Here is your cover for this week’s Sports Illustrated featuring the 2011 National Champion UConn Huskies.
click on image to see it full size
UConn Huskies junior All-American Kemba Walker had a record-breaking season in Storrs, CT. And after returning home for National Championship celebration, Walker did another first at UConn.
He was added to the “Huskies of Honor” wall at Gampel Pavilion.
Normally under head coach Jim Calhoun, you have to be a First Team All-American and then wait five years. But as Calhoun as said all season long, Kemba is a special player. And obviously Kemba meant the world to Calhoun because he allowed his No. 15 to be placed up there with the other greats.
And oh by the way, if you’re thinking of coming to UConn and wearing the No. 15, think again. You’ll have to ask Kemba if you can wear the number.
Here’s the video of the ceremony. Calhoun speaks first and then yields the floor for Walker’s honor.
By Bruce Berlet
With veterans such as Wade Redden, Kris Newbury, Brodie Dupont and All-Star Jeremy Williams in the Connecticut Whale locker room, one might not think there’s much room for others to make an imprint on the team.
But defenseman Jared Nightingale has put a major dent in that theory. Whether it’s being part of the Whale’s No. 1 defensive pairing with Redden, sticking up for teammates, coordinating countless team functions or being constantly involved in community relations, Nightingale has put his stamp on the organization on and off the ice.
Coaches Ken Gernander, J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller thought so much of Nightingale that when Tim Kennedy was traded on Feb. 26, the rugged defenseman replaced the crafty center as one of the Whale’s three alternate captains, serving with Redden and Newbury.
“I like his leadership quality and how he approaches the game,” Gernander said after practice Tuesday at the XL Center in Hartford. “He’s been a pretty good soldier for us and takes it upon himself to do a lot of things.”
So it’s no surprise that the Whale chose Nightingale as the team’s IOA/American Specialty AHL Man of the Year for outstanding contributions to local community and charitable organizations. He is now one of 30 finalists for the Yanick Dupre Memorial Award honoring the overall AHL Man of the Year. The league award is named after the former Hershey Bears forward who died in 1997 at 24 following a 16-month battle with leukemia. Dupre, an AHL All-Star in 1995, had 169 points in 207 AHL games and played in 35 NHL games with the Philadelphia Flyers. The AHL award will be announced Wednesday.
To continue reading, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.
“It’s a great honor and speaks highly because we have a lot of guys deserving of it,” said Nightingale, 28, who is completing his third season in Hartford after starting his pro career with the Springfield Falcons in 2006 out of Michigan State. “It wasn’t just me going out in the community. I think everybody at one time or another this season got out to a children’s hospital or elementary schools. It’s really a collective effort, from the players to the front office and the people behind the scenes.”
The Whale’s outstanding community involvement started with Whalers Sports and Entertainment chairman and CEO Howard Baldwin, who encouraged player commitment to fans off the ice while owner and managing general partner of the Hartford Whalers.
“One of Mr. Baldwin’s priorities was to get out in the community and give back,” said Nightingale, “and that’s exactly what we’ve done.”
The players’ commitment has been spearheaded by Frank Berrian, the team’s community relations coordinator.
“Jared is an outstanding member of the Connecticut Whale community,” Berrian said. “He is always the first one to volunteer for an appearance and even takes it upon himself to make appearances at local hospitals. Personally, Jared is a ‘go out of his way’ kind of guy. If I need anything, he is always a phone call away. I not only consider him a colleague but a friend. Wherever Jared goes, he not only makes fans but he also makes friends.”
Nightingale has indeed been tireless in his enthusiasm for community outreach. Berrian said Nightingale consistently is the first to offer his time to charitable, school or hospital appearances that are scheduled and has frequently initiated his own. He has forged strong relationships with area hospitals, especially the Connecticut Children’s Medical Center in Hartford and Gaylord Rehabilitation Hospital in Wallingford, which is the beneficiary of the Whale’s annual “Tip a Player Dinner and Sports Carnival.”
“I’ve learned from guys who have been here in the past and looked up to,” Nightingale said. “I didn’t always give as much of myself as I should have. Going into this season, I didn’t know how much more I’d be playing, so I wanted to use the platform that I have and the time that I have wisely and as much as I can to get out and help in any way possible.
“I remember growing up and going to college hockey games an hour away at Lake Superior State (in Michigan) in their glory years and it meant a lot when those guys came out and acknowledged you and talked to you. It was kind of the highlight of our season, and I remember really looking up to them and seeing how they handled themselves, so I know how important that is.”
Nightingale has made a significant impression on many students and faculty members during numerous school visits. He and Whale forward Kelsey Tessier earned plaudits from Judy Fitzgerald, a first-grade teacher at Naubuc School in Glastonbury, where the two made a surprise appearance for about 80 first graders in March.
“I was very impressed with the players,” Fitzgerald said. “I thought they related well to the children. I even asked Jared if he ever thought about being a teacher because he did such a good job with the children. He mentioned his mother is a teacher and had considered being a teacher.”
Nightingale has made a special impression on 6-year-old Ryan Bell, who has followed the Hartford Wolf Pack/Whale for several years and was one of the first-graders surprised by Nightingale and Tessier.
“Jared is my favorite player because he’s always so nice when he sees me,” Ryan said. “He takes time to talk to me, and it was great when he surprised me and my friends at school. I wish there was hockey in the summer because I don’t want the games to end.”
Other Man of the Year nominees included Bridgeport Sound Tigers forward Tony Romano and former Wolf Pack defenseman Jake Taylor (Oklahoma City).
ZUCCARELLO KNOWS HOW HUSKIES FEEL
Whale rookie wing Mats Zuccarello can relate to the University of Connecticut men’s basketball team. Not as far as winning a national championship as the Huskies did Monday night, but he knows all about playing four games in four days as they did in capturing the Big East tournament in the start of their four-week title drive.
But Zuccarello went the Huskies a few better. He played four games in four days in five different cities. He was in the parent New York Rangers’ lineup in a 6-2 loss to the New York Islanders in Uniondale, N.Y., on Thursday night. After the Islanders loss, Zuccarello was reassigned to the Whale and played in a 3-2 loss at Providence on Friday night, a 6-2 loss at Springfield on Saturday night and a 4-2 victory over Portland at the XL Center on Sunday afternoon.
That was actually four games in about 72 hours, so it was borderline amazing that Zuccarello had two assists, hit the post and crossbar and was named the No. 2 star in Sunday’s game, giving him four assists in three games while helping the power play. So no one enjoyed the Whale’s off day Monday more than the 5-foot-7, 174-pounder known as “The Norwegian Hobbit.”
“I was pretty tired (Tuesday),” Zuccarello said in a declaration that was totally understandable. “Three (games) in three (days) is the only thing I’ve played.”
Zuccarello said he wasn’t surprised or upset about being sent down after getting six goals, 16 assists, including a team-high nine on the power play, and five shootout goals, including three winners, in 41 games on Broadway.
“It’s no problem,” Zuccarello said. “I’m getting the ice time that you need to do well instead of being up there playing seven minutes (a game). That doesn’t do anything for me. Of course you want to stay up there, but like I told (coach John Tortorella), I know I’m good enough to play up there. But they have all their key guys back, and they need their minutes, but that’s how this game is. Instead of playing seven minutes it’s better that I play close to 20 minutes, the important minutes, and get my groove back. That’s how you get better, and hopefully I can be back there one day.”
That day may come sooner rather than later, as not long after practice ended, the Rangers announced former Wolf Pack right wing Ryan Callahan, whose gritty style epitomizes the Black-and-Blueshirts’ never-say-die attitude this season, would be sidelined indefinitely after he sustained a fracture in his right leg in the third period of a come-from-behind 5-3 victory over the Boston Bruins on Monday night. Callahan has career highs in goals (23), assists (25), points (48), power-play goals (10) and game-winning goals (five) despite missing 20 of the Rangers’ 80 games. He leads the team in power-play and game-winning goals and is second in goals, points, power-play points (15) and hits (224). He missed 19 games from Dec. 16 to Jan. 25 with a broken hand sustained in a Dec. 15 game at Pittsburgh. Since returning Feb. 1, he leads the Rangers in scoring with 13 goals and 11 assists in 27 games.
Center Kris Newbury, the Whale’s leading scorer (16 goals, 42 assists in 58 games), was reassigned to the Whale after being called up as a precaution in case any of several players that Tortorella said had “dings” couldn’t play Monday night. They all played, so Newbury watched and then headed back to Hartford.
Gernander said little changed since Zuccarello was called up Dec. 23 to replace injured Marian Gaborik after getting 13 goals, second among AHL rookies at the time, and 11 assists in 32 games with the Whale. He had 11 goals and 12 assists in the 21 games before his call-up.
“He’s a tenacious guy, and he has to be at that size, and it is one of his strengths,” Gernander said. “Sometimes you can use your little bit shorter stature to your advantage to get in underneath guys where you can get position with your leverage. That’s the way he’s got to play.”
What about Zuccarello playing four games in less than four days?
“Not too shabby,” Gernander said.
Injured forwards John Mitchell, Chad Kolarik and Francis Lemieux and defenseman Michael Del Zotto have resumed practicing with the team. But they are in various stages of recovery, and their status for the final three regular season games this weekend varies from questionable to out.
WHALE ENDS AGAINST STREAKING SOUND TIGERS, HOPEFUL ADMIRALS
The Whale finishes the regular season with a home-and-home with the Sound Tigers and a home game against the Norfolk Admirals. The Whale is at the Webster Bank Arena at Harbor Yard in Bridgeport on Friday night and then hosts the Sound Tigers on Saturday night.
The Whale is 5-2-0-1 against the Sound Tigers and needs one point to clinch the GEICO Connecticut Cup. The Sound Tigers (28-38-4-7) are last in the Atlantic Division but on a 6-2-1 run that includes a 5-1 victory over the Whale at the XL Center on March 26 and 6-2 win over the Springfield Falcons on Tuesday, as All-AHL rookie forward Rhett Rakhshani scored a hat trick and veteran center Jeremy Colliton had four assists.
Rakhshani leads all rookies in scoring with 24 goals and 38 assists and has been the major mainstay for the Sound Tigers, who, like the Whale, have spent much of the season shorthanded because of injuries and call-ups to the parent Islanders. Rakhshani and Rob Hisey (14, 31) are the Sound Tigers’ leading scorers for the season and against the Whale with six points each. Rookie David Ullstrom (16, 24) and Colliton (16, 26) are their other major threats. Mikko Koskinen (11-20-1, 3.52 goals-against average, .888 save percentage) and Nathan Lawson (5-5-4, 2.89, .913) are among six goalies to play in Bridgeport this season.
There will be an auction and sale before Saturday’s game, starting at 5 p.m. in the XL Center atrium. Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl game-used Hartford Whalers and Boston Bruins jerseys will be up for bid, and Whale-used sticks and equipment will be for sale. And 3,000 fans will receive a free Whale travel mug courtesy of the Connecticut Department of Transportation.
The Admirals (38-24-8-7) scored three power-play goals in a 5-2 victory over Charlotte on Monday night that ended a four-game losing streak in the start of a five-game road trip to end the season. The recent slide had dropped the Admirals into a tie for fourth with Binghamton in the battle for the final guaranteed playoff spot in the East Division, but they’re now only one point from clinching a postseason berth and within three points of the second-place Checkers with a game in hand. They can earn a playoff spot Wednesday night when they visit Binghamton, which is two points ahead of the Whale in the battle for the crossover playoff berth.
The Admirals have won two of three meetings with the Whale, who took the last game 3-2 at Norfolk on Jan. 8. Marc-Antoine Pouliot (23, 46) had three assists Monday and is the Admirals’ runaway leader on offense, followed by Blair Jones (23, 28), who had two goals and an assist against the Checkers, Johan Harju (21, 27), Paul Szczechura (19, 29), James Wright (16, 30) and Matt Fornataro (17, 25). Cedrick Desjardins (15-6-1, 2.59, .905) has the two wins against the Whale, allowing only three goals for a 1.50 GAA with a .941 save percentage, but is on recall to the parent Tampa Bay Lightning. Jaroslav Janus (1-3-1, 4.06, .853) made 24 saves for his first victory of the season Monday while sharing the goaltending with Dustin Tokarski (21-19-4, 2.60, .903) and Pat Nagle, who hasn’t played an AHL game since signing a free-agent, two-year entry-level contract with the Lightning on March 22 after having an 18-14-5 record with 2.02 GAA, .923 save percentage and three shutouts in his senior year at Ferris State.
3,000 fans will receive a free Whale T-shirt courtesy of the Connecticut DOT, and all fans will have a chance to win a player’s jersey in the annual “Shirts Off Our Backs” promotion. The Whale’s season awards will be presented after the game.
GRUMET-MORRIS, LEMIEUX ON ECHL SECOND ALL-STAR TEAM
Despite each being with the Whale for more than a month, Whale goalie Dov Grumet-Morris and center Francis Lemieux were named to the ECHL All-Star second team.
Grumet-Morris was 15-8-1 with a 2.32 GAA, third in the ECHL, .922 save percentage, second in the league, and three shutouts in 18 games with the Greenville Road Warriors before being called up by the Whale for a second and final time on Feb. 4. He was only the third goalie in ECHL history to be named Goalie of the Week in consecutive weeks (Dec. 5 and 12) and was Goalie of the Month in December with a 9-2-1 record. He is 11-4-1-1 with a 2.05 GAA, .924 save percentage and one shutout in 20 games with the Whale.
“Personal accolades don’t mean much to me right now,” Grumet-Morris said, “but I definitely take it as an honor that the coaches and players thought enough of what I did in about two months to name me to a slot. I don’t think people realize how many good goalies there are in the ECHL. James Reimer, starting for the Toronto Maple Leafs now, started in the Coast League.”
Lemieux was the ECHL’s leading scorer with 28 goals and 45 assists in 56 games with the Florida Everblades when called up by the Whale for a second time and then signed to an AHL contract Feb. 21. He had two assists in 17 games with the Whale before being injured last week.
Greenville defenseman Wes Cunningham was a first-team selection and wing Brendan Connolly, who was in Wolf Pack/Whale training camp, shared the Reebok Plus Performer of the Year award with Kalamazoo’s Trent Daavettilla at plus-28, as the Road Warriors (46-22-4) won the Eastern Conference title in their inaugural season.
The affiliate of the Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers start a best-of-five, first-round series Tuesday and Wednesday at Elmira and then play the final three games in South Carolina on Friday, Saturday and Monday, if the last two games are necessary. The Road Warriors should be helped by the addition of speedy rookie wing Chris McKelvie, reassigned by the Whale on Monday after missing 31 games since Jan. 22 because of an injury. McKelvie had one goal and two assists and was plus-3 in 17 games with the Whale after getting three goals and three assists in 16 ECHL games.
Elmira’s roster includes former Whale forwards Oren Eizenman and Tyler Donati and former Wolf Pack forward Ryan Hillier, a third-round pick of the Rangers in 2006 who was traded to Anaheim with Aaron Voros for Steve Eminger on July 9, 2010. Donati’s twin brother, Justin, led the ECHL in scoring with 27 goals and 67 assists in 63 games after finishing second last season to Tyler, the league MVP, who is sidelined with a shoulder injury.
FORMER WOLF PACK PLAYERS RECOGNIZED
Congratulations to three former Wolf Pack forwards on being named to the AHL All-Star teams.
Binghamton center Corey Locke and Oklahoma City Barons left wing Alexandre Giroux, the league’s top two scorers with 86 and 74 points, were named to the first team. Hamilton Bulldogs left wing Nigel Dawes, who leads the league with 40 goals in only 63 games, was on the second team. Dawes has 13 goals and eight assists in 16 games since joining the Bulldogs after being acquired from the Atlanta Thrashers on Feb. 24. Last week, he had six goals, including his third hat trick of the season, and three assists and was plus-7 in four games.
Other AHL award winners announced so far are Wilkes-Barre/Scranton’s Brad Thiessen, Aldege “Baz” Bastien Award (outstanding goaltender, 34-7-1, 1.93 GAA, .922 save percentage, seven shutouts in 44 games), Portland’s Marc-Andre Gragnani, Eddie Shore Award (outstanding defenseman, 12 goals, 48 assists, plus-22 in 63 games) and Oklahoma City defenseman Bryan Helmer, Fred T. Hunt Memorial Award (sportsmanship, determination and dedication to hockey). Gernander (1996, 2004), former Hartford Whalers center Glenn Merkosky (1987, 1991) and Murray Eaves (1989-90) are the only two-time Hunt winners. Rakhshani was among six players on the all-rookie team. Other winners to be announced are the Dupre Memorial Award and Louis A.R. Pieri Award (outstanding coach) on Wednesday, Dudley “Red” Garrett Award (outstanding rookie) on Thursday and Les Cunningham Award (MVP) on Friday. … Though not named to an all-league team, Wethersfield native Colin McDonald of Oklahoma City is having the season of his life. The son of former Whalers defenseman Gerry McDonald has 36 goals, which is triple his previous high of 12 in any of his previous three pro seasons. In fact, he had a total of 34 goals as a pro in that span but now ranks second in the AHL to Dawes. … Providence Bruins center Trent Whitfield (12 goals, 10 assists, league-best 22 points in 13 games), Syracuse Crunch right wing Kyle Palmieri (12 goals, including five winners, three assists and plus-8 in 13 games) and Manchester Monarchs goalie Jeff Zatkoff (5-3-1, 1.55 GAA, .949 save percentage, two shutouts in nine games) were named the Reebok/AHL player, rookie and goaltender of the month for March. Player of the Month nominees also included Dawes, Whale defenseman Pavel Valentenko and South Windsor native Jon DiSalvatore (Houston Aeros). Grumet-Morris and Whale defenseman Blake Parlett were among the goalie and rookie nominees. … Former Wolf Pack wing Chad Wiseman of the Albany Devils was named winner of the reGen Muscle Recovery Beverage/AHL Performance of the Month award for March. With his team trailing the Sound Tigers by three goals on March 9, Wiseman scored four times in the final 9:25, tying an AHL record for goals in a period and lifting the Devils to an improbable 5-4 victory. Wiseman has 15 goals and 26 assists in 44 games this season. … Oklahoma City goalie Jeff Drouin-Deslauriers was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Week for getting two shutouts with 55 saves in 7-0 and 2-0 victories over Rockford and Texas. The Whale nominated Zuccarello, and other nominees included Dawes, Rakhshani, former Wolf Pack forward Jeff Taffe (Rockford) and Avon native and former Farmington High/Avon Old Farms/Boston University standout center Nick Bonino (Syracuse).
MONTOYA GETS MUCH-DESERVED SHOT IN NHL
Congratulations to former Wolf Pack goalie Al Montoya on his one-year contract extension from the New York Islanders last week. The 26-year-old Montoya has had a roller-coaster career since being the Rangers’ first-round pick (sixth overall) in 2004. It started in Hartford and continued through never playing in New York and rarely in Phoenix before being traded to the Islanders on Feb. 9 for a sixth-round pick in June. He played 197 games with the Wolf Pack and San Antonio Rampage, compiling a 96-72-7 record with nine shutouts, and only five NHL games with the Coyotes before a series of injuries on Long Island gave Montoya his first legitimate shot in the NHL. He has responded with a 9-5-4 record, 2.37 GAA, .921 save percentage and one shutout with one of the NHL’s worst teams. One of his wins was his first over the Rangers on March 31, when he made 25 saves in a 6-2 victory in which Henrik Lundqvist was pulled for Chad Johnson, making his first appearance since being called up from the Whale on March 2. It was a bounce back for Montoya, who was shaky in a 6-3 loss to the Rangers on March 15. Kudos to Montoya, for his perseverance. … Nice to hear former New Canaan High and Taft-Watertown standout forward Max Pacioretty took a light skate Friday for the first time since the Montreal Canadiens speedster sustained a severe concussion and broken vertebrae in his neck when checked into a stanchion by Boston Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara on March 8. Pacioretty skated about 20 minutes in the start of what he hopes will be a successful return to hockey’s highest level. “It is part of the protocol, it’s the beginning of his rehabilitation,” Canadiens coach Jacques Martin said. Before his injury, Pacioretty was having a breakout season with 14 goals and 10 assists in 37 games with the Canadiens after getting 17 goals and 15 assists in 27 games with Hamilton.

After being swept out of Texas over the weekend, the Boston Red Sox head to Cleveland, Ohio where they’ll look to take out their frustrations against the Cleveland Indians in a three-game set beginning tonight at Progressive Field.
Tonight’s first pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m. and the game will be broadcast on NESN in the Red Sox television market. If you live in the Indians television market, you can catch the game on STO. If you can’t catch the television broadcast, you can always listen to the game on the 2011 Red Sox Radio Network.
Josh Beckett will try to right the ship for Terry Francona in his first start of the season. In 21 starts in 2010, Beckett was 6-6 with a 5.78 ERA. He made one start against the Indians last year and picked up the win after allowing one run in eight innings back on August 3rd. Overall in his career, he is 3-4 with a 5.56 ERA in seven starts against the Indians. He’s made two career starts at Progressive Field where he is 0-2 with a 6.94 ERA.
Josh Tomlin will make his start of the season for Indians skipper Manny Acta. In 12 starts during his rookie campaign in 2010, Tomlin was 6-4 with a 4.56 ERA. He faced the Red Sox once last year on August 5th and took the loss after allowing four runs in seven innings.
Click the read more button below for the lineups, batter/pitcher matchups and pregame links and if you’re on the home page.
0-3 |
1-2 |
||
| 1. Jacoby Ellsbury | CF | 1. Michael Brantley | CF |
| 2. Carl Crawford | LF | 2. Asdrubal Cabrera | SS |
| 3. Dustin Pedroia | 2B | 3. Shin-Soo Choo | RF |
| 4. Adrian Gonzalez | 1B | 4. Carlos Santana | C |
| 5. Kevin Youkilis | 3B | 5. Travis Hafner | DH |
| 6. David Ortiz | DH | 6. Orlando Cabrera | 2B |
| 7. J.D. Drew | RF | 7. Austin Kearns | LF |
| 8. Jarrod Saltalamacchia | C | 8. Matt LaPorta | 1B |
| 9. Marco Scutaro | SS | 9. Jack Hannahan | 3B |
| Josh Beckett | SP | Josh Tomlin | SP |
Here’s how the hitters have fared against tonight’s starting pitchers:

Refresh often or check back 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
Notes: Crawford to bat second, Pedroia third [CSNNE.com]
Okajima hopes to prove himself in Pawtucket [ESPN Boston]
Saltalamacchia remains behind the plate [ESPN Boston]
Beckett’s extension, one year later [Extra Bases]
Pregame news from Cleveland [Extra Bases]
Clay Buchholz on Big Show: Chemistry with Jarrod Saltalamacchia not ‘something that happens overnight’ [Full Count]
Terry Francona explains his approach toward Carl Crawford’s spot in the lineup [Full Count]
Do You Like Dustin Pedroia Batting Third in the Red Sox Lineup? [NESN.com]
Beckett’s Decline & Pitch Type Stats [Nuggetpalooza]
A Series Matter: Red Sox-Indians and Late ’90s Division Series Nostalgia [Projo Sox Blog]
Jason Varitek to play one of next two games [Projo Sox Blog]
Healthy Matsuzaka looks to carry momentum forward [Projo Sox Blog]
Beckett trying to find lost swagger in Cleveland [RedSox.com]
Slow start should concern Red Sox Nation [RedSox.com]
Q&A with Zach Daeges [SoxProspects.com]
New York, April 5, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that forward Kris Newbury has been assigned to the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL).
Newbury, 29, did not dress in last night’s 5-3 victory vs. Boston at Madison Square Garden. He has registered one assist and 35 penalty minutes in 11 games this season. He made his Blueshirts debut at Montreal on January 15, and recorded his first point as a Ranger with the primary assist on the game-tying goal in a 3-2 shootout win at Atlanta on January 22.
Newbury returns to Connecticut where he has registered 16 goals and 42 assists for 58 points, along with 128 penalty minutes in 67 AHL games with Connecticut this season. He has established career-highs in assists and shots on goal (192), and leads the team in points and assists, is tied for first on the Whale in game-winning goals, fourth in goals, and ranks fifth in penalty minutes. Newbury led Connecticut with 14 points (six goals, eight assists) and a plus-seven rating in 13 games during the month of March, including a seven-game scoring streak from March 5 at Springfield to March 18 at Manchester (six goals, five assists over the span). The 5-11, 213-pounder established a career-high with an eight-game assist streak from November 28 vs. Adirondack to December 17 vs. Worcester, recording three goals and 12 assists over the span.
The Brampton, Ontario native was originally San Jose’s fifth round pick, 139th overall, in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. He was acquired by the Rangers from Detroit in exchange for forward Jordan Owens on March 3, 2010.
You’ll have to excuse us here at SOX & Dawgs today. It’s been mighty crazy around these parts with our UConn Huskies men’s basketball team winning the 2011 NCAA Championship last night. We weren’t around yesterday do to something that came up last minute but that doesn’t mean we’ve forgotten about the Boston Red Sox.
As you already know, the Boston Red Sox were swept out of Texas on Sunday afternoon. The pitchers seem to be homer happy in the fact that the Rangers bashed the ball like the Cerrano of old. But if you had the pleasure of listening to Boston sports fans yesterday, you would have thought it was the end of the world (maybe in 2012).
I heard many different things, the main one that new pitching coach Curt Young should be fired. So I ask you this. How is it his fault that pitchers left the pitches out over the plate? It’s not. To steal a word from tonight’s starter Josh Beckett, they simply didn’t “execute” their pitches.
Secondly, do you realize this is a 162-game marathon and not a three-game sprint?
Three games does not make a season and will probably have little impact on the final results other than three losses. How many times have we seen teams get out of the starting gate hot but only to fade as the season goes along? Right now the Baltimore Orioles are 4-0 and lead the AL East. Do you honestly believe they will finish the season in first place?
Yeah I didn’t think so either. Unless you’re an Orioles fan and I’m sure not all think that.
If the Red Sox had won the last game in Texas on Sunday, my best guess is that people would have still had something to complain about. It’s just the nature of being a Red Sox fan here in New England. But seriously though, it’s THREE GAMES!!!! RELAX will ya!!
Now tonight, we’ll hope that Beckett can find his form and right the ship for the Red Sox. Let’s just hope he doesn’t morph into 2006 Beckett and add to the total of home runs already given up by the Red Sox pitching staff this season.
We’ll be back later with the tonight’s lineups, 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
Remembering the birth of a closer, five years later [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]
New Balance steps into Red Sox lineup [Boston Globe]
Time seems right for Varitek [Boston Globe]
Beckett counting on getting ahead [Boston Globe]
Pitching coach unfazed by brutal start [Boston Herald]
Righty starts 2011 with plenty to prove [Boston Herald]
Sweeping up the Texas mess [Boston Herald]
Red Sox banking on Josh Beckett [Boston Herald]
What does an 0-3 start mean for Red Sox? [Clubhouse Insider]
Beckett determined to start off right in Cleveland [CSNNE.com]
Sox third in payroll, 41 million behind Yanks [CSNNE.com]
Lowell enjoys retirement, isn’t worried about Sox [CSNNE.com]
Top 10 overreactions to 0-3 start for Red Sox [ESPN Boston]
Your best overreactions to 0-3 [ESPN Boston]
Papelbon vs. Indians: You can’t touch this [ESPN Boston]
Beckett’s season debut by the numbers [ESPN Boston]
Video: PTI guys talk Sox [ESPN Boston]
Winless Boston Red Sox turn to Josh Beckett against Cleveland Indians [ESPN Boston]
Jarrod Saltalamacchia not rattled by tough first series [ESPN Boston]
Huskies to celebrate at Fenway? [Extra Bases]
Ellsbury in the funny papers [Fenway West]
John Kruk on M&M: Dropping Carl Crawford in order no insult [Full Count]
Questions and answers: Indians general manager Chris Antonetti [Full Count]
Red Sox Fan Goes Viral By Making Son Cry For Liking Yankees and Hating Sox (Video) [NESN.com]
Red Sox Mailbag: Carl Crawford’s Lineup Placement Debate, Pitching Woes, High School Hitting Slumps [NESN.com]
How Many Wins Will Josh Beckett Have in 2011? [NESN.com]
Red Sox, Massachusetts State Lottery Release New Instant Scratch Ticket [NESN.com]
Rangers send a message with thumping of Red Sox [Providence Journal]
Slight change in mechanics leaves Papelbon feeling positive [Providence Journal]
Fond memories of Mondor [Providence Journal]
Nuggetpalooza: Opening Weekend Notes [Nuggetpalooza]
Already, a wake-up call for the Red Sox [Tony Massarotti – Boston Globe]
For more slices of Red Sox goodness, head over to the Boston Globe, Boston Herald, CSNNE, ESPN Boston, NESN, Providence Journal and WEEI websites.
Photo credit: AP Photo

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.
Thank you for stopping by and making SOX & Dawgs your home for UConn Huskies news.
To open the links up in a new tab or window, use Control+click
UConn Men’s Basketball links
Did That Just Happen? [David Borges – New Haven Register]
Savor it: UConn is the national champion [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]
Post-national championship breakdown, video, etc. [Gavin Keefe – The Day]
Ugly, yes, but still national champs [Lee Lewis – The Republican-American]
Kemba Walker Picks Up Cousy Award [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Governors Double Things Up For Championship Game [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Nate Miles’ Statement To The Courant [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Jim Calhoun On NCAA Title [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Kemba Walker MOP; All-Tournament Final Four Team [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Jim Calhoun’s Opening Remarks, 1999 National Championship [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Jim Calhoun’s Opening Remarks, 2004 National Championship [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Jim Calhoun’s Opening Remarks, 2011 National Championship [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Kemba Walker Drove The Bus To The Title [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]
Video View: Revelry At UConn During And Following The National Championship Game [Shawn Courchesne – Hartford Courant]
Running Down a Dream [UConn Huskies Basketball]
NBC’S Today Show Visits UConn Campus [UConnHuskies.com]
UConn wins national championship [CT Post]
Oriakhi’s presence lifts UConn in second half [CT Post]
Big question for UConn: What’s next for Calhoun? [CT Post]
Lamb gets it done for UConn [CT Post]
At Gampel, thousands celebrate and savor victory [CT Post]
Calhoun: ‘Maybe, professionally, the happiest moment of my life’ [CT Post]
UConn men celebrate season for the ages [Greenwich Time]
Source: Nate Miles Won’t Speak To NCAA [Hartford Courant]
UConn Beats Butler 53-41 For Third National Title [Hartford Courant]
Three For Calhoun In The Blink Of An Eye [Hartford Courant]
Championship Spawns Violence At UConn [Hartford Courant]
On Campus, Soaking Up A Great Run [Hartford Courant]
UConn Men Already Feeling Good About 2011-12 [Hartford Courant]
Huskies defeat Butler 53-41, win third national title [New Haven Register]
UCONN MEN’S NOTEBOOK: Calhoun will make decision on future after time [New Haven Register]
Thousands storm court at Gampel; 12 arrested [New Haven Register]
Video of celebration during ‘One Shining Moment’ [New Haven Register]
On campus, students both philosophical and hopeful [The Day]
Improbable dream: UConn claims its third national championship [The Day]
It’s a great time for family, too [The Day]
Walker was the star, but this wasn’t a one-man show [The Day]
UConn completes relentless marathon run [USA Today]
UConn freshman plays beyond his years [FOXSports.com]
Huskies claim NCAA championship with 53-41 victory over the Bulldogs [LA Times]
UConn national championship led by Kemba Walker has Bronx fans cheering hometown standout [NY Daily News]
Local College Students Given Free Tickets To Fill Out UConn’s Pathetic Final Four Student Section [Business Insider]
The dogfight goes to UConn [Christian Science Monitor]
Classic Calhoun cements his legend [ESPN.com]
Kemba Walker serves title-winning dish [ESPN.com]
UConn’s title win a sore sight [ESPN.com]
UConn claws its way to surprise title [Yahoo! Sports]
Lamb takes torch, carries UConn to the crown [Yahoo! Sports]
UConn Women’s Basketball links
UConn/Texas A&M in talks to play next year [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]
Rough ending for Maya [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]
Geno reflects on Final Four loss [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]
UConn women lament failure to help Moore [CT Post]
Moore glad for her UConn experience [CT Post]
Auriemma Acknowledges UConn Women Hurt By Fouls [Hartford Courant]
Moore’s UConn Journey Ends In Defeat, But What A Ride It Was [Hartford Courant]
Moore Adds Naismith To Her Trophy Collection [Hartford Courant]
Maya Moore’s brilliance on display even in loss [New Haven Register]
Avenging Irish gave Coach McGraw a reason to smile [The Day]
UConn Football links
D.J. Shoemate looking to shine in fresh start [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]
Other UConn related links
Baseball. Ahmed Named BIG EAST Player Of The Week [UConnHuskies.com]
Baseball. Tuesday’s Baseball Game Postponed [UConnHuskies.com]

With the 2011 Major League Baseball season underway less than a week comes a report from Joshua Nichols published on Internet Broadcasting called “Take Me Out To Baseball’s 5 Best Ballparks”.
While some of the selections did not surprise me, like PNC Ballpark, home of the Pittsburgh Pirates and AT&T Park, home of the World Champion San Francisco Giants. The fact that baseballs two OLDEST parks, Wrigley Field home of the 1908 World Champion Chicago Cubs and Fenway Park, home of our beloved Red Sox also made the list.
He says that since 1992’s debut of Camden Yards in Baltimore no more than 19 ballparks have made their debuts, including Target Field the new home of the Minnesota Twins in 2010. And next year the Florida Marlins, will be renamed the Miami Marlins and enter a new park at the site of the old Orange Bowl.
Nichols lists the Top 5 as Safeco Field, the retractable roof home of the Seattle Mariners, was fifth. PNC took fourth place, Wrigley Field was third, AT&T was second and Fenway, which has undergone numerous renovations in the nearly decade long ownership of John W. Henry and Co. took the top prize.
I was kind of surprised Fenway was first but then I haven’t been there since 2005 and I was more than shocked that my favorite park, Camden Yards only pulled an honorable mention. Others in that category are Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, San Diego’s PETCO Park, Coors Field in Denver and Detroit’s Comerica Park.
Photo credit: Baseball Pilgrimages