Video: Highlights of UConn’s 75-57 Win Over Providence

Here are the highlights of the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team’s 75-57 win over the Providence Friars on Sunday night at Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, CT.

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Whale Notebook – 2/13

By Bruce Berlet

WHALE BACK IN ACTION FRIDAY NIGHT IN ADIRONDACK

After four days off, the Whale will make a second trip to Glen Falls, N.Y., and try to complete a four-game sweep of the Adirondack Phantoms on Friday night before a bus ride home for the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl against the Bruins on Saturday at 7 p.m. at Rentschler Field in East Hartford in the second outdoor game in AHL history.

CT WhaleThe Phantoms (17-30-3-3), a 4-3 overtime loser to Binghamton on Sunday, have lost 3-0, 4-3 and 6-4 to the Whale but have improved dramatically since a horrific 4-26-1-1 start before their first back-to-back wins Dec. 17-18. They’re led by All-Star defenseman Erik Gustafsson (five goals, 27 assists), veteran left wing Denis Hamel (team-leading 17 goals, 14 assists), defenseman Danny Syvret (6, 17), left wing Michael Ryan (15, 6) and right wing Ben Holmstrom (8, 13). Much of the Phantoms’ improvement can be traced to the arrival of goalie Michael Leighton (4-6-1-1, 2.37 goals-against average, .918 save percentage), who led the parent Philadelphia Flyers to the Stanley Cup finals in June but was back in the minors after he cleared waivers on Jan. 3, as the Flyers went with Brian Boucher. Meanwhile, the Chicago Blackhawks didn’t re-sign goalie Antti Niemi because of salary-cap problems. Niemi signed with the San Jose Sharks.

The Whale is at Portland on Feb. 21 at 1 p.m. and then will play their first two games in Charlotte, N.C., against the Checkers, their former ECHL affiliate, on Feb. 24 and 26. They finally return to the XL Center on March 2 to face Springfield. Their ensuing home game is March 11 against Hershey, ending a brutal stretch of 10 road games in 12. … Free agent forward Jason Williams, released from his professional tryout contract with the Whale on Friday, signed a two-way contract with the Dallas Stars on Saturday night. Williams, 30, had four goals and five assists and was a team-worst minus-13 in 17 games with Whale while still recovering from offseason groin and abdominal surgeries. Williams, part of a Stanley Cup championship with Detroit in 2002, played 44 games for the Red Wings last season. His contract is for $500,000 in the NHL and $105,000 in the minors. He made his Stars debut Sunday in a 2-1 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets. Williams has 91 goals and 129 assists in 420 NHL games.

“Jason Williams has won a Stanley Cup and brings veteran experience to our club,” Stars general manager Joe Nieuwendyk said. “He has the versatility to play any forward position and gives us another right-handed shot. We’re pleased that we could add him to our team.”

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The Manitoba Moose retired former captain Mike Keane’s No. 12 in a ceremony before they beat the San Antonio Rampage 5-0 on Saturday night. In five seasons with the Moose, the native of Winnipeg, Manitoba, had 36 goals and 78 assists in 365 games. He also had eight goals and 12 assists in 59 Calder Cup playoff games.

In 2007, Keane was the recipient of the AHL’s Fred T. Hunt Award for sportsmanship, determination and dedication to the game of hockey. Keane was also selected the captain of the Canadian team at the 2007 Reebok Hockey AHL All-Star Classic in Toronto and helped the Moose reach the Calder Cup finals in 2009.

In his previous 22 seasons of pro hockey, Keane won three Stanley Cups (Montreal 1993, Colorado 1996, Dallas 1999) and had 168 goals and 470 points in 1,161 NHL games with Montreal, Colorado, Dallas, the New York Rangers, St. Louis and Vancouver.

Keane also received the Order of the Buffalo Hunt from the Province of Manitoba, the highest honor the province can bestow on an individual who has demonstrated outstanding skills in the area of leadership, service and community commitment. He also received a commissioned, one-of-a-kind graphic painting, illustrated by sports artist Steve Dittberner, from True North Sports & Entertainment, as well as a trip for two to Los Angeles, airfare included, and a pair of rounds at Pebble Beach golf course from the Manitoba Moose players.

WHALE BOWL TO BREAK AHL ATTENDANCE RECORD

More than 22,500 tickets have been sold for Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl, the highlight of the Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 at Rentschler Field, assuring the Whale will break the AHL attendance record. A record 21,508 watched the host Syracuse Crunch beat the Binghamton Senators 2-1 at the New York State Fairgrounds on Feb. 20, 2010.

“It’s a great tribute to the people of the state of Connecticut, but we have to get 38,000 because we want to sell the place out,” said Howard Baldwin Jr., president and COO of Whalers Sports and Entertainment, which runs the Whale’s business operations and is handling the 12-day event. “Everyone else, the NHL, college and AHL, has sold out, and if Connecticut wants to be back on the (hockey) map again, which I know it does, everybody needs to come out and celebrate this.”

Before Whale Bowl is played, “Trinity-Wesleyan Day” is on Tuesday as the schools’ women’s teams play at 4 p.m., their alumni teams at 6:30 p.m. and the men’s teams at 8 p.m. High school and prep school games fill most of the schedule the remainder of the week until the Whale Bowl, at which about a dozen celebrities will mix in with the Hartford Whalers legends team and Boston Bruins legends team as they face off at 4 p.m., followed by the Whale-Providence Bruins at 7 p.m. The day’s activities begin with the Army-American International College game at 1 p.m. All tickets for the event are general admission except for Feb. 19.

Hall of Fame defensemen Brian Leetch, a Cheshire native, and Brad Park headline the Bruins legends team. Other commitments are Enfield native Craig Janney, former captain Rick Middleton, Reggie Lemelin, Ken Hodge, Don Marcotte, Rick Smith, Bob Sweeney, Lyndon Byers, Cleon Daskalakis, Jay Miller, Bob Miller (no relation) and Ken “The Rat” Linseman, a member of the Whalers for a few moments as he passed through in a multi-player trade with Philadelphia and Edmonton that included Mark Howe leaving Hartford for the Flyers. Derek Sanderson and Gary Doak will coach the Bruins team.

Commitments for the Whalers team are WHA Hall of Famer Andre Lacroix, John McKenzie, whose No. 19 is retired in the XL Center rafters, Blaine Stoughton, Pat Verbeek, John Anderson, Garry Swain, Bob Crawford, Chris Kotsopoulos, Jim Dorey, Jordy Douglas, Ray Neufeld, Gordie Roberts, Darren Turcotte, Nelson Emerson, Mark Janssens, Bill Bennett, Jeff Brubaker, Fred O’Donnell, Terry Yake, Scott Daniels, Ed Hospodar, Yvon Corriveau and the Babych brothers, Dave and Wayne.  Norm Barnes and former captain Russ Anderson will be among the coaches.

Among the celebrities scheduled to play with one of the legends teams are filmmaker Bobby Farrelly, writer/director of such hit films as “Dumb and Dumber”, “There’s Something About Mary”, “Kingpin”, “Me, Myself and Irene”, “Outside Providence”, “The Heartbreak Kid”, “Stuck on You”, and “Shallow Hal”; and actor David Henrie, from “Wizards of Waverly Place” and “That’s So Raven”.

Famed former NHL referee Paul Stewart will officiate the game. Stewart, a Boston native, refereed more than 1,000 NHL games in a 13-year career. On March 15, 2003, he refereed his 1,000th game, becoming the only American-born official to accomplish the feat. He also officiated during the Canada Cup in 1987 and 1991 after an eight-year playing career with teams in the NAHL, AHL, NEHL, CHL, WHA and NHL.

Tickets ($20 to $85) for the doubleheader can be purchased at Ticketmaster.com and the Bushnell box office in Hartford on Monday through Friday from noon to 5 p.m. or by calling the Whale at 860-728-3366. They also can be purchased online and printed immediately at Ticketmaster.com.

The official charity of the Hockey Fest is “Sam’s Race for a Place,” a fund-raising effort spearheaded by West Hartford resident Samantha Udolf that benefits the Ronald McDonald House. Since Udolf, a successful competitive skier, founded Sam’s Race for a Place in June of 2008, it has generated donations of more than $43,500.

The Ronald McDonald House is a non-profit charity operating since 1991 that helps hundreds of families and children enjoy the comforts of home while they await treatment at area medical facilities. Udolf became familiar with Ronald McDonald House and its good works while volunteering there, and she conceived Sam’s Race for a Place after learning it is independently-funded and depends on grass-roots campaigns for nearly all of its support.

For more information about Sam’s Race for a Place, visit www.samsraceforaplace.com. Donations also can be made through that web address. Besides the games, the Hockey Fest will include “Whale Town” featuring exhibitors, games and the Whalers Mobile Hall of Fame.

A complete schedule of games can be found at www.ctwhale.com. There will be a free public skate on Feb. 22 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. to thank the sponsors and fans who supported the event.

THREE WHALE PLAYERS AMONG PROSPECTS TRADING CARDS

Two Whale players, goalie Chad Johnson and forward Evgeny Grachev, and former Whale defenseman Ryan McDonagh, now on recall to the Rangers, are in the 150-card Heroes and Prospects trading card set by In the Game.

The three have all played with the Rangers, though Johnson’s five-game stint was last season. They are pictured on those cards in the uniform of the Hartford Wolf Pack, who were rebranded as the Connecticut Whale on Nov. 27.

In the Game has been making its Heroes and Prospects hockey set for several years, and it’s become a must-have for many hockey fans. This year’s 150-card set includes seven Hockey Hero cards, three international prospects, 90 Canadian major junior hockey league players and 50 AHL players. Many of the players have already been drafted, while others are expected to be early picks in upcoming NHL drafts.

There are a lot of memorabilia, autograph, jersey, game-used emblem and AHL 75th Anniversary cards, including the one of AHL Hall of Famer John Paddock, who coached the Wolf Pack to their only Calder Cup title in his first of three seasons, 1999-2000.

Other notable player cards are Logan Couture and Alex Stalock (San Jose-Worcester), P.K. Subban (Montreal Canadiens-Hamilton Bulldogs), Tyler Ennis (Buffalo Sabres-Portland Pirates), John Carlson (Washington Capitals-Hershey Bears), John Moore (Columbus Blue Jackets-Springfield Falcons), Blake Geoffrion (Nashville Predators-Milwaukee Admirals), Jared Staal (Carolina Hurricanes-Charlotte Checkers) and Linus Omark (Edmonton Oilers-Oklahoma City Barons), as well as Calder Cup champion cards Alexandre Giroux, Chris Bourque, Keith Aucoin, Andrew Gordon and Mathieu Perreault; non-memorabilia insert cards such as Taylor Hall, Cam Fowler and Eric Wellwood; and 75th Anniversary cards Billy Smith, Brett Hull, Bruce Boudreau, Doug Harvey, Eddie Shore, Emile Francis, Gerry Cheevers, John Slaney, Carey Price, Jason Spezza, Larry Robinson, Les Cunningham, Martin Brodeur, Milt Schmidt, Patrick Roy, Pelle Lindbergh, Terry Sawchuk, Mitch Lamoureux, Willie Marshall and Zdeno Chara.

The card sets cost $94.99 and are available at www.theahl.com. All-Star Game jerseys and merchandise are also available.

Coombs-McDaniel, Walker Lead UConn Past Friars

Jamal Coombs-McDaniel signals after dropping a three point shot in UConn's 75-57 win over Providence. Coombs-McDaniel ended with a team high 25-points.

With a tough stretch of games coming up against the likes of Georgetown, Louisville and Marquette coupled with losing three of their past four games, the UConn Huskies men’s basketball team really needed to pick up a win on Sunday night against the Providence Friars. And for the first half and early part of the second half it didn’t look like the Huskies were going to get it done.

But a big night from Jamal Coombs-McDaniel, who had a career-high 25 points, helped the Huskies to a 75-57 win in front of a sold-out crowd at Gampel Pavilion.

With the win, UConn improves to 19-5 (7-5, Big East). The Friars fall to 14-11 and 3-9 in the Big East. By the way, UConn was 18-16 last year.

Kadeem Batts (L) loses control of a UConn rebound under pressure from Charles Okwandu during the first half of UConn's 75-57 win.If it weren’t for Coombs-McDaniel’s 12 points in the first half, this game could have a much different outcome. He was 10-of-17 from the floor and also pulled down eight rebounds. Kemba Walker looks to be out of his funk as he had 22 points on 7-of-10 shooting and added seven assists. Charles Okwandu was also a big factor as he played 25 minutes and had six points, 11 rebounds and four blocked shots.

The Big East’s leading scorer Marshon Brooks had 25 points but had a poor shooting night as he was just 7-of-22 from the floor including 1-of-8 from three-point land. Brooks also added a team-high seven rebounds. Bryce Cotton was the only other member of the Friars in double-digits with 10 points. Vincent Council didn’t have any points but had a game-high nine assists.

The Huskies fell behind 9-4 out of the gates but a Jeremy Lamb dunk and Kemba Walker three-pointer knotted the game back up at 9. Cotton then nailed a three to put the Friars back out front. UConn would get it done to two points a few times during the next three minutes or so.

With Providence holding an 18-16 lead, they scored the next four points to open up a six point lead to silence the crowd at Gampel.  UConn battled back though with a 6-1 run to cut the lead to one point at 23-22. After a Brooks free throw, Napier tied the game up with a layup. Four straight points by the Friars opened their lead back up to four before UConn started to cut into it with Coombs-McDaniel scoring six of the final seven points during a 7-0 run to close out the first half.

The first five minutes and sixteen seconds of the second half saw the score stay close. But with the game tied at 41-all, the Huskies went on a 9-0 run. Providence would then score the next four points before the Huskies responded with five straight of their own. The Friars would eventually get the game down to seven points at 60-53 but UConn would close out the game on a 15-4 run to put it away.

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With the way that he played on Sunday night, Coombs-McDaniel will probably find himself on the court a little more. It was also nice to see Walker get going again. He was at his best tonight when he had the ball in his hands. When he didn’t, he was able to get some better screens.

And I can’t say enough about the play of Okwandu. With Alex Oriakhi in a funk of his own right now, Okwandu’s play was huge. His presence in the middle made a big difference. 

Overall, I thought UConn was at its best when they played with three guards on the floor. Going a little smaller allowed them to play a little more uptempo and keep the Friars off balance.

The Huskies are back in action on Wednesday night when they’ll host the Georgetown Hoyas at the xL Center in Hartford, CT. Game time is scheduled for 7 p.m. and the game will be televised locally here in Connecticut on SNY.

Notes and musings:

Providence Friars @ UConn Huskies 2.13.11 box score

Here are quotes from UConn head coach Jim Calhoun, Kemba Walker, Jamal Coombs-McDaniel, Donnell Beverly, Charles Okwandu and Providence head coach Keno Davis.

The starters for UConn were Kemba Walker, Jeremy Lamb, Roscoe Smith, Alex Oriakhi and Charles Okwandu.

The Friars were without freshman guard Gerard Coleman due to academic issues.

Coombs-McDaniel was only averaging 4.5 points a game and his previous career-high was 13 points before tonight’s 25 point outburst.

UConn shot 46.8% (29-62) from the floor while the Friars shot 33.3% (20-60).

The Huskies had 19 assists on their 29 made baskets.

UConn was 7-of-16 (43.8%) from three-point land. The Friars were 3-of-20 (15%).

The Huskies were 10-of-14 (71.4%) from the charity stripe.

UConn won the battle of the boards 42-35.

The Huskies outscored the Friars 34-26 in the paint and 18-4 on the fast break.

UConn had 15 points off of 11 Providence turnovers. The Friars had 14 points off of 11 Huskies turnovers.

Photo credits: Mark Mirko – Hartford Courant (No. 5, No. 11)

SOX & Dawgs has been nominated for “Best Red Sox Blog” at the New England Sports Blog Awards! Please take a few moments from your day to vote for SOX & Dawgs by heading over to Trufan.com. You are allowed to vote once a day. Thank you for your support not only in the voting but also to make the site what it is today.

Connecticut Whale 4, Providence Bruins 1

Providence, RI, February 13, 2011 – Special teams made the difference for the Connecticut Whale Sunday at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center Providence, as three second-period power-play goals carried the Whale to a 4-1 win over the Providence Bruins.

CT WhaleThe game was a preview of the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl, which matches the same two teams this Saturday, February 19, outdoors at Rentschler Field at 7:00 PM.

The Whale, helped by 21 saves from Dov Grumet-Morris, were five for five on the penalty kill in winning their second straight since a 9-2 pounding they absorbed Wednesday in Toronto.

Brodie Dupont, Kris Newbury and Jeremy Williams had a goal and an assist each in the win, and Wade Redden also scored.  The only one of 22 Bruin shots to beat Grumet-Morris was a late first-period penalty shot by Brian McGrattan.

With the win, the Whale (26-22-2-5, 59 pts.) moved past the idle Worcester Sharks and into third place in the Atlantic Division.  The victory was the Whale’s fourth in their last five road games, and handed the Bruins their sixth straight loss.

After the Whale killed a double-minor assessed to Ryan Garlock at 3:29 of the first period, Garlock came out of the penalty box and joined Kris Newbury on a two-on-one.  Garlock was able to find Newbury at the left side of the slot for a finish past the catching glove of Matt Dalton at 7:39.

That lead lasted until the 17:28 mark, when Jared Nightingale hooked McGrattan off the puck on a breakaway, causing McGrattan to be awarded a penalty shot.  McGrattan was able to convert, snapping a shot past Grumet-Morris’ glove side, for only McGrattan’s fourth goal in 35 AHL games on the year.

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The Whale power play took over in the second period though, scoring three times on four opportunities.

Dupont gave the Whale the lead for good with his 11th goal of the year, and second in as many games, at 3:15.  Dale Weise worked the puck out of the left-wing corner to Newbury on the right-wing boards.  Newbury whipped a hard pass toward the slot and Dupont, headed hard toward the net, deflected it past Dalton.

Then Connecticut would get a pair of goals 2:39 apart in the last 4:10 of the period.

Redden made it 3-1 at 15:50, with Matt Bartkowski in the penalty box for hooking.  Redden’s shot from the top of the left circle hit a Providence defender and deflected past Dalton.  And at 18:29, Williams increased his team-leading goal total to 24 on another Whale power play.  Chad Kolarik fed the puck from the right- wing boards to Williams at the top of the circles.  Sliding to his left, the right-handed-shooting Williams one-timed a hard drive that overpowered Dalton (four goals-against on 16 shots), who was replaced after that goal by Nolan Schaefer, who stopped all eight shots he faced.

Grumet-Morris (3-2-0) then fended off a pair of Providence power plays in the third period, which was scoreless, notching his second consecutive win and his third in his last four starts.

The Whale finished three for five on the power play and are now 12/28 in the season series against Providence.  Connecticut had lost the previous two games of the season series with the Bruins, after winning the first three, and are now 3-0-0 in Providence on the year, having outscored the Bruins by a total margin of 10-2 in those three games.

Connecticut Whale 4 at Providence Bruins 1
Sunday, February 13, 2011 – Dunkin’ Donuts Center

Connecticut 1 3 0 – 4
Providence 1 0 0 – 1

1st Period-1, Connecticut, Newbury 8 (Garlock, Dupont), 7:39. 2, Providence, McGrattan 4   17:28 (TXT_PS). Penalties-Garlock Ct (double minor – high-sticking), 3:29; Williams Ct (slashing), 10:05; McIver Pro (slashing), 10:05; Newbury Ct (fighting), 16:16; Cohen Pro (fighting), 16:16; Kolarik Ct (hooking), 19:06.

2nd Period-3, Connecticut, Dupont 11 (Newbury, Weise), 3:15 (PP). 4, Connecticut, Redden 4 (Williams), 15:50 (PP). 5, Connecticut, Williams 24 (Kolarik, Kundratek), 18:29 (PP). Penalties-Alexandrov Pro (high-sticking), 1:53; Bickel Ct (fighting), 3:40; LaVallee-Smotherman Pro (roughing, fighting), 3:40; Soryal Ct (fighting), 9:07; McIver Pro (fighting), 9:07; DiDiomete Ct (fighting), 14:54; Bartkowski Pro (hooking), 14:54; LaVallee-Smotherman Pro (fighting), 14:54; Ling Pro (tripping), 17:27.

3rd Period- No Scoring.Penalties-Kennedy Ct (hooking), 4:47; Kolarik Ct (slashing), 6:51; Bodnarchuk Pro (interference), 12:58; DiDiomete Ct (fighting), 16:01; Roussel Pro (fighting), 16:01.

Shots on Goal-Connecticut 4-14-6-24. Providence 8-6-8-22.
Power Play Opportunities-Connecticut 3 / 5; Providence 0 / 5.
Goalies-Connecticut, Grumet-Morris 2-2-0 (22 shots-21 saves). Providence, Dalton 7-7-0 (16 shots-12 saves); Schaefer 9-15-1 (8 shots-8 saves).
A-8,470
Referees-Terry Koharski (10), Chris Brown (86).
Linesmen-Todd Whittemore (70), Bob Paquette (18).

Video: Daniel Bard Is a Better Golfer Than Terry Francona

NESN has introduced a new feature during it’s Red Sox Live broadcasts called the Second Base Cup. Every Red Sox guest who appears on the show wil take three shots from behind the set to the second base bag.

With the first NESN Live taking place on Sunday night, the first two “golfers” were skipper Terry Francona and reliever Daniel Bard.

SOX & Dawgs has been nominated for “Best Red Sox Blog” at the New England Sports Blog Awards! Please take a few moments from your day to vote for SOX & Dawgs by heading over to Trufan.com. You are allowed to vote once a day. Thank you for your support not only in the voting but also to make the site what it is today.

Whale Sign Goaltender Pier-Olivier Pelletier to PTO

HARTFORD, February 13, 2011: Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the Whale has signed goaltender Pier-Olivier Pelletier to a Professional Tryout (PTO) agreement.

CT WhaleThis will by the second stint of the season with the Whale for Pelletier, who comes to Connecticut from the Laredo Bucks of the Central Hockey League. In an earlier turn with the Whale, Pelletier played 54 minutes of one game, his AHL debut, with the Whale. That was a 7-3 loss to the Hamilton Bulldogs January 21, in which Pelletier stopped 18 of the 22 shots he faced, including a penalty shot save.

In 22 CHL games with the Bucks, Pelletier, a 6-2, 200-pound second-year pro, carries a record of 6-10-4, with a 3.41 goals-against average, an 89.2% save percentage and one shutout.

A 23-year-old native of St-Louis-du-Ha!Ha!, Quebec, Pelletier was a second-round pick by the Phoenix Coyotes in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft out of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

The Whale defeated the Providence Bruins 4-1 in Providence today, in a preview of the historic Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl outdoor game between the two teams this Saturday, February 19 at Rentschler Field.

Tickets for that game are on sale now at www.ticketmaster.com. Tickets for the AHL game, which begins at 7:00 PM at Rentschler Field, also include the Hartford Whalers legends vs. Boston Bruins legends game at 4:00 PM that day. The February 19 Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl is the featured event of the two-week outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 spectacular that also showcases numerous collegiate, high school, prep school and youth hockey games. A full Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 schedule can be found at www.ctwhale.com. Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl ticket prices range from $20 to $85 and tickets can be purchased on-line via Ticketmaster, at the Bushnell box office from Monday through Friday, 12 noon-5:00 PM., or by calling the Connecticut Whale at 860-728-3366. Tickets purchased on-line can be printed immediately (via Ticketmaster).

“The Hanson Brothers” to Appear at Outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl February 19

Hanson Brothers

Hartford, CT … Whalers Sports and Entertainment announced today that “The Hanson Brothers” will bring their distinctive brand of hockey entertainment to the outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl February 19 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford. Their appearance is presented by Harvey and Lewis Opticians of Hartford.

Whale BowlIn addition to spreading laughs with their trademark comic zaniness, the Hansons will skate on the Whalers legends team in the Whalers legends vs. Boston Bruins legends game at the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl.

The Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl is the featured event of the two-week outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 spectacular at Rentschler Field that includes numerous collegiate, high school, prep school and youth hockey games. The legends game will face off at 4:00 PM on February 19 and will be followed by the outdoor AHL game between the Connecticut Whale and the Providence Bruins at 7:00 PM.

“When we created the concept for Whalers Hockey Fest a year ago, I immediately reached out to secure the Hanson brothers,” said WSE vice-president of business operations Mark Willand. “They are a prefect addition to our Legends game and they have a lot of surprises in store for Hartford hockey fans.”

The Hanson Brothers, Steve, Jeff and Dave, achieved legendary status as a result of the iconic 1977 film “Slap Shot”, of which their brawling, bespectacled characters were the comedic linchpins. The real-life hockey players behind the caricatures are brothers Steve and Jeff Carlson, and Dave Hanson.

Both Steve Carlson and Hanson spent time in Hartford with the WHA’s New England Whalers during their playing careers.

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Carlson played a total of 69 games with the Whalers between the 1976-77 and ’77-’78 seasons, scoring 10 goals and adding 16 assists for 26 points and registering 51 penalty minutes. The highlight of Carlson’s 11-year pro career was 52 NHL games with the Los Angeles Kings in 1979-80, and the Virginia, MN native also logged 173 total WHA games with the Whalers, Minnesota Fighting Saints and Edmonton Oilers.

Hanson, meanwhile, played one regular-season game and one playoff game for the 1976-77 Whalers, one of three WHA stops in a ten-year pro tenure. A native of Cumberland, WI, Hanson played 33 total NHL games with the Detroit Red Wings and Minnesota North Stars, and got into 103 WHA contests with the Whalers, Fighting Saints and Birmingham Bulls.

Jeff Carlson, Steve’s older sibling by two years, played nine years of pro hockey, mostly in the North American and International Hockey Leagues. Jeff did join Steve for seven games on the 1975-76 Fighting Saints squad.

Since going on the road and reprising the Hanson Brothers characters in 1994, the two Carlsons and Hanson have entertained millions of fans across North America, and generated over $12 million for various charities.

Tickets for the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl, which include admission to both the AHL game and the legends game, are on sale now at Ticketmaster.com, as well as at the Bushnell box office from Monday through Friday, 12 noon-5:00 PM. Ticket prices range from $20 to $85 and can also be purchased by calling the Connecticut Whale at 860-728-3366. Tickets purchased online can be printed immediately (via Ticketmaster).

Get Your Votes in For SOX & Dawgs As Best Red Sox Blog

TruFan

In case you hadn’t heard, we here at SOX & Dawgs have been nominated for “Best Red Sox Blog” in the New England Sports Blog Awards sponsored by Trufan.com and CSNE.com.

Voting goes through February 14th so please get your votes in. You are allowed to vote once per day so if you could, give us a vote today and then again tomorrow. We’d really appreciate it.

Thanks because without you the reader, the site wouldn’t be what it is today.

Video: Clay Buchholz On 2011 Expectations

During his session with the media on Saturday, Boston Red Sox starter Clay Buchholz talked about his expectations for the 2011 among other things as well.

SOX & Dawgs has been nominated for “Best Red Sox Blog” at the New England Sports Blog Awards! Please take a few moments from your day to vote for SOX & Dawgs by heading over to Trufan.com. You are allowed to vote once a day. Thank you for your support not only in the voting but also to make the site what it is today.