Video: Highlights of UConn’s 69-58 Win Over Cincinnati

Here are the highlights of the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team’s 69-58 win over the Cincinnati Bearcats in the third round of the NCAA Tournament on Saturday night at the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C.

With the win, the Huskies advance to the Sweet 16 in Anaheim, CA where they’ll take on the San Diego State Aztecs on Thursday night.

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Cincinnati Postgame Press Conference Transcript [ASAP Sports]

UConn Postgame Press Conference Transcript [ASAP Sports]

Connecticut Whale 4, Providence Bruins 3 (SO)

By Bruce Berlet

HARTFORD, Conn. – Fortuitous bounces abounded Saturday night at the XL Center, and veteran center Francis Lemieux’s changeup in the eighth round of a shootout proved the most telling blow.

CT WhaleLemieux, who helped set up Derek Couture’s first AHL goal this season, slowly skated in on Anton Khudobin and beat the Providence Bruins goalie high to the glove side to give the Connecticut Whale a stirring, come-from-behind 4-3 victory before 9,103.

It was Lemieux’s first AHL shootout goal and gave the Whale (35-26-2-6) their seventh win in nine starts and their high-water mark of nine games over .500 this season. It also gave them a four-point lead over the Worcester Sharks, a 5-3 loser at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, in the battle for the third and final guaranteed spot in the Atlantic Division playoff race. The Whale remained one point ahead of Binghamton, which is in fifth place in the East Division and beat slumping Springfield, 2-0.

“That’s my move,” Lemieux said. “I told (Kelsey Tessier) on the bench that if (coach Ken Gernander) is sending me, I’m going East Coast speed so the goalie isn’t expecting that, so that’s what I did. I was coming pretty slow, just waiting for the goalie to make a move and shoot over his shoulder.

“I had just one thing in mind, and I was ready to do that the whole time. I was just waiting on the bench for the tap on the back, and I got it and made it work. This is the first year that I’m actually going in the shootout, and my confidence has been building.”

Lemieux also made it work while with the Florida Everblades in a victory over the Greenville Road Warriors, the Whale’s ECHL affiliate.

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“When it worked, I just stuck with it,” Lemieux said. “(Khudobin) is catching with the left hand, so it’s easier for me because it’s his blocker side and tougher for him to reach over his shoulder. So I was just coming slowly and just waiting for him to put his shoulder down.”

Dov Grumet-Morris (34 saves) extended his AHL career-best win streak to five games when he stopped Jordan LaVallee-Smotherman in Round 8. Jamie Arniel had given the Bruins a 1-0 lead in Round 3, but Dale Weise tied it in Round 4. It stayed even until Lemieux’s first winner with the Whale.

“It feels good to contribute,” said Lemieux, the ECHL’s leading scorer when he left the Everblades but goalless with two assists in 14 games with the Whale. “Couture got a big goal for us that got us back in the game, so it was good for our whole line to create offensively. We’re just trying to work hard every night. We know we’re there to create some energy and scoring chances and not make any mistakes mentally, and that’s what we did tonight. We were first on the puck all night and finished our hits, and it worked well for us.”

The Whale got to overtime when Evgeny Grachev took a pass from John Mitchell in center ice, broke in 1-on-3 and took a shot from the top of the left circle that glanced off Khudobin’s glove and trickled into the net with 3:26 left in regulation. When Grachev realized he had scored his 16th goal of the season, he made like Tiger Woods and pumped his right arm several times.

“We were shorthanded, I was going down the (left wing) and I saw (Khudobin) go down to one knee,” Grachev said. “I got a fortunate break and the shot went off his glove. We had a lot of heart. It was tremendous to come back. When you get a goal like that, you get pumped up.”

The Whale’s 600th regular-season victory in their 14-year franchise history – they’re 600(W)-361(L)-66(T)-49(OTL)-33(SOL) – came after an evenly played first period that ended in a 1-1 tie thanks to a pair of somewhat fluky power-play goals.

After Mitchell lost the puck after splitting the Bruins defense and breaking in alone, the Whale’s recent acquisition’s one-timer of a cross-crease pass from Blake Parlett into the right circle knuckled into the far corner at 10:15.

The Bruins got even on their second man advantage when Zach Hamill’s 40-foot shot from the slot deflected off of Whale defenseman Jared Nightingale’s skate and Whale nemesis Maxime Sauve’s shin pad to Trent Whitfield at the left post, and the Providence veteran captain had an easy finish into an open net with 1:38 left in the period.

The Bruins took the impetus early in the second period, just as the Whale had done Friday night in a 1-0 victory at Manchester. The Bruins had a 7-1 shot advantage in the opening 81/2 minutes but were unable to beat Grumet-Morris. First, Kirk MacDonald raced around Parlett shorthanded but had his backhander from in close stopped at 1:26. Grumet-Morris then made sprawling save on All-Star Jamie Arniel’s rebound at 5:44 and robbed MacDonald off a 2-on-1 at 8:38 that had the Bruins wing shaking his head.

The Whale finally showed some semblance of life as Ryan Garlock raced down the left wing and tried a wraparound that went just wide at 9:52. Then at 10:54, Khudobin flicked out his stick to deny Kris Newbury and smothered a good Brodie Dupont bid.

But defenseman Stu Bickel took a roughing penalty out near his own blue line, and the Bruins made him and the Whale pay with another fluky goal as Andrew Bodnarchuk’s shot from the left point deflected off Dupont to Jordan Caron alone at the right post with 6:34 left in the period.

The Bruins extended their lead to 3-1 with 4:38 to go when Jordan LaVallee-Smotherman deftly batted the puck out of midair and past Grumet-Morris.

But 60 seconds later, a snake-bitten Couture got credit for the game’s fourth fluky goal when his backhander went in off of MacDonald’s stick for Couture’s first AHL goal in nine games with the Whale this season, after Pavel Valentenko’s slap shot went off Lemieux to the rugged right wing.

“I’ve had three breakaways and two good, solid opportunities from the slot, and that’s the one that goes in?” Couture said. “But that’s how the game works sometimes. Each line has to chip in, and we felt good out there.”

Still, the Whale was fortunate to escape the second period down only one goal after being outshot 14-7.

“I made some (good) saves in the second period,” Grumet-Morris said. “If they had got one or two of those, the game could have been out of reach. Then we did a great job on the penalty kill in the third period, and that was a great goal by Grachev. We really needed these two points. That’s the only thing that matters at this point.”

Grumet-Morris kept the Whale close when he stopped Whitfield off a 3-on-2 at 6:48 of the third period before Couture fanned on pass from Lemieux on a 2-on-1 at 10:51. Grumet-Morris then kept it 3-2 when he stopped MacDonald’s screened shot from 20 feet in the slot with 4:41 left.

The Bruins then appeared to have a chance to put the game away on their fourth power play after Bickel was whistled for high-sticking with 4:02 left, but Grachev dramatically changed the course of the game.

“That obviously was a big goal for us,” Gernander said. “We didn’t want to take a penalty that late in the game. The emphasis was that we were going to kill this off and then we’ll make a push, but luckily we got the shorthander.”

Grumet-Morris enabled the Whale to get to overtime when he smothered MacDonald’s jam attempt off a Nightingale turnover with 2:01 to go. After allowing the soft goal by Grachev, Khudobin kept the Bruins alive when he somehow got his right arm on Parlett’s laser from 30 feet in the slot off a setup by Newbury at 2:20 of overtime. Grumet-Morris then got the Whale to the shootout when he again denied MacDonald’s seventh shot on a 2-on-1 with nine seconds left.

“Dov has played really strong for us,” Gernander said. “He got the shutout in Manchester (2-0 on Friday night), so we came back with him, and he had a big game tonight and was really clutch in the shootout. He was real poised and real solid, and we stuck with it to the end. Part of mental toughness or a playoff mentality is that there are going to be hops or bad breaks throughout the course of a game, and you can let it defeat you or you can overcome or, if it’s in your favor, capitalize on it. But a lot of times that’s just a mindset.”

Lemieux earned the game’s No. 1 star and Grumet-Morris the third as the Whale improved to 4-6 in shootouts and 6-21-0-2 when trailing after two periods, with three of those wins coming in the last three weeks.

“I’m obviously happy with the two points, but we were fortunate,” Gernander said. “As every day passes, you’re going to have to get better and better because obviously the stakes are higher. Everybody is building an improving and playing a little closer to playoff-type hockey. We know we’ve got better and have to bring better.”

WHALE SCRATCHES SAME FIVE

The Whale again scratched forwards Chad Kolarik, Todd White and Chris McKelvie and defensemen Michael Del Zotto and Jyri Niemi. The Bruins scratched center Kyle MacKinnon, left wing Antoine Roussel and defensemen Nathan McIver, Boris Valabik and Kevan Miller.

SPRINGFIELD VISITS SUNDAY AFTERNOON

The Whale completes a busy weekend Sunday at 3 p.m. with the first of back-to-back games against the Falcons (30-35-2-3), whose loss to Binghamton extended their season-high slide to 0-9-0-1 since the loss of rugged wings Tom Sestito and former Wolf Pack captain Dane Byers via deals at the trade deadline. The Falcons were challenging for their first playoff berth since 2005 before the freefall that has existed since a 4-1 victory over Portland on Feb. 26. Their only point since then came on March 5 in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Whale, who are 4-1-1-1 against Springfield and have won four in a row with three games left in the I-91 series.

The Falcons are led by rookie right wing Tomas Kubalik (21, 23), veteran centers Trevor Smith (18, 22) and Ben Guite (13, 25) and rookie left wing Maksim Mayorov (18, 13). Smith has six goals and seven assists but is minus-17 in 23 games with the Falcons since being acquired from the Anaheim Ducks on Jan. 4 for defenseman Nate Guenin, the Rangers’ fourth-round pick in 2002 who never played in the organization before signing a free-agent contract with the Philadelphia Flyers in 2006 after four years at Ohio State. Former Wolf Pack captain/center Greg Moore has one assist in seven games since being part of the Sestito trade. Former Wolf Pack David LeNeveu (16-18-2, 2.98, .895) and Gustaf Wesslau (12-16-1, 3.17, .898) are sharing the goaltending. Fans are encouraged to bring their skates for a postgame skate that will include some Whale players.

The Whale and Falcons have a rematch Wednesday before the first-year Charlotte Checkers, the Whale’s former ECHL affiliate, make their second XL Center appearance on Friday and the Bridgeport Sound Tigers visit next Saturday to end the homestand. The Whale then plays successive games at Providence on March 27 and April 1. … At the request of the City of Bridgeport and Fairfield University, the Sound Tigers have moved their game against Binghamton at the Webster Bank Arena on Sunday from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. to allow the Stags men’s basketball team to host a second-round NIT game against Kent State at 12:30 p.m. Any fans who have purchased a ticket to Sunday’s game can use the ticket for the game against Binghamton and will also receive a free ticket to the Fairfield-Kent State game by showing their ticket to the Sound Tigers’ game to a representative at the Webster Bank Arena box office. Fans can get their ticket to any remaining four Sound Tigers home games by bringing their ticket stub from Sunday’s game to the box office. … Wethersfield native Colin McDonald, son of former Hartford Whalers defenseman Gerry McDonald, scored three goals for his first professional hat trick in visiting Oklahoma City’s 5-1 road win over Rockford on Friday. McDonald, who had never scored as many as 20 goals in a season, passed the 30-goal plateau and now ranks third in the AHL with 31 goals in 69 games. … Chris Chappell, who played with the Whale earlier this season, had a goal and Chris Beckford-Tseu made 27 saves as the Greenville Road Warriors beat the Cincinnati Cyclones 5-0 Friday night to clinch their first ECHL playoff berth. Defenseman Lee Baldwin, reassigned to Greenville by the Whale on Thursday, assisted on the first of Matt Schepke’s two goals. Beckford-Tseu had his first shutout of the season after being claimed off waivers from Victoria earlier in the week. The Road Warriors (40-21-4) have a shared affiliation with the Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers.

WHALE TO HONOR HOWE FAMILY NEXT SATURDAY

The Whale will host “Howe Family Night” when the Sound Tigers visit Saturday. The No. 9 of “Mr. Hockey,” one of seven numbers in the XL Center rafters, will be lowered and then raised and re-retired as he and his sons, Mark and Marty, whom he played with for seven seasons in Houston and Hartford, look on. The matriarch of the family, Colleen Howe, who died in 2009, will be honored.

A new banner saluting the Howes, hockey’s first family, will also be raised to the rafters and area fans will be able to salute the Howe clan for their contributions to hockey in general and the Hartford market in particular.

“In a lot of ways, Gordie Howe really put Hartford on the hockey map,” Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. said. “He brought true greatness to the city and helped usher the Whalers into the NHL. We feel that now is the perfect time to honor him and his legendary family with so many great things going on with the Whale, the Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest having been such a momentous event, and so much excitement around hockey in Connecticut right now.”

Prior to the game, fans can meet Gordie and get a personalized autographed book and photo by purchasing a copy of the colorful 185-page book “Howe No. 9.” The book sells for $70, and he will sign copies starting at 5:30 p.m. in the XL Center atrium.  2,000 fans will receive a free commemorative 36-page Gordie Howe tribute program full of color photos and stories.

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.

“I think the next test of this market will be on Howe Family Night,” Baldwin Jr. said. “People should come out and show Gordie the respect that he deserves. It’s one of the biggest nights of the season, and I agree with (Hartford Courant sports columnist) Jeff Jacobs that it’s the time when the tire meets the road. It’s a big game on our schedule, and we don’t have a lot of games left. I’d be very disappointed if we didn’t have 10,000 people.”

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.

HOCKEY MINISTRIES NIGHT AT WHALE GAME

Hockey Ministries International Northeast is sponsoring 2011 Faith & Family Night at the game against Charlotte. Upper bowl seats are $10, and Scarlet Fade will perform a postgame concert.

To order tickets, contact AHL Chapel Coordinator Rick Mitera at 860-817-6440 or rmitera@hockeyministries.org. When someone buys a ticket through Hockey Ministries, they receive a $2 coupon for parking. For more information on Hockey Ministries, visit www.hockeyministriesnortheast.org.

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 4, BRUINS 3 (so)

Providence      1 2 0 0 0 — 3
Connecticut     1 1 1 0 1 — 4

First period: 1. Conn, Mitchell 5 (Parlett, Grachev), 11:15 (pp). 2. Prov, Whitfield 13 (Sauve, Hamill), 18:22 (pp). Penalties: Mitchell, Ct (tripping), 1:33; Laliberte, Pro (hooking), 9:21; Bodnarchuk, Pro (roughing), 17:11; DiDiomete, Ct (slashing, roughing), 17:11; LaVallee-Smotherman, Pro (elbowing), 19:47.

Second period: 3. Prov, Caron 10 (Bartkowski, Hamill), 13:26 (pp). 4. Prov, LaVallee-Smotherman 13 (Whitfield, MacDonald), 15:22. 5. Conn, Couture 1 (Valentenko, Lemieux), 16:22. Penalties: Bickel, Ct (roughing), 12:42.

Third period: 6. Conn, Grachev 16 (Mitchell, Redden), 16:34 (sh). Penalties: Whitfield, Pro (roughing), 0:29; Newbury, Ct (roughing), 0:29; Sauve, Pro (slashing), 2:05; Bickel, Ct (high-sticking), 15:58.

Overtime:  No scoring. Penalties: None.

Shootout: Providence 1 (Hamill NG, Sauve NG, Arniel G, Whitfield NG, Caron NG, MacDonald NG, Laliberte NG, LaVallee-Smotherman NG), Connecticut 2 (Mitchell NG, Williams NG, Grachev NG, Weise G, Redden NG, Newbury NG, Kundratek NG, Lemieux G).

Shots on goal: Providence 12-14-9-2-0-37. Connecticut 9-7-10-3-1-30; Power-play opportunities: Providence 2 of 4; Connecticut 1 of 3; Goalies: Providence, Khudobin 24-13-2 (29 shots-26 saves). Connecticut, Grumet-Morris 9-3-1 (37-34); A: 9,103; Referee: Ghislain Hebert; Linesmen: Jim Briggs, Derek Wahl.

Red Sox News From the Fort – 3/19

Tough day for the Boston Red Sox on Friday as both of the split-squads lost in their respective games.

One squad was in Ft. Myers on Friday afternoon hosting the Detroit Tigers and they came away 8-3 losers. The other squad headed north to Port Charlotte on Friday night and they came away 7-3 losers.

Today, the Red Sox head north once again, this time to Bradenton to take on the Pittsburgh Pirates. The game starts at 1:05 p.m. and will be televised on NESN in the Red Sox television market.

Here are the lineups for today’s game:

Boston Red Sox

Pittsburgh Pirates

1. Marco Scutaro
SS 1. Jose Tabata CF
2. Dustin Pedroia
2B 2. Neil Walker 2B
3. Jarrod Saltalamacchia
C 3. Andrew McCutchen CF
4. Kevin Youkilis
3B 4. Lyle Overbay 1B
5. Mike Cameron
DH 5. Pedro Alvarez 3B
6. Darnell McDonald CF 6. Matt Diaz RF
7. Daniel Nava
LF 7. Ronny Cedeno SS
8. Josh Reddick
RF 8. Dusty Brown
C
9. Nate Spears 1B 9. Kevin Correia P
Josh Beckett SP Kevin Correia SP

Also scheduled to pitch for the Red Sox: RHP Alfredo Aceves, RHP Dan Wheeler.

Also scheduled to pitch for the Pirates: RHP Joel Hanrahan, LHP Joe Beimel, LHP Justin Thomas.

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

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

Wakefield shrugs off rough start [Boston Globe]

Red Sox left with a decision [Boston Globe]

Rebuilding Ryan [Boston Globe]

Red Sox need Tim Wakefield as 6th starter [Boston Herald]

Felix Doubront takes to hill [Boston Herald]

Travel adventures with Tito [Clubhouse Insider]

Francona: Red Sox facing ‘tough’ decisions [CSNNE.com]

Buchholz struggles . . . but says it’s not a bad thing [CSNNE.com]

Sources: Wakefield’s roster spot is safe [CSNNE.com]

FanGraphs: An optimized Red Sox lineup? [ESPN Boston]

Beckett to try to ramp up to 90-plus pitches [ESPN Boston]

No pressure off David Ortiz [ESPN Boston]

Video: Story lines from Fort Myers [Extra Bases]

World Series Game 1 preview on Monday? [Extra Bases]

Gonzalez getting some extra work in [Extra Bases]

The price the Jays paid for John Farrell [Extra Bases]

Could Kevin Youkilis be on the verge of making Gold Glove history? [Full Count]

Clay Buchholz to Work Through ‘Dead Phase,’ Expects to Bounce Back Before Regular Season [NESN.com]

Red Sox Kid Nation Captain Jasper Goodman Fits Right in Among Players and Coaches at Spring Training [NESN.com]

As Red Sox Lay Out Rotation, Several AL East Teams Still Trying to Figure Theirs Out [NESN.com]

Teaching proves learning lesson for Chili Davis [Providence Journal]

Red Sox Journal: Okajima appears Fenway-bound [Providence Journal]

More roster cuts looming next week [RedSox.com]

Left-handed relief still question mark for Boston [RedSox.com]

Doubront resumes pitching program [RedSox.com]

Pedroia homers, but errors plague Red Sox [RedSox.com]

Mechanical glitches haunt Buchholz vs. Detroit [RedSox.com]

Wakefield serves up four homers in loss [RedSox.com]

Wakefield trying to earn spot on roster [RedSox.com]

Why you shouldn’t underestimate the value of Tim Wakefield to the Red Sox [Rob Bradford – WEEI.com]

2011 SoxProspects Pre-Season All-Stars [SoxProspects.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 – 3/19

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.

It’s game day for the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team as they’ll face Big East foe the Cincinnati Bearcats in the third round of the NCAA Tournament. The game is scheduled to begin at approximately 9:40 p.m. and will be nationally-televised on TBS. You can also catch the game online at NCAA 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.

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

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Cronin-gate Put to Rest? [David Borges – New Haven Register]

‘Horrible’ Oriakhi, Kemba on Video [David Borges – New Haven Register]

UConn-Cincinnati, the preamble [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

News and video from UConn’s press conference [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

At least they didn’t make Bison do this … [Lee Lewis – The Republican-American]

UConn-Cincinnati: Looking Back And Looking Ahead [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Kemba Walker Enjoying The Ride [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Calhoun-Cronin … Buddies [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Jim Calhoun On Kemba Walker’s Mindset [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Q & A with Kemba Walker, Alex Oriakhi and Jeremy Lamb [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Jim Calhoun On Respecting UConn Players Other Than Kemba Walker [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

UConn gets ready for familiar foe [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

T-Shirt Produced In Honor Of Historic Championship [UConnHuskies.com]

Calhoun, Cronin mend fences over Walker snub [CT Post]

UConn men’s notebook: Kemba could have been a Bearcat [CT Post]

Back To The Big East As UConn Plays Cincinnati [Hartford Courant]

Kemba Making Most Of His Final Games At UConn [Hartford Courant]

Oriakhi a key against Cincinnati [New Haven Register]

Calhoun, Cronin speak, clear air on Walker issue [New Haven Register]

One Big East rep will head West [The Day]

Huskies’ Oriakhi a key player this time around [The Day]

2011 NCAA Bearcats-Huskies [Dana O’Neil – ESPN.com]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Purdue’s Howard remembers Maya Moore well [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

President Obama Picks Huskies to Win Third-Straight National Title [UConnHuskies.com]

Hartford First Obstacle In UConn Women’s Path [Hartford Courant]

Buck hopes to join UConn for NCAA tournament [Norwich Bulletin]

The Next Lisa Leslie [FOXSportsWest.com]

Stanford out to show its game is not soft [San Jose Mercury News]

Other UConn related links

Baseball. Huskies Fall to Rhode Island 18-3 [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Huskies Fall To RIT In AHA Semifinal, 4-2 [UConnHuskies.com]

Connecticut Whale 1, Manchester Monarchs 0

Manchester, NH, March 18, 2011 – Dov Grumet-Morris made 25 saves for his first Connecticut Whale shutout, and Kris Newbury’s third-period goal was the only scoring in the game, in a 1-0 Whale win over the first-place Manchester Monarchs Friday night at the Verizon Wireless Arena.

CT WhaleThe victory, combined with the Worcester Sharks’ 4-1 loss in Providence, moved the Whale (34-26-2-6, 76 pts.) back into sole possession of third place in the Atlantic Division, two points ahead of the Sharks.  It was also only the Whale’s second win in their eight-game season series with the Monarchs (2-5-0-1)

The first period was evenly played, with the shots 10-9 in favor of the Whale, but Manchester goaltender Jeff Zatkoff (32 saves) was forced to shine in the second.

The Whale had 16 shots to the Monarchs eight in the second frame but were unable to solve Zatkoff, who did particularly strong work on a pair of Connecticut power plays.

Connecticut finally broke the scoreless tie at 2:47 of the third session, with Newbury getting his 15th goal of the season and his sixth in the last seven games.

Newbury led a breakout from the Whale zone, then moved to the left-wing side of the slot in the Manchester end, where he took a pass from Brodie Dupont and fired a shot that Zatkoff got a piece of with his left arm but could not stop.

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The goal extended a point streak for Newbury, the Whale’s leading point-scorer (15-38-53 in 58 games), to seven straight games (6-5-11).

The Whale start a stretch of five straight home games Saturday night at the XL Center against the Providence Bruins at 7:00 PM.  Saturday will also feature the first annual “Guns and Hoses Cup”, as police and fire department personnel from numerous different Connecticut localities battle it out before the Whale-Bruins game.  The police-fire game faces off at 4:30, and tickets can be purchased at CTHeroescup.com for $20, with half of that going to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Association.  Tickets for the benefit game are also good for the Whale-Bruins game, and Whale season seat-holders can receive free admission to the police-fire game by presenting their season ticket at the gate.

Connecticut Whale 1 at Manchester Monarchs 0
Friday, March 18, 2011 – Verizon Wireless Arena

Connecticut 0 0 1 – 1
Manchester 0 0 0 – 0

1st Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Muzzin Mch (roughing), 3:58; Mitchell Ct (roughing), 17:13; Muzzin Mch (roughing), 17:13; Kolomatis Mch (hooking), 18:29.

2nd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Zeiler Mch (tripping), 3:45; Soryal Ct (roughing), 7:56; Elkins Mch (tripping), 10:27.

3rd Period-1, Connecticut, Newbury 15 (Dupont, Weise), 2:47. Penalties-Bickel Ct (fighting), 7:05; Johnson Mch (fighting), 7:05.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 10-16-7-33. Manchester 9-8-8-25.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 0 / 4; Manchester 0 / 1.
Goalies-Connecticut, Grumet-Morris 8-3-1 (25 shots-25 saves). Manchester, Zatkoff 18-13-5 (33 shots-32 saves).
A-7,490
Referees-Ghislain Hebert (49).
Linesmen-Landon Bathe (80), Joe Andrews (32).

Red Sox News From the Fort – 3/18

Despite the struggles of Jonathan Papelbon on Thursday, the Boston Red Sox held on to beat the New York Mets 8-5. Today, they will split their squad and take on the Detroit Tigers at City of Palms Park at 1:05 p.m.. The other squad will head to Port Charlotte tonight to take on the Tampa Bay Rays at 7:05 p.m.

Here are today’s lineups for the game against the Tigers:

Detroit Tigers

Red Sox logo

1. Austin Jackson 
CF 1. Marco Scutaro SS
2. Will Rhymes 2B 2. Dustin Pedroia 2B
3. Clete Thomas
RF 3. Adrian Gonzalez
1B
4. Brennan Boesch
LF 4. Kevin Youkilis 3B
5. Ryan Raburn DH 5. David Ortiz  DH
6. Jhonny Peralta SS 6. Jason Varitek C
7. Don Kelly 3B 7. Mike Cameron RF
8. Alex Avila C 8. Ryan Kalish CF
9. Scott Thorman 1B 9. Darnell McDonald LF
Max Scherzer SP Clay Buchholz SP

Also scheduled to pitch for the Red Sox: LHP Dennys Reyes, LHP Hideki Okajima, RHP Michael Bowden.

Also scheduled to pitch for the Tigers: RHP Robbie Weinhardt, RHP Alberto Alburquerque, LHP Brad Thomas, LHP Fu-Te Ni.

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

Here is the lineup the Red Sox will send to Port Charlotte tonight (I’ll have complete lineups in a later post):

1. Jacoby Ellsbury, CF
2. Carl Crawford, LF
3. J.D. Drew, RF
4. Jed Lowrie, SS
5. Daniel Nava, DH
6. Yamaico Navarro, 3B
7. Nate Spears, 2B
8. Drew Sutton, 1B
9. Mark Wagner, C
Tim Wakefield, SP

Also scheduled to pitch for the Red Sox: RHP Matt Fox, RHP Matt Albers, LHP Randy Williams.

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

Papelbon is still closing in [Boston Globe]

On second thought, Francona taps Lackey [Boston Globe]

John Lackey gets No. 2 start after Jon Lester [Boston Herald]

Red Sox rock the vote [Boston Herald]

Survey says [Boston Herald]

Tough decisions ahead on bullpen spots [ESPN Boston]

Tito: No plans to match catchers, pitchers [ESPN Boston]

Morning notes from Red Sox camp [Extra Bases]

Predict the season series contest [Extra Bases]

Wakefield among ‘interesting’ bullpen decisions for Red Sox? [Extra Bases]

Encouraging step forward for Doubront [Extra Bases]

Why Jarrod Saltalamacchia has entered the world of Twitter [Full Count]

‘Interesting decisions’ to make on Tim Wakefield and the Red Sox bullpen [Full Count]

Terry Francona Says Newly Crafted Rotation Gives Red Sox Opportunity to ‘Win More Games’ [NESN.com]

Jerry Remy Proves He’s No Cyber Expert While Appearing in Heidi Watney’s Video Diary [NESN.com]

Red Sox’ Bullpen in Infinitely Better Shape Than Last Year’s, But Terry Francona Facing ‘Tough Decisions’ [NESN.com]

A platoon behind the plate? [Projo Sox Blog]

Any room for Wakefield? [Projo Sox Blog]

To Francona, it’s spring training, not spring tryouts [Projo Sox Blog]

Red Sox Journal: Boston trims roster, Iglesias, Anderson heading to PawSox [Projo Sox Blog]

Beckett and Papelbon now float in uncertainty [Tony Massarotti – Boston Globe]

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 – 3/18

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

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Auriemma a Naismith Coach of the Year finalist [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Brianna Banks named Miss Georgia Basketball [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Ann Strother: Fashion Model (I Am Not Kidding) [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Mosqueda-Lewis Is Gatorade Player Of The Year [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Depth Helps UHart’s Rizzotti Stress Defense [Hartford Courant]

Auriemma laments expectations [Norwich Bulletin]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

UConn Avoids Being a Louisville [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Roscoe Eyes a Tourney Run [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Calhoun’s Cincinnati Bungle? [David Borges – New Haven Register]

UConn 81, Bucknell 52: the ugly wrap [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

Post-Bucknell game breakdown, video [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

Roscoe Smith: Career-High 17 Points Vs. Bucknell [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Kemba Walker Near A Triple Double [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Career Victory No. 850 For Jim Calhoun [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

A Closer Look At Kemba Walker’s Success [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

UConn handles Bucknell with ease [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Cronin talks Connecticut [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Taking Care of Business [UConn Huskies Basketball]

UConn rolls past Bucknell in NCAA tournament opener [CT Post]

With Walker leading, UConn came, saw, conquered [CT Post]

Calhoun elevates Kemba’s name among Huskies’ greatest [CT Post]

UConn Routs Bucknell In NCAA Opener; Cincinnati Next [Hartford Courant]

Notebook: Smith’s Shooting Eye Doesn’t Suffer [Hartford Courant]

Huskies start NCAA tournament fresh with rout of Bucknell [New Haven Register]

Huskies answer the challenge [The Day]

UConn-Cincinnati: A Big East reunion in NCAA tourney [The Day]

Delivery man: Walker, with 12 assists, gets everyone involved as UConn rolls [The Day]

Huskies look ready for a run [FOXSports.com]

UConn Football links

Who missed out on the Top 25 list? [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

Pasqualoni On Looking At Everyone; Defensive Strategy [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Other UConn related links

W. Lacrosse. Huskies Open BIG EAST Play Against Rutgers [UConnHuskies.com]

Baseball. Huskies to Play Three Games in Mount Pleasant, S.C. [UConnHuskies.com]

Softball. Huelsenbeck Grand Slam Leads UConn Over Fairfield, 12-0 [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Cole Schneider Named All-Rookie [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn Men Can’t Escape Big East; Face Cincinnati on Saturday

 

When the brackets came out on Sunday for the 2011 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, I was taken aback by the fact that the UConn Huskies could face the Cincinnati Bearcats in the second third round of the tournament.

UConn Huskies vs Cincinnati Bearcats

Was the selection committee just being cruel to UConn because of the NCAA sanctions or was that how the cookies crumbled when they were choosing the brackets? After all, the Big East did get 11 teams into the tournament but I didn’t figure any of them would play each other until at least the Sweet 16

Nonetheless, UConn still needed to win against Bucknell, which they did and the Bearcats needed to win against Missouri, which they did also.

So now, the Huskies will get to face a familiar Big East foe in the Bearcats on Saturday night at the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C. The game is scheduled to start at approximately 9:40 p.m. and will be televised nationally on TBS. Winner goes to the Sweet 16 in Anaheim, CA where they’ll face the winner of San Diego State and Temple.

In case you were wondering, UConn beat Cincinnati 67-59 back in late February in Cincy.