Williams Makes Most of First All-Star Opportunity

Hartford's Jeremy WIlliams scores on Charlotte's Mike Murphy during the Wolf Pack's hockey season opener against the Charlotte Checkers at the XL Center

By Bruce Berlet

CROMWELL, Conn. – Jeremy Williams’ first All-Star appearance this week provided several memorable moments, not the least of which was playing center for an extended period for the first time since learning to skate on the rink on his family farm in Glenavon, Saskatchewan, pop. 600.

“It was kind of odd,” said Williams, the Connecticut Whale right wing who played between Kyle Palmieri of the Syracuse Crunch and Eric Tangradi of the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. “We were joking around before the game that we were a dump-and-chase kind of energy line, which was fun. In our defensive zone, we had good stick work and eventually became the first line and got to start the second period.

“But I think they got mistaken with me playing center because sometimes when (Kris Newbury) and I play, I play low. But we had so many right wingers we had to move somebody, but that was OK. It was a good experience, especially having it be an honor because there are so many guys on the Whale who could have gone. It’s something that you want to share with your teammates.”

Williams shared All-Star Classic weekend with his fiancée and her parents, who drove to Hershey, Pa., from Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Williams promptly won a trophy in the accuracy shooting contest when he was the only competitor to hit all four targets in the corners of the net within eight shots.

“I was surprised because 4-for-8 usually wouldn’t win an accuracy shooting,” Williams said. “When I finished, I said, ‘No way I’m winning,’ but I guess the targets were smaller. They certainly got smaller every time you missed one, but it was nice to win.”

In a post-victory, on-ice television interview, Williams mentioned Newbury, a teammate now for a seventh consecutive season. Williams joked Newbury, a good passer who was reassigned to the Whale on Thursday from the parent New York Rangers, would take credit for all of Williams’ goals. Williams leads the Whale in goals (22) and points (40), though Newbury was the team’s leading scorer (35 points) when he was first called up by the Rangers.

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“I gave him more of a compliment than I should have,” Williams said with a smile. “It was between a compliment and a jab, but (Newbury) thought it was a funny. He sent me a message that said, ‘Thanks for pumping my tires on TV.’ ”

Williams said the skills competition was an especially good experience because the glass was down between the blue lines, allowing fans easy access to the players.

“It was really good for the fans who were hanging over (the boards) so you could sign autographs,” he said. “And obviously Hershey has a great fan base, and it was packed every night. Obviously the Hershey players got more cheers, but they were welcoming all the other players, aside from the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton players. They got some boos, but it was all in fun.”

Former Whale wing Alexandre Giroux of the Oklahoma City Barons (Western Conference) and Bridgeport Sound Tigers defenseman Mark Wotton (Eastern Conference) were captains and among the “outsiders” to receive especially loud receptions after playing several seasons with the Bears.

Williams also won’t ever forget Western Conference forward Linus Klasen’s highlight reel moment in the breakaway relay as the Milwaukee Admirals’ top scorer (20 goals, 19 assists) skated left inside the blue line, completed a 360-degree spin with the puck and beat Manchester Monarchs goalie Martin Jones between the legs.

“I saw it made the Top 10 somewhere, but I’m not sure if it was on ESPN, too,” Williams said.

In the All-Star Game the next night, Williams demonstrated his accuracy again, firing a close-in shot just under the crossbar to help the Eastern Conference rally for an 11-10 victory, only the third time in history that both teams reached double digits in goals. He also had the primary assist on the first of two goals by the Penguins’ Robert Bortuzzo.

“We had a little incentive to win the game and got a little prize,” said Williams, who wouldn’t divulge his “bonus”. “The losers got nothing, went away empty handed.”

Williams and the rest of the Whale players resumed practice Thursday at Champions Skating Center after a players-only optional skate Wednesday at Trinity College in Hartford. Coach Ken Gernander said he hadn’t left his team with any special message after Derek Whitmore’s power-play goal with 7.5 seconds left gave the Portland Pirates a 3-2 victory Saturday night, the Whale’s third consecutive loss on a four-game homestand that ends Friday night at the XL Center against the Sound Tigers.

How about any message heading into the final 31 games of the regular season?

“No, we were just getting ready for tomorrow’s game,” Gernander said. “We wanted to get them out there sweating, getting pucks moving, get everything back in order. It wasn’t a maintenance day as much as it was getting them as close to game-ready as we could.”

After being down as many 10 players because of injuries and recalls, the Whale are now missing only forward Mats Zuccarello and defensemen Ryan McDonagh and Michael Del Zotto, who are with the Rangers, and injured goalie Cameron Talbot (high ankle sprain), center Todd White (concussion) and wing Chris McKelvie (foot surgery), who was hurt while on recall from Greenville of the ECHL.

Newbury, the Whale’s second-leading scorer (five goals, 31 assists) despite missing six games while in New York, was reassigned as Vinny Prospal made his season debut against the New Jersey Devils after missing the Rangers’ first 51 games following knee surgeries in the offseason and October. Newbury had one assist in eight games with the Rangers and helped on face-offs and killing penalties. Wing Ruslan Fedotenko, already out with a shoulder injury, underwent an appendectomy Wednesday morning and will miss another 3-to-4 weeks instead of returning in two. Center Erik Christensen is due back next week.

The Whale (22-20-2-5) concludes a four-game homestand against another struggling team, the Sound Tigers (19-23-3-3). The last-second loss to the Pirates was the Whale’s third in a row overall, and fourth straight and sixth in seven starts at home after eight consecutive wins at the XL Center. It dropped the Whale into fourth place in the Atlantic Division, one point behind Worcester, which beat Providence 3-2, and they are only three points ahead of the Providence Bruins, who have two games in hand.

The Whale is 11-12-2-1 at home and 11-8-0-4 on the road but 4-1-0-1 in the GEICO Connecticut Cup against the Sound Tigers, capped by Chad Johnson’s 22-save shutout in a 4-0 victory at Bridgeport on Dec. 26. Behind Williams and Newbury in scoring are wing Chad Kolarik (17, 16) and center Tim Kennedy (9, 24).

The Sound Tigers arrive at the XL Center on a four-game losing streak that ended the worst calendar month in franchise history (1-9-2-1) and dropped them into the division cellar. Like the Whale, the Sound Tigers have had to battle through countless call-ups, including on Monday, when goalie Kevin Poulin and defensemen Ty Wishart and former Wolf Pack Dylan Reese were recalled by the parent New York Islanders. Poulin was the No. 3 star on Tuesday night after making 25 saves in a 4-1 victory over the Atlanta Thrashers as Kyle Okposo scored his first two goals in six games since returning from a shoulder injury that sidelined him until mid-January, and former Wolf Pack wing P.A. Parenteau had one goal and one assist.

Poulin and Reese returned to the Islanders after spending two games with the Sound Tigers during the NHL All-Star break. Reese had a goal in a 3-2 loss at Worcester last Friday, when Poulin made 45 saves. The Sound Tigers’ leading scorer is right wing Rhett Rakhshani, who has three of his 10 goals and two of his 24 assists against the Whale, is tied for first in rookie scoring and had a goal and three assists in the All-Star Game. Center Rob Hisey (7, 18) is second in scoring, and center David Ullstrom (6, 17) tied for third with Wishart (4, 19). Left wing Micheal Haley (12, 10) leads the team in goals. Rookie Mikko Koskinen (5-14-0, 3.67 goals-against average, .882 save percentage) has played the most games in goal for the Sound Tigers.

After the Sound Tigers game, the Whale will play a home-and-home set with Portland, Saturday at 7 p.m. in Maine and at 3 p.m. at the XL Center on Super Bowl Sunday. They have split their first four games, with both Whale wins coming on overtime goals, on Dec. 29 and 31, by Kennedy, a member of the AHL all-rookie team in 2008 while with the Pirates. The Pirates (29-14-4-1) have won five of six games to move within a point of Atlantic Division-leading Manchester.

The Pirates evened the season series with the Whale on Whitmore’s late goal, his third of the season against the Whale. David Leggio had 36 saves for his fourth consecutive victory and has allowed only two goals in two wins against the Whale. Wing Mark Mancari leads the league in goals (27) and is third in points (53). The Pirates have the AHL’s second-best home record (17-3-3-1, .792 percent). Marc-Andre Gragnani is tied for third in points among defensemen with 32 (eight goals, 24 goals) and has eight points in his last four games (one goal, seven assists). There will be 2,000 Whale headbands handed out at Sunday’s game sponsored by XFINITY of Comcast.

GOALIE FIGHT GETS ATTENTION OF WHALE PLAYERS

Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Brent Johnson’s one-punch knockdown of Islanders goalie Rick DiPietro with 16 seconds left in a 3-0 victory Wednesday night was topic of discussion in the Whale locker room Thursday.

“Nice left, eh!” backup goalie Pier-Olivier Pelletier said with a smile.

Yes, one left is all it took for the 6-foot-3, 196-pound Johnson to deck the 6-1, 200-pound DiPietro, who precipitated the fracas when he roamed out of his net (a common occurrence) to nudge Penguins’ agitator Matt Cooke as he skated near the crease. After DiPietro and Cooke went to the ice, Cooke was accosted by two Islanders, setting off a fight that eventually included the goalies. Fortunately for DiPietro, Johnson didn’t let go the right hand he had cocked as DiPietro lay on his back on the ice. Both were ejected, and All-Star Marc-Andre Fleury came in to finish off the shutout.

The fight was the lead item on nhl.com for much of Thursday, along with some classic fights involving goalies that often became the main event. The all-time classic was on Nov. 11, 2006, between the Bruins’ Byron Defoe and Washington Capitals’ Olaf Kolzig after Dafoe was the best man in Kolzig’s wedding earlier in the month. Despite the scrap, Dafoe returned the honor years later. Kolzig was the Eastern Conference honorary captain in the All-Star Game.

The DiPietro-Johnson fight elicited memories of five years ago for Pelletier when he fought Ilya Ejov of the St. John’s (Newfoundland) Fog Devils while playing with Drummondville in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

“It was on YouTube, but for some reason it’s not there anymore,” Pelletier said. “It was at the end of the game, and they were an expansion team that built a really, really tough team. We were winning 8-2, and they had a power play but the coach sent out all his tough guys. We were shorthanded, so I grabbed a player, and (Ejov) smashed his stick and said, ‘Let’s go, let’s go.’

“The (home) crowd was going crazy, so we just squared off. I was actually going to beat him because as we were going toward each other I had loosened my arm under my jersey so I had a free right hand. I was firing, and then the ref came in. When I was in juniors, I always had (a playful) scrap at the end of practice, so this was kind of fun.”

Chad Johnson said he saw Brent (no relation) Johnson’s quick KO but has never got in a fight. The closest he came was in juniors and at the end of the second period of the Whale’s 7-1 rout of the Sound Tigers on Nov. 7 when Nathan Lawson motioned toward Johnson as if he wanted to go.

“Obviously goalies don’t fight very often, so it’s a unique situation that’s pretty exciting for the fans,” Chad said. “You could see DiPietro kind of bump the guy (Cooke), and then skate towards the pile in corner. Then Brent Johnson, being the ole wily veteran that he is, took it into his own hands and went down there and chased him.

“Obviously DiPietro got caught a little off-guard, and Brent has long arms and definitely caught him on the jaw. When a guy goes down, it’s a dangerous situation. You could kind of see Johnson let up.”

HOWE, PROPP AND HANGSLEBEN VISITING

Former Hartford Whalers and 1986 NHL All-Stars Mark Howe and Brian Propp, and ex-Whaler Alan Hangsleben, will be at the XL Center on Friday night, when 3,000 fans will receive “Harvest-Propertries.com Whale Bowl” pucks. The trio will hold a private, “meet and greet” reception with Whale season ticket holders and “Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011” festival ticket purchasers before the game (4:30-6:30 p.m.) and then drop the ceremonial first puck. Hangsleben also will sign autographs in the XL Center atrium during the second intermission with selected Whale players.

Friday is the 25th anniversary of the 1986 NHL All-Star Game at the Hartford Civic Center. Howe and Propp were with the Philadelphia Flyers and played on the Wales Conference team that beat the Campbell Conference 4-3 in overtime. Propp, who finished his 15-year NHL career with the Whalers, scored the first Wales goal. It was one of four All-Star appearances for Howe, the son of hockey legend Gordie Howe who was at the XL Center last Friday night scouting for the Detroit Red Wings, a job he has held since retiring from the NHL and Red Wings in 1995.

Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m., the Grand Rink at the MGM Grand at Foxwoods will host a skate with Hangsleben and former Whalers Doug Roberts and Garry Swain, former Bruins Bob Miller and Tom Songin and Whale mascot Pucky. Fees are $10 for adults with a $5 skate rental, and $6 for children with a $2 skate rental. Hot beverages and photo opportunities are included, as well as the chance to win tickets to the Harvest-Properties.com Whale Bowl.

RENTSCHLER SNOW REMOVAL STARTS FRIDAY

The massive undertaking of removing snow from the seating areas at Rentschler Field in East Hartford in advance of the Feb. 11-23 Hockey Fest begins Friday. Volunteers from non-profit groups “Teen Challenge Connecticut,” “Teen Challenge Albany (N.Y.)” and “Teen Challenge New York” have been organized to do the snow removal as a fund-raiser for their organizations and will receive a fee for doing it.

Hall of Fame defensemen Brian Leetch, a Cheshire native, and Brad Park headline the Bruins legends team that will play the Whalers legends. Other Bruins commitments are Enfield native Craig Janney, former captain Rick Middleton, who played 12 seasons in Beantown and two with the Rangers, 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, who was 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 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 and the Babych brothers, Dave and Wayne. Emile “The Cat” Francis, a coach and general manager with the Rangers and Whalers, will be back behind the bench again, and Norm Barnes and former captain Russ Anderson will be assistant coaches.

Celebrities scheduled to play with one of the legends teams include Michael Keaton, Alan Thicke and David E. Kelley, son of New England and Hartford Whalers coach and general manager Jack Kelley and the writer of the 1999 hit film “Mystery, Alaska,” which was produced by Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and CEO Howard Baldwin and his wife, Karen. “Mystery, Alaska” cast members slated to appear are Michael Buie, Scott Richard Grimes, Jason Gray-Stanford and Cameron Bancroft, along with Neal McDonough, Kevin Zegers, Bobby Farrelly, David Henrie and the Hanson brothers – Steve, Jeff and Dave –  who were the comedic linchpins of the classic movie “Slap Shot.”

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 outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011 will include “Whale Town” featuring exhibitors, games and the Whalers Mobile Hall of Fame.

FOUR RECEIVE WEEKLY, MONTHLY AHL HONORS

Milwaukee Admirals center Blake Geoffrion was named Reebok/AHL Player of the Week after getting three goals and three assists in two wins for the West Division leaders. He had his biggest night as a pro last Friday night with two goals and three assists in an 8-1 victory over Peoria.

Geoffrion, who turned 23 on Thursday, is in his rookie season after four years at the University of Wisconsin, where he won the Hobey Baker Award as the top collegiate player in the nation as a senior in 2009-10. That’s also when he and Rangers center Derek Stepan and defenseman Ryan McDonagh led the Badgers to the NCAA title game, which they lost 5-0 to Boston College and Rangers top prospect Chris Kreider. Geoffrion, who has eight goals and 17 assists in his first 35 pro games, is the grandson of former AHL coach and Hockey Hall of Famer Bernie Geoffrion and the son of former AHL forward Dan Geoffrion.

… Mancari, Oklahoma City’s Teemu Hartikainen and Lake Erie’s John Grahame were named Reebok/AHL player, rookie and goaltender of the month for January.

In 15 games, Mancari had 13 goals, eight assists and was plus-10. He was held scoreless in the first and last games of the month but had a 13-game scoring streak in between, tying the longest run in the league this season. He had three consecutive three-point games Jan. 21-23 and became the first AHL player in nearly two years to notch back-to-back hat tricks on Jan. 22-23 against Providence and Worcester.

The Whale nominee was Grachev, who had nine goals and three assists in 11 games, including his first hat trick as a pro Jan. 22 against Springfield. Other nominees included former Wolf Pack center Corey Locke (Binghamton) and left wing Nigel Dawes (Chicago) and Sound Tigers left wing Justin DiBenedetto.

Hartikainen had four goals and 10 assists and was plus-8 in 15 games after starting the month with 18 points and being minus-9 in 35 games.  Other nominees included Ullstrom and Syracuse Crunch center Nick Bonino, a native of Unionville who attended Farmington High and Avon Old Farms.

Grahame, a 14-year veteran, was 10-3-0 with a 1.85 goals-against average, .925 save percentage and one shutout in 13 games as the Monsters climbed from seventh place to third in the North Division. He was the first goalie since John Curry in March, 2008 to win 10 games in a month, starting with a 30-save shutout of division-leading Hamilton on New Year’s Day. Winner of the Calder Cup with Providence in 1999 and the Stanley Cup with Tampa Bay in 2003, Grahame has appeared in 203 AHL games and 196 NHL games.

Other nominees included Talbot, who was 3-1-0-0 before being injured Jan. 16, and the Sound Tigers’ Joel Martin.

Photo credit: Bettina Hansen – Hartford Courant

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 2/3

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

ESPN The Magazine Honors UConn Associate Coach Chris Dailey [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

H.S. coach: Stewart is athletic, competitive, versatile … and can dunk [Vickie Fulkerson – The Day]

Road gets tougher for UConn women [Journal Inquirer]

Catching Up With Kiah Stokes [USABasketball.com]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Is Kemba Burned Out? [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Huskies drop second straight [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

UConn hits first losing streak [Gavin Keefe – The Day]

A Few Postgame Comments From UConn-Syracuse [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

The Cuse bounces back, hands UConn second straight L [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Video View: Postgame Following The Loss To Syracuse [Shawn Courchesne – Hartford Courant]

Derailed [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Syracuse breaks losing skid, deals UConn its second straight loss [CT Post]

UConn can’t solve zone in another ugly loss [CT Post]

UConn report card [CT Post]

Syracuse Defeats UConn, 66-58 [Hartford Courant]

Walker’s Production At Season Low [Hartford Courant]

Comparing Hartford To Syracuse With A Calhoun-Boeheim Twist [Hartford Courant]

Extras: Walker Struggles [Hartford Courant]

Desperate times [Journal Inquirer]

Boeheim, Syracuse snap skid against Huskies [New Haven Register]

Not enough understudies when Kemba Walker Show gets cold [New Haven Register]

Calhoun sees wasted opportunity [Norwich Bulletin]

UConn bottled up by the zone [The Day]

UConn notes: Lamb shines in loss [The Day]

UConn suffers crushing loss to Orange [The Republican-American]

Kemba can’t pull out of his slump [The Republican-American]

COY: The case for Jim Calhoun [Andy Katz – ESPN.com]

Junior Guard Leads the Huskies to a Surprising Season [The Minaret]

UConn Football links

Connecticut recruiting analysis [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

UConn Coach Paul Pasqualoni Off Podium [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Unofficial Visit For Casey Cochran [Desmond Conner- Hartford Courant]

Pasqualoni on the signing class [Ed Daigneault – The Republican-American]

Pasqualoni on the newest Huskies and other issues [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Pasqualoni likes new class of Huskies [CT Post]

Pasqualoni Pleased With UConn’s Incoming Class [Hartford Courant]

About 450 Attend UConn Signing Day Fanfest [Hartford Courant]

UConn Football In The Hunt For Masuk’s Casey Cochran [Hartford Courant]

Pasqualoni’s 1st recruiting class in the books [Journal Inquirer]

Pasqualoni holds onto most, adds 16 more [New Haven Register]

New staff keeps its promise [Norwich Bulletin]

Pasqualoni keeps most recruits on board [The Republican-American]

Foxx signs commitment to UConn [Lynchburg News and Advance]

Other UConn related links

2011 CBD Season Preview: Big East [College Baseball Daily]

M. Soccer. Ford Featured in NY State West Youth Soccer Article [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Ice Hockey. Huskies Set To Face Boston College And Northeastern [UConnHuskies.com]

Eye Contact Photo Blog: Traveling With UConn [Hartford Courant]

Red Sox Players Starting To Arrive in Ft. Myers

According to Peter Abraham of the Boston Globe, Jonathan Papelbon, Ryan Kalish, Jarrod Saltalamacchia, Daniel Nava and Lenny DiNardo are already in Ft. Myers working out at the Boston Red Sox Player Development Complex.

Boston Red SoxOf course the pitchers and catchers don’t have to report until February 13th but it’s always nice to see the players getting there early. What’s shocking to me is that Jon Lester isn’t there yet. He’s usually the first one to arrive.

Anyways, we’re getting ready for truck day soon here which usually signifies the beginning of spring here. But if you don’t live up here or are still hibernating, most places around here have four to five feet of snow on the ground and snow banks that are a high as the Green Monster.

So as you can see, spring training starting will hopefully help warm things up here in Red Sox Nation.

Rangers Return Kris Newbury to Whale

New York, February 3, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that forward Kris Newbury has been assigned to the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL).

Kris Newbury #45 of the New York Rangers during a preseason game against the New Jersey Devils at the Prudential Center on September 25, 2010 in Newark, New Jersey.Newbury, 28, has registered one assist and 35 penalty minutes in eight games with the Rangers this season.  He made his Rangers debut at Montreal on January 15, and recorded his first point as a Blueshirt with the primary assist on the game-tying goal in a 3-2 shootout win at Atlanta on January 22. He returns to Connecticut where he has registered five goals and 31 assists for 36 points, along with 91 penalty minutes in 43 games this season.  He is tied for sixth in the AHL in assists, and leads the Whale in assists, ranks second in points and fourth in penalty minutes.  Newbury has registered a team-high, 10 multi-point performances this season, including two separate streaks of three games with multiple points – November 13 vs. Springfield to November 19 at Springfield (six assists), and December 3 at Providence to December 11 vs. Manchester (one goal, six assists).  The 5-11, 213-pounder established a career-high with an eight-game assist streak from November 28 vs. Adirondack to December 17 vs. Worcester, recording three goals and 12 assists over the span.

The Brampton, Ontario native was originally San Jose’s fifth round pick, 139th overall, in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft.  He was acquired by the Rangers from Detroit in exchange for forward Jordan Owens on March 3, 2010.

Photo credit: Getty Images

Report: Lang, Aiken Done at UConn; Frey Could Be Next

According to Ed Daigneault of The Republican-American, safeties Mike Lang and Marcus Aiken will not be part of the 2011 UConn Huskies football team. Also, Daigneault said that running back Robbie Frey is considering transferring from UConn as well.

UConn's Robbie Frey is congratulated by Jonathan Jean-Louis after scoring a touchdown on a kickoff during the second half of the Fiesta Bowl at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Ariz.Safeties Mike Lang and Marcus Aiken, the former St. Paul Catholic High standout, will not return to the Huskies. Lang was an academic casualty this year and did not make the trip to the Fiesta Bowl. Aiken succumbed to academics before the 2010 season began and was dismissed from school with the possibility of applying for re-admission. That will not happen.

There are rumors that running back Robbie Frey is set to leave the Huskies, but that is not set in stone yet. Coach Paul Pasqualoni said he is in contact with Frey about his plans.

Lang played in 12 games during the 2010 season and 41 tackles along with two interceptions and a fumble recovery.

If Frey decides to transfer, it will be a big loss for Pasqualoni and the Huskies as he should be the No. 1 running back for the 2011 season with Jordan Todman heading to the NFL.

Frey missed some time with an injury during the 2010 season but did play in 11 games. Spelling Todman at running back, Frey rushed for 389 yards and four touchdowns on 75 carries.

He’s also a big part of the special teams as he averaged 31.4 yards on 13 kickoff returns, including a 95-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the loss to the Oklahoma Sooners in the Fiesta Bowl. He also had nine tackles.

Photo credit: Bettina Hansen – Hartford Courant

Belichick named AP NFL Coach of the Year

New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick looks on during the first half of the Bills' NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills in Orchard Park, N.Y. , Sunday, Dec. 26, 2010.

New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick has been named AP NFL Coach of the Year.  This is the third time Belichick has been honored as the AP NFL Coach of the Year. He also won it in 2003 and 2007.

Belichick led the team to a 14-2 season with one of the youngest teams of his 11-year tenure, while facing one of the NFL’s most difficult schedules. Also during the season, Belichick moved to 10th on the all-time wins list; he now has 176 wins.

Belichick started his head coaching career in Cleveland where he went 36-44 (1-1 in the post season) in five seasons before being fired.  In 2000, he was hired as the head coach of the Patriots and since then has compiled a regular season record of 125-50 while going 14-5 in the post season and winning three Super Bowls in four appearances.

Overall in his 16 seasons as a head coach, he is 176-100.

Photo credit: AP Photo

Theo’s Gamble With Felipe Lopez Doesn’t Pay Off

St. Louis Cardinals' Felipe Lopez watches his solo home run against the Chicago Cubs during the 11th inning of a baseball game Sunday, July 25, 2010, in Chicago.

Back when Boston Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein signed Felipe Lopez at the end of the 2010 season, he did so with the intention of getting an extra supplemental draft pick since Lopez was a Type-B free agent.

Unfortunately, Theo’s gamble of getting that extra draft pick isn’t going to work out as Felipe Lopez has signed a minor league deal with the Tampa Bay Rays. Since it’s a minor league deal, the Red Sox will not pick up an extra supplemental round pick. Had it been a big league deal, they would have.

Lopez hit .267 with one home run and one RBI in four games with the Red Sox in 2010. Before being released by the St. Louis Cardinals, he hit .231 with seven home runs, 38 RBIs and eight stolen bases in 109 games.

The Red Sox will still have four picks in the first round plus the supplemental round despite losing their draft pick (No. 24) when they signed Carl Crawford. They have the Detroit Tigers pick at No. 19 for losing Victor Martinez. They also picked up the No. 26 pick from the Texas Rangers when they signed Adrian Beltre. They also get the two supplemental picks for losing Martinez and Beltre since they were Type-A free agents.

While the extra early round draft pick would have nice, it’s definitely not going to hurt the Red Sox at all. You know Theo’s brain trust in the baseball operations department will get the best players available in this very deep 2011 MLB Draft class.

Photo credit: AP Photo

Red Sox Sign Four; Invite 20 To Spring Training

In just 11 days, the pitchers and catchers for the Boston Red Sox will be reporting to Ft. Myers, FL to begin spring training for the 2011 season. They will do so with 60 players in camp as they have invited 20 non-roster players to camp.

Boston Red SoxThey also announced the signings of four minor league free agents, Hector Luna, Tony Pena, Jr., Paul Hoover and Matt Fox. Those four players are among the 20 invited to camp.

Here’s the release from the Boston Red Sox:

BOSTON, MA-The Boston Red Sox today announced the signings of four free agents to 2011 minor league contracts, all with invites to Boston’s Major League Spring Training camp as non-roster players. The four free agents are right-handed pitchers Matt Fox and Tony Pena Jr., catcher Paul Hoover and infielder Hector Luna. All of the free agents have been placed on the Triple-A Pawtucket roster.

The club also announced that 20 players overall will attend the team’s Major League Spring Training camp as non-roster invitees.

The announcements were made by Executive Vice President/General Manager Theo Epstein.

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Fox, who was designated for assignment by the Red Sox on January 5 and released on January 13, tossed 1.2 innings of relief over three games with Boston last year (2 ER) after being claimed off waivers from Minnesota on September 9. The 28-year-old made his Major League debut with a start for the Twins on September 3 (2 ER/5.2 IP) after appearing in 35 games (21 starts) for Minnesota’s Triple-A Rochester affiliate, going 6-9 with a 3.95 ERA (54 ER/123.0 IP) and 104 strikeouts. A supplemental-round selection by the Twins in the 2004 First-Year Player Draft, Fox has a 35-28 record with three saves and a 3.71 ERA (223 ER/541.0 IP) in 145 career minor league games (80 starts).

Pena, 29, spent his first full season as a pitcher in 2010, splitting the year between San Francisco’s Double-A Richmond and Triple-A Fresno clubs. The right-hander combined to go 3-2 with six saves, a 4.13 ERA (35 ER/76.1 IP), 62 strikeouts and 29 walks over 53 relief appearances, including a 2.53 ERA (13 ER/46.1 IP) in 29 games with Richmond to earn a mid-season promotion to Triple-A. After the season, he pitched in 26 games with Aguilas Cibaenas of the Dominican Winter League, going 2-0 with a 2.78 ERA (7 ER/22.2 IP), and also threw 1.0 scoreless frame with Bravos de Margarita of the Venezuelan Winter League. Originally signed by Atlanta as an international free agent on July 21, 1999, Pena played primarily shortstop before converting to pitcher during the 2009 season. He made his Major League debut with the Braves in 2006 and hit .228 (189-for-829) with 32 doubles, eight triples, four home runs, 66 RBI and 95 runs in 327 career games over parts of four Big League seasons with Atlanta and Kansas City (2007-09). He tossed 1.0 scoreless inning with one strikeout in his only Big League pitching appearance with the Royals in 2008. A native of Santiago, Dominican Republic, Pena’s father Tony is a former Major League catcher who played for the Red Sox from 1990-93 and is currently the bench coach for the New York Yankees.

The 34-year-old Hoover appeared in nine games behind the plate with the Phillies in 2010, including six starts with the team going 5-1 in those contests. A right-handed hitter, he batted .227 (5-for-22) with two doubles, two RBI, six runs and three walks over his two stints with Philadelphia. He also appeared in 77 games with the Phillies Triple-A Lehigh Valley club, hitting .247 (63-for-255) with 13 doubles, three triples, two homers, 21 RBI, 23 runs and 26 walks. Hoover played 67 games at catcher with the IronPigs and eight at first base, throwing out 24 of 81 attempted base stealers while behind the plate (29.6 percent). Selected by Tampa Bay in the 23rd round of the 1997 First-Year Player Draft, Hoover has played 40 Major League games over parts of seven seasons with the Devil Rays (2001-02), Marlins (2006-08) and Phillies (2009-10), batting .250 (25-for-100) with eight RBI. He has made 36 career appearances at catcher (26 starts) and thrown out six base runners in 21 stolen base attempts (28.6).

Luna, who turned 31 yesterday, hit .294 (104-for-354) with 17 doubles, 16 home runs, 71 RBI, 55 runs scored and 42 walks in 97 games with Florida’s Triple-A New Orleans affiliate in 2010, including 83 games at third base and eight at first base. He earned Pacific Coast League mid-season All-Star honors and finished third among all Marlins minor leaguers in RBI and sixth in batting average. Luna also appeared in 27 games with Florida, primarily serving as a pinch-hitter but also making four appearances at third base and one at second base, going 4-for-29 (.138) with two home runs and four RBI overall at the plate. After the season, he batted .349 (60-for-172) with 17 doubles, four home runs, 28 RBI, 34 runs and 31 walks in 47 games with Aguilas Cibaenas of the Dominican Winter League. Born in Monte Cristi, Dominican Republic, Luna was signed by Cleveland as an international free agent on February 2, 1999. In 311 career Major League games over parts of six seasons with St. Louis (2004-06), Cleveland (2006), Toronto (2007-08) and Florida (2010), he has hit .265 (194-for-732) with 39 doubles, six triples, 13 home runs, 86 RBI, 99 runs scored and 23 stolen bases while making appearances at first base, second base, third base, shortstop and all three outfield positions. Luna also appeared in five postseason games with St. Louis in 2004-05 including as a pinch-hitter in Game 4 of the 2004 World Series against Boston (0-for-1).

The complete list of non-roster invitees includes left-handed pitchers Rich Hill, Andrew Miller and Randy Williams; right-handers Jason Bergmann, Brandon Duckworth, Fox, Pena, Jason Rice, Clevelan Santeliz, Kyle Weiland and Alex Wilson; catchers Tim Federowicz, Hoover and Ryan Lavarnway; infielders Brent Dlugach, Luna, Nate Spears and Drew Sutton; and outfielders Che-Hsuan Lin and Juan Carlos Linares.

Eleven of the 20 invitees have Major League experience, including Bergmann, Duckworth, Dlugach, Fox, Hill, Hoover, Luna, Miller, Pena, Sutton and Williams. Fox and Hill both saw action for the Red Sox in 2010.

Pitchers and catchers will participate in their first on-field workout in Fort Myers on Tuesday, February 15. The first full workout of the Red Sox Spring Training camp is on Saturday, February 19.

All workouts take place at Boston’s Player Development Complex, located at 4301 Edison Avenue. The team will move its spring operation to City of Palms Park when the games begin on Saturday, February 26

Pujols Could Land in Boston in 2012

St. Louis Cardinals' Albert Pujols yells at first base umpire Dan Bellino after Chicago Cubs' Kosuke Fukudome scored on a throwing error by St. Louis Cardinals catcher Bryan Anderson in the third inning during a baseball game in Chicago, Saturday, Sept. 25, 2010.

While the 2010-11 baseball hot stove season may not be closed out as of yet with still some big name but older free agents out there, it’s time to take a look at the possible big fish for 2012.  That would be one, Albert Pujols currently of the St. Louis Cardinals.

Pujols is on record of telling the Cardinals that he will not negotiate contract extension during the 2011 season as he just wants to concentrate on baseball.  He says if he is not signed by the start of spring training he will become a free agent at season’s end.  So in a little less than three weeks from now St. Louis fans could be preparing themselves to see Sir Albert walk away. 

Could the Cardinals really lose the best player in baseball?

It appears that St. Louis management has basically been given a drop dead date of February 18th.  It is rumored that Pujols wants Alex Rodriguez-type dollars.  A-Rod’s last deal signed after the 2007 season was for 10 years and $275 million plus different incentives based on his milestone numbers and awards that push the potential value of the deal well past $300 million if they are all achieved.  Insiders say that while the Cardinals brass and Albert and his reps have always gotten along word is that things may not be so cozy behind closed doors and chances are slim of the Cards getting an extension beyond February 18th.

So this leaves St. Louis with three options:

  1. Sign Pujols in the next few weeks and break the bank for the Player of the Decade.
  2. Look to trade him during the season before the deadline, hoping to get one good player and prospects in return.
  3. Ride the season out and see if you can hang with the big boys in the free agent market.

While most baseball “experts” and talking heads will try to tell you (they’ve already started by the way) that the Red Sox, Yankees and Phillies are already all set at first base and have no interest in Pujols, do not believe it.  You are not going to try to sneak the best player in the game by these three teams without them trying to at least kick the tires.

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Most people also forget that even though Pujols is a first baseman now, earlier in his career he was a jack of all trades.  When he first came to the majors in 2001 he played third base, left field, right field and DH in addition to first.  And he did this until he became the Cards everyday first baseman in 2004.  In fact in 20003 he played 113 games in left field to 62 at first base (I’m sure there were games where he played both positions at some time that’s why the numbers don’t add up).  He’s only 31, he is definitely not too old to play a corner outfield spot and get some DH time with an American League club.

With that in mind I fully expect the following to happen if Pujols gets to free agency after the 2011 season:

  1. Philadelphia will look at him but after sinking all that money into the rotation, Howard, Utley and Rollins there’s no way they’ll pay Pujols $30 million a year.  I don’t think they can over extend themselves that much but they will be in on the bidding, just to drive up the final numbers.
  2. New York, the Yankees not the Mets, will be in on this.  Who would you rather have Nick Swisher patrolling right field or Albert Pujols?  Do you want an aging Jorge Posada as your DH or Pujols?  Hank and Hal have already proved to have the crazy Steinbrenner gene.  They, not GM Brian Cashman, gave ARod that contract that’s killing them; they also gave the go ahead to sign Raphael Soriano when Cashman didn’t want to lose the draft pick.  They will be in the bidding long and hard especially after the Cliff Lee embarrassment.  On one side will be Hank and Hal wearing their spinning propelling beanies, sucking on giant lollipops looking to spend their inheritance on the newest shiny toy.  While Cashman sits across the table preaching patience and talking up the growing farm system.  It will once again be ugly for the Yankee family; it will once again make it to the press and this time no matter how it end’s it will send Cashman running from the Bronx.
  3. Boston will bid on Pujols. Theo and the Trio much like the Phils and Yanks will not this one pass regardless of how well put they seem to be. But unlike the other two teams talks will be quiet and secret making Sox fans and Boston media want to scream for lack of news.  It’s how Theo operates.  Covertly, discreetly in the dark shadows and amongst the bodies of the teams who have failed. There are two teams out there who can pay Pujols $30 a year or more.  They are the Yankees and the Red Sox.  But the difference between them is that Boston while still being loaded is clearing a whopping $61 million off the payroll from 2011.  Gone are the big contracts of David Ortiz, Jonathan Papelbon, J.D. Drew, Mike Cameron, Jason Varitek, Hideki Okajima and Marco Scutaro (dual option for 2012).

If the Red Sox don’t re-sign Drew and Ortiz the lineup needs a power bat in one of those spots and a right handed one to boot.  Pujols could easily be moved to right field with some occasional at bats at DH, while you find a veteran bat to be the everyday DH.  I’ve said if before, I’ll say it again even if they give Albert $30 million a year there’s still plenty of money to come off the books to allow them to get a DH, maybe re-sign Ortiz for a year or two, and add to the bullpen and strengthen their catching.

Theo and his baseball bunch are brilliant at working these things out.  I’d love to see them win over Pujols with how they do business and with the product they have on the field.  It is a reality if he gets to free agency.

In the end I feel Pujols wants to stay in St. Louis badly but if given the opportunity to see what else is out there he may get overwhelmed.  St. Louis and Boston are baseball towns, the fans love their teams.  I think Albert would see a parallel and could be persuaded to come to Boston.

If he leaves, St. Louis will not be a good place to be.

Follow Steve on Twitter @djstevem

Photo credit: AP Photo

Game On! – Syracuse vs UConn Game Will Be Played Tonight

Are you going to the Syracuse Orange vs UConn Huskies men’s basketball team tonight at the XL Center in Hartford, CT at 7 p.m. If so, the game is on as scheduled.

UConn HuskiesHere’s the release:

HARTFORD, Conn. – The men’s basketball game between the University of Connecticut and Syracuse University set for Wednesday, February 2 at 7:00 p.m. at the XL Center will be played as scheduled.

Fans choosing to attend the game are urged to use extreme caution when traveling to Hartford, as well as parking and walking to the XL Center.

If you choose not to travel to Hartford for tonight’s contest, the game will be available on ESPN and on WTIC NewsTalk 1080 and the UConn Radio Network.

UConn’s Football Signing Day public event in the XL Center Exhibition Hall will also take place as scheduled (4:15 social/reception, 5:00 program).

Any additional updates will be posted on UConnHuskies.com.

Note: They left out that you can also watch the game online at ESPN3.com.