time with the Rangers, it was difficult spending all but one period practicing, cheerleading and opening the bench door for his teammates.

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“It’s sort of tough because you don’t really do a lot of game-situation stuff throughout practice, especially later in the season,” said Johnson, a fifth-round pick of the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2006 acquired for a similar pick in 2009. “But for me, it was just a matter of keeping my mental intensity up. Benoit was always there after practice to do some small game situations for me. It’s just the situation you’re in, so you have to make the best of it and be ready whenever you possibly can. Obviously I would have like to have played a lot more, but again it’s kind of crunch time, and that was the situation that I was in. I understood the situation and tried to make the most of it. I tried to help the team as much as I could throughout the game, so obviously I was there in a different aspect throughout practice and off the ice, too.”

Johnson admitted his first four months of last season weren’t as good as his rookie campaign when he was 24-18-2 with a 2.54 GAA, .911 save percentage and three shutouts in 44 games with the then Hartford Wolf Pack and 1-1-2, 2.35 and .919 in five games with the Rangers.

“I think it was more my approach to the game,” Johnson said. “I think the way I approached and prepared for games wasn’t what it should have been. I was more worried about the technical side instead of just going out and playing and competing to win the hockey game. So over the summer, I adjusted that as far as preparing for games, along with getting stronger and improving in little things, like my footwork, that Benoit talks about.

“In the end, when you’re in a game, it’s all about competing hard and trying to get those two points somehow. How you get it done is making sure you’re making the saves you should and play solid to help the team win. I think I improved on that aspect, and physically I’ve gotten stronger and in better condition, which I think is going to help my overall game.”

Rangers assistant general manager/assistant coach/Whale GM Jim Schoenfeld agrees that Johnson needs to concentrate better than he did last season, which likely will come with more ice time.

“Being with the Rangers is nice, but playing is better,” Schoenfeld said. “The key is being ready for every shot. His high end is as high as many, but it’s the ability to focus and not let in the one you’re supposed to stop. To me, goalies have to stop everything they’re supposed to stop, plus a few. And even if you stop more than a few that are hard, if you let one in that you’re supposed to stop, it knocks the heck out of your team.

“So that to me is that consistency of focus. You’re not going to get beaten by a bad-angle shot because you’re focused on being where you should be. You’re not going to be beaten by giving up a bad rebound because you’re lazy and don’t steer it into the corner. It’s all that mental clarity, and that’s something that has to be developed, just like your leg strength, your arm quickness and everything else. It’s something that you have to work on all the time.”

Schoenfeld related Johnson’s inconsistency last season to golf, though in the more fast-paced game of hockey, goalies live by the credo, “He who hesitates is lost.”

“When you’re learning a new skill or technique, the time to think about is when you’re practicing it, so when you get in a game, you just try to put the ball in the hole,” Schoenfeld said. “When you get in the (hockey) game, you just stop the puck any way you can. You can’t be thinking about a lot of things, so sometimes when they’re going through the process of learning, when the game starts, it doesn’t matter how you do it but you stop the puck. Technique is important – don’t get me wrong, it’s critical to have good technique to be an efficient goaltender – but the most important thing is stopping the puck. After plenty of practice, the habit becomes habit-forming, but you can’t think about it. It’s a reaction, and your first reaction to the shot has to be instinctive.”

Johnson said he tried to improve the mental part of his game by zeroing in on his goals for every game and individual plays that might arise. He said he has focused on having a clear mind, knowing what his goal is for each game and period and staying in the present without thoughts of outcomes or statistics.

“I just want to keep it simple and not try to do too much or try to win games all by myself,” Johnson said. “I just have to play the way I can and have confidence in doing it, nothing too elaborate because it’s a simple game. My job is simple, you stop the puck. When you start making it too complicated is when you kind of get in trouble. Everybody always has their own little different way of doing things, whether it’s coaches or the media saying you should have done this or that, but it’s not really a complex game. You just have to stick to what you do. That’s all you can really worry about.”

It stems from majoring in psychology at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, where he was the Central Collegiate Hockey Association Player of the Year and a Hobey Baker Award finalist his senior year when he was 14-16-5 but had a 1.66 GAA, .940 save percentage and six shutouts in 35 games.

“You just have to focus to making that next save because nothing else really matters,” Johnson said. “It’s just training your mind to think a certain way. And I learned that from school taking sports psychology stuff, which, as I look back, helped me, too.”

Lundqvist and Biron are ticketed to be the Rangers goalies, with Johnson, Cam Talbot and youngsters Jason Missiaen and Scott Stajcer vying for spots in Hartford, though some decisions may have already been made. During the prospects tournament last week in Traverse City, Mich., Rangers director of hockey operations Gordie Clark said Missiaen, who spent a month with the Whale last season, would be going to Greenville of the ECHL to get some seasoning. Clark and Schoenfeld have said Stajcer would be headed back to the Ontario Hockey League as an over-aged junior because he has missed most of last season after hip surgery in November. But Stajcer played well in the prospects tournament and a strong camp could earn him a spot with the Whale.

It’s all part of the increased depth in the Rangers organization, which helps in Hartford.

“I think the team is going to be more experienced on the back end,” Johnson said. “Early on last year, we didn’t have a lot of experience with a lot of young guys coming in, which can be a good thing because they compete hard and don’t really care if they’re playing three (games) in three (days) or who you’re playing against. They’re just coming in and competing hard, so I think defensively, we’re going to be a lot stronger. Obviously there are a lot of D-men in the organization and not a whole lot of spots available (in New York), so I think we’re going to be good on defense with a lot of experience and skill.

“Up front, we’re going to have a lot of skill, too, a lot of youth, which I think is going to be good. It brings that energy, that excitement to the game. I think it’s good having young guys in there because you just go out and play, you don’t think about anything else. You just want to go in and play as well as you can when you first get in there, so I think it’s good for the whole team to have a lot of young kids who really compete every day because it brings everybody else up and challenges everyone else in practice and in games to be their best.”

Youngsters such as late-season additions Carl Hagelin, Andrew Yogan, Tommy Grant and Kale Kerbashian could be joined by Ryan Bourque, son of Hockey Hall of Famer Ray Bourque, Jonathan Audy-Marchessault, Jason Wilson, Jordan Hickmott and/or Tayler Jordan. Bourque and Audy-Marchessault excelled in the prospects tournament, where the Rangers lost 5-2 in the final to the more experienced Buffalo Sabres.

So with so much youth up front, the defense and goaltending might have to carry the Whale at the start of the season, which begins Oct. 8 against the Adirondack Phantoms in Glens Falls, N.Y. The home opener is Oct. 15 against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, whose head coach is former Wolf Pack defenseman Brent Thompson. One of his assistants is West Haven native Eric Boguniecki, who was the AHL’s MVP with the then Worcester IceCats in the 2001-02 season.

“It has to start with your goaltending. I think that’s how you win games,” Johnson said. “Whether it’s in the minors or the NHL, teams that do well and go far in the playoffs all have good goaltending throughout the season. And having good defense and playing good strong team defense is important, too, is how you’re going to consistently win hockey games. You can win games being really offensive, but you’re not going to be as consistent as if you’re just playing strong defensively.

“So for sure early on, our defense and goaltending are going to have to be our strong points, and with playing strong D, you’re going to get the puck and get more opportunities so you’re going to score more goals. So I think if we just focus on playing well defensively early on, offensively things are going to come.”

While Johnson appears headed to Hartford, he is taking nothing for granted in training camp, especially in light of what happened last season. Not to mention the Rangers will be taking three goalies to Europe for four preseason games before the season opener Oct. 7 against the Los Angeles Kings in Stockholm, Sweden, and everyone knows who two of them will be, barring injuries. Coach John Tortorella said Tuesday that he wants to get Lundqvist and Biron as ready as possible in the preseason games.

“You want to compete and showcase what you can do to the organization and all the scouts that are here,” Johnson said. “Obviously they have Henrik and Marty there, but you come into this camp as a tryout camp and a training camp to compete and battle and show what you can. For me, I’m not really that worried about Hartford. When the time comes and I’m down there, I’ll worry about down there. Right now, I’m worried about trying to make the New York Rangers, even if they do have things penciled in. Things change all the time, so you want to make sure you’re playing the best you possibly can all the time. It’s important for me to have a good camp and do what I do, play the best I possibly can. That’s all that I can control.”

LUNDQVIST, TALBOT BACKSTOP RANGERS IN PRESEASON OPENER

Lundqvist and Talbot were scheduled to split the preseason opener in Albany, and the defensive pairings were expected to be: Dan Girardi-Brendan Bell, Michael Del Zotto-Steve Eminger and Erixon-Dylan McIlrath, who played together in the prospects tournament.

The lines scheduled lines were (left to right): Brandon Dubinsky-Artem Anisimov-Dale Weise, Hagelin-Erik Christensen-Christian Thomas, Sean Avery-John Mitchell-J.T. Miller and Bourque-Shane McColgan-Andre Deveaux.

Lundqvist told the New York media that this would be the last start that he doesn’t finish, but didn’t know which games he would play. He’s likely to start four of the seven preseason games and most assuredly against his former team, Frolunda, on Sept. 30 in Gothenburg, Sweden.

Tortorella said the Rangers will be taking three goalies, 10 defensemen and 18 forwards to Europe. They hope to be down to the maximum 23 for the regular season after the first two games in Europe. The final cuts will join the Whale, giving coach Ken Gernander and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller about a week to form their lines and defensive pairings for their opener Oct. 8 against the Adirondack Phantoms in Glens Falls, N.Y.

Right wing Chad Kolarik, who played his first four NHL games with the Rangers last season after being acquired from Dane Byers on Nov. 13, wasn’t scheduled to play Wednesday but couldn’t even practice. He tried to skate after being injured Tuesday during a scrimmage but quickly left the ice.

The 25-year-old forward played reasonably well and had an assist on the fourth line with the Rangers as an injury replacement, and his past performance will be part of his evaluation this year.

“He did some things for us last year,” Tortorella said. “You can’t take anything away or against what they’ve done prior. You have to keep it in your memory how they’ve played. But it’s also, ‘Are they improving?’ And Kolarik is not getting a chance to show that if he can’t skate.”

Kolarik, Weise, Hagelin, Bourque and Mats Zuccarello are vying for a possible one or two forwards spots, with veterans Avery and Christensen on the bubble.

“There’s a lot of players in there that really need to show some things to really move along,” Tortorella said after the morning skate. When asked if that included Avery and Christensen, Tortorella said “very definitely.”

We’ll have a look at the game and reactions Thursday.

WHALE COACHES EARN PLAUDITS

All of the Rangers hierarchy that we talked to believe training camp has been competitive and fast paced. Tortorella said much of the credit goes to Clark and the scouts and the Whale coaches.

“Gordie Clark and his crew are the people looking at kids, drafting the kids,” Tortorella said. “I go back to even Kenny (Gernander) and (his assistants). When we had all the injuries last year we were playing with a lot of the Hartford guys for a good part of the season. They came in and did a great job and really did give us an opportunity to get into the playoffs. So organizationally, I think we’ve added to our depth. I think we’ve done a great job down there and with our scouts and player development as far as adding to our depth with drafts and having to come along through our system.

“This is what we want to do. We have a captain (former Wolf Pack All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan) that’s come through our system; he’s the captain of our team now. This is what you want to do. So I think you really need to look to give some credit to the people that are out there, watching these games, drafting and the minor-league team that have helped develop them.”

When asked if that really matters, Tortorella had an emphatic response.

“Absolutely. Absolutely,” he said. “In a (salary) cap world, and where we’re at right now, I think it’s huge as far as how they feel about it, and the business end from us, how we’re going to go about our business, not just for one year, but as you go along. Again, that’s why I’m excited. I’m excited that Ryan Callahan is the captain of the team. He is one of us. He has gone through the system, been drafted on through and now he’s turned into this. It’s a great example and I think the players really come together with that when you get to your National Hockey League team, the top team in your organization.”

Schoenfeld agreed that Callahan was the logical successor to Trumbull native Chris Drury, who retired Aug. 19 after having the final year of his five-year, $35.25 million contract bought out by the Rangers on June 23.

“Ryan was the heir apparent,” Schoenfeld said. “I really liked Chris and admired the way he played, but people knew Cally was the right choice. He plays the game the way it’s supposed to be played, and he’s homegrown. He’s a Ranger.”

STAAL BACK BUT CAUTIOUS

All-Star defenseman Marc Staal returned to the ice Tuesday, taking part in drills and practice but not a scrimmage after being sent home for not feeling well on Monday. Staal has been bothered by headaches since summer and said that getting through the first three days of intense training camp with only minor issues was a good sign.

“I couldn’t get through my workouts at the start of the summer because of the headaches, but it has been steadily improving since,” said Staal, who also skated Wednesday. “It’s frustrating. It’s something I’ve never had before, but I’ve been improving quite a bit the past two-three weeks, so I’m just hoping it keeps heading in that direction.”

Staal originally sustained a concussion when hit by his brother, All-Star center Eric Staal of the Carolina Hurricanes on Feb. 22.

“He’s not real happy about it,” Marc said of Eric. “But it is what it is. You can’t really do anything about it now.”

Marc passed baseline tests after hit by Eric and before training camp, but the headaches continue depending on the extent of his workouts. As a precaution, the Rangers are holding Staal out of scrimmages and at least the first three preseason games in hopes he will be ready for the regular-season opener on Oct. 7 against the Los Angeles Kings in Stockholm, Sweden.

“It depends on the length and the hardness of the workout,” Staal said of the severity of his headaches. “Some days I’ll get a headache late in the day that’ll last sometimes four or five hours, or it’ll last one hour. That’s just kind of the way it’s been going the last couple of weeks.

“I feel no symptoms if I don’t do anything. If I sit on the couch all day, I don’t get any headaches or anything like that. If I push myself really hard, later on in the day, I’ll more times than not get a headache.”

Tortorella acknowledged it’s much more difficult dealing with a concussion than other injuries but is trusting Staal to let the Rangers know how he’s feeling.

“It’s a hard one,” Tortorella said. “You want to be careful. I’m a coach (that thinks) you need to keep pushing athletes. Sometimes athletes are sore but not hurt. Not everybody feels perfect, but you’ve got to be careful. (A concussion) is not tangible. It’s a difficult injury. You leave it up to the player. He needs to communicate with you. There’s a league-wide push on us on the need to be careful.

“I trust him. Take away the head injury, sometimes you don’t trust a player. I trust him.”

All sides are hoping a cautious approach will bring a full recovery for the Rangers’ assistant captain who forms the team’s No. 1 defensive pairing with former Wolf Pack Girardi. But if Staal’s health issues become a long-term concern, it will be a major blow to the Rangers’ hopes of joining the NHL’s elite.

The one bright side of Staal’s injury is management will get a chance to look at defensemen on the bubble for one or two roster spots such as Del Zotto, Pavel Valentenko, Tomas Kundratek and newcomers Bell and Erixon, son of former Rangers wing Jan Erixon and the Rangers’ best player in the prospects tournament.

“We’re going to keep on looking at guys, and that is a position that there are spots wide open,” Tortorella said. “So we’ll get some guys in situations to take a look at them in the exhibition games.”

WHALE OPEN CAMP SATURDAY

The Rangers’ prospects will play their Devils counterparts Friday at 1 p.m. in Newark, N.J., before the parent clubs face off at 7 p.m. Then the Rangers will make their first cuts and send an as-yet undetermined number of players to the Whale, who open camp Saturday at Champions Skating Center in Cromwell with physicals and testing.

The Rangers’ cuts are expected to join several players not invited to Rangers camp, including veteran defenseman Wade Redden, who has played 994 NHL games with the Ottawa Senators and Rangers and was an extremely positive influence on the Whale’s young players in his first time in the minors last season.

The Whale will have their first scrimmage open to the public Sunday from 10:40 to 11:40 a.m. The Whale’s first preseason game is Sept. 27 at 7 p.m. against Albany 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 Sept. 28 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 Sept. 30 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).

MODANO RETIRES – VIA FACEBOOK AND TWITTER

Mike Modano, the all-time leading NHL scorer among U.S.-born players, retired on his Facebook and Twitter accounts on Tuesday and announced he will hold a press conference Friday.

“After a long summer of thinking about my future, I’ve come to the decision that it’s time to retire as a player from the NHL,” Modano wrote on his Facebook page, a link to which he also posted to his Twitter account. “There’s way too many people to thank here at this time and too much to say, so I have a press conference scheduled for early Friday afternoon. Check back Friday late afternoon for more. What a great ride it’s been!

Modano played 1,499 regular-season NHL games, including 1,459 with the Minnesota/Dallas franchise, and finished his career with 561 goals and 813 assists. The first pick of the 1988 draft, he made his NHL debut with the North Stars in 1989 and played 21 seasons. The native of Livonia, Mich., returned home last season to play with the Red Wings, but injuries limited him to only 40 games.

“The greatest American player ever,” former teammate Brett Hull told The Hockey News. “I don’t think there’s one better. He’s by far No. 1.”

Modano won the Stanley Cup with the Stars in 1999 and holds NHL records for the most goals, points, playoff points (145) and games played by a U.S.-born player. He also holds Minnesota/Dallas franchise records for games played in the regular season, games played in the playoffs (174), goals in the regular season (557), goals in the playoffs (58), assists in the regular season (802), assists in the playoffs (87) and points in both the regular season (1,359) and playoffs (145). He was named to the All-Rookie team in 1990 and played in eight All-Star Games.

BLUE JACKETS SIGN UMBERGER TO BIG DEAL, SPLIT TWO WITH JETS

Center R.J. Umberger, who worked out the Wolf Pack but never played for the Rangers, signed a five-year, $23 million contract with the Columbus Blue Jackets that also was revealed via social media on Wednesday.

“We have signed RJ to a 5 year extension,” Blue Jackets general manager Scott Howson tweeted. “Thrilled to have such a big part of our team signed long term.”

Umberger is entering his fourth season in Columbus after spending his first three NHL seasons with the Philadelphia Flyers. He hasn’t missed a game in a Blue Jackets uniform and has 74 goals and 84 assists. He has scored at least 23 goals in each of his three seasons with Columbus and had 32 assists in each of the last two. He had a career-best 57 points last season.

The announcement of Umberger’s signing came just hours after the Blue Jackets split two games with the new Winnipeg Jets. They won 5-1 at home but were routed 6-1 in the return of the NHL to Manitoba after a 15-year absence, in a game that had the feel of a Stanley Cup game before a sellout crowd of 15,003 at the MTS Center. Mark Scheifele, the seventh overall pick in June, had two goals and two assists for the Jets, and former Wolf Pack wing Alexandre Giroux assisted on the Blue Jackets’ only goal by Ryan Johansen, the fourth overall pick in 2010.

Winnipeg fans roared from the moment the Jets hit the ice for warm-ups, rarely rested throughout the game and screamed “Go Jets Go” countless times. “The atmosphere was electric,” said Blue Jackets coach Scott Arniel, a member of the original Jets and 2009 AHL Coach of the Year while with the Manitoba Moose when they played in Winnipeg. “We knew it was going to be loud, and it was.” Could this be Hartford again in a few years?

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

Patriots Move Two to IR, Sign Two Replacements

New England Patriots center Dan Koppen leaves the field on a cart after an injury to his left ankle during the second quarter of an NFL football game against the Miami Dolphins, Monday, Sept. 12, 2011 in Miami.

The New England Patriots made some roster moves today.  The team placed C Dan Koppen on the IR with the broken fibula he suffered Week one in Miami. 

Sources say that after the recovery time was adjusted to 10-12 weeks from the earlier projection of 6-10 weeks the team felt that it was too long to wait.

Also placed on the IR was DL Myron Pryor with a shoulder injury.  Pryor hurt it during the San Diego game on Vincent Jackson’s 2nd quarter TD.  It’s unclear what he did to the shoulder as it looked like a routine pass rush play.

With those moves being made that opened two spots on the 53-man roster.  The Patriots brought back DL Landon Cohen who was among the last cuts in training camp.  For one I am shocked Cohen was still available to New England after the way he played in the preseason.

DB Philip Adams was also signed by the club.  He was a 7th round pick of the San Francisco 49ers in 2010 out of South Carolina State.  He played 15 games for the Niners last season and had 13 tackles and one pass defensed.

Follow Steve on Twitter @djstevem

Photo credit: AP Photo

Red Sox News & Notes – 9/21

Boston Red Sox relief pitcher Jonathan Papelbon sits in the dugout after the Red Sox lost 7-5 to the Baltimore Orioles in a baseball game at Fenway Park in Boston, Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2011. Papelbon gave up a three-run double to Robert Andino in the eighth inning.

Boston Red Sox closer Jonathan Papelbon took full blame for Tuesday night’s 7-5 loss to the Baltimore Orioles. Josh Reddick felt really bad about misplaying the fly ball in the 3rd inning that would eventually force starter Erik Bedard from the game. It also turns out that Bedard may have a little something else on his mind before the game.

According to the NY Post, Bedard was served with child support papers before the game by an ex-girlfriend who is the mother of his daughter. And before you jump to conclusions without reading the WHOLE article, Bedard is not a “deadbeat dad”. In fact, according to the same article, Bedard has been paying his child support all along.

Essentially the baby’s mother wants more money since at one point since their original agreement, Bedard has made a little more money in contracts.

So now besides battling injuries to their pitching staff and key players, the Red Sox are also dealing with baby mama drama. I don’t even dare think what’s next.

The one positive about the loss last night for the Red Sox is the fact that the New York Yankees beat the Tampa Bay Rays. Sure it doesn’t help the Red Sox as far as winning the division goes but do we even care about that anymore as they are six games out with eight to go.

With the team going 5-15 this month, we just want them in the playoffs. Right now the lead over the Rays is still two games in the AL Wild Card and 3.5 over the Los Angeles Angels.

With the Red Sox holding a 1-0 lead, the O’s tied it up in the second when Nick Markakis brought in Robert Andino with a double. Vladimir Guerrero then hit a fly ball to right that Reddick misjudged and ended up going off the webbing of his glove for an error and another O’s run.

This seem to unnerve Bedard as he walked the next two guys to load up the bases. Rather than take Bedard out with Scott Atchison ready to come in, Red Sox skipper Terry Francona took his chances with Bedard but it didn’t work out as Mark Reynolds singled to bring in two more runs that gave the Birds a 4-1 lead.

The Red Sox did battle back in the bottom half of the inning as Adrian Gonzalez hit a two run homer to cut the lead to one. They got two more in the fourth to take a 5-4 lead and let their bullpen keep them in the game until the 8th inning.

After working a 1-2-3 7th inning, Daniel Bard allowed two singles around an Adam Jones strikeout and gave to Paps who was called upon for a five outing save. He struck out Chris Davis for the second out of the inning before Nolan Reimold singled to left to load the bases.

The next batter he faced was Andino and worked the count full before Andino went the other way and cleared the bases with a double to put the O’s out front for good.

I can’t say enough about the job Atchison has done over the past few games as he kept the local nine in the game by allowing three hits with two strikeouts in 2.1 scoreless innings. Even Matt Albers has a solid outing by striking out two in an inning of work.

But given how much the bullpen has been used the past three games, Josh Beckett is probably going to need to go all nine innings tonight. If there’s a pitcher on this staff, he can do it. Making just his second start after the ankle injury could present problems for that but what else can the Red Sox do at this point.

They just need to win games and not worry about whatever anyone else around them in the standings is doing. That and only that, will help them achieve their postseason goal.

We’ll be back later with tonight’s lineups, batter/pitcher matchups, news and links from the day. But for now, enjoy the overnight links by click 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

For starters, Red Sox rotation at heart of swoon [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]

Long third inning does in Bedard [Boston Globe]

In this corner . . . it’s Ric Flair [Boston Globe]

Buchholz takes the next step [Boston Globe]

Holding pattern [Boston Globe]

Asking Sox fans the unthinkable: Root for Yankees? [Boston Globe]

No relief in sight [Boston Herald]

Pedroia, Sox get pumped with Flair for dramatics [Boston Herald]

A money player [Boston Herald]

Tito may Yank Bedard [Boston Herald]

April rain brings pain [Boston Herald]

Papelbon takes the hit [Boston Herald]

Bullpen blows it, Sox lose to O’s, 7-5 [CSN New England]

Ric Flair’s Fenway visit thrills Pedroia, Reddick [CSN New England]

Pitching fails Sox from start to finish [CSN New England]

Francona takes high road on Schilling comments [CSN New England]

Notes: Buchholz throws a simulated inning Tuesday [CSN New England]

Papelbon takes ‘full responsibility’ for loss [ESPN Boston]

Schilling: ‘Don’t know that it’s there’ [ESPN Boston]

Closing Time: After Bedard’s poor start, Sox bullpen blows it at the end [Full Count]

No one feels worse about Tuesday than Josh Reddick [Full Count]

Video: Ric Flair, Dustin Pedroia Exchange ‘Woos’ in Red Sox Clubhouse Upon Meeting [NESN.com]

Video: Theo Epstein Pleased With Daniel Bard’s Ability to Fix Issues in One Bullpen Session, But Has Come to Expect Right-Hander’s Confidence [NESN.com]

Video: Ric Flair Emphatically Introduces Red Sox Lineup Prior to Game Against Orioles, Concludes With Trio of Vintage ‘Woos’ [NESN.com]

Video: Erik Bedard Says Knee, Lat Felt Good in Start Against Orioles, But Becomes Latest Red Sox Pitcher to Turn in Short Outing [NESN.com]

Jonathan Papelbon Steps Up, Takes Blame for Latest Red Sox Loss [NESN.com]

Josh Reddick’s Miscue Prolongs Nightmare Inning for Erik Bedard, Forces Another Early Dip Into Red Sox Bullpen [NESN.com]

Terry Francona Loses Gamble After Going for Early Knockout Blow With Back End of Bullpen [NESN.com]

Bard, Papelbon combine to blow one-run lead [Providence Journal]

Buchholz takes another step on the road back [Providence Journal]

Red Sox Journal: Wrestler’s visit may add some flair to playoff push [Providence Journal]

Francona body slams talk-show fodder [RedSox.com]

Lackey or Bedard to face Yankees in finale [RedSox.com]

The last Red Sox standing finally fell [Rob Bradford – WEEI.com]

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

And if you must check out the enemy news, head over to the Baltimore Sun website. You can also check out our Bloguin brother, the Oriole Post.

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

Photo credit: AP Photo

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 9/21

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 in trouble, but Huskies have big game at Buffalo [Chip Malafronte – New Haven Register]

Buffalo week quotes: Jesse Joseph [Joe Perez – Norwich Bulletin]

Buffalo week: Mike Nebrich [Joe Perez – Norwich Bulletin]

Buffalo week; D.J. Shoemate [Joe Perez – Norwich Bulletin]

Buffalo week [Joe Perez – Norwich Bulletin]

Tuesday press conference [John Silver – Journal Inquirer]

Huskies prep for Buffalo trip, try to focus on football [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Video View: Paul Pasqualoni Tuesday In Storrs [Shawn Courchesne – Hartford Courant]

Time For UConn’s Offense To Step Up [Hartford Courant]

Paul Pasqualoni: Loyalty To Conference, Region Not What It Used To Be [Hartford Courant]

UConn gets key defensive end back for Buffalo game [Norwich Bulletin]

Huskies shuffle O-line [The Day]

All part of his constitution [The Day]

Joseph set to return to UConn defensive line [The Hour]

Pasqualoni discusses shuffling of Big East, quarterbacks [The Daily Campus]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Swofford, Dixon on Realignment [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Former Big East Commish Mike Tranghese Doubts Boeheim, Calhoun Will Coach in ACC [Dom Amore – Hartford Courant]

Shabazz Napier ready to make his point [New Haven Register]

Jesse Joseph ready to return [New Haven Register]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Geno’s take on conference chaos [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

UConn will be represented in WNBA championship series [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Other UConn related links

Musical chairs [Joe Perez – Norwich Bulletin]

Hold your horses [John Silver – Journal Inquirer]

UConn president talks about conference realignment [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

BIG EAST Conference Statement Following Tuesday Meeting In New York [BigEast.org]

UConn president Herbst on expansion: Huskies ‘sought after’ [CT Post]

Big East Vows To Rejuvenate Conference [Hartford Courant]

UConn tries to control its fate as Big East crumbles [New Haven Register]

Conference shakeup subject of meeting [Norwich Bulletin]

Forget loyalty, conference realignment is about every man for himself [The Day]

M. Golf. Men’s Golf Places Ninth At Adams Cup of Newport [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Men’s Hockey Picked Fifth In AHA Preseason Poll [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Tennis. Men’s Tennis Competes At Brown Invitational [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Ice Hockey. UConn Slated Fifth in Hockey East Preseason Poll [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Soccer. Alvarez and Cascio Lead No. 2 Huskies Past No. 10 BC, 2-0 [UConnHuskies.com]

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

Brady Earns Second FedEx Air Nomination of Season

The NFL announced today that New England Patriots quarteback Tom Brady has been nominated for the FedEx Air Player of the Week for his Week 2 performance against san Diego.

Tom Brady #12 of the New England Patriots celebrates his touchdown pass to Rob Gronkowski in the fourth quarter against the San Diego Chargers on September 18, 2011 at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts.Brady was 31 of 40 for 423 yards, 2 TD’s and 0 INT’s in the 35-21 win over the Chargers at Gillette Stadium.

This is the second week in a row that Brady has been nominated, he won the award in Week 1 after throwing for 517 yards and 4 TD’s against Miami.

Other nominated for the FedEx Air award are Dallas QB Tony Romo and Detroit QB Matthew Stafford.

You can vote for Brady through Friday at noon.

Follow Steve on Twitter @djstevem

Photo credit: Getty Images

Weise Making Strong Bid for NHL Spot

By Bruce Berlet

GREENBURGH, N.Y. – Dale Weise got a taste of the NHL last season and would love to have a permanent dose this year.

CT WhaleSo to try to give himself the best possible chance of making the New York Rangers, the right wing changed his diet and worked with a trainer, Nate Rubin, for the first time this summer while home in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and reported to training this week stronger, thanks largely to eight pounds of muscle mass.

“We set up our own thing and went one-on-one all summer, and I think it really helped me,” Weise said Tuesday while watching others scrimmage at the Madison Square Garden training facility. “Normally I work in a group, but this time I worked one-on-one with (Rubin). I’m leaner than ever. I’m stronger than ever. And I’m a little bit heavier, which I feel good about because I was getting stronger but not really losing my speed.

“After playing in the NHL last season, if I want to play the style I want I felt I had to get a little stronger, and I think I did that over the summer. It’ll probably get a little more physical as we get rolling into the exhibition games, but it has felt pretty good so far.”

Weise, who ended last season at 205 pounds but is now at 213, will be in the lineup when the Rangers open a rigorous preseason schedule Wednesday night at 7 against the New Jersey Devils in Albany, N.Y; home of the Devils’ AHL affiliate. But several players who played for the Connecticut Whale last season or could be in Hartford season will be action, including goalie Cam Talbot, defensemen Michael Del Zotto, Tim Erixon and Brendan Bell and forwards John Mitchell, Carl Hagelin, Andre Deveaux and Ryan Bourque, son of Hockey Hall of Famer Ray Bourque. Others playing include standout goalie Henrik Lundqvist, defenseman Steve Eminger, pesky Sean Avery and former Wolf Pack players Dan Girardi, Brandon Dubinsky and Artem Anisimov.

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

Weise is battling fellow wings Mats Zuccarello, Chad Kolarik and Hagelin for one of the final few open spots on the Rangers roster. Centers Mitchell and Kris Newbury are also in the forward mix, depending on whether the Rangers decide to play second-year pro Derek Stepan in the middle or at wing, which he did a few times last season.

Zuccarello and Newbury also did extensive training in the summer. Zuccarello worked out with Rangers center Brian Boyle and former Olympic medalist Barbara Underwood, the team’s skating guru. Newbury worked out with former Whale strength and conditioning coach Jeremy Goodman at Champions Skating Center in Cromwell.

Weise was encouraged Tuesday when he was put on a line with Boyle and newcomer Mike Rupp, who won’t play against his former team Wednesday night. The first two days of scrimmages, Weise was alongside Bourque and newcomer Jonathan Audy-Marchessault. Bourque and Audy-Marchessault excelled in last week’s prospects tournament in Traverse City, Mich., where the Rangers lost 5-2 in the finals to the more experienced Buffalo Sabres.

“It’s a big line, and we all kind of play similar styles,” Weise said of his Tuesday pairing. “I think it’s good that they’re giving me a look on some different lines and try to check out some combinations.”

Weise, a fourth-round pick in 2008, said he thinks he has a decent shot to stick with the Rangers, though there’s little margin for error.

“If you look at their roster, they have a lot of good, young guys, and I just want to be a part of it,” Weise said. “And they’re building something special with the core guys that they love to talk about (Lundqvist, Dubinsky, captain Ryan Callahan and All-Star defenseman Marc Staal). There a couple of guys battling for one or two spots, and I’m taking it day-to-day and game-to-game and just try to do what I can to make an impression and show them a little more than I did in the 10 games last season.”

Weise was scoreless with 19 penalty minutes in the 10 games but earned some notoriety when he fought Philadelphia Flyers’ tough guy Daniel Carcillo in his NHL debut in the Wachovia Center. Weise also had 18 goals, 20 assists and 73 penalty minutes in 47 games with the Hartford Wolf Pack/Whale while battling a series of injuries that began even before the season even began.

“Knock on wood, it’s nice not to be playing with any broken fingers,” Weise said with a smile. “Last year things started bothering after a fight with (Marcus) Foligno. I didn’t really say anything because I’m not a guy who’s going to complain about a little stuff like that, but it continued to get worse as I played the first two games. Then I got into a fight in the second game, which didn’t help. I was out for month and then came back, played three games and broke my finger, so it was kind of a whirlwind start. I’m lucky to stay healthy so far this year.”

Weise hopes he can follow in the footsteps of Boyle and former Wolf Pack defenseman Michael Sauer. Boyle, a first-round pick (26th overall) of the Los Angeles Kings in 2003, was acquired for a third-round pick on June 27, 2009. After a forgettable season in which he had only four goals and two assists in 71 games, Boyle worked out in the offseason with Underwood but still seemed destined for Hartford. But he performed so well in training camp that he earned a job with the Rangers and had 21 goals and 14 assists, while being a top penalty killer, in 82 games last season. Sauer had three injury-plagued seasons in Hartford before staying healthy in 2010-11 after surprisingly earning a job in New York in training camp. He then ended up being part of the Rangers’ No. 2 pairing with Ryan McDonagh, who changed places with Del Zotto on Jan. 3 and never left Broadway.

“It was good to see for a guy like that who battled through some adversity with injuries,” Weise said. “It kind of slowed his progression a little bit, but he came last year in kind of the same situation as me now, made the team and got himself a nice, little contract (two years, $2.5 million).

“You look at a guy like that who got a chance to play a few NHL (preseason) games. No one was really expecting him to make the team, and he was steady and made it hard on (Rangers management) and they couldn’t cut him. And look at Brian Boyle, who also wasn’t considered to be making the team. He came in, had a solid camp and continued to get better. I think guys like that are something I can build off of.”

WHALE OPEN CAMP SATURDAY

The Rangers prospects will play their Devils counterparts Friday at 1 p.m. in Newark, N.J. Then the Rangers will make their first cuts and send a yet-undetermined number of players to the Whale, who open camp Saturday at Champions Skating Center with physicals and testing.

The Rangers cuts are expected to join nine players not invited to Rangers camp, including veteran defenseman Wade Redden, who has played 994 NHL games with the Ottawa Senators and Rangers and was an extremely positive influence on the Whale’s young players in his first time in the minors last season.

The Whale will have their first scrimmage open to the public Sunday from at 10:40 to 11:40 a.m. The Whale’s first preseason game is Sept. 27 at 7 p.m. against Albany 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 Rangers will commemorate left wing/enforcer Derek Boogaard, who died May 13, with a helmet decal, just as the Winnipeg Jets will do for Rick Rypien, who committed suicide Aug. 15 after a long bout with depression. Boogaard was found dead in his Minneapolis apartment from an accidental overdose of alcohol and painkillers.

MARK JOHNSON AMONG LESTER PATRICK TROPHY WINNERS

Former Hartford Whalers center and Olympic gold medalist Mark Johnson is among four people named to receive the 2011 Lester Patrick Trophy for outstanding service to hockey in the United States.

Other recipients to be honored Oct. 26 at the RiverCenter in St. Paul, Minn., are Hockey Hall of Famer Bob Pulford, longtime USA Hockey executive Tony Rossi and college coaching legend Jeff Sauer. The award, one of the most prestigious in hockey, was presented to the NHL by the Rangers in 1966 to honor the memory of Lester Patrick, who spent 50 years in hockey as a player, coach and general manager and was a pioneer in the sport’s development.

Johnson, born in Minneapolis, followed an accomplished athletic career by distinguishing himself as a coach. Perhaps best-known as the leading scorer for champion Team USA at the 1980 Olympic Winter Games, one of 13 international tournament in which he would play for the U.S., Johnson scored twice in Team USA’s iconic 4-3 victory over the Soviet Union en route to the gold medal. Johnson, who had a three-year collegiate playing career at the University of Wisconsin, also competed for 11 years in the NHL (1979-90), collecting 508 points in 669 games.

Johnson is currently head coach of the women’s hockey team at his alma mater, having led Wisconsin to four NCAA championships (2006, 2007, 2009 and 2011). He also served as the head coach of the 2010 silver-medal winning U.S. Olympic women’s hockey team and twice was as an assistant coach for the U.S. men’s national team at the World Championships (2000, 2002) Johnson, the son of legendary college and NHL coach “Badger” Bob Johnson, was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 2004.

Pulford was one of the most reliable players in the NHL during a 16-year career that spanned three decades. He played 1,079 regular-season NHL games, winning four Stanley Cups with the Toronto Maple Leafs (1962-64, 1967) before being traded to the Kings in 1970. He took his first coaching role with the Kings, guiding them to their first playoff appearance in five years in 1974, and won the Jack Adams Award as coach of the year in the NHL in 1975. That season, the Kings amassed 105 points, still a club record.

Pulford then joined the Chicago Blackhawks, where he spent more than 30 years in various roles. He served as the club’s head coach on three separate occasions from 1977 to 1987. He was promoted to senior vice president in 1990 and took on the general manager’s duties three separate times. Pulford was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1991.

Besides a highly successful business career, Rossi has generously donated significant time, resources and expertise to USA Hockey for parts of five decades at the grassroots and executive leadership levels. After beginning his volunteer career with the National Governing Body in the mid-1970s, Rossi was elected to the USA Hockey Board of Directors in 1983 and served as a director from the Central District until 1988. He then was elected to the USA Hockey executive committee and transitioned into the role of USA Hockey treasurer in 1995. He currently serves as vice president of the organization and its international council chair.

During his time with USA Hockey, Rossi helped guide the formation and growth of The USA Hockey Foundation, a charitable and educational non-profit corporation that provides long-range financial support for USA Hockey and promotes the growth of the game in the United States. He was elected to the International Ice Hockey Federation council in 2008.

Sauer is one of the most successful and distinguished coaches in the history of college hockey. After his playing career at Colorado College, where he played for Bob Johnson, Sauer spent more than 30 seasons as an NCAA Division I head coach at Colorado College (1971-1980) and the University of Wisconsin (1983-2002). Sauer won national championships as coach of the Badgers in 1983 and 1990 and ranks eighth on the all-time wins list of college hockey coaches with a 655-532-57 record.

Sauer also is closely involved with preparing and coaching the USA Deaf Olympic Team, having participated in seven Deaflympics and earning a gold medal in 2007 at the IIHF Winter Deaf Olympics. In April 2009, he also coached Team USA to a bronze medal in the first World Deaf Hockey Championships. Sauer earned the John “Snooks” Kelley Founders Award from the American Hockey Coaches Association in 2003, presented to individuals in the coaching profession who have contributed to the overall growth and development of the sport in the United States. He is a member of USA Hockey’s International Council and the Disabled Hockey Committee and also currently works for the Western Collegiate Hockey Association as assistant to the commissioner. Sauer was recently named head coach of the U.S. National Sled Hockey Team.

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

Afternoon Red Sox Delight – 9/20

Rick VandenHurk (L), Erik Bedard (R)

After splitting the day/night doubleheader on Monday, the Boston Red Sox look to continue their playoff push in game three of a four-game set with the Baltimore Orioles tonight at Historic Fenway Park.

Today’s first pitch for game two of the day/night doubleheader is scheduled for 7:10 p.m. The game will be carried on NESN if you live in the Red Sox television market. If you live in the Orioles television market, you can watch the game on MASN. If you don’t live in either market, you may be in luck as the MLB Network is scheduled to have coverage of the game as well. And if you can’t catch the television broadcast, you can always listen to the game on the 2011 Red Sox Radio Network.

Erik Bedard makes his his seventh start in a Red Sox uniform (23rd overall) since September 3rd after being sideline with a lat and knee issue. In his previous 22 starts, Bedard is 5-9 with a 3.50 ERA. In his six starts with the Red Sox, he is 1-2 with a 3.66 ERA. He’s made one start against his former club this season and that came as a member of the Seattle Mariners. In that start back on May 31st, he picked up a no decision after allowing two earned runs in 6.1 innings of work. He’s made three career starts against the Orioles and is 1-0 with a 2.70 ERA (5 ER/16.2 IP).

Rick VandenHurk looks to try and help the Orioles play spoiler again in his second start (fourth appearance) of the season. In his previous three appearances (one start), VandenHurk has no record with a 6.00 ERA (4 ER/6 IP). He’s made two career appearances against the Red Sox with both coming in 2010. In those appearances, he has no record with a 4.50 ERA (1 ER/2 IP). He struck out two in a perfect inning of work in his only appearance at Fenway Park.

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 evening’s lineups:

Baltimore Orioles63-90 Boston Red Sox88-66
1. Robert Andino 2B 1. Jacoby Ellsbury CF
2. J.J. Hardy SS 2. Dustin Pedroia 2B
3. Nick Markakis RF 3. Adrian Gonzalez 1B
4. Vladimir Guerrero DH 4. David Ortiz DH
5. Matt Wieters
C 5. Josh Reddick
RF
6. Adam Jones
CF 6. Carl Crawford
LF
7. Mark Reynolds
1B 7. Marco Scutaro
SS
8. Chris Davis 3B 8. Jarrod Saltalamacchia
C
9. Nolan Reimold LF 9. Mike Aviles 3B
Rick VandenHurk SP Erik Bedard
SP

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

Baltimore Orioles @ Boston Red Sox 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

As season nears end, Red Sox pitching remains an exercise in the unknown [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]

Terry Francona “doesn’t give a (expletive)” about Curt Schilling’s prediction [Clubhouse Insider]

Monday’s win doesn’t hide Red Sox warts [CSN New England]

Ric Flair’s Fenway visit thrills Pedroia, Reddick [CSN New England]

Notes: Buchholz throws a simulated inning Tuesday [CSN New England]

Alfredo Aceves, Clay Buchholz Could Solve Red Sox’ Current Rotation Problems [Don Orsillo – NESN.com]

Schill doesn’t think Sox will make playoffs [ESPN Boston]

Why Kyle Weiland was best internal option [ESPN Boston]

Tito lays out rotation through Monday [ESPN Boston]

Ells inside-parker, Jackson slam 1st in same inning in 61 years [ESPN Boston]

Buchholz fares well in simulated game [ESPN Boston]

Ex-mates not fazed by Schilling’s opinion [ESPN Boston]

Some random thoughts on the Red Sox [Extra Bases]

Sim game goes well for Buchholz [Extra Bases]

Meeting of titans at Fenway Park: Ric Flair and Dustin Pedroia [Extra Bases]

Blame Theo for reeling BoSox’s bare staff [FoxSports.com]

Buster Olney on M&M: Some Red Sox players are out of shape [Full Count]

Rooting For Yankees? Most Red Sox Can’t Bear To Do It No Matter What [Hartford Courant]

Justin Verlander’s Dominance Will Spoil Jacoby Ellsbury’s Big Year, Steal Spotlight No Matter Who Wins MVP [NESN.com]

Clay Buchholz Throws Simulated Game, Stays on Course for Possible Return [NESN.com]

Kevin Youkilis Questionable to Return During Regular Season, Adrian Gonzalez Forced to Play Through Calf Pain [NESN.com]

Erik Bedard May Start Sunday in New York, Pushing John Lackey Back a Day [NESN.com]

Ric Flair’s Surprise Visit Energizes Red Sox Clubhouse [NESN.com]

Carl Crawford Can Make Up for Lackluster Season by Finally Breaking Through for Red Sox in Final Week [NESN.com]

Ted Williams Diligently Studied Art of Hitting, Considered Barry Bonds to Have One of Greatest Swings in Baseball History [NESN.com]

Showalter was wrong [Projo Sox Blog]

Lackey, Matusz making the wrong kind of history [Projo Sox Blog]

Wheeler still unavailable [Projo Sox Blog]

Crawford back in lineup [Projo Sox Blog]

Lester, Wakefield to start in New York [Projo Sox Blog]

Wrestling legend Flair visits Sox [Projo Sox Blog]

Bedard aims to pad Sox’s Wild Card advantage [RedSox.com]

Destiny in own hands, Red Sox see opportunity [RedSox.com]

Papelbon awed, motivated by Rivera [RedSox.com]

As pitching goes, so go the Red Sox [RedSox.com]

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

Photo credits: AP Photo, AP Photo

2011 BlogPoll Top 25 – Week 4

Here’s the BlogPoll Top 25 for week 4 in college football.  If you’re curious to see how I voted, you can check that out as well. Also be sure to check out the analysis on the BlogPoll Top 25 as well.

College Football Rankings 2011

Results for Week 4

# School Points/blog SD Delta
1 Oklahoma Sooners (54) 24.68 2.33 Arrow_up 2
2 LSU Tigers (39) 24.26 2.19
3 Alabama Crimson Tide (11) 23.17 1.79 Arrow_down -2
4 Boise St. Broncos 21.46 0.41
5 Wisconsin Badgers 20.22 0.62 Arrow_up 2
6 Stanford Cardinal 20.13 1.49 Arrow_down -1
7 Oklahoma St. Cowboys 17.14 3.27 Arrow_up 1
8 Texas A&M Aggies 15.75 4.10 Arrow_up 1
9 Nebraska Cornhuskers 15.66 4.15 Arrow_up 2
10 South Carolina Gamecocks 13.99 3.89
11 Oregon Ducks 13.61 4.68 Arrow_up 2
12 Florida St. Seminoles 13.50 5.08 Arrow_down -6
13 Virginia Tech Hokies 12.89 3.69 Arrow_up 1
14 Arkansas Razorbacks 12.88 3.96 Arrow_down -2
15 Florida Gators 12.05 3.44 Arrow_up 1
16 West Virginia Mountaineers 9.70 3.21 Arrow_up 2
17 South Florida Bulls 8.77 4.13 Arrow_up 2
18 Baylor Bears 7.88 4.03 Arrow_up 2
19 Clemson Tigers 6.50 4.28 Arrow_up 20
20 Texas Longhorns 6.36 3.87 Arrow_up 3
21 Michigan Wolverines 4.54 4.19 Arrow_up 4
22 USC Trojans 4.53 4.81 Arrow_up 2
23 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets 3.42 4.14 Arrow_up 10
24 Illinois Fighting Illini 3.40 3.93 Arrow_up 11
25 TCU Horned Frogs 2.87 2.84 Arrow_up 1
Others Receiving Votes: Iowa St. Cyclones | Houston Cougars | Fla. International Golden Panthers | North Carolina Tar Heels | Michigan St. Spartans | Vanderbilt Commodores | Miami Hurricanes | California Golden Bears | Maryland Terrapins | Missouri Tigers | Utah Utes | Arizona St. Sun Devils | Ohio Bobcats | San Diego St. Aztecs | Mississippi St. Bulldogs | Penn St. Nittany Lions | Ohio St. Buckeyes | Iowa Hawkeyes | Georgia Bulldogs | Pittsburgh Panthers | Notre Dame Fighting Irish | Auburn Tigers | Temple Owls | Texas Tech Red Raiders
Updated: Sep 20, 2011 9:32 AM EDT

SB Nation BlogPoll College Football Rankings 2011