Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/25

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

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

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

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UConn Women’s Basketball links

Attention UConn Women’s Basketball Program Administrators [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Majority Of Fans Not On Geno’s Side [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Doty Heading To Regionals in Good Spirits [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Five Big East Women’s Teams Alive In The Sweet 16 [Hartford Courant]

It’s back to the future for UConn women’s basketball team [The Day]

Geno Auriemma: How to lose fans and alienate people [Washington Post]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Shabazz: ‘They Thought They Were Fab Five’ [David Borges – New Haven Register]

How Does This UConn Run Rank with Others? [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Team That Won’t Lose 74, San Diego State 67 [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

Post-San Diego State notes, video, etc [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Two Key Technical Fouls In UConn-San Diego State [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Arizona’s Sean Miller On UConn [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Some UConn-San Diego State Nuts And Bolts [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Kemba Walker Knows Arizona’s MoMo Jones Talks A Good Game [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

UConn Player Reaction, SDSU Postgame Locker Room Quotes [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Kemba conquers Aztecs, Arizona up next [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Magical Ride [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Walker, Lamb deliver UConn to Elite 8 [CT Post]

UConn men’s notebook: Walker thrives in tough situations [CT Post]

UConn men’s report card [CT Post]

UConn Beats San Diego State, 74-67; To Face Arizona In Elite Eight [Hartford Courant]

With Jeremy Lamb, March Comes In Like A Lion [Hartford Courant]

Anaheim Magic: UConn Wins 74-67; One Game Away From Final Four [Hartford Courant]

Huskies reach Elite Eight, will face Arizona [New Haven Register]

Aztecs’ brashness works in Huskies favor [New Haven Register]

Kemba, Huskies do it again [The Day]

UConn notes: Lamb comes up big in support of Kemba [The Day]

Cats, Huskies Meet in West Regional Final [ArizonaWildcats.com]

Thrilling double feature [Boston Globe]

Rapid Reaction: UConn 74, San Diego St. 67 [Diamond Leung – ESPN.com]

Huskies laugh off fatigue, doubters [Michael Wilbon – ESPN.com]

Kemba Walker leads Connecticut Huskies over San Diego State Aztecs [Sporting News]

UConn Football links

Big East coaching moves scorecard [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

DC answered a few questions in his mailbag [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Five Huskies Make Website Preseason All-America Team [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Other UConn related links

W. Lacrosse. Sunday Lacrosse Game Time & Site Changed [UConnHuskies.com]

Baseball. Huskies Welcome Panthers to J.O. Christian Field [UConnHuskies.com]

Video: Highlights of UConn’s 74-67 Win Over San Diego State

Here are the highlights from the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team’s 74-67 win over the San Diego State Aztecs in the Sweet 16 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA on Thursday night.

The Huskies advance to the Elite Eight where they’ll take on the Arizona Wildcats who beat the Duke Blue Devils 93-77 on Saturday night. The game is scheduled to begin at 7:05 p.m. and will be broadcast nationally on CBS. The winner of that game advances to the Final Four in Houston, TX.

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Watch this video on your smartphone

San Diego State postgame quotes [ASAP Sports]

UConn postgame quotes [ASAP Sports]

Buck Blows Hard

Theo Epstein & Buck Showalter composite

Let me start by saying I haven’t seen the question(s) that prompted this response, nor have I seen the context of the full interview.  But like most baseball fans, I was kind of surprised to see Baltimore Orioles manager Buck Showalter bashing Boston Red Sox executive V.P./General Manager Theo Epstein in print.

Showalter’s comments may seem innocent and innocuous to some, but to others it shows a lack of respect for someone who has helped to build one of the top teams of the new century.

Showalter in a print interview with Men’s Journal Magazine disparages Epstein by asking, “I’d like to see how smart Theo Epstein is with the Tampa Bay payroll”.  The Orioles manager goes on to add “you (Boston) got Carl Crawford because you paid more than anyone else, and that’s what makes you smarter”?

But Showalter like, most people should think before he speaks.  Seems this man has managed three well-funded teams in his day.  He guided the 1992-1995 New York Yankees, the 1998-2000 Arizona Diamondbacks and the 2003-2006 Texas Rangers prior to taking over in Camden Yards late last season.

In his time with those teams, Showalter has managed big payroll, superstars.  Don’t let him fool you because now he has Peter Angelos pulling the purse strings.  In New York he had such high priced talent as Wade Boggs, David Cone, Don Mattingly, Paul O’Neill, Darryl Strawberry, Danny Tartabull and Jim Abbott.  What did it get him besides fired?  A 313-268 record and one playoff appearance in which they got eliminated by the Seattle Mariners on Ken Griffey Jr.’s mad dash to the plate.

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The next season under new manager Joe Torre, the Yankees restore their dynasty (gag) and win the first of 4 World Series in 5 seasons and have a run under Torre in which they made the post season all twelve seasons he was the manager.

Then in Arizona, ownership outfitted him with Curt Schilling, Randy Johnson, Steve Finley, Luis Gonzalez and Matt Williams.  All well paid vet’s who wanted to win they ended up 250-236 in three seasons and had only one playoff appearance to show for it.  Guess what?  He gets canned.

The next season the Diamondbacks beat the Yankees in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series as Johnson and Schilling are named co-MVP’s of the series.

Well then good ol’ Buck ends up in Texas with the Rangers for the next four seasons in which time he once again manages some of the highest paid talent on the books thanks to Tom Hicks.  Amongst the highly paid players under Showalter’s watch were Kevin Millwood, Sandy Alomar Jr., Chan Ho Park, Kenny Rogers, Carl Everett, Juan Gonzalez, Rafael Palmeiro and Alex Rodriguez.  He goes 319-329 in those years with no playoff appearances and where does he end up?

In Bristol, CT pontificating for ESPN.  Meanwhile Epstein has gotten the Red Sox to two World Series titles, 4 ALCS appearances and the team has been in the playoffs in six of his eight seasons as the general manager.

So Buck, you wanna re-think who the smart one really is?

Red Sox News From The Fort – 3/24

Normally when the Boston Red Sox have lost six straight and seven of their last eight, the Nation would be in a complete uproar. We’d be calling for somebody’s head on the team or wanting general manager Theo Epstein and skipper Terry Francona fired.

But as a Nation we know this is spring training and that the losses don’t matter one tiny bit. The players are getting ready for the season and we can’t expect them to be ready just yet or can we?

We are in the home stretch though of spring training as the season for the Red Sox opens up on April 1st in Texas. So if the Red Sox lose the rest of the way out, there’s no reason to panic.

Plus wouldn’t we want them to get all the losses out of their systems now and go 162-0 this season. Maybe in a perfect world. So settling for 161-1 wouldn’t be so bad.

After a day off on Wednesday, the Red Sox make the trip across the state to take on the Florida Marlins at Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter, FL.

Here are the lineups for today’s game:

Boston Red Sox

Florida Marlins

1. Jacoby Ellsbury
CF 1. Emilio Bonifacio CF
2. Jed Lowrie
SS 2. Omar Infante 2B
3. David Ortiz
DH 3. Hanley Ramirez SS
4. Kevin Youkilis 3B 4. Mike Stanton RF
5. Jarrod Saltalamacchia
C 5. Gaby Sanchez
1B
6. Mike Cameron RF 6. Logan Morrison LF
7. Ryan Kalish LF 7. John Buck C
8. Drew Sutton
1B 8. Donnie Murphy
3B
9. Nate Spears 2B 9. Javier Vazquez P
Clay Buchholz SP Javier Vazquez SP

Also scheduled to pitch for the Red Sox: LHP Andrew Miller, LHP Rich Hill, RHP Scott Atchison.

Also scheduled to pitch for the Marlins: LHP Michael Dunn, RHP Clay Hensley, RHP Leo Nunez.

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Going for Gonzo: Why Red Sox didn’t wait to acquire Adrian Gonzalez [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]

Minor progress for Gonzalez [Boston Globe]

Red Sox draft beer server [Boston Herald]

Adrian Gonzalez sharpens swing on ‘day off’ [Boston Herald]

Raining on Sox’ parade [Boston Herald]

Decision time looms for bullpen [Boston Herald]

Red Sox to begin stretching out Miller for Pawtucket (AAA) rotation [Clubhouse Insider]

Albers hasn’t spoken to teams in Japan [Clubhouse Insider]

Reyes gives Red Sox one more day… [Clubhouse Insider]

Francona: Regardless of Red Sox’ payroll, Epstein is ‘really smart’ [Clubhouse Insider]

Francona still unsure on final bullpen spot [CSNNE.com]

Childhood mishap turned Reyes into a lefty [CSNNE.com]

Magadan talks lineup [ESPN Boston]

Ranaudo finding his groove [ESPN Boston]

Francona laughs off Showalter’s Theo jab [ESPN Boston]

For your listening pleasure (hopefully) [Extra Bases]

Seven Red Sox pitchers in minor league games today [Extra Bases]

Pregame news from Jupiter [Extra Bases]

Mike Cameron Playing 10 Years Younger, Jarrod Saltalamacchia a Trusty Heir to Jason Varitek’s Throne [NESN.com]

Terry Francona Fires Back, Defends Theo Epstein in Wake of Buck Showalter Comments [NESN.com]

Starters to take it easy in final week [Projo Sox Blog]

Buchholz learns to pitch without the expectations [Providence Journal]

Josh Beckett talks what went wrong in ’10, and what can go right in ’11 [Rob Bradford – WEEI.com]

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

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/24

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.

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

It’s game day for the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team as they’ll take on the San Diego State Aztecs in the Sweet 16 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA. The game is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. and will be nationally-televised on CBS. The game is also available online at March Madness on Demand. If you can’t catch the television broadcast, you can always listen to the game on the WTIC/UConn Radio Network.

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Tale of the Tape: Calhoun-Fisher [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Bowling (and Raining) in Anaheim [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Greetings from Anaheim [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

Pre-Sweet 16 notes, video [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

UConn Basketball/Bowling Team [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

UConn’s Jim Calhoun gives a snapshot of Jeremy Lamb [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Jim Calhoun On Joy And Expectations [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Jim Calhoun And Steve Fisher [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Talking About Practice [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

UConn, San Diego State getting Sweet [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

UConn gets ready for San Diego State [UConn Huskies Basketball]

UConn Set For Sweet 16 Showdown With San Diego State [UConnHuskies.com]

Calhoun doesn’t believe UConn will be too bothered by “neutral” court [CT Post]

UConn men’s notebook: Calhoun, Fisher meet for first time [CT Post]

UConn Looking Forward To Being ‘Away’ Team [Hartford Courant]

A Season Of Ups And Downs For UConn Men’s Basketball Team [Hartford Courant]

NCAA Sweet 16: UConn Men Vs. San Diego State: Breaking It Down [Hartford Courant]

A Coaching Contrast Between Calhoun And Fisher [Hartford Courant]

Jeremy Lamb’s father eliminated Jim Calhoun and Northeastern from NCAA tournament in 1984 [New Haven Register]

Jim Calhoun, Steve Fisher to face off for first time [New Haven Register]

Huskies have another ‘road’ game in NCAA tournament [New Haven Register]

UConn has eyes on big prize [The Day]

UConn notes: Huskies brace for hostile crowd [The Day]

UConn’s Walker adds to his value with leadership [Washington Times]

Anaheim welcomes top teams [Whittier Daily News]

Solo acts grab stage, make great memories [San Francisco Chronicle]

Former Norcross Player Leads UConn to Sweet 16 [Norcross Patch]

UConn violations tainting legacy of tough-guy coach [San Diego Union Tribune]

What to watch for: SDSU vs. UConn [San Diego Union Tribune]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Not a perfect exit [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Taya Reimer Gets Scholarship Offer From UConn [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

The Wait Continues For Those On the Outside [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

An Offer Has Been Made, No Decision Coming From Reimer [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Hayes and Moore Named Finalists for WBCA State Farm All-America Team [UConnHuskies.com]

Hayes’ offense welcomed on slow scoring night by UConn [CT Post]

UConn Women Have Already Beaten Three Teams In Their Regional [Hartford Courant]

UConn Coaching Staff Upset About Small Crowd At Gampel For Women’s Game [Hartford Courant]

UConn’s NCAA Tournament Attendance [Hartford Courant]

First Final Four team 20 years ago paved the way [New Haven Register]

Hayes proves to be a valuable weapon [Norwich Bulletin]

Big East might be in a league of its own [The Day]

UConn Football links

Looking at Big East NFL draft hopefuls [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

Cersosimo & Difton Talk, More From Coach P And A Reminder [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Video View: Scenes And Interviews From Pro Day [Shawn Courchesne – Hartford Courant]

UConn Pro Day numbers [Joe Perez – Norwich Bulletin]

UConn Football Players Strut Their Stuff At Pro Day [Hartford Courant]

NFL Film Crew Focuses On Todman At UConn Pro Day [Hartford Courant]

Lawrence Wilson runs up NFL Draft boards off of Pro Day performance [New Haven Register]

Huskies tune up for Draft Day [Norwich Bulletin]

Huskies chase the NFL dream [The Day]

Other UConn related links

Softball. Wednesday and Thursday Softball Contests Postponed [UConnHuskies.com]

Baseball. Wednesday’s Baseball Game at Yale Postponed [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Lacrosse. UConn Travels To Canisius And St. Bonaventure [UConnHuskies.com]

Connecticut Whale 3, Springfield Falcons 2

By Bruce Berlet

HARTFORD, Conn. – Like their previous game Sunday and their parent club’s outing 24 hours earlier, the Connecticut Whale faced another “trap game” Wednesday night at the XL Center.

CT WhaleThe Whale had lots of reasons not to bring their best after winning five in a row against the Springfield Falcons, who were on an 11-game losing streak that knocked them out of playoff contention again.

For the second time in four days, the Whale came out flat but recovered for a critical come-from-behind decision, as a brilliant individual move by All-Star right wing Jeremy Williams set up John Mitchell’s tie-breaking goal with 8:43 left in a 3-2 victory before 3,176.

Williams maneuvered his way around and through the Falcons’ line of former Hartford Wolf Pack captain Greg Moore, leading scorer Tomas Kubalik and Trevor Smith and then had the presence of mind to find Mitchell in the high slot as he was falling to the ice. Williams was looking for defenseman Wade Redden, who helped devise the faceoff play that set the winning goal in motion. But Mitchell intervened, putting a 30-foot shot between the legs of Falcons goalie Paul Dainton, making his AHL debut as he works on finishing his degree at the University of Massachusetts.

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“I kind of blacked out there,” a smiling Williams said of his series of dipsy-doodle moves. “Redden said on the faceoff play we were going to with him going down the wall me popping out (to cover the point). It ended up happening three or four times on one shift where he played forward and I played defense. It was fortunate play where I found some room.

“A blind squirrel even finds a nut once in a while because that’s the most inconsistent part of my game. Sometimes I can see the holes, and sometimes I can’t. Fortunately I was able to have a little bit of vision there. I thought Reds was coming down and tried to move it over to him, but Mitch ended up going into the spot was Reds was. I putted where I wanted, but Mitchell stepped up.”

Mitchell said he thought his longtime friend who will be the best man in his wedding this summer was going to shoot, so he planned to go to the front of the net and wait for rebound or deflection. But when Williams got tangled up, Mitchell went to the net figuring he was going to pass to Redden. But with Redden having moved up, Mitchell planned to cover the point so he could backcheck if needed. But the puck popped loose, and Mitchell got off a clean shot.

“I just wanted to grab the puck, turn and shoot it as quickly as I could,” said Mitchell, acquired from the Toronto Maple Leafs on Feb. 28 for a seventh-round pick in 2012. “That works out a lot of the time. Even in the NHL, goals are scored like that where guys just turn and shoot as quick as they can to surprise the goalie. That’s exactly what happened, but we have to be ready from the drop of the puck and be ready for the full 60 minutes. Desperation has kicked in, and the boys have responded well. That’s a bonus, but we want to go in ready from the get-go because that’s what it’s going to take to win games in the playoffs.”

The latest sagging start helped put the Whale (37-26-2-6) into a two-goal hole, but as they did Sunday in a 3-1 victory over the Falcons and the Rangers did Tuesday night in a 1-0 win over the Florida Panthers, they rallied from a sluggish beginning to win their fourth in a row and ninth in 11 starts to reach their high-water mark this season of 11 games over .500. They regained a four-point lead over the idle Worcester Sharks (33-26-4-8) in the battle for the third and final guaranteed spot in the Atlantic Division playoff race and remained one point in front of Binghamton (37-27-3-4), a 6-3 winner over Albany and fifth in the East Division in the fight for a possible crossover playoff berth. The crossover rule says the top four teams in the East Division and the top three in the Atlantic Division qualify for the playoffs, and the conference’s eighth and final spot will go to whichever has more points between the East’s fifth-place team and the Atlantic’s fourth-place club.

“We came out slow, but they came out hard and played very well and enthusiastically,” said Whale goalie Dov Grumet-Morris, who extended his AHL career-high winning streak to six games with 25 saves, including a game-saver off Moore with 4:09 left. “They certainly dominated the first half of the game, then we started to play in spurts and got some momentum at the end of the second period against a goalie who played an outstanding game and we were fortunate to have a great third period.”

The strong finish enabled the Whale to improve to 7-21-0-2 when trailing after two periods, but four of those wins have come in the last three weeks. The Whale are now 6-1-1-1 and have won six in a row against the Falcons (30-37-2-3), who are on a 0-11-1-0 slide since the loss of rugged wings Tom Sestito and former Wolf Pack captain Dane Byers via deals at the trade deadline. They were challenging for their first playoff berth since 2005 before the freefall dating to a 4-1 victory over Portland on Feb. 27. Their only point in the slump came March 5 in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Whale.

The first period resembled the opening 20 minutes Sunday, when the Whale came out sluggish but pulled out a win. This time, they were outshot 10-5 in the first period and never seriously threatened Dainton, who signed an amateur tryout contract Monday after finishing his career at UMass, where he was 6-18-5 with a 3.06 goals-against average and .908 save percentage with one shutout in 32 games this season.

“After winning three games in three nights and having a little break, you have to recapture that intensity,” Whale coach Ken Gernander said. “We had addressed that we wanted to have a much better start than (Sunday), but that wasn’t the case. But again the guys stuck with it and found a way to get the two points. If we want to make a run in the playoffs, we can’t wait until the second period to get going.”

Grumet-Morris made excellent stops off a wide-open Kyle Neuber at the left post at 6:21 and Petr Kalus in front with 3:44 left in the period. But the Falcons got the period’s only goal from one of Dainton’s former Hockey East rivals, left wing Wade McLeod, who also signed an ATO on Monday after completing his eligibility at Northeastern, where he led the Huskies in scoring the last three seasons, including career highs in goals (22), assists (23) and points (45) in 38 games this season. He scored in his first pro game when he took a long cross-ice pass from David Savard, skated into the left circle, outmaneuvered Tomas Kundratek and beat Grumet-Morris to the glove side with 1:58 left in the period.

The Whale heeded Gernander’s words during the first intermission to shoot more, and Dainton had to stop strong bids by Kris Newbury, Evgeny Grachev and Pavel Valentenko in the opening minute. Grumet-Morris then denied Kubalik breaking in off right wing at 1:28.

Then six seconds after the Falcons’ first power play expired, Cody Goloubef took a pass from Kubalik and fired a 40-foot shot that went past Grumet-Morris at 8:59 as he was being screened by Moore and Whale defenseman Stu Bickel.

The Whale finally showed some steady life, and Ryan Garlock picked off Theo Ruth’s pass in the neutral zone, skated into the Falcons’ zone and pushed the puck ahead to the right circle to Derek Couture, who beat Dainton to the far stick side at 11:52.

“Finally one goes in for me,” said Couture, who has had several excellent scoring chances since being called up from Victoria of the ECHL but had only scored when the opposition put the puck in its own net. “Keep shooting and they’re going to go in. It’s got to happen. I played the same way all the time, and if the goals go in, it’s kind of a bonus in my (checking) role. … It’s a good team to be on that builds throughout the game. You can tell that we just gradually took over that game. And night in and night out Dov keeps kicking for us.”

Grumet-Morris kept the Whale close when he stopped Trevor Frischmon’s shorthanded rush down left wing with 22.5 seconds left in the period. Given that reprieve, the Whale got even on the carryover power play into the third period, but it didn’t come easily. Dainton (31 saves) made a diving stop to smother Brodie Dupont’s rebound of Williams’ shot at 38 seconds. But 16 seconds later, Dale Weise got inside Nick Holden, kicked the puck to Newbury and then redirected his centering pass past Dainton to tie it.

“We had good pressure on the power play, and I just kind of redirected the puck to Newbs, who’s a good passer,” Weise said. “I beat my man to the net and he gave me a great pass.”

Then with the Whale on their third period rise, Grumet-Morris had Moore talking to himself as he stopped his rush down left wing at 2:54. He then somehow got his left pad on an even better bid off another left-wing rush while sprawled in the crease at 4:09, then stopped a secondary chance by Ben Guite.

“Moore made a great play to cut in and made a great move, and I got lucky and made a lucky save,” Grumet-Morris said. “That’s a standard desperation play all goalies do. That’s nothing special or unique to this level or myself. When he extends his hands to go around you, he loses the ability to lift the puck. When he goes to the full extension, I know he’s trying to go around me but he’s not going to be able to lift it, so I try to take away everything low.”

The Falcons pulled Dainton for a sixth attacker with 1:22 left, but the Whale didn’t allow a shot the rest of the way in notching yet another come-from-behind win.

“The third period is when this team just seems to come on and want to play, but that’s good and bad,” Weise said. “It’s good because no lead (for the opposition) is safe because we know we can come back, but you can’t spot good teams leads like that. These are big games and big points for us, and I don’t know why we’re not able to get up for them. They don’t mean as much to them as they do to us, but give them credit because they came out hard while playing for jobs.

“I don’t have the answer why we don’t have good starts, but at the end of the day, we got the two points and we’ll address that tomorrow.”

Again.

KERBASHIAN MAKES WHALE DEBUT

Kale Kerbashian made his pro debut with the Whale, replacing Devin DiDiomete and playing on a line with center Francis Lemieux and Kelsey Tessier. Kerbashian signed an amateur tryout agreement for this season and an AHL contract for next season on Monday. The 5-foot-11, 173-pound Kerbashian joined the Whale after getting 37 goals and 51 assists in 68 games with Sarnia of the Ontario Hockey League. The 20-year-old free agent from Thunder Bay, Ontario, saw his first pro action last season when he had two goals and an assist in four ECHL games with Wheeling.

Besides DiDiomete, who was injured Sunday, the Whale scratched defensemen Michael Del Zotto and Jyri Niemi and forwards Todd White, former Falcons right wing Chad Kolarik and Chris McKelvie, who skated for the first time Wednesday since surgery to repair an injury sustained in a 5-1 victory over the Falcons on Jan. 22. That happened in his second game after being recalled from the ECHL’s Greenville Road Warriors. He missed his 25th game Wednesday night. … The Falcons scratched goalie Gustaf Wesslau, defensemen Mike Commodore, Brent Regner and Anton Blomqvist and forwards Kyle Wilson, Tomas Kana, Chris D’Alvise, Mike Blunden and Maksim Mayorov, recalled earlier in the day by the parent Columbus Blue Jackets. … Greenville clinched the ECHL’s South Division title in their first season with a 3-1 victory over the South Carolina Stingrays on Tuesday night. The Road Warriors are affiliated with the Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers.

CHECKERS, SOUND TIGERS VISIT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

The first-year Charlotte Checkers, the Whale’s former ECHL affiliate, make their second visit to Hartford Friday night and the Bridgeport Sound Tigers are in town Saturday night to end a five-game homestand. The Whale then plays successive games at Providence on Sunday and April 1.

The Checkers (39-25-2-6) lost to the Whale 4-2 on opening night Oct. 9 but won 5-1 and 1-0 at home on Feb. 24 and 26. The Checkers beat Adirondack 5-2 Tuesday night thanks to going 4-for-11 on the power play. Their balanced attack is led by left wings Chris Terry (29, 27) and Jacob Micflikier (24, 28) and centers Zach Boychuk (19, 33) and Zac Dalpe (19, 28), the AHL’s third-leading rookie scorer who has a goal and three assists against the Whale. Right wing Jerome Samson (26, 28) is on recall to the parent Carolina Hurricanes.

Rookie Mike Murphy (21-11-3, 2.53 goals-against average, .919 save percentage, two shutouts) has the two wins against the Whale, allowing only four goals in three appearances. He has shared the goaltending with Justin Pogge (18-16-3, 3.10, .908) as the Checkers are the only AHL team to use two goalies throughout the season.

Hockey Ministries International Northeast is sponsoring “Faith & Family Night” that includes the band Scarlet Fade performing in the XL Center atrium before and after the game. Contact AHL Chapel Coordinator Rick Mitera at 860-817-6440 or rmitera@hockeyministries.org to order $10 tickets for upper bowl seats. Anyone who buys a ticket through Hockey Ministries will receive a $2 coupon for parking. For more information on Hockey Ministries, visit www.hockeyministriesnortheast.org.

PADDOCK TO BE INDUCTED INTO BINGHAMTON HALL OF FAME

Congratulations to AHL coaching legend John Paddock, who led the Wolf Pack to their only Calder Cup title in 2000 and will be inducted into the Binghamton Hockey Hall of Fame on Friday night at the Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena before the Senators play the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins.

Award-winning goalie Corey Hirsch and BC Icemen standout Chris Grenville will join Paddock in the Class of 2011. Paddock, 56, led the Binghamton Rangers and Senators to successful inaugural seasons that ended in the third round of the playoffs. He had a 121-90-24 regular-season record in Binghamton before taking over as co-coach of the B-Senators in 2004-05. He was honored by the Wolf Pack last season after being inducted into the AHL Hall of Fame.

“I’m thrilled by (the induction),” Paddock told the Binghamton Press. “Those years were a big part of my career. They were good times professionally and also in the community. This is something above and beyond, and I’m very grateful.”

Paddock is the only coach to lead three teams to the Calder Cup – Maine Mariners, Hershey Bears and Wolf Pack. He also was coach and general manager of the NHL’s Winnipeg Jets and Phoenix Coyotes before joining the Wolf Pack and then returning in 2002 to where he had some of his most memorable hockey moments.

“Binghamton was Rangers territory, so it was pretty neat for Binghamton to have the Rangers as their parent club,” Paddock said. “I was there the first year they came. It was an exciting time. Then with Ottawa, lots of players that played in Binghamton went on to be the supporting cast of that Stanley Cup finals team (in 2007). On the flip side, we finished first overall the lockout year (2004-05), then lost in the first round. That was one of my bigger disappointments in hockey.”

Paddock was promoted to assistant coach in Ottawa for the 2005-06 season and then took over as head coach in 2007-08. After being fired the next season, he was named coach of the Philadelphia Phantoms, the Flyers’ AHL affiliate, and is now an assistant general manager to former Whalers coach and GM Paul Holmgren. Paddock also played 10 seasons professionally, including 102 NHL games and winning a Calder Cup with the Mariners… Oklahoma City Barons right wing Colin McDonald, a Wethersfield native and son of former Hartford Whalers defenseman Gerry McDonald, has scored 32 goals this season after totaling 34 in his first three AHL seasons. He had his first pro hat trick at Rockford on Friday.

CAREER SEASONS FOR KORPIKOSKI AND QUICK

Former Wolf Pack and Rangers forward Lauri Korpikoski scored the winner with three minutes left in the second period Tuesday night as the Phoenix Coyotes beat the St. Louis Blues 2-1 to solidify their hold on fourth in the Western Conference and move within one point of the third-place San Jose Sharks, who hosted the Flames on Wednesday night.

Korpikoski, the Rangers’ first-round pick (19th overall) in 2004, has career highs in goals (18), assists (19) and points (37) this season and is plus-19, second on the Coyotes to Adrian Aucoin’s plus-21. He assisted on Ray Whitney’s goal and then tied Radim Vrbata and captain Shane Doan for the team lead in goals after entering the season with only 11 goals in his first two NHL seasons. While he doesn’t have a single power-play goal, Korpikoski does have seven points in his last eight games while playing between Whitney and Vrbata in place of the injured Martin Hanzal, and his 38 points are 27 more than he had all last season.

“Two more big plays by Korpi, he’s really meant the world to us all season,” Doan said. “No one is surprised to see him scoring like this. He’s an elite player and everyone has been kind of waiting for him to put it together. We count on him to break the game open with his skill.”

Korpikoski, known for his defense and penalty killing but named the game’s No. 1 star for his offense, said, “I’m playing with good players and on the top line. I think it’s normal when you get more chances to score and you put it in. I think it just comes with the opportunity to play.”

Another player with local ties having a career season is Hamden native Jonathan Quick, who made 27 saves in regulation and overtime and then stopped two of three shots in a shootout in the Los Angeles Kings’ 2-1 victory over the Calgary Flames on Monday night. The game was scoreless until the Kings’ Jarret Stoll scored with 5:52 left, but Olli Jokinen tied it on the game’s next shot 55 seconds later. Quick made four big saves during a Flames power play late in overtime before earning the victory and No. 1 star as the Kings moved two points ahead of the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks into a tie for fifth in the tightly bunched Western Conference playoff race.

“Every point we get, whether it’s one point or two points, it helps build a resume to make the playoffs,” said Quick, who improved to 8-0 in shootouts this season. “We’re just trying to get two points every time we’re out. We got two points and that’s all that matters.” Stoll got the Kings even in the shootout after Alex Tanguay beat Quick, and Anze Kopitar gave the Kings the win when he slipped the puck through Miikka Kiprusoff’s legs.

At the other end of the spectrum is former Rangers and Wolf Pack forward Manny Malhotra, who will miss the rest of the season and playoffs because of a left eye injury. Malhotra, in his first season with the Vancouver Canucks, was injured when a shot by the Colorado Avalanche’s Erik Johnson hit him in the face during a game March 16 and then had surgery. The Rangers’ first-round pick (seventh overall) in 1998 has 11 goals, 19 assists and is second in the NHL in faceoff winning percentage at .617.

FIRST TEE OF CONNECTICUT DAY ON APRIL 3

The Whale will host First Tee of Connecticut Day on April 3, when the Portland Pirates are at the XL Center at 3 p.m. Level 200 tickets are $12, with the First Tee of Connecticut receiving $5 from each ticket sold. To purchase tickets and help local youngsters interested in improving their golf game and life skills, contact Nick Criscuolo at 860-728-3366 or ncriscuolo@whalerssports.com.

WHALE 3, FALCONS 2

Springfield        1 1 0 – 2
Connecticut       0 1 2 – 3

First period: 1. Spr, MacLeod 1 (Savard, Holden), 18:02. Penalties: None.

Second period: 2. Spr, Goloubef 5 (Kubalik, Smith), 8:59. 3. Conn, Couture 2 (Garlock), 11:52. Penalties: Filatov, Spr (slashing), 2:52; Parlett, Ct (tripping), 6:53; Lemieux, Ct (interference), 13:35; Goloubef Spr (holding), 19:03.

Third period: 4. Conn, Weise 16 (Newbury, Dupont), 0:54 (pp). 5. Conn, Mitchell 6 (Williams, Grachev), 11:17. Penalty: Guite, Spr (high-sticking), 1:55.

Shots on goal: Springfield 10-11-6-27. Connecticut 5-13-16-34; Power-play opportunities: Springfield 0 of 2; Connecticut 1 of 3; Goalies: Springfield, Dainton 0-1-0 (34 shots-31 saves). Connecticut, Grumet-Morris 10-3-1 (27-25); A: 3,176; Referees: Terry Koharski, Marcus Vinnerborg; Linesmen: Brent Colby, David Spannaus.

Whalers Live On In Their Fans

The State of Connecticut is full of long suffering Hartford Whalers fans, like Ian and myself.  For those of you who aren’t aware the Whalers left town in 1997 when Carpetbagger Peter Karmanos, who had come from Michigan and bought the team, moved it to North Carolina and re-named them the Carolina Hurricanes.  It’s a move that still stings.

In fact after disparaging the ‘Canes head d-bag in a tweet I heard from one of his cousins who tried to inform me what a generous and nice guy Karmanos is.  I told her I felt sorry for her due to the relation and reiterated that he is still hated and despised in CT.

But I digress, the fact is many of us still love the Whalers and threw my new friend Brittany Auerbach who runs the BA Loves the Whalers blog come these two items.

First are Hartford Whalers sneakers designed on a pair of Nike Air Jordan Retro 1.  Uber cool high tops in Whalers colors rocking the Whalers logo.  Nice.

Hartford Whalers Air Jordan Retro 1

Brass Bonanza Plays Again: How Hockey’s Strangest Goon Brought Back Mark Twain and a Dead Team—and Made a City Believe AgainThe second item on the Whale is a book written by Andover MA resident, Robert Muldoon.  Muldoon worked his way through his college years and early twenty’s by working part-time for the Whalers.  Most of his duties consisted of driving the new cars on ice between periods for promotions.  His book: Brass Bonanza Plays Again: How Hockey’s Greatest Goon Brought Back Mark Twain and a Dead Team – And Made a City Believe Again was published in January of this year.

The book which took nine years to write, “is a mix of real characters such as Ron Francis, Kevin Dineen and Ulf Samuelsson along side a fictional goon who goes from being homeless and living under a bridge to center ice with a reunited Whalers team”.

While working for the club he even wrote articles for the Sunday Hartford Courant and Goal Magazine. Muldoon worked for the team from 1984-1994 and was heartbroken when the Carpetbagger run away to Carolina with his favorite team.  When the team left he even attended the “Irish Wake” with the city journalists at a local bar.

He is selling his Book through Barnes and Noble and Amazon.

Photo credit: Casey Custom Sneakers, Andover Patch

Red Sox Players Have Two of Top 20 Jerseys

MLB announced today the sales of the most popular player jerseys in 2010.  Long time New York Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter had the best selling jersey by Majestic the official uniform supplier for MLB.  After the Yankee captain 2nd on the list was Minnesota Twins All-Star catcher former AL MVP Joe Mauer who was followed by three Philadelphia Phillies; Cy Young winner pitcher Roy Halladay, All-Star 2B Chase Utley and former Cy Young winner pitcher Cliff Lee.  Lee’s sales figures not only are for his Philadelphia jerseys but for his Seattle and Texas jerseys all combined.

Dustin Pedroia jerseySixth of the list was the SOX & Dawgs choice for Player of the Decade (2000-09) St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols, a three time NL MVP.  Also in the top 10 were Boston Red Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia, was 8th, and in the Top 20 was his teammate Jacoby Ellsbury, who was 16th.

The ironic thing about Pedroia, a former ROY and AL MVP, and Ellsbury is that both spent considerable time on the disabled list in 2010 but fans still came out and bought their jerseys.

Pedroia says “It’s cool when we’re playing at home at Fenway it’s fun, because it seems like everybody in the whole stadium is in one of our jerseys, and we all kind of look up there and see who it is.  It just makes it fun.”

Ellsbury, who used to don a Ken Griffey Jr. #24 growing up said it was meaningful to be on the list after his injury riddled 2010 season.

“It goes to show I’m blessed to have these great fans that go to the game and support me.  It’s exciting.”

Others in the Top 10 were AL MVP Josh Hamilton, New York’s Alex Rodriguez and San Francisco ace Tim Lincecum.

In the second half of the Top 20 were: Yankee first baseman Mark Teixeira; Braves OF Jason Heyward; Washington phenom Stephen Strasburg; Brewers OF Ryan Braun; former AL MVP Twins first baseman Justin Morneau; Texas second baseman Ian Kinsler; Philadelphia 1B Ryan Howard; Giants catcher Buster Posey and Tampa Bay third baseman Evan Longoria.

Valentenko Helps Whale with Shot, Blocks

By Bruce Berlet

Connecticut Whale rookie goalie Cam Talbot paid defenseman Pavel Valentenko quite the compliment Sunday.

CT Whale“He blocks shots so well it’s like having three goalies,” Talbot said after watching Valentenko doing plenty of just such dirty work in a 3-1 victory over the Springfield Falcons.

With the Whale on the way to tying a season low of 18 shots, Valentenko also gave them some unexpected offense when one of his lasers from the left point overpowered goalie Gustaf Wesslau, hitting his stick and going into the net for his third goal at 9:07 of the third period.

“I’ve had a hard shot all my life, but it has always gone the wrong way,” a smiling Valentenko said after practice Tuesday at the XL Center in Hartford. “Now I’ve been practicing my shot almost every day with (assistant coach) J.J. (Daigneault), and it goes in the net. I’ve worked on shooting quicker and hitting the net.”

Valentenko, a self-proclaimed stay-at-home defenseman, also has specialized in blocked shots since he began learning the game in Nizhnekamsk, Russia.

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“All my hockey career I’ve tried to block shots because then it’s easier for the goalie and better for us,” said Valentenko, nicknamed “Tank” in training camp by New York Rangers coach John Tortorella. “Even when as I was a kid I was staying in the net and blocking shots. My father said, ‘Be a goalie if you want.’ I didn’t want to be a goalie. I just wanted to protect the net.”

Personal issues at home and a pair of injuries limited Valentenko to 19 games the past two seasons, so he is delighted to be the only Whale player to appear in all 70 games this season. But he hasn’t completely escaped the injury bug. He had difficulty talking for nearly three months after he sustained nerve damage in his throat when clipped by a stick during a scrimmage in Rangers training camp.

“The last two years was a hard time for me,” Valentenko said. “I had two big injuries, and now I’m so happy that I’m playing.”

The 23-year-old Valentenko has been paired mostly with rookies Tomas Kundratek, 21, and Blake Parlett, 21, an ECHL All-Star recalled from Greenville on Feb. 17 as Kundratek battled an infection.

“I’m doing my best and everything for the team and guys have helped me,” Valentenko said. “So the season has been pretty good, and I think I’ve improved my shot and penalty kill.”

Others say Valentenko has been much more than “pretty good.”

Whale coach Ken Gernander commended Valentenko for being willing to sacrifice his body at a moment’s notice.

“He has always been a pretty good shot blocker,” Gernander said, “and when he’s on his game, he plays physical, hits and contains in the defensive zone. And he has a big shot. Maybe he could be more selective with it, make sure he gets it through and things like that, but obviously that was a big goal for us (Sunday). It was much needed offense from a source that isn’t typical of some of our power-play guys.”

Despite Valentenko’s heavy shot, Kundratek, Parlett, veteran Wade Redden, injured second-year pro Michael Del Zotto and All-Star right wing Jeremy Williams usually man the points on the Whale’s top power-play units. Right wing Dale Weise even was used there for a few games, while Valentenko, Jared Nightingale and Stu Bickel have focused on penalty killing.

Valentenko’s three goals and 10 assists might not catch the eye of many Whale followers, but he leads the team in plus-minus at plus-20, two better than fellow Russian Evgeny Grachev. And some of Valentenko’s bone-crushing hits rank among the best in hockey.

“He’s obviously a great shot blocker, always in those lanes, and even if he doesn’t block it, he usually gets a stick on it or something,” Talbot said. “One-on-one, no one (hardly) ever gets around him. Anyone who tries to make a move on him, he just gets the stick on the puck, knocks it in the corner and rubs the guy out. He obviously has really improved all season long, and it’s starting to show for us.”

Valentenko and defenseman Ryan McDonagh, both of whom were acquired in a seven-player trade with the Montreal Canadiens that included center Scott Gomez, were narrowly edged out in training camp by former Hartford Wolf Pack defenseman Michael Sauer, who has been one of the Rangers’ major surprises and leads the parent club in plus-minus at plus-18, one more than McDonagh entering a game against the Florida Panthers on Tuesday night. Ironically, Sauer and McDonagh, who started the season with the Wolf Pack, are now the Rangers’ No. 2 defensive pairing behind two former Wolf Pack players, All-Star Marc Staal and Dan Girardi.

“I thought I did pretty well in training camp after I (hardly) played in two seasons,” Valentenko said. “I was working hard in the summer before camp, and I think I did pretty well. I was doing my best, but when I got sent down, I just told myself to work harder and wait for my chance to make the big team.”

Daigneault, who handles the defense, also noted the 6-foot-2, 220-pound Valentenko’s willingness to block shots and how he has improved his defensive coverage and finished checks better while still trying to get a quicker release on his shot and push soft passes to his teammates.

“His strength is on the (penalty) kill and blocking shots, but there are a few things I’ve worked with him on,” Daigneault said. “Early in the season, he had the habit of jumping from one check to another, and I think it’s important for a defenseman to focus on one job. But sometimes it’s just wanting to do too much, taking one guy and then jumping on the other check, so that’s what I keep showing him on video.

“He also needs to show a little more physicality, but he’s also finished some big hits on the rush and down low. He does have a big shot, but he also has a big windup so I’ve worked with him on getting his shot off quicker. In our league, opponents are really good at taking the lanes away so oftentimes he wasn’t able to exploit his big shot because he was taking too long. But you saw (Sunday) the one-timer from the blue line, which is a drill we’ve been working on in practice to get a feel for that one-time shot. He told me those are things that no one had ever taught him, but I think those are the kinds of things that young defensemen need to know.”

It’s all about the basics.

“If you improve your skating, your passing or your shot from the first time you’re here, fundamentals will allow you to play anywhere,” Daigneault said. “So I’d love the young guys to be a Ranger one day, but if they have good fundamentals and the Rangers think they can get a (draft) pick for those players, then they can go play somewhere else. If you have fundamentals, I think you can play anywhere.”

After growing up in the hockey ranks in his native Nizhnekamsk, Valentenko was a fifth-round pick of the Canadiens in 2005 and moved to North America a year later. He had two goals and an assist in six games playing for Team Russia in the 2007 World Junior Championships and was voted the Bulldogs’ top rookie in his first season (2007-08) after getting one goal and 15 assists in 57 games. He also was part of the group of players the Canadiens called up for the 2008 Stanley Cup playoffs in the case of injuries.

On Oct. 30, 2008, after getting two assists in four games with Hamilton to start the 2008-09 season, Valentenko decided to leave the Bulldogs to help provide for family members, including his parents, and signed a three-year contract with Dynamo Moscow in the Kontinental Hockey League.

“He was concerned about how his family would survive,” Gordie Clark, the Rangers’ director of player personnel, told www.newyorkrangers.com. “He went to the Canadiens first, unlike some other guys who just go home. He told them that he didn’t want to leave, but he had to for the best interest of his family. So he did it, and he had to set his pro career back for that.”

When he left, Valentenko intended to return when his wife’s finances were more stable. But after he played only eight games with Dynamo that season, the Canadiens didn’t want to wait. On June 30, 2009, Valentenko was traded with McDonagh, the Canadiens’ No. 1 pick (12th overall) in 2007 who started this season with the Wolf Pack before switching places with Del Zotto on Jan. 3, former Yale center Chris Higgins and former Springfield Pics defenseman Doug Janik for Gomez, former Wolf Pack wing Tom Pyatt and defenseman Michael Busto.

“I was so happy that Montreal traded me to the Rangers because I wanted to come back to North America,” Valentenko said. “I had a hard time in my family and had to go back home, but I always wanted to come back to North America. But the Canadiens signed seven defensemen to one-way contracts, and I didn’t think I got a chance (to make the team).”

As Valentenko prepared for last season, he sustained an injury that required surgery just before the season started. After diligent rehab, he returned Jan. 5, 2010, and played in Novokuznetsk’s 4-3 victory. He played six more games before the nagging injury ended his season on Feb. 7.

But the left-handed shooting Valentenko has progressed well while paired with two other good, young right-handed prospects.

“I thought Valentenko and Parlett were a good compliment,” Daigneault said. “Parlett is a good skater and very good at the short pass to exit the defensive zone, and one is physical and the other likes to get up the ice. It’s like Chris Chelios and (Craig) Ludwig, so I thought the combination was good. I don’t particularly like having two right-handed shooters together like Kundratek and Bickel, but there’s nothing I can do with four right-handed guys.”

Valentenko is now on the cusp of being a NHL player, and it seems appropriate it could be with the Rangers. One of Valentenko’s favorite souvenirs is a Rangers’ 1994 Stanley Cup championship cap that his father bought while attending his 10-year-old son’s seven “friendship games” in 1997. Pavel’s team played in Nassau Coliseum on Long Island, where he watched a New York Islanders game and also visited Madison Square Garden, the home of the Rangers.

“My dad went to Madison Square Garden and bought the hat,” Valentenko said. “I loved the Rangers, and my father also has a miniature Rangers player that he hangs on his keys or rear-view mirror. He likes the Rangers because they have so much history and had a couple of Russian players on the championship team – (Alex) Kovalev, (Sergei) Nemchinov, (Sergei) Zubov and (Alexander) Karpovtsev. He followed them and read about them.”

Now Valentenko would love to have his father and thousands of others get to watch him play in The World’s Most Famous Arena.

NEWCOMER PRACTICES WITH WHALE

Forward Kale Kerbashian had his first practice with the Whale on Tuesday, a day after signing an amateur tryout agreement for this season and an AHL contract for next season. The 5-foot-11, 173-pound Kerbashian joined the Whale after getting 37 goals and 51 assists in 68 games with Sarnia of the Ontario Hockey League.

The 20-year-old free agent from Thunder Bay, Ontario, saw his first pro action last season when he had two goals and an assist in four ECHL games with Wheeling. He is the Whale’s only healthy extra and is eligible to play in the playoffs if the team reaches the postseason.

Kerbashian stayed with the same family in Sarnia as new teammate Devin DiDiomete and played against Del Zotto and Parlett in the OHL. Defenseman Jyri Niemi continued to skate on his own, but Del Zotto and forwards Chad Kolarik, Todd White and Chris McKelvie are just rehabbing or resting.

REMATCH WITH FALCONS WEDNESDAY NIGHT

The Whale (36-26-2-6) has a rematch with the Falcons on Wednesday night at the XL Center in the start of four games in five days. The Whale has won three in a row and eight of 10 to reach their high-water mark this season of 10 games over .500. The 3-1 win over the Falcons on Sunday moved the Whale four points ahead of Worcester in the battle for the third and final guaranteed spot in the Atlantic Division playoff race and one point in front of Binghamton (36-27-3-4), which is fifth in the East Division in the fight for a possible crossover playoff berth. The crossover rule stipulates the top four teams in the East Division and the top three in the Atlantic Division qualify for the playoffs, and the conference’s eighth and final spot will go to whichever has more points between the East’s fifth-place team and the Atlantic’s fourth-place club.

If the Sharks (33-26-4-8) eke out a playoff spot, they might look back to a 5-4 overtime victory over the Atlantic Division-leading Portland Pirates on Tuesday morning. Rookie Corey Tropp’s goal only 13 seconds into the game sparked the Pirates to an early 3-0 lead before Patrick Davis’ shorthanded goal got the Sharks started. The Pirates took a 4-2 lead early in the second period, but Nick Schaus got the Sharks to 4-3 by the end of the period. With the Pirates on the verge of clinching a playoff spot and expanding their division lead to four points with four games in hand on Manchester, another defenseman, Joe Loprieno, tied it with 3:23 left in regulation. Left wing John McCarthy then scored only 16 seconds into overtime to get Sharks within two points of the Whale and one point of Binghamton. The Sharks had been outscored 19-7 in losing their three previous visits to Portland.

The stage for a Whale-Falcons rematch was set when the teams had to be separated after the final buzzer sounded as they were leaving their benches Sunday. The scuffle was precipitated by Falcons tough guy Kyle Neuber jabbing at Kris Newbury and DiDiomete, the AHL leader in fighting majors (32) and penalty minutes (296). It wasn’t the first time this season the Whale had a run-in with Neuber. His hit on All-Star right wing Jeremy Williams in the Whale’s 3-2 victory on March 2 forced the team leader in goals (29) to miss four games.

While the Whale has surged into a playoff spot, the Falcons (30-36-2-3) are on a 0-10-1-0 slide since the loss of rugged wings Tom Sestito and former Wolf Pack captain Dane Byers via deals at the trade deadline. They were challenging for their first playoff berth since 2005 before the freefall dating to a 4-1 victory over Portland on Feb. 27. Their only point in the slump came March 5 in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Whale, who are 5-1-1-1 and have won five in a row against their I-91 rival. The Falcons have been shut out twice and scored only four goals in their last five games.

The Falcons are led by rookie right wing Tomas Kubalik (21, 24), veteran centers Trevor Smith (18, 22) and Ben Guite (14, 25) and rookie left wing Maksim Mayorov (18, 13). Former Wolf Pack captain/center Greg Moore has one assist in 10 games since being part of the Sestito trade. Former Wolf Pack David LeNeveu (16-20-2, 2.97 goals-against average, .896 save percentage) and Gustaf Wesslau (12-16-1, 3.17, .897) share the goaltending. LeNeveu was pulled after the second period Sunday because of fatigue from having played three games in less than 48 hours, including a trip to Binghamton, N.Y.

After the rematch, the first-year Charlotte Checkers, the Whale’s former ECHL affiliate, make their second Hartford appearance Friday night and the Bridgeport Sound Tigers visit Saturday night to end the homestand. The Whale then plays successive games at Providence on Sunday and April 1.

WHALE HONOR HOWE FAMILY ON SATURDAY NIGHT

“Howe Family Night” arrives Saturday as the Whale honors legendary Gordie Howe, sons Mark and Marty and his wife, Colleen, who died in 2009. Before the game, fans can meet Gordie and get a personalized autographed book and photo by purchasing a copy of the colorful 185-page book “9. Nine. A Salute to Mr. Hockey, Gordie Howe.” The book sells for $70, and he will sign copies starting at 5:30 p.m. in the XL Center atrium. The first 2,000 fans will receive a free commemorative 36-page Gordie Howe tribute program full of color photos and stories, and there will be a video tribute to the Howes during a pregame ceremony.

In pregame warm-ups, Whale players will wear a special 1978 vintage No. 9 Gordie Howe New England Whalers white home jerseys. A refurbished banner honoring the No. 9 of “Mr. Hockey,” one of seven numbers in the XL Center rafters, will be will be spotlighted as he and his sons, whom he played with for seven seasons in Houston and Hartford, look on. Colleen Howe also will be honored as a new banner saluting the Howes will be raised. There will be a highlight film of the Howes shown on the video screen as area fans can salute them for their contributions to hockey in general and the Hartford market in particular.

Howe’s No. 9 is in the rafters with the Whalers’ No. 2 (Rick Ley), 5 (Ulf Samuelsson), 10 (Ron Francis), 11 (Kevin Dineen) and 19 (John McKenzie). Gernander’s No. 12 is the only number to be retired in the 14-year history of the AHL team.

The Howes played together for the first time with the Houston Aeros in 1973 before coming to Hartford and signing with the World Hockey Association’s New England Whalers in 1977. Howe ended his legendary 32-year career in the Whalers’ first NHL season (1979-80), when he had 15 goals and 26 assists and was named a NHL All-Star for the 23rd time while helping the Whalers make the playoffs at 52 years old.

Tickets for all Whale games are available at the XL Center box office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com. Tickets start at $7 at the XL Center ticket office on game day. Fans who did not attend the Whale’s outdoor game against Providence because of the frigid weather can redeem their tickets for one to “Howe Family Night” or another game of their choice. If fans want to redeem a ticket, they should contact Baldwin Jr. at hlb@whalerssports.com. … Wethersfield native Colin McDonald, son of former Hartford Whalers defenseman Gerry McDonald who had his first pro trick at Rockford on Friday, has scored 32 goals this season after totaling 34 in his first three AHL seasons. … Former Rangers and Wolf Pack forward Manny Malhotra will miss the rest of the season and playoffs because of a left eye injury. Malhotra was injured when a shot by the Colorado Avalanche’s Erik Johnson hit him in the face during a game March 16, requiring surgery. In his first season with the Canucks, the Rangers’ first-round pick (seventh overall) in 1998 has 11 goals, 30 points and is second in the NHL in faceoff winning percentage at .617. … Hamden native Jonathan Quick did it again for the Los Angeles Kings on Monday night, making 27 saves in regulation and overtime and then stopping two of three shots in a shootout in a 2-1 victory over the Calgary Flames. The game was scoreless until the Kings’ Jarret Stoll scored with 5:52 left, but Olli Jokinen tied it for the Flames on the game’s next shot only 55 seconds later. Quick then made four big saves during a Flames power play late in overtime before earning the victory and game’s No. 1 star as the Kings moved two points ahead of the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks into fifth place in the tightly bunched Western Conference playoff race. “Every point we get, whether it’s one point or two points, it helps build a resume to make the playoffs,” said Quick, who improved to 8-0 in shootouts this season. “We’re just trying to get two points every time we’re out. We got two points and that’s all that matters.” Stoll got the Kings even in the shootout after Alex Tanguay beat Quick, and Anze Kopitar gave the Kings the win when he slipped the puck through Miikka Kiprusoff’s legs.

CONGRATULATIONS, DAVE ANDREWS AND JARED DEMICHIEL

Congratulations to AHL president and CEO David Andrew and Avon native Jared DeMichiel for being named recipients of two significant awards.

Andrews has been selected by the Ace Bailey Children’s Foundation as the 2011 recipient of its Ace Bailey Good Guy Award, presented annually to individuals who have supported and advanced the game of hockey on the professional, school or youth level and who are regarded to be truly “good guys.” Andrews will be honored on Wednesday night at the organization’s “Face Off for Ace” dinner in Cambridge, Mass.

The Ace Bailey Children’s Foundation was established in memory of Garnet “Ace” Bailey, who won the 1969 Calder Cup with the Hershey Bears and went on to play eight years in the NHL, capturing the Stanley Cup with Boston in 1972. Bailey was a victim of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and his family created the foundation to perpetuate his deep caring for the well-being and happiness of children through the improvement of hospital environments and services.

DeMichiel was named the Rochester Press-Radio Club’s PAXCHEX Male College Athlete of the Year for 2010 after leading the surprising Rochester Institute of Technology to the NCAA Frozen Four last year. He will be recognized at the organization’s awards dinner May 24, when the featured speaker will be former Detroit Lions quarterback Clay Matthews.

In his senior year at RIT, DeMichiel was 27-10-1 with a 2.09 GAA, .921 save percentage and six shutouts, capped by victories over top-seeded Denver University and the University of New Hampshire to give the school a record for wins in a season and its first berth in the Frozen Four before an 8-1 loss in the semifinals to Wisconsin, led by McDonagh and Rangers center Derek Stepan. Wisconsin lost 5-0 in the title game to Boston College, led by right wing Chris Kreider, the Rangers’ top prospect after being a first-round pick (19th overall) in 2009.

DeMichiel’s stellar senior year earned him an AHL contract with Hershey, but he started this season with the ECHL’s South Carolina Stingrays, where he was 14-10-0, 2.66, .913 with two shutouts in 26 games before being traded on March 11 to the Elmira Jackals for the rights to forward Brock McBride, who was with the Milwaukee Admirals. DeMichiel is 1-0-1, 3.37, .909 in two games with the Jackals, losing 3-2 to the Trenton Devils in a shootout despite making 49 saves. He’s also 2-1-0, 3.65, .873 in five games with the Bears.