Pat Verbeek Added to Player Roster for Whalers vs. Bruins Legends Game at Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” February 19

Hartford, CT …  Whalers Sports and Entertainment announced today that Pat Verbeek will join the group of featured players for the Hartford Whalers legends vs. Boston Bruins legends game February 19, 2011 at Rentschler Field in East Hartford.

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

The Bruins Alumni currently boasts a roster that includes Craig Janney, Brian Leetch, Brad Park, Lyndon Byers and Rick Middleton. They will be taking on a Whalers Alumni team consisting of players such as Blaine Stoughton, Nelson Emerson, John McKenzie, Wayne and Dave Babych, as well as others still to be announced.

Verbeek, a right wing hailing from Sarnia, Ontario, played six seasons for the Hartford Whalers from 1989-95 and ranks twelfth on the all-time list of games played as a Whaler with 433. Verbeek served as the eighth captain of the Whalers from 1992-95.

Verbeek totaled 192 goals as a member of the Whalers, fourth all-time, and 211 assists, also good for fourth all-time. His 403 total points in a Hartford uniform ranks third in franchise history, behind Ron Francis and Kevin Dineen. Verbeek also registered 1,144 penalty minutes with the Whalers, also third all-time. He was selected to represent Hartford in the 1991 NHL All-Star Game in Chicago, recording one assist.

A 19-year professional, Verbeek skated in a career-total of 1,424 NHL contests with the New Jersey Devils, Whalers, New York Rangers, Detroit Red Wings and Dallas Stars, scoring 522 goals with 541 assists for 1,063 points, along with 2,905 penalty minutes, eleventh-most all-time in league history.

Originally a third-round pick of the New Jersey Devils in the 1982 NHL Draft, Verbeek was acquired by the Whalers from New Jersey in June of 1989 in exchange for Sylvain Turgeon. He captured a Stanley Cup Championship with the Dallas Stars during the 1998-99 campaign.

Verbeek’s son, Kyle, will also be participating in the Outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011.  Kyle Verbeek is a sophomore forward on the Sacred Heart University Pioneers hockey team, which is taking on the UConn Huskies at 1:00 on Sunday, February 13 at Rentschler Field.

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

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 1/28

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

Maya Moore flexes her muscles [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Transcript of Duke coach McCallie’s teleconference [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Huskies Stay The Course, Defeat Rutgers [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

After Slow Start, Second-Half Surge Helps UConn At Rutgers [Hartford Courant]

When her shots missed the hoop, Moore hit the boards [New Haven Register]

Five questions with UConn’s Lorin Dixon [The Day]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

UConn-Bound Guard Ryan Boatright Suspended [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Mike also answered a bunch of questions in his mailbag [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Big East bits: a little Kemba and Jimmer talk [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

UConn’s Kemba or BYU’s Jimmer: Who’s the best in the country [CT Post]

Walker, Fredette Both Making Cases For Player Of The Year [Hartford Courant]

UConn Football links

More Thoughts From A FWG: Former Husky DT Rob Lunn [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Sean Mulcahy – A Burton Scholarship Recipient – Talks [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Former Huskies Witten, Davis Weigh In On Burton Deal [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Former Husky Desi Cullen On His Support For Jeff Hathaway [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Frosh Talk: Nebrich, McQuillan, Gifford And Adeyemi Speak [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

The Burton Bully [Joe Perez – Norwich Bulletin]

Solution to UConn’s ‘Burton Problem’ [Lee Lewis – The Republican-American]

Former UConn Football Players Question Burton’s Motive [Hartford Courant]

Pickens understands UConn donor’s anger [USA Today]

The lesson to be learned, courtesy of Connecticut football: Beware those strings attached to donors [Syracuse Post-Standard]

Red Sox Exhibition Game On March 31 Against Astros Canceled

Boston Red SoxIf you’re a fan of the Boston Red Sox, live in the Houston, TX area and have tickets to the exhibition game against the Houston Astros on March 31st, you’re SOL. And the reason you’re SOL is the fact that the game has been canceled.

Instead of that game, the two teams will play two more games during Grapefruit League play.

The first one added to the Red Sox 2011 spring training schedule is on March 8th when the Astros will visit City of Palms Park in Ft. Myers, FL at 1:05 p.m. The Red Sox will then head to Kissimmee, FL to take on the Astros at 1:05 p.m. at Osceola County Stadium.

All-Star Williams Eager to Provide Leadership, in Addition to Scoring

By Bruce Berlet

When Jeremy Williams finally realized his goal of playing in the NHL five years ago, he had Toronto Maple Leafs’ captain, 2006 Olympic gold medalist and future Hall of Famer Mats Sundin sitting beside him in the locker room.

CT Whale“There’s not much of a better leader than that on or off the ice,” said Williams, who leads the Connecticut Whale in goals (21) and points (38) and will be the team’s representative in the AHL All-Star Classic. “Not in a negative aspect or because he was old (36), but he was always like a father figure, which was really weird. To the guys, he was that composed and that mature that you didn’t want to anger him or anything because you didn’t want him to be disappointed in you.”

Sundin, the first overall pick by the Quebec Nordiques in 1989 who retired in 2009, assisted on two of the first three NHL goals by Williams, who set a record by scoring in each of his first three games – in different seasons (2005-06, 2006-07 and 2007-08). In his one game with the Rangers against the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 24, Williams’ only claim to fame in 3 1/2 minutes of ice time was getting two high-sticks to the chin on his first two shifts without a penalty being called.

“It was, ‘Welcome to New York,’ ” Williams said with a smile. “(But) I’ve been very fortunate, and I don’t know if it’s all luck or just in the right place at the right time.”

How about a laser shot that would make Al MacInnis, Zdeno Chara or former Whalers defenseman Chris Pronger proud? It also makes Williams a threat from almost anywhere, especially on a one-time from the point or the circle on the power play. Williams should be in the hardest shot event for the Eastern Conference in the AHL All-Star Classic skills competition Sunday night and could be a serious scoring threat in the usually high-scoring, no-hitting All-Star Game on Monday night at the Giant Center in Hershey, Pa.

“His biggest asset is his shot and scoring touch, and he obviously has brought that (to the Whale),” coach Ken Gernander said. “He’s one of the league leaders in scoring goals, which will always make for an interesting type of player to watch in an All-Star type of environment.”

With as many as eight Whale players on recent call-ups to the Rangers, Williams also added some penalty killing to his repertoire. But he’s best known for his shot and has tried to help some of the Whale’s younger players, notably rookie Kelsey Tessier, about shooting the puck quickly.

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

And accuracy is nothing new for Williams, who credited the trait to his early days playing hockey on a family farm in Glenavon, Saskatchewan, pop. 600, located about an hour outside Regina. Williams’ father, Kevin, made ice for Williams and his younger brother, Tristan, every winter, but it wasn’t exactly like Madison Square Garden.

“If you missed the net, there were no boards, so you’d better be hitting the net or we’d be searching for pucks in the snow,” Williams said with a wide smile. “My father would go out with the hose and spray it down for me and my younger brother. And if he didn’t have time to build a rink, he would clean off an area of farm water so it would freeze over. He would wait until he could drive on it with the tractor, push all the snow off and then spray it down with a little water.”

Williams said his game and how he acts in the locker room never really changes regardless of who’s on the team or on recall to the Rangers.

“I’ve always thought that everybody can talk,” Williams said, “but it’s more what you do on the ice is what the young guys and other guys on the ice are going to follow. I’m not saying I’m a great leader, but I try and help as much as I can. I try to talk to someone if I feel I can give advice. You can take it and listen to it and believe it, or you can take it and forget it. What you do with advice is up to you and whether or not you believe in it.”

Williams will be leaving for Hershey right after Saturday night’s game against the Atlantic Division-leading Portland Pirates, coached by former Hartford Whalers star and captain Kevin Dineen, another of the all-time best leaders in hockey history.

“It’s an honor to be named to an All-Star team,” Williams said, “especially on a team like ours with so many skilled, veteran forwards and some new, up-and-coming young guys. It must have been hard to choose one guy off our team just based on the amount of skill level we have.”

Williams was named a reserve on the Eastern Conference team by a panel of AHL coaches. At the time, he was tied for the league lead in goals with 20, and his 21 goals are now tied for fifth with former Wolf Pack wing Nigel Dawes, who is on recall to the Atlanta Thrashers. The Pirates’ Mark Mancari has vaulted to the goal-scoring lead with 27, seven coming in the last three games starting with back-to-back hat tricks. Wethersfield native Colin McDonald, son of former Whalers and New Haven Nighthawks defenseman Gerry McDonald, is second with a career-high 23, one more than Charlotte’s Jerome Samson and Oklahoma City’s Alexandre Giroux, the former Wolf Pack wing who is captain of the Western Conference team.

“I’m fairly happy with the way things have started,” said Williams, signed as a free agent by the Rangers on July 12 after setting career highs for goals (32) and points (63) last season with the Grand Rapids Griffins. “I’m pretty tough on myself. To me, I think I should have 35 goals already just based on the number of chances that I’ve had. For me, it’s just being reliable and making the right plays. Everybody is going to make mistakes – I make mistakes – but it’s limiting them and using brains over anything.”

Williams said he has benefited from playing with center Tim Kennedy, who has a pass-first, shoot-second philosophy that fits well with Williams.

“We have a little different styles,” Williams said. “I score goals just going up and down the ice, and Tim is a very skilled, shifty kind of guy. But the last few games, I feel we’ve really started clicking and understanding each other as players, so playing with him is really good, too.”

The Whale has been a bit topsy-turvy in Williams’ first season in Hartford, first because of so many new, young players, especially on defense, and more recently due to all the call-ups to the Rangers. That was epitomized by a nine-game winless streak that started a 1-9-2-1 drought from Oct. 20 to Nov. 17, that was immediately followed by a 12-1-0-2 surge that included winning streaks of six and four games and took the Whale all the way into second place in the Atlantic Division. The Whale (22-18-2-5) are now in third with 51 points, 10 behind leader Portland and nine back of second-place Manchester.

“We’ve been pretty good since that skid,” Williams said, “but I guess you’d rather have a nine-game losing streak at the start of the season rather than at the end, so that’s a positive that we learned from that. When a team is winning, everybody is just more confident and making better plays. Confidence is a huge part of winning and losing, and as long as you cannot get too high or get too low, it’s pretty good.”

Williams has certainly been pretty good in his first 47 games with the Wolf Pack/Whale and deserving of the All-Star notoriety.

Four players were added to the rosters Thursday. Forward Eric Tangradi and defenseman Robert Bortuzzo, both of Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, joined the Eastern Conference roster, while Lake Erie Monsters forward Mark Olver and Texas Stars forward Francis Wathier were added to the Western Conference team. They replaced Wilkes-Barre/Scranton’s Dustin Jeffrey (personal), Portland’s Drew Schiestel (injury), Lake Erie’s Ryan Stoa (NHL recall) and Texas’s Travis Morin (NHL recall).

Williams’ first All-Star coaches will be Mark French and assistant Troy Mann, 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 their conferences 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.

AHL Live (ahllive.com) will show the skills competition (3 p.m.) and All-Star Game (7 p.m.) live, and NHL Center Ice will have the All-Star Game live. NESN will show the skills competition live, but the All-Star Game will be delayed until Wednesday at 7 p.m. MSG Plus HD will show the skills competition at 5 p.m. Monday, followed by the All-Star Game live.

Emrick, the lead announcer for NHL games on NBC and Versus as well as the TV voice of the Devils, will handle the play-by-play alongside Craig Laughlin, former AHL and NHL wing and longtime commentator for Comcast SportsNet’s live game coverage of the Washington Capitals. Bears broadcaster John Walton will be the rink-side reporter for the All-Star Game and will do play-by-play on Skills Night, when he will be joined by former AHL player and coach and current Comcast SportsNet studio analyst Alan May and NESN’s John Chandler with rink-side interviews.

AHL Live is also offering a special two-day subscription package for live streaming of the All-Star Classic.

REINFORCED WHALE HOSTS ATLANTIC’S BEST

Williams and the rest of the Whale have been reinforced by the return of defenseman Michael Del Zotto and forwards Kris Newbury, Chad Kolarik, Evgeny Grachev and Brodie Dupont from the Rangers. With right wing Dale Weise rejoining the team on Monday and center Ryan Garlock back after missing a game and a practice with the flu, the Whale returned three wings to their ECHL teams – Bretton Cameron (Stockton), Chris Chappell (Greenville) and Tyler Donati (Elmira).

The Whale can use reinforcements, with the Atlantic Division’s top two teams, the Pirates and Monarchs, coming to town. The Pirates (28-13-4-1) overtook the Monarchs (28-16-1-3) for the division lead Sunday when they beat Worcester 6-5 in a shootout while the Monarchs were losing 2-1 in a shootout with the Bruins. The Pirates increased their lead to three points Tuesday night as Mancari, the reigning AHL Player of the Week, scored his 27th goal in a 2-1 victory over the Norfolk Admirals. The Monarchs reciprocated with a 4-2 victory over the Admirals on Wednesday night as Marc-Andre Cliché, the Rangers’ second-round pick in 2005 who never played in the organization before being traded to Los Angeles as part of the Sean Avery deal, had two power-play goals and an assist.

The Whale is 1-4-0-1 against the Monarchs, losing three times in Manchester by one goal, once in a shootout. But they’ve also lost twice by three goals, including 3-0 at home on Jan. 2 when rookie Martin Jones made 39 saves for his first shutout of the season and former Yale forward David Meckler and Richard Clune helped set each other up in the third period. The Whale’s only victory was 5-1 on Dec. 11 when Mats Zuccarello scored twice, linemate Newbury had one goal and two assists and Chad Johnson made 23 saves. Zuccarello is on recall to the Rangers.

All-Star defenseman Viatcheslav Voynov leads the Monarchs’ balanced attack with nine goals and 25 assists, followed by left wing Bud Holloway (14, 19), center Oscar Moller (10, 20), left wing Dwight King (12, 15), centers Corey Elkins (13, 14), Justin Azevedo (12, 15) and Cliché (14, 12), and wings Brandon Kozun (10, 12) and Meckler (13, 8). Jones has had an excellent rookie season with a 16-5-0 record, 2.17 goals-against average, .930 save percentage and two shutouts. Jeff Zatkoff is 11-11-3, 3.13, .899 with no shutouts.

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. Park also will play for the Bruins legends against the Whalers legends Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. at Rentschler Field in East Hartford before the Whale faces the Bruins at 7 p.m.

After playing the Pirates and having the brief All-Star break, the Whale’s four-game homestand ends Feb. 4 against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers before they have a home-and-home set with Portland on Feb. 5-6.

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 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 Monday. In case of bad weather, the Whale-Bruins 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, 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.

STRONG FINISH FOR KINGS’ QUICK

Hamden native Jonathan Quick capped the end of a terrific first half of the NHL season on Wednesday night, making 22 saves in regulation and overtime and then stopping all four shots in a shootout as the Los Angeles Kings rallied for a 3-2 victory over the San Jose Sharks. The Kings got to extra time on Alexei Ponikarovsky’s goal at 5:47 of the third period, then Quick was perfect as he won his third consecutive game to improve to 22-14-1 with a 2.15 goals-against average, third in the NHL, .920 save percentage and five shutouts, third in the league.

“We knew going into the third period that we had to go out there and leave it on the ice,” said Quick, the former Avon Old Farms and UMass star who is 5-0 in shootouts this season. “We had nothing to save. … It was a real tight game and every play mattered. There were a lot of big hits and physical play around the net and in the corners, and you did get the feeling of a playoff game. The crowd was really into it, but in the playoffs, you don’t get the shootout.”

The Kings had lost seven of their past 10 home games, but Quick’s goaltending and Jarret Stoll’s second shootout-winning goal of the season enabled them to snap the Pacific Division rival Sharks’ four-game winning streak. It was the Kings’ final home game until Feb. 24, as they will travel all over North America while the Staples Center is occupied by the Grammys and the NBA’s All-Star weekend. … Rookie forward Marc-Olivier Vallerand and defenseman Blake Parlett, who were in Whale camp this fall before being assigned to the Greenville Road Warriors, played major roles as the ECHL All-Stars routed the Bakersfield Condors 9-3 in the ECHL All-Star Game on Wednesday night in Bakersfield, Calif. Vallerand tied for the highest point total on the team with a goal and two assists, while Parlett had the best plus/minus at plus-4. Stockton Thunder rookie forward Mark Arcobello of Milford and Yale University scored three goals and was named MVP. Greenville coach Dean Stork coached the All-Stars, and Road Warriors president and general manager Neil Smith, former GM of the Rangers, did color commentary on the TV broadcast.

Whale Announce Player Moves

HARTFORD, January 27, 2011: Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the Whale has returned forwards Bretton Cameron, Chris Chappell and Tyler Donati to their respective ECHL teams.

CT WhaleCameron, a rookie who registered one assist, two penalty minutes and a +2 with the Whale in two games, his first career AHL action, was released from his Professional Tryout (PTO) agreement and will return to the Stockton Thunder. Chappell, who was reassigned by the parent New York Rangers to the Greenville Road Warriors, was scoreless in five games with the Whale. Donati was returned on loan to the Elmira Jackals, after playing one game with the Whale since being recalled from the Jackals Monday. Donati had no points or penalty minutes in Tuesday’s 4-2 Whale loss to Providence and in total on the year, has played in nine Whale games and is scoreless, with no penalty minutes and nine shots on goal.

The Whale are back in home-ice action at the XL Center tomorrow night, Friday, January 28, against the Manchester Monarchs. Faceoff is 7:00 PM, and being a Friday night, it’s Guida’s Family Value Night. Family Value packages start as low as $48 and include three tickets, three hot dogs or pizza slices, three sodas and a Whale souvenir. Guida’s Family Value Night packs are available at the XL Center ticket office and on-line at www.CTwhale.com.

The Whale also play at home this Saturday, January 29 vs. Head Coach Kevin Dineen and the Portland Pirates. That is also a 7:00 faceoff, and features a special appearance by Hall of Fame ex-NHL defenseman Brad Park, who will be signing autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM and dropping a ceremonial first puck. Park is also slated to be among the Boston Bruins legends who take the ice against Whalers legends February 19 at Rentschler Field in the Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl”.

Tickets for all 2010-11 Whale home games are available now at the XL Center ticket office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com. Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day.

For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call (860) 728-3366.

NESN Announces 2011 Red Sox Spring Training Coverage

NESNNESN has announced their 2011 Boston Red Sox spring training schedule and the nice thing about it, we’re going to get more Red Sox coverage. NESN will be broadcasting 13 games this spring and will have 16 hours of live coverage over 13 days.

Considering the fact that we’ve had over four feet of snow this month, the sights of Florida will be a very nice thing.

Check out the full release below:

NESN FUELS RED SOX FANS BY DOUBLING ITS SPRING TRAINING COVERAGE
Live Programming Begins February 13
Network to Televise 13 Spring Training Games
NESN.com to Provide Daily Reports and Live Blogs

BOSTON – NESN,New England’s most watched sports network, will launch its 2011 Red Sox spring training baseball coverage on February 13 with thirteen days of wall to wall action featuring news, analysis and exclusive behind the scenes access. Spring Training game coverage will begin March 4 when the Red Sox meet the New York Yankees in Tampa,Florida.

“Red Sox Nation can’t wait to see the 2011 team take the field in Fort Myers. NESN will bring the fans to the field every day with unprecedented coverage,access, analysis and interviews,” said Joel Feld, NESN’s executive vice president of programming and executive producer.“For the first time, our viewers can participate LIVE in our spring training shows through NESN.com and via Twitter and Facebook. The Red Sox off-season has created a record level of excitement and we’ll be there to give fans their first opportunity to connect directly with the Red Sox in action.”

NESN’s coverage line-up includes:

  • Red Sox LIVE from Fort Myers – 16 hours of live coverage over 13 days with Tom Caron, Peter Gammons, Heidi Watney & Don Orsillo
  • The Dennis & Callahan Morning Show – 15 hours live from Fort Myers with John Dennis, Gerry Callahan and Jon Meterparel
  • Red Sox Spring Training Baseball on NESN – 13 games beginning Friday, March 4 with Don Orsillo, Jerry Remy & Heidi Watney
  • NESN Daily – On location reports featuring the latest news from Fort Myers with Heidi Watney and Don Orsillo
  • Special Edition of Red Sox GameDay LIVE from Houston – March 30 at 7:00 PM ET with Tom Caron, Don Orsillo, Jerry Remy and Heidi Watney
  • NESN.com – Daily posts, live blogs of every game and fan participation featuring Tony Lee, Don Orsillo, Tom Caron and Heidi Watney

For a full look at the schedule, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

NESN’s 2011 Red Sox LIVE from Fort Myers and The Dennis & Callahan Morning Show  Programming Schedule

DATE PROGRAM TIME
Sunday, February 13 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 7:00 – 8:00 PM
Monday, February 14 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM
Tuesday, February 15 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 6:30 PM
Wednesday, February 16 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM
Thursday, February 17 Dennis & Callahan Morning Show 6:00 – 9:00 AM
Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 6:30 PM
Friday, February 18 Dennis & Callahan Morning Show 6:00 – 9:00 AM
Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM
Saturday, February 19 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 9:00 AM – NOON
Sunday, February 20 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 9:00 AM – NOON
Monday, February 21 Dennis & Callahan Morning Show 6:00 – 9:00 AM
Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM
Tuesday, February 22 Dennis & Callahan Morning Show 6:00 – 9:00 AM
Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM
Wednesday, February 23 Dennis & Callahan Morning Show 6:00 – 9:00 AM
Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM
Thursday, February 24 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM
Friday, February 25 Red Sox LIVE from Ft. Myers 6:00 – 7:00 PM

NESN’s 2011 Red Sox Spring Training Game Broadcast Schedule

DATE PROGRAM TIME
Friday, March 4 Red Sox at New York Yankees (Tampa) 7:00 PM
Saturday, March 5 Florida Marlins at Red Sox 1:00 PM
Sunday, March 6 Red Sox at New York Mets (Port St. Lucie) 1:00 PM
Wednesday, March 9 Baltimore Orioles at Red Sox 7:00 PM
Saturday, March 12 Florida Marlins at Red Sox 1:00 PM
Sunday, March 13 Red Sox at Pittsburgh Pirates (Bradenton) 1:00 PM
Monday, March 14 New York Yankees at Red Sox 7:00 PM
Saturday, March 19 Red Sox at Pittsburgh Pirates (Bradenton) 1:00 PM
Sunday, March 20 St. Louis Cardinals at Red Sox 1:00 PM
Friday, March 25 Toronto Blue Jays at Red Sox 7:00 PM
Saturday, March 26 Minnesota Twins at Red Sox 7:00 PM
Sunday, March 27 Red Sox at Baltimore Orioles (Sarasota) 1:00 PM
Wednesday, March 30 Red Sox at Houston Astros (Houston,TX) 8:00 PM

Visit http://www.directsattv.com to see the best deals on satellite tv.

UConn Baseball Ranked No. 9 By Baseball America

The UConn Huskies baseball team is coming off of a record setting 2010 season that saw them net 48 wins and a berth in the 2010 NCAA Baseball Playoffs. They eventually were knocked out by the Oregon Ducks in the NCAA Regionals that were held at Dodd Stadium in Norwich, CT.

UConn Huskies baseballBut the Huskies have a solid nucleus of players back including George Springer, Mike Nemeth and Matt Barnes who look to get the Huskies back to the postseason for the second straight year. And with those players back plus many more, the Huskies have been ranked No. 9 by Baseball America in their top 25 preseason poll.

Here’s a quick synopsis of what Baseball America has to say about the Huskies:

Baseball America OFP: 65. Connecticut will prove that its school-record 48-win 2010 season was no fluke, as its roster is among the most complete and balanced in college baseball. No New England team has reached Omaha since Maine in 1986, but UConn is well equipped to end that drought.

To see what Baseball America is saying about the Huskies, scroll down to No. 9.

For a full look at the Baseball America 2011 Preseason College Baseball Top 25, click on the read more button below if you’re on the home page.

Baseball America’s 2011 Preseason Poll
Team 2010 Record  Final 2010 Ranking
1.    Florida   47-17 7
2.    UCLA    51-17 2
3.    Texas Christian    54-14 3
4.    Vanderbilt    46-20 14
5.    Oklahoma   50-18 5
6.    Texas   50-13 9
7.    South Carolina   54-16 1
8.    Cal State Fullerton  46-18 1
9.    Connecticut  48-16 NR
10.    Clemson 45-25 10
11.    Arizona State  52-10 4
12.    Florida State   48-20 6
13.    Stanford    31-25 NR
14.    Oregon   40-24 25
15.    Virginia   51-14 8
16.    Baylor   36-24 NR
17.    California   29-25 NR
18.    Rice   40-23 21
19.    Arizona   34-24 NR
20.    College of Charleston   44-19 NR
21.    Texas A&M   43-21 23
22.    Louisiana State 41-22 NR
23.    St. John’s   43-20 NR
24.    Miami  43-20 15
25.    Tulane  32-24 NR

Red Sox Place Three in Keith Law’s Top 100 MLB Prospects

Keith Law of Scout’s Inc. has released his top 100 MLB prospects for 2011 (ESPN Insider link) and the Red Sox have three of their minor leaguers being recognized. They are SS Jose Iglesias (45), RHP Anthony Ranaudo (54) and Drake Britton (90).

Boston Red SoxLaw’s top five prospects are Mike Trout from the Los Angeles Angels, Bryce Harper of the Washington Nationals, Domonic Brown of the Philadelphia Phillies, Jesus Montero of the New York Yankees and Eric Hosmer of the Kansas City Royals.

Here’s what Law has to say about Iglesias (ESPN Insider link):

Iglesias is the best defensive shortstop prospect I’ve ever seen. He’s not the fastest or most athletic, but he’s the one most able to make plays and to take difficult plays and make them look routine.

There’s not much flash to Iglesias’ fielding; he gets in position, the ball disappears into his glove and it’s on its way to first base before your eyes have even adjusted from watching the ball on the ground. His hands and instincts are plus. He is not wide-ranging like an Ozzie Smith but will surprise with how many ground balls he reaches despite average-at-best running speed.

Iglesias’ swing is direct with good bat speed, and he has a little pop when he gets his arms extended, although in Fenway that probably will mean lots of doubles off the Monster but few home runs. He needs to avoid barring his lead arm, and so far he hasn’t shown much patience although he has shown he can make a lot of contact. If he can draw 50 walks a year or hit .300 regularly, he’s an All-Star, and if not, he’s still an above-average regular because of the potential value of his defense.

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Here’s what Law has to say about Ranuado (ESPN Insider link):

Ranaudo might have been the second pick in the draft had he been healthy all spring, but he tweaked his elbow at the start of his season at LSU and wasn’t 100 percent again until about three weeks before the draft. Boston took him in the sandwich round and watched him dominate in the Cape Cod League all summer, after which the Red Sox gave him a bonus commensurate with a top-five overall selection.

Ranaudo is a horse, built for 220-240 innings a year, and has the aggressive approach to pitching you want to see in a potential front-line guy. He’ll pitch with a solid-average fastball at 90-93, reaching back for 94-95 when he needs it, but hitters do not pick up the ball out of his hand and he gets swings and misses up in the zone with the pitch as if it was 97 with life. His curveball is solid-average now, projecting as above-average to plus, 79-82 with varying shape, and he’s got a show-me changeup that will probably be a developmental priority for him in 2011. His arm action was unrestricted on the Cape and he was getting great extension out in front; the fact that Boston gave him all that money is a sign that his elbow is in good shape.

He might be more of a strong No. 2 than an ace, but he should move as quickly as his arm’s health will allow.

Here’s what Law had to say about Britton (ESPN Insider link):

Britton missed almost all of 2009 while recovering from Tommy John surgery, but came back strongly in 2010 and saw his velocity move upward as well. Britton worked in the low 90s all year but would touch 95-97 within outings at the end of the summer. His curveball and changeup both improved as well, although he still needs to refine his curve. He’s also worked on his tendency to rush through the end of his delivery, which the Red Sox hope will lead to improved command.

He’s aggressive and will throw strikes, if not always the quality strikes he needs, and his arm works well. He threw only about 90 to 95 innings in 2010, including work in spring training, so he’ll remain on a fairly low innings cap in 2011 and is probably a good three years out, with the chance that he’s a Jon Lester Lite down the road.

And if you’re wondering where Casey Kelly and Anthony Rizzo, two of the prospects traded in the Adrian Gonzalez deal, fell in Law’s top 100, they came in at 19th and 38th respectively.

Red Sox Farm System Ranked 11th

In a prelude to his top 100 prospects, Scouts, Inc.’s Keith Law has released his top minor league systems (ESPN Insider Link)  for the 30 teams in MLB and we find the Boston Red Sox as the 11th best team. The Kansas City Royals are the top team followed by the Tampa Bay Rays, Atlanta Braves, Toronto Blue Jays and Philadelhia Phillies.

Boston Red SoxAll things considered, this isn’t so bad as the Red Sox lost three of their top prospects in the trade with the San Diego Padres for Adrian Gonzalez.

Here’s what Law had to say about the Red Sox farm system:

The Sox traded away their top two prospects for Gonzalez, but boosted on the back end with three first-round talents added in the 2010 draft (their actual first-rounder, Kolbrin Vitek, plus Anthony Ranaudo and Bryce Brentz). As usual, their low-minors teams were strong, with the Greenville rotation quietly loaded with intriguing arms.

And those prospects, Casey Kelly, Anthony Rizzo and Reymond Fuentes, helped the Padres move up six spots in Law’s rankings.

The Red Sox should be able to boost their farm system even more as the 2011 draft class is deep and the Red Sox right now hold two first round picks plus two supplemental round picks. They could get another one if Felipe Lopez signs with another team.

Whale Welcome Special Guests to February 4 Home Game in Exclusive Season Ticket/Festival Ticket Holder Event

HARTFORD, January 27, 2011:  Whalers Sports & Entertainment announced today that former Hartford Whalers and 1986 NHL All Stars Mark Howe and Brian Propp, and ex-Whaler Alan Hangsleben, will be appearing at the Connecticut Whale’s home game Friday, February 4 at the XL Center, a GEICO Connecticut Cup matchup with the Bridgeport Sound Tigers.

CT WhaleThe three former pro stars will be conducting a private, exclusive “meet and greet” reception with Whale season ticket-holders, and “Outdoor Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest 2011” festival ticket-purchasers, before the game, from 4:30-6:30 PM at the XL Center.  (Invited guests will be contacted late this week and will need to RSVP for the event.)

Propp, Howe and Hangsleben will then drop a ceremonial first puck before the 7:00 faceoff between the Whale and Sound Tigers.  Hangsleben will also be signing autographs in the XL Center atrium during the second intermission, alongside selected Whale players.

February 4 marks the 25th anniversary of the 1986 NHL All-Star Game, which was played at the Hartford Civic Center and saw the Wales Conference defeat the Campbell Conference, 4-3 in overtime.  Propp and Howe, who were then with the Philadelphia Flyers, both played for the victorious Wales Conference in that game, and Propp scored the Wales’ first goal, which tied the game at one at 17:56 of the second period.

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Howe, the son of all-time great, and fellow former Whaler, Gordie Howe, played 929 NHL games, and another 426 in the WHA, in a 22-year pro career that spanned from the 1973-74 season through 1994-95.  Playing both forward and defense, Howe was a three-time First-Team NHL All-Star selection and the 1986 game was one of four NHL All-Star games in which he participated.  His NHL totals were 197 goals and 545 assists for 742 points, along with 455 penalty minutes, in 929 games with the Whalers, Philadelphia and Detroit.

In the WHA, after winning an AVCO Cup with the Houston Aeros in 1975, Howe, along with Gordie and brother Marty, joined the New England Whalers for the 1977-78 season.  Mark Howe remained with the Whalers for their final two seasons in the WHA, and the franchise’s first three NHL campaigns, before being traded to the Flyers in August of 1982.  In 213 career NHL games with Hartford, Howe amassed 51 goals and 147 assists for 198 points and had 92 penalty minutes.  In 147 total WHA games with the Whalers, he scored 72 goals and added 126 assists for 198 points and served 64 minutes in penalties.

Propp finished off a 15-year NHL career with 65 games in a Hartford Whaler uniform in 1993-94, scoring 12 goals and adding 17 assists for 29 points, and totaling 44 penalty minutes.  Prior to that the 1979 Flyer first-round pick (14th overall) spent 11 full seasons, and part of a 12th, in the City of Brotherly Love, and also saw time with the Boston Bruins and Minnesota North Stars.  A native of Lanigan, Saskatchewan, Propp skated in a career total of 1,016 NHL matches, scoring 425 goals and adding 578 assists for 1003 points and serving 830 PIM.  The 1986 All-Star Game was one of five career All-Star game appearances for Propp, who also went to the Stanley Cup Finals five times (1980, 1985 and 1987 with Philadelphia, 1990 with Boston and 1991 with Minnesota) during his 15 NHL years.

Hangsleben, a defenseman born in Warroad, Minnesota, broke into pro hockey in 1974-75 after three years at the University of North Dakota, and suited up for 26 WHA games with the Whalers that season.  He would stay with the Whalers for the remainder of their WHA existence, logging 334 games-played, the sixth-most in franchise history, and registering 36 goals and 73 assists for 109 points, along with 437 PIM.  Hangsleben made the transition to the NHL with the Whalers in 1979-80 and played 37 games with Hartford that season, before being traded to the Washington Capitals in January of 1980.

Hangsleben’s NHL career would continue through the 1981-82 season and include a stint with the Los Angeles Kings in addition to his time with Washington.  All told, Hangsleben suited up for 185 career NHL contests, scoring 21 goals and adding 48 assists for 69 points and totaling 396 penalty minutes.

RSVPs will be sent via the CT Whale ticket office soon.

Tickets for the February 4 game, and all 2010-11 Whale home games, are available now at the XL Center ticket office, through Ticketmaster Charge-by-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on-line at www.ctwhale.com.  Tickets start at $7 each at the XL Center ticket office on game day.

For information on Whale ticket packages, group sales and VIP packages, call (860) 728-3366.