Lawrence Wilson Shines at Senior Bowl

South squad quarterback Greg McElroy (12) of Alabama, reacts as running back Noel Devine (27) of West Virginia, scores a touchdown as the North's Lawrence Wilson (48) of Connecticut, defends in the first half of the Senior Bowl NCAA college football game.

While Scouts, Inc. didn’t mention former UConn Huskies linebacker Lawrence Wilson in its game blog or buzz (ESPN Insider links) from after the Under Armour Senior Bowl on Saturday afternoon in Wilson’s home state of Alabama, I thought that he played a pretty good game. 

Sure in the above photo, he wasn’t able to make the tackle but he finished the game with six tackles (four solo) as his North squad fell 24-10 to the South. Out of both teams, only Mason Foster (8) of the Washington Huskies, Kendric Burney (7) of the North Carolina Tar Heels and Greg Jones (7) of the Michigan State Spartans finished with more.

Wilson will get a couple off more chances to show his skills to the NFL scouts when during the NFL Combine in late February and when UConn holds it’s Pro Day some time in March.

2011 Under Armour Senior Bowl box score

Video: Nick Diaz Submits Evangelista Cyborg

The main event of the Strikeforce event on Saturday night at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA featured Nick Diaz defending his Strikeforce Welterweight Championship for the second time, this one against Evangelista Cyborg.

In what looked like a heavyweight boxing match for the first round and a good portion of the second, the pair traded blows. But things changed when Cyborg took Diaz to the ground. It turns out, that’s exactly what Diaz wanted to happen.

Diaz would take advantage of his Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu skills as he ended up beating Cyborg by submission (armbar) at 4:50 of the second round to retain his Strikeforce Welterweight Championship.

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Video: Jacaré Souza Submits Robbie Lawler

For the first time since winning the Strikeforce Middleweight Championship in August of 2010, Jacaré Souza defended his title on Saturday night at the Strikeforce event at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA.

And at the end of the night, Souza walked out of the cage with his title as he submitted Robbie Lawler with a rear naked choke at 2:00 of the third round.

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Video: Herschel Walker Knocks Out Scott Carson

Herschel Walker is a beast. After hearing his comments earlier in the week that he could still play football, I can see why he was thinking about it. The man is absolutely jacked right now.

In the second fight of the Strikeforce event on Saturday night at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA, Walker beat Scott Carson by TKO (strikes) at 3:13 of the first round.

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Video: Roger Gracie Submits Trevor Prangley

In the first match on the main card at the Strikeforce event on Saturday at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA, Roger Gracie submitted Trevor Prangley via a rear-naked choke at 4:19 of the first round.

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Portland Pirates 3, Connecticut Whale 2

By Bruce Berlet

HARTFORD, Conn. – The Portland Pirates played beat the clock on the power play Saturday night and came away with one of their most stirring victories of the season.

CT WhaleLeft wing Derek Whitmore took a pass from behind the net from Corey Tropp about 35 feet in the slot and beat Connecticut Whale goalie Chad Johnson high to the glove side with 7.5 seconds left to give the Pirates a 3-2 victory before 10,872 at the XL Center.

“I came off the bench and tried to find the seam,” Whitmore said after scoring his 19th goal. “(Defenseman) Nick Crawford was working the puck down low. Tropp made a good play to the slot. I knew there wasn’t much time, and I tried to shoot it past the guy coming out at me (Chad Kolarik) and was able to find the back of the net.”

Johnson’s head dropped after allowing a goal set up by Dale Weise’s interference penalty with 1:38 left. It earned Weise a post-game, closed-door meeting with coach Ken Gernander.

“It was a great game and hugely disappointing,” Gernander said. “Their goalie (David Leggio) played good, but we had a lot of guys who really worked hard, paid the price and did extra duty when we shortened the bench.”

Weise admitted that his penalty was ill-timed.

“Obviously not a smart play by me,” said Weise, playing his third game since being one of six players reassigned by the parent New York Rangers earlier in the week. “I’m an emotional player, and sometimes I cross the line. I crossed the line tonight, and it cost us the game. I don’t feel good about it, but it’s a mistake, and I’ll learn from it.”

Weise’s mistake led to the Pirates (29-14-4-1) finishing 2-for-3 on the power play as they won their fifth in six starts and remained one point behind Atlantic Division-leading Manchester, which beat Bridgeport, 3-2. Leggio had 36 saves for his second straight win over the former Hartford Wolf Pack, the other being a 21-save shutout in a 3-0 victory at home on Jan. 14.

Meanwhile, the Whale (22-20-2-5) lost their third in a row and fifth in seven starts to fall 13 points behind the Monarchs. More importantly, they fell one point behind Worcester, which beat Providence, 3-2. The Whale also has lost four in row and six of seven at home after eight consecutive wins at the XL Center. They’re 11-12-2-1 at home and 11-8-0-4 on the road.

Besides Weise, no Whale player was more upset than Johnson (21 saves).

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“The guy made kind of a good shot past Kolarik, and I just kind of caught it at the last second and just didn’t have enough time to react to it,” Johnson said. “It’s really disappointing because it was a big moment in the game. I talked to Kolarik, and he doesn’t know how it got by him. He was in good position, it’s just the guy found some way to get it by him and then I picked it up late and it beat me. It’s tough. When they score a late goal like that, you can’t do much with seven seconds left.”

Pirates coach Kevin Dineen reiterated Gernander’s thoughts about the quality of the game and was delighted his team could pull out such a win in its eighth game in 11 days, especially after losing two more players, defenseman T.J. Brennan and right wing Maxime Legault, to injuries.

“Except for the one game, all the games against them have been extremely tight,” Dineen said. “There’s a heck of a lot of talent on the ice with good goaltending at both ends in a game with a real, real physical tone to it. We were fortunate to go two-for-three on the power play, which is a huge night for us. We talked before the game that we had to have some power-play production in order to have some long-range success. I don’t think there was much designed play. There was a lot of effort more than anything else.”

Especially on the Pirates’ first power-play goal 59 seconds into the third period when Luke Adam, who left immediately after the game for the AHL All-Star Classic in Hershey, Pa., poked the puck behind the net to Tropp, who found Matt Ellis alone 15 feet in front for a quick finish for his ninth goal and first since being reassigned by the parent Buffalo Sabres on Friday.

The goal seemed to invigorate the Pirates, and Johnson had to be sharp to stop Ellis’ backhander at 6:14. The Whale then tied it on their third power play as Brodie Dupont got inside Crawford and deflected Kris Newbury’s centering pass from the right corner past Leggio with 7:56 left.

The Whale outshot the Pirates 10-1 in the opening 14:20 but actually fell behind 1-0 when NHL veteran Mark Parrish outworked several players for the puck in the right corner and passed into the slot to a wide-open Crawford, who beat Johnson to the glove side with a shot that went in off the post.

Evgeny Grachev, a threat throughout the game thanks to the passing of linemate Tim Kennedy, nearly tied it 50 seconds later, but his deflection went off the post. But the Whale continued to press and got even when Jason Williams made a lead pass to Kelsey Tessier, who outmaneuvered defenseman Dennis Persson and feathered a pass that All-Star right wing Jeremy Williams buried into the top corner at 5:25 for his 22nd goal and 40th point, both team highs.

Grachev nearly gave the Whale the lead, but his bid out of the corner and rebound were both turned aside by Leggio with 8:24 left in the period. Johnson made his best save of the period during the Pirates’ first power play when he stopped Parrish in front with 1:32 to go.

After Johnson denied Tropp cruising in off the right point at 5:28 and Ellis hit the post 36 seconds later, the Pirates escaped the second period tied despite being outshot 13-5 thanks to Leggio. First, he made what might be the save of the season at 6:58 with a glove stab off Grachev, set up alone in front at 15 feet off a pass from behind the net by Kennedy, who was named to the 2009 AHL all-rookie team after leading all rookies in points (67) and assists (48) while with the Pirates and beat his former team with back-to-back overtime goals on Dec. 29 and 31.

Leggio stopped a good Kennedy bid at 7:31 and denied Grachev from 20 feet in the slot at 11:08. The Pirates goalie then got lucky when Dupont stole a Pirates cross-ice pass and raced off on a breakaway, only to be caught from behind with 3:42 left in the period.

Given those reprieves, the Pirates regained the lead on Ellis’ goal, then survived Dupont’s equalizer to win on Whitmore’s late heroics.

GARLOCK RETURNS AS WHITE OUT AGAIN

Center Ryan Garlock returned to the Whale lineup after missing two games with the flu and was reunited with feisty, hard-working wings Devin DiDiomete and Justin Soryal, who started the night first and eighth in the league in penalty minutes. Garlock replaced veteran Todd White, who was injured in a collision with Dupont in the first period of Friday night’s 4-2 loss to the Monarchs. It was White’s second game back after missing four with another injury. The Whale also scratched center Oren Eizenman, defenseman Jyri Niemi and injured goalie Cam Talbot (fifth game with high ankle sprain) and wing Chris McKelvie (foot surgery). … Defenseman Tim Conboy returned for the Pirates after serving a two-game suspension. But the Pirates were without injured All-Star defenseman Drew Schiestel, Travis Turnbull, Brian Roloff, and Marc-Andre Gragnani, hurt in a 4-2 loss at Providence on Friday night. To combat the injuries, the Pirates signed defenseman Kyle Bushee to a tryout contract on Friday.

After the game, Jeremy Williams left for Hershey and his first All-Star appearance at the Giant Center. The Pirates’ representative is Adam, who has 12 goals and 14 assists in 27 games with the Pirates and three goals and one assist in 18 games with the parent Buffalo Sabres. Williams and Adam were named to the Eastern Conference team and traveled together to Hershey. Wethersfield native Colin McDonald, son of former Whalers and New Haven Nighthawks defenseman Gerry McDonald, is a Western Conference All-Star and started the night tied for second in the league in goals with Charlotte’s Jerome Samson with a career-high 23, four behind Pirates’ right wing Mark Mancari, the Reebok/AHL Player of the Week last week after getting back-to-back hat tricks last Saturday and Sunday. McDonald is one goal ahead of former Wolf Pack wings Nigel Dawes of the Chicago Wolves and the Oklahoma City Barons’ Alexandre Giroux, who is captain of the Western Conference team. Williams was tied for sixth with the Hershey Bears’ Andrew Gordon.

Williams and Adam will play for first-time All-Star coaches Mark French and assistant Troy Mann, who earned the honor by virtue of the Hershey Bears winning the 2010 Calder Cup for the second consecutive year. Rookie head coaches John Hynes of Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and Jared Bednar of Peoria will be co-coaches of the Western Conference team because their teams had the best record in the Western Conference as of Jan. 16.

The AHL Hall of Fame Class of 2011, to be inducted Monday at 11 a.m., is Mitch Lamoureux, Larry Wilson and the late Harry Pidhirny and Maurice Podoloff, who grew up in New Haven, graduated from Hillhouse High School and Yale and became the first person to be president of two professional league simultaneously (AHL and then NBA). AHL Hall of Famer Bruce Boudreau, former coach of the Bears and now coach of the Washington Capitals, will be the keynote speaker, and AHL graduate and 2008 Foster Hewitt Award winner Mike Emrick will be master of ceremonies.

WHALE ENDS HOMESTAND FRIDAY NIGHT

After the All-Star break, the Whale’s four-game homestand ends Friday night against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, who completed their worst calendar month in franchise history (1-9-2-1) with a 3-2 loss to the Monarchs on Saturday night. The Whale then will play a home-and-home set with Portland, Saturday night at 7:05 in Maine and Sunday at 3 p.m. at the XL Center.

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. They will hold a private, “meet and greet” reception with Whale season ticket holders and “Outdoor 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 on Friday night scouting for the Detroit Red Wings, a job he has done since retiring from the Red Wings in 1995.

Next Sunday 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” on Feb. 19.

HALL OF FAMER PARK MEETS FANS, DROPS PUCK

Hall of Fame defenseman Brad Park greeted fans, signed autographs and dropped the ceremonial first puck before the game Saturday night. Park and fellow Hall of Fame defenseman Brian Leetch, a Cheshire native, headline the Bruins legends team that will play the Hartford Whalers legends Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. in the opener of a doubleheader that’s part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest” on Feb. 11-23 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford. The Whale will play Providence at 7 p.m., and in case of bad weather, that game will be Feb. 20 at the XL Center.

MORE BELATED HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ‘THE GREAT ONE’

I previously mentioned knowing I’m old when I’m wishing Wayne “The Great One” Gretzky a belated happy 50th birthday from Wednesday. Watching a 17-year-old Gretzky play his final game with the Indianapolis Racers against the New England Whalers in 1979 and being fortunate to cover the Howes when they came to Hartford and “Mr. Hockey” was still going strong at 52 against the likes of a 19-year-old Gretzky in a NHL All-Star Game were fond memories.

I was equally as fortunate to witness one of the greatest feats in sports history when Gretzky recorded five points in four consecutive games in 1982, including one goal and four assists against the Hartford Whalers on what was designated as “Feed Gretzky Night” in Edmonton before the Oilers embarked on a seven-game road trip. He was two goals shy of tying Phil Esposito’s season record of 76, and after scoring once in the first two periods, he played virtually the entire third period, staying on the ice while the Oilers’ other four skaters changed. He failed to get No. 76, but barely, whiffing on a wide-open, goal-mouth crossing pass with 45 seconds left when the puck hit a chip of ice and bounced over his stick. I can still hear – and feel – the groans reverberating through Northlands Coliseum. Heck, even I was disappointed and upset, and there’s not supposed to be any cheering in the press box.

Then after covering a Whalers game in Vancouver on Saturday night, Hall of Fame announcer Chuck Kaiton and I took a red-eye flight to Detroit for the Oilers’ game against the Red Wings on Sunday night. Despite being shadowed by Paul Woods, Gretzky scored No. 76 and added four assists. Then it was on to Buffalo, where Gretzky broke the record, was saluted on the ice by Esposito and then demonstrated why he was considered a classier act off the ice than on it. A mob of reporters awaited Gretzky after the game, but knowing his hometown reporter, future Hall of Famer Jim Matheson of the Edmonton Journal, needed some comments ASAP, Gretzky pulled Matheson and this reporter, who just happened to be in the right place at the right time, into the back of the locker room shower and spoke with us for several minutes. It gave Jim and myself a jump on the opposition and helped immensely with deadline issues.

Now Gretzky is 50, and he and wife Janet have five children, including 22-year-old Paulina, 20-year-old Ty and 18-year-old Trevor, all of whom used to travel the NHL circuit, closing on Broadway when dad played three seasons with the Rangers before the curtain came down with “The Great Goodbye” on April 13, 1999. How appropriate! No. 99 retired in 1999. The most stunning statistic of Gretzky’s endless number of records in a mind-boggling career? If you take away all of the record 894 goals that he scored, his record 1,963 assists would still make him the NHL’s all-time scoring leader by 76 points over former Oilers teammate Mark Messier (1,887).

Later in 1999, on Nov. 22, Gretzky became the 10th player to bypass the three-year waiting period for induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame, which announced he would be the last player to do so. He was inducted into the International Ice Hockey Federation Hall of Fame in 2000, and his No. 99 was retired league-wide at the NHL All-Star Game. It was only the second number retired league-wide by a major North American sports league, the other being Jackie Robinson’s No. 42 by Major League Baseball in 1997. In 2002, 14 years after “The Trade” to Los Angeles, the Kings held a jersey retirement ceremony and erected a life-sized statue of Gretzky outside Staples Center. The ceremony was delayed until then so owner Bruce McNall, who had recently finished a prison sentence, could attend.

Two years earlier, Gretzky had agreed to purchase a 10 percent stake in the Phoenix Coyotes in a partnership with majority owner Steve Ellman, taking on the roles of alternate governor, managing partner and head of hockey operations. He became head coach on Aug. 8, 2005, with associate head coach and former Whalers defenseman Ulf Samuelsson taking over in training camp in 2009 during an ownership dispute. Gretzky hasn’t had any official ties to the NHL since he stepped down as coach and head of hockey operations on Sept. 24, 2009.

Gretzky insists he holds no grudge toward the NHL or anyone connected with the league while continuing his connection from afar. Let’s hope the NHL never lets it come to that. No. 99 will always be No. 1 in my mind. Players today and forever should always remember that being an ambassador for the game like “The Great One” and “Mr. Hockey” should be the ultimate goal.

PIRATES 3, WHALE 2

Portland           1 0 2 – 3
Connecticut     1 0 1 – 2

First period: 1. Port, Crawford 4 (Parrish, Bowers), 3:02. 2, Connecticut, Williams 22 (Tessier, Williams), 5:25. Penalties-Byron Por (cross-checking), 6:46; McCauley Por (fighting), 9:18; Soryal Ct (fighting), 9:18; Brennan Por (delay of game), 11:28; Gongalsky Por (fighting), 14:20; DiDiomete Ct (fighting), 14:20; Weise Ct (roughing), 17:55.
Second period: No scoring. Penalty: Newbury, Ct (boarding), 19:33.

Third period: 3. Port, Ellis 9 (Tropp, Adam), 0:59 (pp). 4. Conn, Dupont 9 (Newbury, Weise), 12:04 (pp). 5. Port, Whitmore 19 (Tropp, Crawford), 19:52 (pp). Penalties: Conboy, Por (roughing, roughing), 10:52; Williams Ct (elbowing), 10:52; Weise Ct (interference), 18:22.
Shots on goal: Portland 7-5-12-24. Connecticut 12-13-13-38; Power-play opportunities: Portland 2 of 3; Connecticut 1 of 3; Goalies: Portland, Leggio 13-4-0 (38 shots-36 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 14-17-3 (24-21); A: 10,872; Referee: Chris Brown; Linesmen: Kevin Redding, Brent Colby.

UConn Men Fall Short Against Louisville

If you’re a top 10 team in the Big East, it’s been a tough week. On Saturday afternoon, the No. 5/5 UConn Huskies were looking to avoid the fate that No. 2/2 Pittsburgh, No. 8/7 Villanova (twice) and No. 9/10 Syracuse all faced this week.

Unfortunately for the Huskies, they were unable to avoid it as Peyton Silva’s layup with 27 seconds left in the second overtime was the difference in the Louisville Cardinals 79-78 win over the Huskies in front of a sold-out crowd at Gampel Pavilion.

The University of Connecticut's Kemba Walker misses a jumper in traffic against Louisville in their Big East game at Gampel Pavilion. Walker scored 20 points in UConn's heartbreak one-point loss in triple overtime, 79-78. Silva’s layup put the Cardinals up 79-74 but Shabazz Napier cut it to 79-76 on a layup. Napier fouled Silva on the inbounds and Silva missed the front end of a one-and-one that was pulled down by Roscoe Smith. Kemba Walker got the ball in his hands and was fouled by Silva. Walker made both free throws and on the inbounds pass, he fouled Chris Smith with eight seconds left.

Smith missed both free throws with the rebound pulled down by Napier who got the ball in the front court to Walker. But Walker wasn’t able to deliver yet another game-winner as his 35 foot shot went in and out to give the Cardinals the win.

UConn falls to 17-3 (5-3 Big East) on the season. The No. 23/19 Cardinals improve to 17-4 (6-2).

Napier led the Huskies with 23 points, scoring 21 of them in the second half and overtime. Jeremy Lamb scored 14 of his 21 points in the second half and added six rebounds with three assists. Walker chipped in with 20 points, four rebounds and four assists.

Roscoe Smith wasn’t a big factor on the offensive end with just five points but he did pull down 12 rebounds and had three steals.

Silva killed the Huskies all afternoon long and led the Cardinals with 19 points and had seven assists, three steals and two blocked shots. Terrence Jennings had a double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds while Preston Knowles and Kyle Kuric both had 15 points.

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The first half was a tight affair with the Cardinals getting out to a 7-4 lead early on. But UConn battled to take an 8-7 lead on an Alex Oriakhi tip-in but the Cardinals retook the lead. The Huskies once again came back and got out to a four point lead at 15-11. The Cardinals would come back once again to tie at 15 before the Huskies took their largest lead of the half with the next five straight points.

The Cardinals would get no closer than two points the rest of the half and they would trail UConn by five at 28-23 at the break.

Silva pulled the Cardinals to within two right out of the gate in the second half on an old fashioned three-point play but UConn responded with the next six points to increase their lead to eight. Over the course of the next four and half minutes, the Cardinals would get the Huskies lead down to three.

With 12:02 remaining and the Huskies up by three at 43-40, they scored the next six points over a three-minute span to open up a nine-point lead. The Cardinals wouldn’t go away though as UConn had trouble with Louisville’s matchup zone defense while on the offensive end they would cut the lead to four with 6:13 remaining.

Napier hit a clutch three to put UConn back up seven but once again the matchup zone proved to problematic for the Huskies ash they were unable to get the shots they wanted. Meanwhile on the offensive end for the Cardinals, they fought back and tied the game at 55 on a Kuric three-pointer with 2:13 remaining.

The Cardinals retook the lead after a Walker turnover with Silva hit two free throws. On the enusing possession, Napier was fouled and hit just one-of-two at the line. But on his miss, the rebound was pulled down by Oriakhi. Walker would then hit a three-pointer to put the Huskies up two with 1:20 to go.

Silva would tie the game up at 59 with 23 seconds left. After a timeout, the Huskies got the ball into the hands of Walker but his last second shot was off the mark and the game went to overtime.

The first overtime saw the teams battle it out and stay close. Lamb had a chance to win it with a three but it was off the mark and we went to a second overtime. In that second overtime, the Cardinals got out to a quick six-point lead and the Huskies were never able to recover.

I really thought UConn had this game won. But the defense became pourous at the wrong times and the offense had trouble with the defense that Louisville presented. Walker was constantly double-teamed and always had a hand in his face. Lamb was huge in the first half but totally disappeared in the second half and didn’t reemerge until it was too late. 

The one thing I didn’t understand was the fact that Napier always had the ball in his hand at crunch time. I know he’s improved and had a good game but I felt as though the ball should have been in Walker’s hands. That’s how it’s been all season long and things shouldn’t have been any different.

It’s a tough loss no doubt, especially coming on your home floor. But unlike last year’s team, I have no doubts that this team will rebound and play better when the next time they take the floor.

That next time on the court for the Huskies will come Wednesday night when the Syracuse Orange come to the XL Center. The game is scheduled to start at 7 p.m. and will be nationally-televised on ESPN.

Notes and musings:

Louisville Cardinals @ UConn Huskies 1.29.11 box score

Here are quotes from UConn head coach Jim Calhoun, Kemba Walker,  Jeremy Lamb, Roscoe Smith, Shabazz Napier and Louisville head coach Rick Pitino.

The starters for the Huskies were Kemba Walker, Jeremy Lamb, Roscoe Smith, Tyler Olander and Alex Oriakhi.

Former Husky Jerome Dyson was in the crowd at Gampel.

Kemba Walker was wearing red sneakers in the first half but came out in the second half with white ones on.

UConn had won their previous six games before Saturday’s loss.

The Huskies shot 37.7% (29-77) from the floor while Louisville shot 48.4% (30-62).

UConn had 13 assists on their 29 made baskets.

Both teams had eight three-pointers.

The Huskies were 12-of-19 (63.2%) from the charity stripe. That’s not going to get it done in the Big East. Of course the Cardinals were just 11-of-20 (55%).

UConn won the battle of the boards 51-36.

The Huskies outscored Louisville 38-36 in the paint and 21-10 on second chance points.

The Cardinals outscored the Huskies 18-6 on the fast break.

UConn had 12 points off of 15 Louisville turnovers. The Cardinals had 13 points off of 12 Huskies turnovers.

Photo credit: Cloe Poisson – Hartford Courant (No. 14)

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 1/29

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 a busy Saturday if you’re a fan of the UConn Huskies men’s and women’s basketball teams.

First up is the UConn men’s basketball team as they’ll host the Louisville Cardinals at Gampel Pavilion. The game is scheduled to start at 12 p.m. and will be televised locally here in Connecticut on SNY. The game will also be available online at ESPN3.com. If you can’t catch the television broadcast, you can always listen to the game on the WTIC/UConn Radio Network.

Right after that is over, the UConn women will be taking on the Cincinnati Bearcats at Fifth Third Bank Arena in Cincinnati, OH. Game time is scheduled for 2 p.m. and the game will be televised locally here in Connecticut on CPTV. It is also available on Hoop Streams for a fee. If you can’t catch the television broadcast, you can always listen to the game on the WTIC/UConn Radio Network.

Then if you want to continue your UConn viewing, flip over to the NFL Network at 4 p.m. and watch former UConn linebacker Lawrence Wilson on the North team in the Senior Bowl in Mobile, AL.

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

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Doty being patient [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Tiffany Hayes May Fall, But She Always Gets Up [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

How Does Geno Auriemma Handle Saturday’s Game? [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Former UConn Player Kristen Phillips On How Tough It Can Be At UConn [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Former UConn Player Courtney Gaine On Making Things Work [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Former UConn Player Brittany Hunter On Her Time At UConn [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Kara Wolters On How Playing At UConn Impacted Her Life [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Meghan Pattyson-Culmo On The UConn Experience And Geno [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Hayes Realizing Her Role For Huskies [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

600 Tickets Remain for Women’s Hoops’ Game vs. Duke on Monday [UConnHuskies.com]

Hayes stepping up on the court [CT Post]

Tiffany Hayes Always Bounces Back [Hartford Courant]

UConn women looking to roll Cincinnati’s unlucky 7 [Journal Inquirer]

Geno, short-handed Huskies to face Jamelle Elliott, shorter-handed Cincinnati [New Haven Register]

The ball’s in Moore’s court now [The Day]

Tiffany Hayes learns to adjust her attitude [The Republican-American]

Underestimated Duke heads to UConn [Mechelle Voepel – ESPN.com]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Cardinals Coming to Town [David Borges – New Haven Register]

Calhoun v. Pitino [David Borges – New Haven Register]

UConn Must Protect Ball Against Louisville Pressure [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

UConn Preparing For Louisville’s Three-Point Barrage [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Jim Calhoun On Ryan Boatright’s Suspension [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Talking Kemba Walker In Advance Of UConn-Louisville [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Pitino and Cards coming to town [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Calhoun and Oriakhi on Louisville [UConn Huskies Basketball]

Men’s Basketball vs. Louisville and Syracuse SOLD OUT!! [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn men hope to avoid turnovers against Louisville [CT Post]

Stakes Get Higher Saturday For UConn And Louisville [Hartford Courant]

Fans falling back in love with No. 5 Huskies [New Haven Register]

Focus important against Cardinals [Norwich Bulletin]

Huskies-Cards: The first of two [The Day]

Huskies face the pressure of facing pressure [The Republican-American]

Louisville basketball can’t focus solely on Connecticut’s Walker now [Louisville Courier-Journal]

POY: The case for Kemba Walker [Jay Bilas – ESPN.com]

UConn Football links

Who brings back the most in the Big East? [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

Kuraczea to Central Connecticut State [Chip Malafronte – New Haven Register]

No Surprise: Graham Stewart To Florida, Not Boston College [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Former UConn Quarterback Dan Orlovsky On Robert Burton [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Stan Simpson Show: Can Jeff Hathaway Survive? [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Other UConn related links

UConn needs to stop ruining the best tradition it has [The UConn Blog]

M. Soccer. Deeley Named a 2011 Top Assistant by College Soccer News [UConnHuskies.com]

W. Ice Hockey. Huskies Fall Short At No. 3 Boston University, 2-1 [UConnHuskies.com]

2011 NHL All-Star Game Rosters

2011 NHL All-Star Game

Here are the 2011 NHL All-Star rosters for the game that will be played on Sunday, January 30th at the RBC Center in Raleigh, NC at 4 p.m. The 2011 NHL All-Star Game presented by Discover will be televised on VERSUS, CBC and RDS.

Team Staal Team Lidstrom
POS PLAYER TEAM POS PLAYER TEAM
G Cam Ward Carolina Hurricanes G Tim Thomas Boston Bruins
G Henrik Lundvquist New York Rangers G Marc-Andre Fleury Pittsburgh Penguins
G Carey Price Montreal Canadiens G Jonas Hiller Anaheim Ducks
D Zdeno Chara Boston Bruins D Niklas Lidstrom Detroit Red Wings
D Marc Staal New York Rangers D Duncan Keith Chicago Blackhawks
D Mike Green Washington Capitals D Shea Weber Nashville Predators
D Dan Boyle San Jose Sharks D Dustin Byfuglien Atlanta Thrashers
D Kris Letang Pittsburgh Penguins D Keith Yandle Phoenix Coyotes
D Erik Karlsson Ottawa Senators D Brent Burns Minnesota Wild
F Eric Staal Carolina Hurricanes F Patrick Kane Chicago Blackhawks
F Daniel Sedin Vancouver Canucks F Martin St. Louis Tampa Bay Lightning
F Alexander Ovechkin Washington Capitals F Jonathan Toews Chicago Blackhawks
F Rick Nash Columbus Blue Jackets F Steven Stamkos Tampa Bay Lightning
F Ryan Kesler Vancouver Canucks F Henrik Sedin Vancouver Canucks
F Patrick Sharp Chicago Blackhawks F Brad Richards Dallas Stars
F Jeff Skinner Carolina Hurricanes F Danny Briere Philadelphia Flyers
F Claude Giroux Philadelphia Flyers F Martin Havlat Minnesota Wild
F Corey Perry Anaheim Ducks F Anze Kopitar LA Kings
F Patrik Elias New Jersey Devils F Matt Duchene Colorado Avalanche
F David Backes St. Louis Blues F Loui Eriksson Dallas Stars
F Paul Stastny Colorado Avalance F Phil Kessel Toronto Maple Leafs

Also selected to participate in the game but aren’t playing:

  • Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins
  • Ales Hemsky, Edmonton Oilers
  • Evgeni Malkin, Pittsburgh Penguins
  • Tobias Enstrom, Atlanta Thrashers
  • Jarome Iginla, Calgary Flames

Manchester Monarchs 4, Connecticut Whale 2

By Bruce Berlet

HARTFORD, Conn. – A five-minute lapse early in the second period proved the Connecticut Whale’s undoing Friday night in another tight encounter with the Manchester Monarchs.

CT WhaleAHL All-Star defenseman Viatcheslav Voynov, Brandon Kozun and Bud Holloway scored in a 5:06 span, and the Monarchs held off a late Whale charge for a 4-2 victory before 5,802 at the XL Center.

It was the Whale’s third consecutive loss at home and dropped them to 11-11-2-1 at the XL Center compared to 11-8-0-4 on the road. Meanwhile, the Monarchs (29-16-1-3) moved back into the Atlantic Division lead, one point ahead of the Portland Pirates (28-14-4-1), who lost 4-2 at Providence and will be at the XL Center on Saturday night.

Despite being reinforced by the return of defenseman Michael Del Zotto and forwards Kris Newbury, Dale Weise, Chad Kolarik, Evgeny Grachev and Brodie Dupont from the Rangers, the Whale fell to 1-5-0-1 against the Monarchs.

“They’re (the Monarchs) obviously a good team, and you can’t give them opportunities,” Whale coach Ken Gernander said. “They’re going to earn them on their own, so you can’t give them extra cracks at it, and that was the case a couple of times tonight.”

Especially in the first 10:20 of the second period when turnovers and lax play by the Whale helped the Monarchs take the lead and then hold it thanks in large part to another solid effort by rookie goalie Martin Jones, who had 26 saves to improve to 17-5-0 with a 2.17 goals-against average and .930 save percentage. In the Monarchs’ previous visit, Jones made 39 saves for his first of two shutouts in a 3-0 victory.

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“Within that (five-minute span), we made some big mistakes that I’m sure we’ll have to address,” Gernander said. “It’s not that we went flat or disappeared for a segment of time. The goals came in a short span, but there were some big mistakes in that span. I’m not going to single guys out, but some of our mistakes were by some of our more key players, and that’s always disappointing.”

An angry Gernander called his timeout at 10:20 of the second period after the Whale turned the puck over in the neutral zone and Holloway, the Monarchs’ leading scorer, skated into the left circle and beat Chad Johnson high to the glove side at 10:20.

“There were mistakes, and there were some areas where our effort could have better,” Gernander said in revealing what was said during the timeout. “Throughout the course of a game, people are going to make mistakes, people are going lose the odd battle, but it was just the general kind of malaise and some mistakes that were beyond just mistakes, kind of bonehead plays instead of just the mistake that you make in the course of a game. After some of those mistakes, I don’t think the effort was there to try to recover or correct the situation.”

Dupont admitted a lack of defense and effort on the sequence that led to Holloway’s goal.

“I tried to make up for it,” Dupont said. “You know you can do better. I wanted to make it up to the team because I enjoy playing for this team.”

The Whale responded with their best forechecking of the game, leading to Weise scoring off a give-and-go with Dupont at 13:41 for his third goal in two games since being reassigned by the Rangers on Saturday.

The Monarchs managed to retain their lead 2:23 into the third period when a diving Dupont drove to the net and let go a shot from 10 feet in the slot that Jones stopped without knowing where the puck was. After Johnson (30 saves) kept the Whale close with three stops during the Monarchs’ third power play, Kennedy broke in alone from center ice but hit the post at 7:37.

“(Jones) was pretty good,” Gernander said. “There were no muffins. I thought we had some pretty good chances where he made some good saves and we hit a post and other things, but I think he’s a really good goalie.”

The Whale pulled Johnson for a sixth attacker with 1:06 left, but John Zeiler took a pass from former Yale forward David Meckler and iced it with an empty-net goal with 50 seconds to go.

Jones picked up where he left off from the previous game when he turned aside Dupont’s 30-foot shot at 2:55 and slid across to stop Jason Williams’ rebound attempt on a power play at 5:05.

Johnson then made bang-bang saves on Kozun’s close-in bid and rebound at 7:09 before Weise had the crowd buzzing after hits that knocked down defensive partners Thomas Hickey and David Kolomatis at the nine-minute mark.

The Whale then took a 1-0 lead on a brilliant individual effort by Tim Kennedy, who stole a Kozun back pass in the Whale zone, raced into the offensive zone, pirouetted away from Monarchs defenseman Jake Muzzin and passed in front to Grachev, who had gotten away from Voynov, for an easy finish at 11:23. It gave Grachev a four-game scoring streak, best on the Whale this season, and was his seventh goal in that span.

Whale center Todd White was injured in a collision with Dupont with 7:02 left in the period and didn’t return. Moments later, Jones made a strong save on Stu Bickel’s one-timer off Kelsey Tessier’s pass.

The Whale nearly expanded their lead on their second power play, but Jones denied Newbury in front with 5:44 left and then made a right pad save on Weise’s 40-foot laser from the right circle with two seconds to go.

Jones made another alert stop on Tessier’s 35-foot shot from the slot 2:24 into the third period before Johnson stopped Justin Azevedo from the left circle on a Monarchs power play at 4:59.

But the game quickly turned in a little more than five minutes.

Moments after the Monarchs’ second power play expired, Meckler hit the post. Weise was unable to reach the rebound, and Voynov picked up the puck and fired a 40-foot shot to tie it at 5:14, becoming the Monarchs’ 10th player with at least 10 goals.

The Monarchs took the lead for good 62 seconds later as Elkins dropped a pass to Kozun, who got away from Kolarik and fired a wrist shot from the left circle that beat Johnson high to the glove side, went off the crossbar and inn. Holloway capped the rally 4:04 later.

“We didn’t play a 60-minute game,” said Del Zotto, starting his second go-around with the Whale. “I know from the first day I got here that’s one thing we’ve talked about, you need to play 60 minutes. The penalty kill did a good job (4-for-4), but it kills you when you just don’t take care of the puck for a couple of shifts.

“They did a really good job in the neutral zone, and we were trying to make plays through them when all we really had to do is chip it by them and become the first guy on the forecheck. When we were doing that, we were successful and scored our goal in the second when we had 45 seconds battling them down low.

“When we did that, we were successful, but we didn’t do it on a consistent basis. And turnovers really kill you, especially in the neutral zone, and that’s what happened. There were a couple of shifts back-to-back that hurt us and ended up costing us the game.”

TALBOT, GARLOCK AND MCKELVIE OUT AGAIN

Goalie Cam Talbot missed his fourth game with a high ankle sprain, center Ryan Garlock sat out his second game with the flu and wing Chris McKelvie was out a second game after foot surgery. The Whale also scratched center Oren Eizenman and defenseman Jyri Niemi. The Monarchs scratched forward Ray Kaunisto and defenseman Patrick Mullen. … One former Hartford Wolf Pack defenseman replaced another in the AHL All-Star Classic on Sunday and Monday at the Giant Center in Hershey, Pa. The Hershey Bears’ Brian Fahey, who played for the Wolf Pack in 2008-09 after being a member of a Calder Cup champion with the Chicago Wolves the previous season, replaced teammate Lawrence Nycholat on the Eastern Conference team. Fahey has three goals and 14 assists and is plus-17 in 33 games with the Bears and also finally reached the NHL, getting one assist in seven games with the Washington Capitals. Nycholat, who played for the Wolf Pack for two-plus seasons in 2002-05, will miss the skills competition on Sunday at 3 p.m. and the All-Star Game on Monday at 7 p.m. because of an injury.

HALL OF FAMER PARK AT XL CENTER SATURDAY NIGHT

Hall of Fame defenseman Brad Park will make a special appearance Saturday night when he will meet and greet fans and sign autographs before the game and then drop the ceremonial first puck before the Whale takes on the Pirates. After playing the Pirates and the All-Star break, the Whale will end a four-game homestand Friday night against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers before a home-and-home set with Portland next Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. 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. They will hold a private, “meet and greet” reception with Whale season ticket holders and “Outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011” 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.

Feb. 4 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 on Friday night scouting for the Detroit Red Wings. It was Howe’s fourth game at the XL Center this season but first since the team was rebranded from the Hartford Wolf Pack to the Connecticut Whale on Nov. 27. Howe said he didn’t have any special pangs when “Brass Bonanza” first played, but he did recall the feelings of youngest son Travis for the most famous theme song in hockey.

“He had the 45 (rpm) of the song and played it 24/7 while racing around the house with his hockey stick,” Howe said with a smile.

Howe also smiled about the crowd.

“Nice to see more people here now,” he said.

On Feb. 5 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 Pucky, the Whale mascot. 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” on Feb. 19.

WHALERS AND BRUINS LEGENDS FACE OFF FEB. 19

Park and fellow Hall of Fame defensemen Brian Leetch, a Cheshire native, headline the Bruins legends team that will play the Hartford Whalers legends on Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. in the opener of the doubleheader that’s part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest” on Feb. 11-23 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, where construction of the rink began Jan. 17 and snow removal will take place Thursday. The Whale and Providence Bruins will play at 7 p.m., and in case of bad weather, that game will be played Feb. 20 at the XL Center.

Other commitments for the Bruins team 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 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.

BELATED HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ‘THE GREAT ONE’

I know I’m officially old when I’m wishing Wayne “The Great One” Gretzky a belated happy 50th birthday from Wednesday. In 1978, I saw a 17-year-old Gretzky play his final game with the Indianapolis Racers against the New England Whalers the night before being sold to the Edmonton Oilers with goalie Eddie Mio and forward Peter Driscoll for $700,000. One of the highlights of that season was Gretzky’s appearance in the 1979 WHA All-Star Game, a three-game series between the WHA All-Stars and Dynamo Moscow. The All-Stars were coached by Jacques Demers, who put Gretzky on a line with his boyhood idol Gordie Howe and his son, Mark. In the first game, the line had seven points, and the WHA All-Stars won 4-2. In Game 2, Gretzky and Mark Howe each scored and Gordie Howe had an assist in another 4-2 win. The line failed to score in the final game, but the WHA won again, 4-3.

I was fortunate to cover the Howes when they came to Hartford, and “Mr. Hockey” was still turning heads at 52 years old. In fact, he was the Whalers’ representative in the 1980 NHL All-Star Game in Detroit, and rather than the hometown player(s), in this case Red Wings’ Reed Larson, being the last player to be introduced for the Wales Conference team, it was Gordie, making his 23rd All-Star appearance with a record 10 All-Star goals. And instead of announcing Howe’s name, the public address announcer said, “And from the Hartford Whalers and representing all of hockey with great distinction for five decades, No. 9.” The 21,002 at Joe Louis Arena broke into a “Gor-die, Gor-die” chant and stood and roared for several minutes, forcing Howe to take a few bows and wipe away a few tears. Appropriately, Howe’s was the last name in the scoring summary as he assisted on the final goal by Real “Whalers Killer” Cloutier for his 19th All-Star point. It was the last of four goals in a 4:26 span in the final 8:20 as the Wales Conference rallied for a 6-3 victory over the Campbell Conference, which included a 19-year-old named Wayne Gretzky in his NHL All-Star debut.

I was equally as fortunate to witness one of the greatest feats in sports history when Gretzky recorded five points in four consecutive games in 1982, including one goal and four assists against the Hartford Whalers on what was designated as “Feed Gretzky Night” in Edmonton before the Oilers embarked on a seven-game road trip. He was two goals shy of tying Phil Esposito’s season record of 76, and after scoring once in the first two periods, he played virtually the entire third period, staying on the ice while the Oilers’ other four skaters changed. He failed to get No. 76, but barely, whiffing on a wide-open, goal-mouth crossing pass with 45 seconds left when the puck hit a chip of ice and bounced over his stick. I can still hear – and feel – the groans reverberating through Northlands Coliseum. Heck, even I was disappointed and upset, and there’s not supposed to be any cheering in the press box.

Then after covering a Whalers game in Vancouver on Saturday night, Hall of Fame announcer Chuck Kaiton and I took a red-eye flight to Detroit for the Oilers’ game against the Red Wings on Sunday night. Despite being shadowed by Paul Woods, Gretzky scored No. 76 and added four assists. Then it was on to Buffalo, where Gretzky broke the record, was saluted on the ice by Esposito and then demonstrated why he was considered a classier act off the ice than on it. A mob of reporters awaited Gretzky after the game, but knowing his hometown reporter, future Hall of Famer Jim Matheson of the Edmonton Journal, needed some comments ASAP, Gretzky pulled Matheson and this reporter, who just happened to be in the right place at the right time, into the back of the locker room shower and spoke with us for several minutes. It gave Jim and myself a jump on the opposition and helped immensely with deadline issues.

Now Gretzky is 50, and he and wife Janet have five children, including 22-year-old Paulina, 20-year-old Ty and 18-year-old Trevor, all of whom used to travel the NHL circuit, closing on Broadway when dad played three seasons with the Rangers before the curtain came down with “The Great Goodbye” on April 13, 1999. How appropriate! No. 99 retired in 1999. The most stunning statistic of Gretzky’s endless number of records in a mind-boggling career? If you take away all of the record 894 goals that he scored, his record 1,963 assists would still make him the NHL’s all-time scoring leader by 76 points over former Oilers teammate Mark Messier (1,887).

Later in 1999, on Nov. 22, Gretzky became the 10th player to bypass the three-year waiting period for induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame, which announced he would be the last player to do so. He was inducted into the International Ice Hockey Federation Hall of Fame in 2000, and his No. 99 was retired league-wide at the NHL All-Star Game. It was only the second number retired league-wide by a major North American sports league, the other being Jackie Robinson’s No. 42 by Major League Baseball in 1997. Later in 1999, Capilano Drive that runs past Northlands Coliseum was changed to “Wayne Gretzky Drive.” In 2002, 14 years after “The Trade” to Los Angeles, the Kings held a jersey retirement ceremony and erected a life-sized statue of Gretzky outside Staples Center. The ceremony was delayed until then so owner Bruce McNall, who had recently finished a prison sentence, could attend.

In 2000, Gretzky agreed to purchase a 10 percent stake in the Phoenix Coyotes in a partnership with majority owner Steve Ellman, taking on the roles of alternate governor, managing partner and head of hockey operations. He became head coach on Aug. 8, 2005, with associate head coach and former Whalers defenseman Ulf Samuelsson taking over in training camp in 2009 during an ownership dispute. Gretzky hasn’t had any official ties to the NHL since he stepped down as coach and head of hockey operations on Sept. 24, 2009.

Gretzky insists he holds no grudge toward the NHL or anyone connected with the league while continuing his connection from afar. Let’s hope the NHL never lets it come to that. No. 99 will always be No. 1 in my mind. Players today and forever should always remember that being an ambassador for the game like “The Great One” and “Mr. Hockey” should be the ultimate goal.

MONARCHS 4, WHALE 2

Manchester     0 3 1 – 4
Connecticut    1 1 0 – 2

First period: 1. Conn, Grachev 13 (Kennedy), 11:23. Penalties: Kolomatis, Mch (hooking), 3:03; Tessier, Ct (hooking), 7:09; Johnson, Mch (interference), 14:10; Clune, Mch (unsportsmanlike conduct), 17:57.

Second period: 2. Mch, Voynov 10 (Meckler, Clune), 5:14. 3. Mch, Kozun 11 (Elkins, Teubert), 6:16. 4. Mch, Holloway 15 (King), 10:20. 5. Conn, Weise 10 (Dupont, Soryal), 13:41. Penalties: Weise, Ct (tripping), 3:02; Clune, Mch (fighting), 8:53; DiDiomete, Ct (fighting), 8:53.

Third period: 6. Mch, Zeiler 2 (Meckler), 19:10. Penalties: Newbury, Ct (boarding), 3:38; Dupont, Ct (interference), 8:27; Cliché, Mch (delay of game), 14:02.
Shots on goal: Manchester 10-12-11-33. Connecticut 12-5-8-25; Power-play opportunities: Manchester 0 of 4; Connecticut 0 of 4; Goalies: Manchester, Jones 17-5-0 (25 shots-23 saves). Connecticut, Johnson 14-16-3 (33-30); A: 5,802; Referee: Jamie Koharski; Linesmen: Luke Galvin, Brent Colby