Samarie Walker Leaves UConn Women’s Basketball Program

It takes a very special kind of student-athlete to play for UConn Huskies women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma.

For one, you have to put up with him (I don’t mean this in a bad way at all). Secondly, when you play at UConn, you are under the microscope every day. Some can handle that, some can’t. And it’s not too often that someone leaves the UConn women’s program but unfortunately that’s happening right now.

UConn's Samarie Walker takes a shot over LSU defender Swayze Black during the second half of the Huskies' 81-51 win in the final game of the World Vision Challenge at Gamepl Pavilion on Nov. 28, 2010.After not practicing for two days, Auriemma gathered his troops together and informed them that freshman Samarie Walker has decided to leave the UConn women’s basketball family. She has decided to transfer. Should she transfer and want to play basketball at the Division I level, she will have to sit out a year.

Here’s the release from the UConn:

STORRS, Conn. – Freshman forward Samarie Walker has informed head women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma of her intention to transfer from the University of Connecticut.

The coaching staff has known for quite some time that Samarie is struggling with her commitment level to basketball,” Auriemma said. “We have attempted to work with her and help her through this. I wish Samarie all the best in her future endeavors.”

I want to thank Coach Auriemma for the opportunity to be here but right now I can’t give the team the energy and commitment that it needs to be successful. I need to go and figure out what my future holds,” Walker said. “I have struggled with this for some time and remaining here would not be fair to my teammates or the coaching staff.”

Walker played in seventeen games for UConn and saw one starting assignment. She averaged 6.2 points and 5.8 rebounds in 18.8 minutes per game.

Photo credit: Richard Messina – Hartford Courant

Report: Pasqualoni Hires New Offensive Coordinator; Todd Orlando To FIU

According to all of the UConn Huskies football beat writers here in the state of Connecticut, new head coach Paul Pasqualoni has decided to bring in an old friend of his, George DeLeone, to take over as offensive coordinator. What remains to be seen is where former offensive coordinator Joe Moorhead ends up.

UConn FootballAll of them report that Moorhead is a finalist for the head coaching gig at Indiana (PA) University, Division II school or could retain his title of quarterbacks coach at UConn.

DeLeone, a UConn graduate, has been the tight ends coach for the Miami Dolphins the past three seasons. Before he joined the Dolphins, he was the offensive coordinator in 2006 and 2007 for the Temple Owls. In 2005, he was the run game coordinator/offensive line coach for the Ole Miss Rebels.

He has also coached with Pasqualoni at Southern Connecticut State University and at Syracuse. He had two stints at Syracuse, the first from 1985-1996, and the second from 1998-2004. In his 19 years at Syracuse, he was offensive line coach (1985-86, 2000-04), offensive coordinator (1987-96), defensive coordinator (1998) and quarterbacks coach (1999). He also held the title of associate head coach from 1998-2004.

DeLeone also coached at Rutgers from 1980 to 1983 as defensive line coach (1980), defensive coordinator (1981-82) and offensive line/special teams coach (1983).

Also, Desmond Conner of the Hartford Courant is reporting that inside linebackers coach and defensive coordinator Todd Orlando will be named the new defensive coordinator at Florida International University.

Orlando was one Randy Edsall’s original hires at UConn. He had coached the inside linebackers since 1999 and became the defensive coordinator in 2005.

The Geno Auriemma Show: Special Edition

HARTFORD, Conn. (January 20, 2010) – University of Connecticut Women’s Basketball Head Coach Geno Auriemma is rarely at a loss for words, which is one reason why his coach’s interview programs can be so fascinating. UConn’s Hall of Fame coach can be even more witty, engaging and free-wheeling when he steps in front of an audience.

CPTVAll the more reason why The Geno Auriemma Show: Special Edition – a rare on-location interview program taped in front of a packed audience of fans – should prove to be an entertaining hour of television for any Husky devotee. The special premieres on Saturday, February 12 at 1 p.m. on Connecticut Public Television (CPTV), with an encore broadcast on Sunday, Feb. 13 at 1 p.m. Taped at the Rocky Hill Marriott in Rocky Hill, Connecticut, Auriemma, along with Associate Head Coach Chris Dailey and Assistant Coaches Shea Ralph and Marisa Moseley, answer questions about the team and its challenges and triumphs from members of the audience. Meghan Culmo, CPTV’s UConn Women’s Basketball sports analyst and former UConn basketball player, hosts the show.

The Geno Auriemma Show: Special Edition event and broadcast are sponsored by J.H. Cohn LLP of Glastonbury, Connecticut and the 2010-2011 season of The Geno Auriemma Show is sponsored by Highland Park Market.

Viewers will get an inside look at the team as Geno and his staff discuss their record-breaking 90-game winning streak, their disappointing loss against Stanford, their upcoming games in the regular season as well as how they plan to prepare for Big East and NCAA Tournament play in the coming weeks.

CPTV is the TV broadcast home of UConn Women’s Basketball and has been broadcasting the team’s games since 1994. With some of the consistently highest ratings and strongest membership levels of any program on public television over the past 15 years, UConn Women’s Basketball on CPTV is considered to be one of the most successful local franchises in public television history.

Rangers Recall Brodie Dupont from Whale

HARTFORD, January 20, 2011:  New York Rangers president and general manager Glen Sather announced last night that the Rangers have recalled forward Brodie Dupont from the Connecticut Whale.

CT WhaleThe callup is the first of Dupont’s four-year pro career.

In 40 games with the Whale this season, Dupont has registered eight goals and 12 assists for 20 points, along with 54 penalty minutes.  Dupont’s assist total is tied for fifth on the Whale club, and he is also fifth in PIM.  In 265 career games with the Whale/Hartford Wolf Pack, the 23-year-old native of Russell, Manitoba has 52 goals and 71 assists for 123 points, along with 365 PIM.

Dupont was a third-round selection (66th overall) by the Rangers in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft.

The Whale are back in action tomorrow night, Friday, January 21, hosting the Hamilton Bulldogs in a 7:00 PM game at the XL Center.  Fans can meet ex-Hartford Wolf Pack favorites Todd Hall and Terry Virtue, who will be signing autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM, and being a Friday night, it’s a 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.

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.

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 1/20

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 Football links

Big East mailbag [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

Best Big East games of 2010: Nos. 5 and 4 [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

Grading the 2010 Big East coaching jobs [Brian Bennett – ESPN.com]

UConn DT Kendall Reyes: Returning For 2011 Season [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Report: Samarie Walker not expected to practice today [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Walker missed game for personal matter [New Haven Register]

UConn Diary: No break on this vacation [Heather Buck – Norwich Bulletin]

UConn heads up on Hayes [The Republican-American]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Men’s Basketball Game Saturday Against Tennessee SOLD OUT! [UConnHuskies.com]

Other UConn related links

W. Ice Hockey. UConn Travels To Maine For Weekend Series [UConnHuskies.com]

M. Ice Hockey. Men’s Hockey Hosts Air Force At Freitas Ice Forum [UConnHuskies.com]

Can Dupont Repeat as “Tip-a-Player” Earnings Champion?

By Bruce Berlet

Talk about a tough act to follow.

CT WhaleYes, even Connecticut Whale wing Brodie Dupont admits he doesn’t know what he can do for an encore as defending money-earning champion in the eighth “Tip-A-Player” Dinner and Sports Carnival at the XL Center on Sunday from 4-7 p.m.

Dupont put himself over the top when he agreed to allow several fans to clip and then shave his head as the coup de grace of the 2010 event, which raised $41,000 for Gaylord Specialty Healthcare at Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford.

“There probably won’t be another shaving of the head, but I guess anything is possible,” a smiling Dupont said Wednesday after a brisk, one-hour practice at the XL Center in Hartford. “I really don’t have any story for this year. I’m just going to go in with an open mind like I did last year. It’s one of those fun events that you actually look forward to. It’s for a good cause, and I have a good time playing with some of those inflatable things.

“I don’t think I’m cut out to be a server, but the inflatables are fun. Playing with and racing the kids, just kind of having fun and enjoying yourself, is what it’s all about. This year I don’t have anything exactly planned, but I’ll have an open mind.”

Last year, Dupont had about as open a mind as you could imagine after several fans began pooling their “Puck Bucks” to get right wing Dale Weise, now on recall to the New York Rangers, to shave his head.

“Weisie was kind of on the fence, so I asked what was going on, and someone said the fans were trying to get someone to shave his head,” Dupont recalled. “I said, ‘I’ll do it,’ and started laughing, but I was pretty serious.”

The fans collected about 8,000 “Puck Bucks” ($800), which is the most any player has raised for one “dare.”

“That’s pretty cool,” Dupont said.

During the collection, one man climbed on the stage and told the crowd that Dupont wanted more “Puck Bucks” or the shave wasn’t going to happen.

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

“I wasn’t going to do it for 100 ‘Puck Bucks,’ so they just kept rolling up people and the fans just kept handing out money,” Dupont recalled. “Even when they were shaving my head, they kept throwing more money in. Several of the other players pooled their money trying to beat me, and they were close, about 500 ‘Puck Bucks.’

“I thought there were some shaky operations trying to steal my win, but I still got it.”

The head shaving was only one of a multitude of activities that Dupont did in the community last year to try to raise awareness for the then Hartford Wolf Pack. He also made dozens of appearances on behalf of the team, volunteering for school visits and any other youth-oriented outreach opportunities. He and defenseman Jared Nightingale went to Gaylord Hospital on their own to offer support and encouragement to patients recovering from catastrophic and life-changing injuries and medical conditions, something they did again this season.

For his efforts, Dupont was named the Wolf Pack’s American Specialty/AHL Man of the Year for his outstanding contributions to the Hartford community and became one of 29 finalists for the Yanick Dupre Memorial Award, honoring the overall winner. The award is named after the former Hershey Bears forward and AHL All-Star who died in 1997 following a 16-month battle with leukemia. San Antonio Rampage goalie Josh Tordjman won the award.

“It was nice to get recognition, but I don’t think that’s why anyone does it,” Dupont said. “There are a lot of guys on the team who do a lot of community work, so they must have just pulled my name out of a hat. But a lot of guys deserve just as much recognition as I got.”

Dupont said he is involved in so many activities because it’s important to give back.

“We enjoy events where you see kids smile, and it’s good to get out and learn about stuff in your community and get to know where you are,” Dupont said. “This is my fourth year here, and I’m happy I’ve got to know some people. When you meet great people, it’s just like the door opens. The people have been so nice and the community of Hartford so great, it makes it easier to go out and do things and makes it a lot more fun.

“It’s not a chore, not something I think I have to do, it’s something I really enjoy doing. I think it’s the way I was raised, where the whole part of giving back is what keeps everything going around and around. And we’re trying to make the game grow, so I think it’s fun doing these events.”

Dupont got special satisfaction at a game in Bridgeport when an AHL official approached him about visiting a friend of his dad.

“That was kind of cool,” Dupont said. “I actually remember his buddy, he stood out in my mind, because he just had a heart transplant and was a really positive guy.”

Much like the people that Dupont sees at Gaylord Hospital.

“It’s pretty cool to see how hard they have to work, and what they go through is unbelievable,” Dupont said. “It’s amazing how much mental toughness it take to even go through something like that. A lot of these guys are just going through their lives and then they get in an accident or something. But Gaylord is a special place and very welcoming, so it’s fun to go there. We even play Wii.”

But Dupont’s charity work doesn’t end there. He and his non-profit charity hosted the Brodie Dupont Slo-Pitch Classic the last two summers at his home in St. Lazare, Manitoba, where his father is the mayor. Eight teams raise money for local athletic teams and departments while playing with hockey players from the region, including Weise.

“I’ll direct the money wherever they need the financial support,” Dupont said. “Baseball diamonds are huge for a town of 250 people. It’s a lot of work with a lot of volunteers who help. My name ends up on the poster, but I honestly don’t do as much work as a lot of other people. A lot of the behind-the-scenes work is done while I’m away in Hartford, and we hold it the day before Father’s Day.”

Dupont has also helped run a dance on the rink at night, but last year he gave control to local firefighters, who worked with Dupont’s group.

Now on Sunday, Dupont and his Whale teammates will again work to raise more money for Gaylord Hospital with an event presented by Aetna. Dinner provided by area restaurants will be served by the Whale players, who will be available for autographs and pictures and competing for “tips.” There also will be a silent auction and inflatables and games in a carnival setting. Tickets are $30 for adults and $20 for children, and walk-ins are welcome. For more information, contact Lori Leniart at 860-728-3366.

So for “A Whale of a Time,” forego a few hours of NFL playoffs and help a team as active as ever in the Hartford community to do more good for brave and deserving people in the region.

KOLARIK GETS FIRST CALL-UP TO RANGERS; WHALE SIGN GOALIE PELLETIER

Whale right wing Chad Kolarik hadn’t fared well in his first four games after missing two with an injury. He had several quality scoring chances, but failed to get a single point.

All that changed in the first period Sunday against the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. Kolarik had two shorthanded goals and two assists and was plus-4 in the first period of a 6-3 victory. Kolarik set a franchise record for shorthanded goals in a period and tied team records for shorthanded goals in a game and points in a period. The Whale is 17-7-0-4 since the Kolarik-Byers trade, compared to 11-15-1-2 for the Falcons, who lost their fourth in a row Wednesday night to the Charlotte Checkers.

It turned out to be great timing for Kolarik when Rangers leading scorer Brandon Dubinsky went down for a month with a stress fracture in his left leg.

Kolarik became the fifth Whale forward to be called up this season and will rejoin center Kris Newbury and wings Mats Zuccarello and Dale Weise, all of whom were in the lineup Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Dubinsky, who has team highs of 17 goals and 38 points, was examined by team doctor Andrew Feldman, and an MRI and bone scan revealed the fracture in his left fibula.

The Rangers were already without injured forwards Vinny Prospal, Alex Frolov, Erik Christensen and former Wolf Pack wing Ryan Callahan. And sniper Marian Gaborik and captain/Trumbull native Chris Drury have returned to the lineup after lengthy absences. Frolov is out for the season and Prospal possibly as long, while Callahan and Christensen have resumed skating and are expected to return Feb. 1 for the first game after the All-Star break.

The numerous injuries in New York have also taxed the Whale lineup, but coach Ken Gernander and assistants J.J. Daigneault and Pat Boller have done a masterful job of rallying the team from a poor start to a solid position to return to the playoffs.

But the Whale will be severely challenged again without Kolarik and goalie Cameron Talbot, who will miss at least this weekend’s games against Hamilton at home on Friday night and at Springfield on Saturday night.

Kolarik, 24, has 17 goals and 16 assists this season, including 13 goals and 10 assists in 26 games with the Whale since being acquired from the Columbus Blue Jackets and Springfield Falcons on Nov. 11 for former Wolf Pack captain Dane Byers. He has nine multiple-point games and eight goals and six assists in his last 14 games. He played two games with the Blue Jackets last season.

Talbot sustained a high ankle sprain when a Wilkes-Barre/Scranton player fell on him in the final minute Sunday. He has undergone extensive treatment the last three days with trainer Damien Hess and hopes to return next week.

“I mostly just have to let it rest because there’s really not much you can do for it,” Talbot said. “I have full mobility, but it just needs to heal itself. Damo has me in a walking boot just as a precaution to kind of keep it immobilized. I’m just fine walking; I don’t have a limp or anything. But they just want to make sure it doesn’t move too much and maybe make it worse. (Hess) said the hardest part will be going down, so the real test will be the butterfly. If I can butterfly with no pain, then I’m good to go. Hopefully it’ll be less than a week, but we’ll see. Maybe take this week off and hopefully start skating again next week.”

With Talbot sidelined, the Whale signed Pier-Olivier Pelletier to a professional tryout contract to backup Chad Johnson. Pelletier, 23, the Phoenix Coyotes’ second-round pick in 2005, is from St. Louis, Quebec. As a rookie last season, he was 10-6-3 with the Laredo Bucks of the CHL and Elmira Jackets of the ECHL. He was 6-9-4 with a 3.33 GAA, .895 save percentage and one shutout in 21 games with Laredo this season.

While Kolarik, Talbot and center Todd White (undisclosed injury) are temporarily out of the Whale’s ever-changing lineup, veteran Wade Redden and rookie Jyri Niemi, a defensive pairing much of the season, each participated in a full practice for the second time Wednesday and will be available this weekend. Redden has missed six games and Niemi two, but their returns led to rookie Sam Klassen being returned to the Greenville Road Warriors of the ECHL after his first three AHL games with the Whale.

VIRTUE, HALL VISIT AND SIGN AS WHALE’S HOMESTAND ENDS

The Whale’s three-game homestand ends against the North Division-leading Hamilton Bulldogs (23-13-1-4) on Friday night, when former Hartford Wolf Pack standouts and close friends Terry Virtue and Todd Hall of Hamden will sign autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6-7 p.m. and then drop the ceremonial first puck. Virtue is an assistant coach with Owen Sound of the Ontario Hockey League, whose owners include former Hartford Whalers right wing Paul MacDermid. Hall is an assistant coach with the third-ranked Hamden High hockey team, which won the state Division I title the last two years.

Virtue will be making a pit stop on his way from his home in Tara, Ont., to Worcester, Mass., where he’ll be one of the first six inductees into the Worcester Hockey Hall of Fame on Saturday at the DCU Center. It’s “Salute to the IceCats Night,” the name of the franchise that preceded the Sharks in Worcester, and Virtue will be inducted with former Whalers wing Scott Young, Kelly O’Leary, Eddie Bates, Larz Anderson and Marvin Degon Sr., father of former Wolf Pack defenseman Martin Degon.

The Bulldogs have won two in a row despite their top two All-Star scorers, center David Desharnais (10 goals, 35 assists) and former New Canaan High School and Taft School-Watertown star wing Max Pacioretty (17, 15), are on recall to the Montreal Canadiens. The remaining top offensive threats are center Ben Maxwell (6, 19), right wings Aaron Palushaj (5, 17) and J.T. Wyman (10, 9), and defensemen Brendon Nash (2, 17). Center Ryan Russell, the Rangers’ seventh-round pick in 2005 who never played in the organization, has six goals and two assists and is plus-11 in 41 games. Veteran Curtis Sanford (16-7-1), who will make his AHL All-Star debut next week, is No. 1 in the league in goals-against average (1.67) and save percentage (.940), which improved with back-to-back shutouts on Friday night and Tuesday night. He won a classic goaltending duel with Jean-Philippe Levasseur of Syracuse 1-0 in a shootout Friday, when he made 22 saves in regulation and overtime, while Levasseur had a season-high 46 stops. After surrendering an opening-round shootout goal to former Avon Old Farms standout Nick Bonino, Sanford stopped the Crunch’s next four shooters to notch the win. Ben Maxwell and rookie Alexander Avtsin scored for the Bulldogs, but Levasseur also got credit for a shutout, his third of the season. Then on Tuesday night, Sanford notched his fourth shutout of the season with 22 saves in a 7-0 romp over the Rochester Americans as Russell had one goal and two assists.

It will be a special Family Value Night and “City of New Britain Night” at which New Britain Rock Cats mascot Rocky will be on hand with Whale mascots Pucky and Sonar. There will be an autograph signing with a Rock Cats player and a Rock Cats giveaway, and the New Britain High School marching band will perform the national anthem and during the first intermission and before the game. Tickets in the lower level are $16 and include a soda and pizza slice or hot dog. Visit www.ctwhale.com.

TWO ROAD WARRIORS REPLACE TWO ALL-STAR ROAD WARRIORS

Greenville Road Warriors rookie forwards Marc-Olivier Vallerand and Blake Parlett have been named replacements for teammates Brendan Connolly and Julien Brouillette for the ECHL All-Star Classic next Wednesday night in Bakersfield, Calif. Road Warriors coach Dean Stork will coach the All-Stars against the host Bakersfield Condors. Road Warriors president and general manager Neil Smith will be the color commentator on the broadcast.

The 21-year-old Parlett, under contract to the Whale, is tied for third in points among defensemen in the ECHL with six goals and 17 assists in 34 games. He has been especially effective on the power play, where he is tied for the league lead among ECHL defensemen with 14 points (4, 10). Vallerand is the leading sniper on the Road Warriors with 15 goals in 38 games and leads the league in shorthanded goals (four) and shorthanded points (six). He also leads the Road Warriors in plus-minus with plus-12.

Brouillette is on recall to the AHL’s Lake Erie Monsters, and Connolly is out with an undisclosed injury. … The Atlanta Thrashers recalled former Wolf Pack wing Nigel Dawes from the Chicago Wolves. … Former Wolf Pack wing Chad Wiseman has two goals and 11 assists in 15 games since rejoining Albany’s lineup on Dec. 11. … Former Wolf Pack center Corey Locke, the AHL’s leading scorer (15 goals, 40 assists) with the Binghamton Senators, is back from an NHL recall to the Ottawa Senators, but  leading rookie goal-scorer Bobby Butler (19, 11) is now in the NHL.

Sam Klassen Reassigned to Greenville

HARTFORD, January 19, 2011: Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned defenseman Sam Klassen from the Whale back to the club’s ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleKlassen, a rookie out of the Western Hockey League, joined the Whale from the Road Warriors January 10 and was scoreless, with four penalty minutes and an Even plus/minus rating, in three games with Connecticut, his first career AHL action. Klassen has skated in 34 ECHL games for the Road Warriors this year and has scored one goal and added six assists for seven points, while serving 36 minutes in penalties and compiling a +11 rating.

The Rangers signed Klassen as a free agent July 27, 2009.

The Whale are back in action this Friday night, January 21, hosting the Hamilton Bulldogs in a 7:00 PM game at the XL Center. Fans can meet ex-Hartford Wolf Pack favorites Todd Hall and Terry Virtue, who will be signing autographs in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM, and being a Friday night, it’s a 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.

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

Rangers Recall Chad Kolarik from Whale

New York, January 19, 2011 – New York Rangers President and General Manager Glen Sather announced today that forward Chad Kolarik has been recalled from the Connecticut Whale of the American Hockey League (AHL).

CT WhaleCT WhaleKolarik, 24, established a Connecticut franchise record with two shorthanded goals in a single period, and added two assists to tie the franchise mark for scoring in one period with four points during the opening frame of a 6-3 win vs. Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Sunday.  His four points in the contest established a career-high, and tied the Whale’s season-high.  Kolarik has registered 17 goals and 16 assists for 33 points, along with 38 penalty minutes and a plus-seven rating in 39 games with Springfield and Connecticut this season.  He is tied for 11th in the AHL in goals, and 18th with 125 shots on goal.  In 26 games with the Whale, he has recorded 23 points (13 goals, 10 assists) with 20 penalty minutes and a plus-six rating.  He is tied for second on the team in goals, ranks second with a plus-six rating and fourth with 79 shots on goal since being acquired from Columbus in exchange for Dane Byers on November 11, 2010.  Kolarik has registered nine multi-point performances this season, and has tallied 14 points (eight goals, six assists) in his last 14 games.

The 5-11, 195-pounder has skated in 191 career AHL contests with the Connecticut Whale, Springfield Falcons, Syracuse Crunch, and San Antonio Rampage, registering 63 goals and 70 assists for 133 points, along with 140 penalty minutes.  He split the 2009-10 season between San Antonio and Syracuse, recording a career-high, 26 goals and tying his career-high in scoring with 50 points in 76 games.  He also appeared in two games with the Columbus Blue Jackets last season, making his NHL debut on April 5, 2010 at St. Louis.  In 2008-09, Kolarik established a career-high with 30 assists and 50 points in 76 games with San Antonio.  He made his professional debut with San Antonio on April 16 in the 2008 Calder Cup Playoffs, and notched a hat trick in his next game two days later.

The Abington, Pennsylvania native was originally selected as Phoenix’s seventh round pick, 199th overall, in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft.

UConn At The 2011 East-West Shrine Game

East-West Shrine GameAs we already know, the UConn Huskies football team sent five players to represent them in the East-West Shrine Game to be played this Saturday, January 22nd, at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, FL. They are fullback Anthony Sherman, offensive guard Zach Hurd, and linebackers Scott Lutrus, Lawrence Wilson and Greg Lloyd Jr.

All five are there to help themselves out for the upcoming 2011 NFL Draft to be held April 28-30.

Here’s what Scouts, Inc (Day 1, Day 2 both ESPN Insider links) had to say about Hurd, Lloyd and Sherman after the first two days of practices:

Connecticut OG Zach Hurd (ESPN Insider link) is lining up at center, which is a good thing for him and shows his versatility. He looked good in the 9-on-7s (a running drill) and did a nice job blocking, but he was not nearly as quick getting set in the 1-on-1s. It looks like snapping the ball slowed him down a little. He had a hard time getting set, and the defensive linemen were already into their moves before he could get set. He struggled in pass-protection drills, but again, we think it had more to do with snapping then ball than his ability. It’s not that he can’t do it, it looks like he just needs more reps at center and snapping the ball.

Inside linebackers Akeem Dent out of Georgia and Greg Lloyd (ESPN Insider link) out of Connecticut are filling hard, but they are playing too high and allowing blockers to get into them easily.

Connecticut FB Anthony Sherman (ESPN Insider link) is not a great athlete, but he’s running hard inside and catching the ball well.

 

It’s a little surprising to see Hurd playing center which isn’t obviously his natural position. Obviously, the NFL scouts believe he may help teams out by playing center but it wouldn’t surprise me in the least to see him move back to offensive guard.

As far as Lloyd is concerned, it’s not a big shock to hear he’s struggling a little. He saw very little game action for the Huskies in 2010 and probably would have been better served redshirting and coming back. But that isn’t the case and he’ll have to work his tail off to get noticed.

With Sherman, not a surprise there either. He played hard all four years at UConn at fullback and on special teams. My guess is that he’ll get a shot in the NFL on special teams with someone.

I’ll check in again on Friday to see what Scouts, Inc has had to say about any of the UConn players over the course of the next two days.

If you would like to watch the East/West Shrine Game on Saturday at 4 p.m., you’ll need to get the NFL Network on your cable or satellite provider.

Bill Bennett, Jeff Brubaker, Norm Barnes and Garry Swain Added to Whaler Legends Roster for Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl”

Hartford, CT …  Whalers Sports and Entertainment announced today that Bill Bennett, Jeff Brubaker, Norm Barnes and Garry Swain 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.

Bennett, a left wing from Warwick, Rhode Island, skated for both the Boston Bruins and the Hartford Whalers during his two NHL seasons. His best season came while playing for the Whalers in 1979-80, when he skated in 24 games, scoring three goals and adding three assists for six points while accruing 63 penalty minutes.

Overall, Bennett played in 31 career NHL contests, finishing with four goals and seven assists for eleven points and 65 penalty minutes. Bennett also totaled 184 games in the American Hockey League, playing with the Rochester Americans, Springfield Indians and Hershey Bears.

Brubaker, a winger and a native of Hagerstown, Maryland, skated in parts of three seasons with both the New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association and the Hartford Whalers. Brubaker has 12 WHA games to his credit with New England, and took part in 46 NHL contests with the Whalers during the inaugural 1979-80 and 1980-81 seasons, totaling five goals and four assists for nine points, along with 95 penalty minutes. Brubaker was originally a sixth-round draft pick of the Boston Bruins.

Brubaker played in 178 total NHL games with the Whalers, Montreal, Calgary Flames, Toronto Maple Leafs, Edmonton Oilers, New York Rangers and Detroit Red Wings, amassing 16 goals and nine assists for 25 points and 512 penalty minutes. He also has 12 seasons of coaching experience, from 1989-90 to 2004-05, and has been behind the bench in the ECHL, IHL and SPHL. Brubaker led the ECHL’s Greensboro Monarchs to the championship in his first season as a head coach in 1989-90.

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Barnes, a defenseman hailing from Toronto, Ontario, played 74 games for the Hartford Whalers from 1980-1982, totaling two goals and 14 assists for 16 points and 101 penalty minutes. Barnes played three seasons of collegiate hockey at Michigan State University before being selected as the Philadelphia Flyers’ eighth-round pick in the 1973 NHL draft.

Barnes played 156 games with the Flyers and Whalers over five NHL seasons, scoring six goals and adding 38 assists for 44 career points and 178 penalty minutes. He won back-to-back Calder Cups with the Maine Mariners of the American Hockey League in 1977-78 and 1978-79, and was a member of the 1979-80 Flyer team that went to the Stanley Cup Finals, losing to the New York Islanders in six games.  Barnes also played in the 1980 NHL All-Star Game.

Swain, a centerman from Welland, Ontario, played three seasons with the New England Whalers of the WHA from 1974-1977. Swain played 171 WHA games with the Whalers, scoring 22 goals and 33 assists for 55 points.  He has the distinction of having scored the overtime game-winning goal in the first game ever played at the Hartford Civic Center, a 4-3 Whaler victory over the San Diego Mariners January 11, 1975.

Drafted fourth overall by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 1968 NHL draft, Swain played nine NHL games for the Penguins, all in 1968-69, scoring once and adding one assist.  He also saw pro time in the Central Hockey League, International Hockey League and Southern Hockey League, and played 177 career games in the AHL with the Baltimore Clippers and Rhode Island Reds.  Swain currently works with the Whale in corporate development.

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).