Williams Headed to All-Star Classic

By Bruce Berlet

An autographed Toronto Maple Leafs prospect trading card of Jeremy Williams showed up on eBay on Tuesday morning.

Jeremy WilliamsIts value likely increased by day’s end after Williams, the Connecticut Whale right wing tied for the AHL goal-scoring lead, was named to the AHL’s Eastern Conference All-Star team that will face the Western Conference on Jan. 30-31 at the Giant Center in Hershey, Pa.

“I really wasn’t sure if I’d make the team,” said Williams, named an All-Star for the first time after only playing with a group of Western Hockey League players against a touring top Russian junior team when he was with Swift Current in 2001. “A couple of guys mentioned it over the last few days, but I didn’t really think that I’d be the one going. But it’s nice and obviously an honor and a privilege to be named.”

Williams then paused, smiled and added, “Now I get to go Hershey, which obviously has great fans and great chocolate. All the guys are asking me to bring back some chocolate bars, so I might just get the team credit card and bring a wheel barrel when I get back.”

Williams’ 20 goals share the top spot with Wethersfield native Colin McDonald of the Oklahoma City Barons and the Charlotte Checkers’ Jerome Samson, who also was named to the Eastern Conference team.

Williams’ 20th goal on Saturday night was a beauty, a strong finish of his own rebound after a brilliant rush and pass by 20-year-old defenseman Michael Del Zotto with 37.2 seconds left in overtime that gave the Whale a 3-2 victory over the Norfolk Admirals.

But that kind of goal shouldn’t be all that surprising. Williams is believed to be the only person to score a goal in each of his first three NHL games – in a different season. His NHL debut was April 18, 2006, when he scored on his first NHL shot in the Toronto Maple Leafs’ season finale, a 5-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins. After the Leafs failed to qualify for the playoffs, Williams was sent down to the Toronto Marlies and then recalled Feb. 23, 2007, when he scored off Mats Sundin’s rebound for his second NHL goal in a 5-4 loss to the Montreal Canadiens. Then after being called up a third time on Feb. 27, 2008, Williams completed his unique hat trick against the Florida Panthers.

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Since then, Williams has one more goal, on Dec. 8, 2008 in a 4-2 victory over the New York Islanders. So in the first four seasons in which he was called up from the minors, Williams scored in his first NHL game of the season. But that streak ended when he failed to score in his one game with the New York Rangers on Oct. 24, when he played only 3:43 in a 3-1 victory over the New Jersey Devils.

But 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. “He 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 also played baseball for a year and dabbled in rodeo with the rest of his family. His 15-year-old sister, Hailee, recently won the Canadian junior women’s championship in barrel racing with horses, which came long after Jeremy chose hockey over team roping.

Good thing because Williams quickly became a scoring machine with Swift Current, capped by career highs of 52 goals and 101 points in 68 games in his final season (2003-04) with the Broncos. The Maple Leafs’ seventh-round pick in the 2003 NHL entry draft then played his first full pro season with St. John’s, getting 16 goals and 20 assists in 75 games. Williams spent the next four seasons playing mostly with the Marlies but also getting a shot with one of the NHL’s Original Six teams.

But Williams and center Kris Newbury, on recall from the Whale to the Rangers for the first time, then signed with the Detroit Red Wings last season, when Williams had pro career highs of 32 goals and 63 points in 77 games with Grand Rapids. But the Griffins failed to make the playoffs, and the Red Wings decided to start shedding veteran players, including trading Newbury to the Rangers for wing Jordan Owens on March 3.

When the Red Wings didn’t re-sign Williams, he and his agent, Craig Oster, began looking for employment and decided on the Rangers, who paid Williams a nice AHL salary of $250,000 on July 12.

“We just felt like it was a good fit,” said Williams, who will turn 27 on Jan. 26. “I wasn’t sure where I was headed this year after sitting around free agency for a bit, and my agent and I knew what we wanted in a contract, and opportunity-wise, where I wanted to be. He thought the Rangers might need secondary scoring and might get a chance to help out. I had a few offers from other teams, but it’s one thing to get a contract to play in the AHL, but I was looking for a place to play in the NHL.”

Williams has had what he calls his most consistent start as he continues to try to improve on the defensive end, which has kept him from more time in the NHL.

“Aside from my first season, I’ve had injury problems, and it’s kind of hard to be consistent and score goals if you’re not playing,” Williams said. “So staying healthy and being able to play the last few years has helped a lot. Being good defensively never came naturally for me. I play puck possession, so I’m more dangerous in the offensive zone. I figure if you’re in the offensive zone all the time, then you don’t have to play defense.

“But the last seasons, especially last year after leaving Toronto, I was trying to work on my defensive play in Grand Rapids, and I think that helped me out a lot. And coming (to Hartford), the same thing.”

Whale coach Ken Gernander said Williams was quite deserving of the honor that Gernander received twice.

“He was a legitimate candidate,” Gernander said. “He has been a big part of our success and has lots of positives going for him. I thought we had a couple of guys who would make real good candidates, and they chose Jeremy. Congratulations.”

Some of Williams’ nine goals in 32 NHL games have been highlight-reel material, and he has duplicated some of those this season.

“He’s a shooter, so if he’s playing well, he’s going to get goals,” Gernander said. “There are always areas of improvement, especially if you’re at the American League level and there’s something that the NHL teams would like to see you improve upon. I think he has worked hard and brought us success helping out offensively and been a pretty good part of our team.

“He’s obviously a capable goal-scorer, so he’s going to have to bring a little bit more to catch the eye of an NHL squad that says this special talent that he has not only translates to the NHL level, but he can also bring (something else) to the game. I don’t want to say he’s a specialist, but he has a shot that kind of separates him from a lot of players in that he’s a very effective shooter. That’s how he scores a lot of his goals with the one-timer or from the slot with a good slap shot or snap shot with his good release. He’s maximizing one of his strengths or key components.”

Williams’ NHL-type shot is a major reason he is again being used on the point on the power play, which is handled mainly by assistant coach J.J. Daigneault.

“J.J. had gone to the library and watched some of Williams’ previous games and seen that he had a big shot that he can bring and discusses it with him,” Gernander said. “He figured it might be a good spot where he might fit on our power play, and it has worked out well. He does have a really good release and is a good goal-scorer.”

The Eastern Conference starters, selected by an online fan vote, include Bridgeport Sound Tigers defenseman/captain Mark Wotton and two players named to All-Star teams while with the Wolf Pack, center Corey Locke (Binghamton) and defenseman Lawrence Nycholat (Hershey). The other starters are goalie Brad Thiessen (Wilkes-Barre/Scranton) and forwards Andrew Gordon (Hershey) and Jonathan Cheechoo (Worcester). The Western Conference starters include captain and former Wolf Pack wing Alexandre Giroux (Oklahoma City), and the squad also includes former New Canaan High and Taft School-Watertown star Max Pacioretty (Hamilton), who is on recall to the Montreal Canadiens and had 20 family and friends from New Canaan at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night for a game against the New York Rangers. A committee of AHL coaches chose the balance of the teams, with all 30 AHL teams having to be represented.

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 Sunday. By virtue of winning the 2010 Calder Cup, Bears coach Mark French and assistant Troy Mann will coach the Eastern Conference team for the second consecutive year.

The Hall of Fame Class of 2011, to be inducted Jan. 30 at 11 a.m., is Mitch Lamoureux, Larry Wilson and the late Harry Pidhirny and Maurice Podoloff, who grew up in New Haven and graduated from Yale. AHL Hall of Famer Bruce Boudreau, former coach of the Hershey 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.

Tickets for the All-Star Classic, which includes admission to the skills competition (3 p.m., Jan. 30) and All-Star Game (7 p.m., Jan. 31), are nearly sold out. Tickets remain for the post-skills party (6 p.m., Jan. 30) and Hall of Fame induction and awards ceremony (11 a.m., Jan. 31). For information, contact the Giant Center box office at 717-534-3911.

WHALE GET TWO PLAYERS FROM GREENVILLE

Defenseman Sam Klassen, reassigned by the Rangers from the ECHL’s Greenville Road Warriors to the Whale, couldn’t get to Connecticut because his flight was canceled. And Klassen might not be able to make practice on Wednesday as the storm that dumped more than a foot of snow on the Southeast hit New England overnight. Ditto for forward Chris Chappell, who was reassigned from Greenville to the Whale on Tuesday night.

The 6-foot-2, 199-pound Klassen had one goal, six assists and was plus-11 in 34 games with the Road Warriors. He signed a free-agent contract with the Rangers on July 27, 2009 after getting seven goals and 74 assists in 249 games with the WHL’s Saskatoon Blades.

The 6-4, 212-pound Chappell had four goals and seven assists in 24 games with Greenville. Last season, he was scoreless in six games with the Hartford Wolf Pack after being limited to 11 games in an injured-riddled season with the Charlotte Checkers in which he had one goal and three assists. The Rangers signed Chappell as a free agent on July 2, 2009 after he had 70 goals and 84 assists in 248 games with the Saginaw Spirit of the Ontario Hockey League.

Wojtek Wolski, acquired from the Phoenix Coyotes for defenseman Michal Rozsival on Monday after it was learned that Alex Frolov would need season-ending knee surgery this week, made his Rangers debut Tuesday on a line with Marian Gaborik and former Wolf Pack center Artem Anisimov.

Rozsival’s departure left the Rangers with only six defensemen, including rookie Ryan McDonagh, who played his third NHL game Tuesday night.

Twenty-year-old defenseman Michael Del Zotto has played well in his first three minor-league games setting up game-winners by Tim Kennedy and Williams.

“It’s been good, and a great group of guys to play with,” said Del Zotto, the Rangers’ first-round pick (20th overall) in 2008. “The first period of the first game (a 2-0 victory over Worcester last Wednesday) was a bit different because there are different systems, and (the Whale) play a bit differently. But the guys have been great, jelled pretty quickly, and I’ve got along with everyone. That’s the biggest thing, to make sure you get along with everybody, and everything has gone pretty smoothly.”

The Whale (20-14-2-5) lost the opener of a two-game set in Norfolk 5-2 on Friday night, when the Admirals scored three goals in 68 seconds, one less than the franchise record for three fastest goals allowed. But the Whale rebounded from that unwanted record for a 3-2 overtime victory that improved their run to 13-3-0-2.

“The floodgates opened, but we got the two points the next night and four of six on the road, so we’ll take it,” Del Zotto said.

Del Zotto said he has achieved the No. 1 objective of Rangers president and general manager Glen Sather and coach John Tortorella after the young defenseman had two goals and seven assists in 35 games.

“They wanted me to come down and play a lot of minutes, and that definitely happened in all areas of the game,” said Del Zotto, who averaged more than 30 minutes for three games, similar to the time of the Rangers’ Marc Staal, named to the NHL All-Star Game for the first time on Tuesday. “Once you get that going, then you feel more comfortable. I’m just trying to get my confidence back, and playing a lot of minutes and being out there every other shift is the only way you’re going to get any better and into the swing of things.

“That’s what has happened so far, so I’m just taking it a day at a time. All I can do is control how hard I work. The rest is out of my control.”

On Jan. 3, Del Zotto, a member of the NHL all-rookie team last season, switched places with 21-year-old rookie Ryan McDonagh, who more than held his own in his first two NHL games, victories over the tough Dallas Stars and St. Louis Blues, and was in the lineup again Tuesday night alongside former Hartford Wolf Pack defenseman Matt Gilroy.

“We’ve been trying to build this team around the youth,” Sather said during a teleconference call Monday night. “And when a player like this, who’s 24 years old, who’s 6-foot-3 and 215 pounds and has been a very good, prolific goal scorer in the past, and you’re moving a guy that’s 32 years old with this year and next year left on his contract, it was a good opportunity for us to get younger and bigger and give the kids the opportunity in defense to play.”

The trade also gives the Rangers additional salary cap space, as Wolski has a $3.8 million hit for this season and next season, while Rozsival’s hit is $5 million.

Wolski, the Colorado Avalanche’s first-round pick in 2004, had six goals and 10 assists in 36 Coyotes games this season but only three points in his last 17 games. But the Rangers hope he can regain his touch from last season, when he had 23 goals, 42 assists and was plus-21 in 80 games with the Avalanche and Coyotes. He had six goals and 12 assists in 18 regular-season games with the Coyotes last season and then scored four goals and had one assist in seven playoff games.

“He’s got all the talent in the world,” Sather said. “The opportunity is gonna be here for him to play in a pretty good position, and we look forward to seeing him play.”

Former Wolf Pack All-Star right wing Ryan Callahan, one of six injured Rangers forwards, resumed skating Sunday after sustaining a broken left hand when he blocked a shot by Pittsburgh Penguins’ defenseman Kris Letang in a 4-1 victory Dec. 15. Drury broke a finger for the first time in the very first scrimmage in training camp and again in practice, and other casualties have been Rozsival, Frolov, Gaborik (separated shoulder), center Erik Christensen (sprained MCL) and enforcer Erik Boogaard (concussion).

Tortorella lauded Gernander and his assistants for preparing so many reinforcements when he called them “a lifeline, especially in a (salary) cap world.”

WHALE’S NEW ROAD JERSEYS DEBUT FRIDAY

The Whale is 2-1 on a four-game road trip that ends Friday night at 7 at Portland, where their new blue road jerseys will debut. The jerseys are available at the XL Center or The Hartford Store, 45 Pratt Street in Hartford. Prices, including sales tax, are $289 (authentic), $125 (senior replica) and $99 (junior replica).

The Pirates (21-12-4-1) had a three-game winning streak ended by Binghamton on Tuesday night as Locke celebrated his fourth selection to the All-Star team with two goals and two assists. Locke, who is the All-Star scoring leader with nine points, got the winner with his first goal 19 seconds into the second period while increasing his league-leading totals to 40 assists and 55 points. The loss kept the Pirates in a second-place tie in the Atlantic Division with the Whale, who has played three more games. The Pirates are 12-3-3-1 at the Cumberland County Civic Center for a winning percentage of .737, third best in the AHL.

Former All-Star right wing Mark Mancari leads the Pirates in goals (17), assists (20) and points (37). The best of the rest for coach Kevin Dineen, the former Hartford Whalers star right wing and captain, are center Paul Byron (13, 14), center Matt Ellis (7, 18), defenseman Marc-Andre Gragnani (7, 17) and left wing Colin Stuart (7, 17). Rookie forward Maxime Legault scored in each of the Pirates’ three victories last week, registering four goals after tallying four in his first 32 games. Jhonas Enroth (12-11-1, 2.93 goals-against average, .907 save percentage) and David Leggio (9-4-0, 2.98, .908) split the goaltending.

The Whale returns to the XL Center Saturday at 7 p.m. to face the Providence Bruins in the start of a three-game homestand that will include former Boston Bruins standouts Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin signing autographs in the atrium from 6-7 p.m. and then dropping the ceremonial first puck. Middleton, who played 12 seasons with the Bruins after two with the Rangers, and Lemelin also will play on the Bruins legends team that will face the Whalers legends Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. before the Whale plays the P-Bruins at 7 p.m. The doubleheader is part of the “Harvest-Properties.com Whalers Hockey Fest” at Rentschler Field in East Hartford on Feb. 11-23. Middleton will be on “The Rock 106.9 WCCC” Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. to discuss the Whalers Hockey Fest and his appearance with Lemelin.

Early commitments for the Whalers team are Jordy Douglas, Ray Neufeld, Gordie Roberts, Darren Turcotte, Nelson Emerson and the Babych brothers, Dave and Wayne. 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.

There also will be “a town hall meeting” starting at 6 p.m. in the atrium during which fans are encouraged to ask questions and make suggestions to Whalers Sports and Entertainment president and COO Howard Baldwin Jr. The Whale has won the previous three meetings with the last-place Bruins (15-18-3-1), including 6-2 at the XL Center on Jan. 1. But the Bruins are 10-6-2-0 on the road.

Centers Jamie Arniel (14, 11), Zach Hamill (2, 21) and Joe Colborne (9, 11) lead a Bruins attack that has scored the third-fewest goals in the league (91). Right wing Jordan Caron, the Bruins’ first-round pick in 2009 who had three goals and four assists in 20 games with the NHL Bruins earlier this season, scored his first AHL goal on New Year’s Day.

The league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (30-8-0-0) complete the week’s action with a Sunday visit at 3 p.m. in the first of two meetings with the Whale. The high-powered Penguins have a 13-point lead over Norfolk and Charlotte in the East Division. Leading scorer Dustin Jeffrey (15, 22) is on recall to the Pittsburgh Penguins, but other threats are right wing Nick Johnson (13, 13), left wing Brett Sterling (11, 15), forward Eric Tangradi (16, 7), left wing Tim Wallace (11, 12) and center Joe Vitale (8, 14). Corey Potter, the third all-time leading scorer among defensemen in Wolf Pack history (21 goals, 81 assists in 246 games), leads Penguins blueliners in points with 17 assists in 35 games. Brad Thiessen (17-3-0, 2.06, .921) and John Curry (13-5-0, 2.35, .910) have both excelled in goal.

It’s a Guida’s Family Value Day in which 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 packs are available at the XL Center box office or online at www.CtWhale.com. Fans are encouraged to bring their skates for a free postgame skate, sponsored by Stone Academy. … Goalie Cam Talbot is 6-0-1 in his last seven decisions, including 38 saves Saturday night when the Whale increased their AHL-high total of overtime victories to five. Two of those OT wins have been against the Pirates. In successive games, the Pirates were done in by center Tim Kennedy, a member of the AHL all-rookie team in 2009 after leading all first-year players in assists (49) and points (67) while with the Pirates. Kennedy beat the Pirates 2-1 at home on Dec. 29 and 5-4 in Maine on Dec. 31. … Barb Underwood, a former Canadian national skating champion who now specializes in strength skating, was back with the Whale before and after practice Tuesday. She was especially interested in watching and recording data on players that she hadn’t previously seen such as forwards Oren Eizenman and Jason Williams.

MORE IN COMMON FOR GERNANDER AND KEANE

Whale coach Ken Gernander and Mike Keane have plenty in common. During their playing days, they were gritty, intelligent, hard-trying forwards who were captains of their teams and wore No. 12 during lengthy careers that included brief stays with the New York Rangers.

Gernander became the only Hartford Wolf Pack/Connecticut Whale player to have his number retired and raised to the rafters on Oct. 8, 2005, three months after he announced his retirement. Keane will have his No. 12 retired and sent to the rafters of the MTS Centre by the Manitoba Moose on Mike Keane Tribune Night on Feb. 12, when the San Antonio Rampage is in town.

Keane was a three-time Stanley Cup champion with three teams (Canadiens, 1993; Colorado Avalanche, 1996; Dallas Stars, 1999) and played 1,230 NHL games before playing 443 AHL games in five seasons with the Moose. He received the AHL’s Fred T. Hunt Award for sportsmanship, determination and dedication to the game of hockey in 2007, an award that Gernander won in 1996 and 2004. Also like Gernander, Keane was named an AHL All-Star captain. Keane led the Canadian team in 2007 in Toronto, Gernander the PlanetUSA team in 1999 in Philadelphia, where he was joined by former Wolf Pack wing Johan Witehall and defenseman Rich Brennan. The Canadian team included former Wolf Pack center Derek Armstrong and former Yale defenseman Ray Giroux.

WHALE’S TIP-A-PLAYER DINNER ON JAN. 23

The Whale’s eighth Tip-A-Player Dinner and Sports Carnival, presented by Aetna, is Jan. 23 at the XL Center from 4-7 p.m. Tickets are $30 for adults and $20 for children, and proceeds benefit Gaylord Specialty Healthcare at Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford. For more information, contact Lori Leniart at 860-728-3366. … Howard Baldwin Jr. has a new Twitter account accessible to Whale fans at howardbaldwinjr. … The Professional Hockey Players Association has agreed to a new five-year contract with Larry Landon to serve as executive director of the PHPA through June 30, 2016. Next season will be Landon’s 30th with the association. … Two former Wolf Pack and Rangers forwards are now in Europe. Center Jamie Lundmark has left the Milwaukee Admirals for Timra in the Swedish Elite League, and wing Petr Prucha has gone from the San Antonio Rampage to SKA St. Petersburg in the Kontinental Hockey League in Russia.

Big Run Propels UConn Men to 67-53 Win Over Rutgers

From left, Alex Oriakhi (17 points), Shabazz Napier (4 points), Kemba Walker (18 points), Roscoe Smith (8 points) and Jamal Coombs-McDaniel (9 points) huddle midway through the second half Tuesday as UConn pulled away to win 67-53 at the XL Center in Hartford.

For the first 12 minutes of the second half, you could have sworn you were watching the UConn Huskies women’s basketball team and not the men’s team. Why you ask? Well the Huskies used a big run and some swarming defense to put the game away early in the second half.

The Huskies used a 20-2 run to start the second to break open a five point game on their way to a 67-53 win over the Rutgers Scarlet Knights in front of 12,527 (including myself) at the XL Center in Hartford, CT on Tuesday night.

With the win the Huskies improve to 13-2 (2-2 Big East). The Scarlet Knights fall to 10-6 (1-3).

UConn forward Alex Oriakhi provides an exclamation point during a run in the second halfKemba Walker paced the Huskies with 18 points with six rebounds and three assists. Alex Oriakhi put together another fine game as he had his sixth career double-double with 17 points and 12 rebounds. He also had four blocked shots. Jamal Coombs-McDaniel came off the bench to score nine points and Roscoe Smith added eight.

Shabazz Napier paced the Huskies with seven assists to go along with four points and was a pest on defense when he was on the floor.

Rutgers was led by Mike Poole who had a double-double of his own with 11 points and 10 rebounds. Austin Jackson and James Beatty both chipped in with nine points.

The Scarlet Knights got out of the gates quickly taking a 5-0 lead before Walker would put the Huskies on the board with a layup. Rutgers would increase their lead to 12-6 before a 6-0 run by the Huskies would knot things up. A Beatty three-pointer would give the Scarlet Knights a three-point lead but the Huskies responded with another 6-0 run to take the lead for the first time in the game.

The two teams jostled back and forth with the lead for the next five minutes before a Coombs-McDaniel three-pointer would give the Huskies the lead for good with 3:19 remainin in the first half at 24-23. The Huskies would outscore Rutgers 8-4 the rest of the half to take a 32-27 lead at the break.

Whatever halftime adjustments head coach Jim Calhoun made, the players executed them to perfection as they started out the half with a 12-0 run that would end up being part of a 20-2 run to put the game out of reach. It took the Scarlet Knights five minutes and 16 seconds to get their first basket in the second half then another three minutes and 42 seconds to get their second.

UConn built their lead as high as 24 points before slacking off a little and letting the Scarlet Knights close it down to the final margin of 14 points.

It was nice to see Oriakhi come out and put up another big game after the one he had on Saturday. If the Huskies can continue to get him involved early on in the game, good things should happen from him. Plus if he steps up and the others continue to do the same, Walker may be able to get a little more freedom on the court.

You could definitely tell Rutgers was trying to stop Walker but he recognized it and made sure his teammates got involved. After seeing him in person for the first time this year, watching him on television just doesn’t do him justice. It’s amazing how much better he has gotten from last year.

The Huskies are off until Saturday when they head to Rosemont, IL for a Big East matchup with the DePaul Blue Demons at Allstate Arena. Game time is scheduled for 2 p.m. and the game will be televised locally here in Connecticut on SNY.

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Notes and musings:

Rutgers Scarlet Knights @ UConn Huskies 1-11-11 box score

Here are quotes from UConn Huskies head coach Jim Calhoun, Kemba Walker, Alex Oriakhi, Shabazz Napier and Jamal Coombs-McDaniel.

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

Walker has led the Huskies in scoring for all 15 games. He has also scored at least 18 points in all 15 games.

The Huskies shot 45.6% (26-57) from the floor while Rutgers shot 34.5% (20-58). Ironically enough, Rutgers was 10-for-29 (34.5%) in each half.

UConn had 14 assists on their 26 made baskets.

The Huskies 6-of-20 (30%) from three-point land while the Scarlet Knights were just 3-of-17 (17.6%).

UConn was 9-of-14 (64.3%) from the charity stripe.

The two teams both finished with 37 rebounds.

UConn had just six points off of nine Rutgers turnovers. The Scarlet Knights had 11 points off of eight Huskies turnovers.

This was the third straight game, the Huskies finished with less than 10 turnovers.

UConn outscored Rutgers 30-22 in the paint and 15-2 on the fast break.

The Scarlet Knights bench outscored UConn’s 27-22.

Rutgers held a 16-10 advantage on second chance points.

UConn has 27 consecutive regular-season wins against the New York-area Big East schools — Rutgers, St. John’s and Seton Hall.

Photo credits: Michael McAndrews – Hartford Courant (No. 4, No. 6)

Rangers Reassign Forward Chris Chappell to Whale

HARTFORD, January 11, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned forward Chris Chappell to the Whale from the club’s ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleChappell, a 6-4, 212-pound second-year pro, had 11 points, four goals and seven assists, and 19 penalty minutes in 24 games with Greenville.  Last year the 22-year-old Pickering, Ontario native skated in six AHL games with the Hartford Wolf Pack, going scoreless with five penalty minutes, and was limited to 11 games in an injury-marred campaign with the ECHL’s Charlotte Checkers.  In those 11 contests, Chappell had one goal and three assists for four points.

The Rangers signed Chappell as a free agent July 2, 2009 from the Ontario Hockey League’s Saginaw Spirit.  Chappell played four seasons of OHL action for the Spirit, totaling 248 games, with 70 goals and 84 assists for 154 points, along with 243 PIM.

CHRIS CHAPPELL’S stats

The Whale finish off a stretch of four straight road games this Friday night, January 14 in Portland against the Pirates (7:00 PM faceoff, WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com).  That is followed by a pair of home games at the XL Center, this Saturday night, January 15 and Sunday, January 16.

Saturday’s game vs. the Providence Bruins faces off at 7:00 and features a special appearance by former Boston Bruin greats Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin.  They will be meeting and greeting fans, and signing autographs, in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM to promote the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” at Rentschler Field.  Sunday the Whale will take on the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at 3:00, and there will be a free postgame skate, sponsored by Stone Academy.

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.

Red Sox Road Trip Announced; 2011 Tix On Sale January 29th

Here’s a press release from the Boston Red Sox announcing the 2011 Red Sox Road Trip through New England. The club also announced that tickets will go on sale January 29th for all games except the Yankees and Cubs. So remember when you’re buying tickets on the 29th to get me a pair, since that’s my birthday.

BOSTON, MA – As the Boston Red Sox prepare to launch the 2011 regular season general ticket on-sale on Saturday, January 29, the team will host the 2011 Red Sox Road Trip presented by Coca-Cola with stops in all six New England states from January 18 through January 24. The team will distribute vouchers redeemable for each respective 2011 regular season State Day game at Fenway Park, with a total of 6000 vouchers to be given out – 1000 in each state.

Boston Red SoxThe 2011 Red Sox Road Trip presented by Coca-Cola will also feature the first-ever “Sing Your Way to Fenway” contest where fans of all ages will have the opportunity to audition to perform the National Anthem at Fenway Park. The first 100 fans at each stop will be guaranteed the opportunity to audition, with additional attendees to be viewed based on time constraints. The top two winners from each state will be invited to compete in the “Sing Your Way to Fenway” finals at Fenway Park, which is scheduled to be held at Fenway Park on February 9. The grand prize winner will be selected to perform the National Anthem at a 2011 regular season Red Sox game. For more information on the “Sing Your Way to Fenway” contest, please visit www.redsox.com/roadtrip.

Vouchers will be distributed on a first come, first served basis to fans that visit to the Road Trip stops. Coupon holders will have a chance to purchase tickets in advance of the general on-sale, which begins on Saturday, January 29, 2011.

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

All distributed vouchers, which will be valid for two 2011 regular season tickets for that state’s respective State Day game at Fenway Park, must be redeemed online at www.redsox.com during the presale window as specified on the voucher. Fans holding vouchers who do not have internet access or who require ADA accessible seating may also call 877-REDSOX9 during the presale window. Hearing impaired fans may call the Red Sox TTY line at (617) 226-6644.

In addition, one lucky fan from each state who visits a Red Sox Road Trip tour stop will be selected as a Grand Prize Winner for the Red Sox Road Trip Opening Weekend VIP Experience (includes pre-game VIP tour, the chance to watch batting practice on the field, and two tickets to an Opening Weekend game versus the New York Yankees). Fans can register at each tour stop and the winner will be randomly selected from all names. The winner will be notified via email.

The group making stops on the Red Sox Road Trip will include Wally the Green Monster, the 2004 and 2007 Red Sox World Series Trophies, a display of Red Sox memorabilia, and Fenway Ambassadors, along with a balloon artist and face painter. The Ambassadors will give away pocket schedules and other collectibles and souvenirs at each stop. Fans will also have the opportunity to sign up for Red Sox Nation, the official fan club of the Boston Red Sox.

The Road Trip will lead up to the general ticket on-sale for 2011 Regular Season games at Fenway Park, which begins at 10:00 a.m. on Saturday, January 29, 2011. Fans will be able to purchase tickets to all games at Fenway Park, with the exception of all games with the New York Yankees and Chicago Cubs for which a special random drawing will be held at a later date. Tickets for the Green Monster and Budweiser Right Field Deck will also be sold via the random drawing. To purchase tickets starting on January 29, fans can log on to www.redsox.com or call the automated ticket line at 888-REDSOX6. Fans who require accessible seating can call 877-REDSOX9. Hearing impaired fans may call the Red Sox TTY line at (617) 226-6644.

The schedule for the road trip is as follows:

January 18: XL Center in Hartford (12-6 p.m.)

January 19: Curry Hicks Cage, Amherst (10 a.m.-4 p.m.)

January 20: University Mall, Burlington, Vt. (11 a.m.-5 p.m.)

January 21: Muldoon Fitness Center, Rivier College, Nashua, NH (12-6 p.m.)

January 22: Hadlock Field, Portland, Maine (10 a.m.-4 p.m.)

January 24: Woonsocket (R.I.) High School (2-8 p.m.)

2011 AHL All-Star Classic Rosters

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. … The American Hockey League announced today the Eastern and Western Conference All-Star rosters for the 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross, to take place Jan. 30-31 at Giant Center in Hershey, Pa.

2011 AHL All-Star ClassicEach team comprises 23 players – 12 forwards, eight defensemen and three goaltenders. AHL fans determined the starting lineups via on-line balloting at theahl.com, while a committee of AHL coaches selected the remainder of the rosters. All 30 AHL teams are represented by at least one All-Star.

The 2011 squads include 31 first-time AHL All-Stars and 11 rookies. Among that group are AHL rookie scoring leader Rhett Rakhshani of the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, leading rookie goal-scorer Bobby Butler of the Binghamton Senators, and standout first-year goaltenders Jake Allen of the Peoria Rivermen and Martin Jones of the Manchester Monarchs. A total of 12 former first- and second-round draft picks were also named All-Stars, including Syracuse’s Kyle Palmieri, Springfield’s John Moore and Grand Rapids’ Brendan Smith.

Players returning to the AHL All-Star Classic include AHL leading scorer Corey Locke of Binghamton, who is the all-time leading scorer in AHL All-Star history with nine points in four previous appearances. Wilkes-Barre/Scranton’s Dustin Jeffrey, Hershey’s Andrew Gordon, Charlotte’s Bryan Rodney, Manchester’s Viatcheslav Voynov, Manitoba’s Sergei Shirokov and Houston’s Maxim Noreau are all back in the midseason classic after making their first appearance in 2010.

Hershey Bears head coach Mark French and assistant coach Troy Mann will guide the Eastern Conference All-Stars by virtue of the Bears’ 2010 Calder Cup championship. Rookie head coaches John Hynes of the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins and Jared Bednar of the Peoria Rivermen are set to co-coach the Western Conference entry after their teams finished play this past Sunday with the best records in their respective conferences.

Tickets for the 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross – which include admission to both the 2011 AHL All-Star Skills Competition at 3 p.m. on Sunday, January 30, and the 2011 AHL All-Star Game at 7 p.m. on Monday, January 31 – are nearly sold out. Tickets remain available for the 2011 AHL Hall of Fame Induction & Awards Ceremony (January 31, 11 a.m.) and the Post-Skills Party (January 30, 6 p.m.). Contact the Giant Center box office at (717) 534-3911 for information.

The 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross in Hershey will feature the top young talent in the American Hockey League, competing in the AHL All-Star Skills Competition and the AHL All-Star Game, a two-day event to be televised nationally in the United States and Canada. Of the 528 players to take part in the AHL All-Star Classic since 1995, more than 93 percent have competed in the National Hockey League, including Patrice Bergeron, Dan Boyle, Daniel Briere, Dustin Byfuglien, Brian Campbell, Zdeno Chara, Eric Fehr, Miikka Kiprusoff, Kari Lehtonen, Ryan Miller, Zach Parise, Bobby Ryan, Martin St. Louis, Jason Spezza, Eric Staal and Tomas Vokoun

To see the complete rosters for the game, click on the read more button below.

2011 Eastern Conference AHL All-Star Team
Forwards
Luke Adam, Portland
Matt Anderson, Albany
Bobby Butler, Binghamton
x-Jonathan Cheechoo, Worcester
x-Andrew Gordon, Hershey
Johan Harju, Norfolk
Dustin Jeffrey, W-B/Scranton
x-Corey Locke, Binghamton
Kyle Palmieri, Syracuse
Rhett Rakhshani, Bridgeport
Jerome Samson, Charlotte
Jeremy Williams, Connecticut

Defensemen
Erik Gustafsson, Adirondack
Steven Kampfer, Providence
John Moore, Springfield
x-Lawrence Nycholat, Hershey
Bryan Rodney, Charlotte
Drew Schiestel, Portland
Viatcheslav Voynov, Manchester
x-Mark Wotton, Bridgeport (“C”)

Goaltenders
Braden Holtby, Hershey
Martin Jones, Manchester
x-Brad Thiessen, W-B/Scranton

x-starters

Head Coach: Mark French, Hershey
Assistant Coach: Troy Mann, Hershey
Athletic Trainer: Dan Stuck, Hershey
Equipment Manager: Justin Kullman, Hershey

2011 Western Conference AHL All-Star Team
Forwards
Joey Crabb, Toronto
x-David Desharnais, Hamilton
x-Alexandre Giroux, Oklahoma City (“C”)
Linus Klasen, Milwaukee
Spencer Machacek, Chicago
Brett MacLean, San Antonio
x-Travis Morin, Texas
Linus Omark, Oklahoma City
Max Pacioretty, Hamilton
Michal Repik, Rochester
Sergei Shirokov, Manitoba
Ryan Stoa, Lake Erie

Defensemen
T.J. Brodie, Abbotsford
Brian Connelly, Rockford
Maxim Noreau, Houston
Nathan Oystrick, Peoria
x-Paul Postma, Chicago
Brendan Smith, Grand Rapids
x-Garrett Stafford, San Antonio
Clay Wilson, Rochester

Goaltenders
x-Jake Allen, Peoria
Mark Dekanich, Milwaukee
Curtis Sanford, Hamilton

x-starters

Co-Coach: John Hynes, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Co-Coach: Jared Bednar, Peoria
Athletic Trainer: Kent Weisbeck, Rochester
Equipment Manager: Ralph Calvanese, Springfield

2011 Eastern Conference AHL All-Star Team Starters

Brad Thiessen , Goaltender (Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins):
Second-year pro Brad Thiessen began the year on an eight-game winning streak and hasn’t looked back, collecting a league-leading 17 victories (17-3-0) in 21 appearances for the AHL-best Penguins. A native of Aldergrove, B.C., Thiessen has surrendered two goals or fewer on 15 occasions this year, including a pair of shutouts. The 24-year-old ranks among the league’s top ten in both goals-against average (2.07) and save percentage (.921).

Lawrence Nycholat , Defense (Hershey Bears):
Making his fourth AHL All-Star appearance and third as a starter, Lawrence Nycholat leads all Hershey defensemen with 27 points (5-22-27) in 30 games this season. Nycholat’s 27 points are good for a share of fourth among AHL rearguards, and his plus-15 mark is tied for third-best. A 30-year-old Calgary native, Nycholat won the 2006 Calder Cup during his first stint with the Bears and also appeared in the 2005, 2006 and 2008 AHL All-Star Classics.

Mark Wotton, Defense (Bridgeport Sound Tigers):
A veteran of 863 AHL contests – fifth all-time among AHL defensemen – Mark Wotton has been captain of his team in 11 of his 14 American Hockey League seasons, including the last five in Bridgeport. Captaining the Eastern Conference in his first AHL All-Star appearance since 1998, Wotton has contributed three goals and four assists in 38 games for the Sound Tigers this year. The Foxwarren, Man., native was a member of Hershey’s 2006 Calder Cup title team.

Jonathan Cheechoo, Forward (Worcester Sharks):
Former NHL goal-scoring champion Jonathan Cheechoo is enjoying a career revival in his original organization, putting up team-high numbers in goals (13), assists (22) and points (35) in 34 games for Worcester and head coach Roy Sommer, who was also Cheechoo’s first pro coach when he broke into the AHL in 2000. Cheechoo, who scored 56 goals for San Jose in 2005-06 and topped the 20-goal mark in three other NHL seasons, appeared in the AHL All-Star Classic in 2001 and the NHL All-Star Game in 2007.

Andrew Gordon, Forward (Hershey Bears):
Andrew Gordon is following up a career-best showing last season with another stellar effort for Hershey in 2010-11. The fourth-year pro paces the Bears in both goals (18) and points (36) in 31 games and has also notched his first two career NHL points (1-1-2) in eight contests with the parent Washington Capitals. Gordon, 25, began the season on an eight-game scoring streak and has netted 11 of his 18 goals on a Bears power play which ranks fifth in the AHL (20.8 percent). This is the Halifax, N.S. native’s second straight AHL All-Star trip.

Corey Locke, Forward (Binghamton Senators):
One of the AHL’s most potent offensive threats in recent years, Corey Locke currently leads the league in both assists (38) and points (51) through 37 games of his first season with Binghamton. The 26-year-old from Toronto put together a 12-game scoring streak from Oct. 23 to Nov. 20 and has already recorded 15 multiple-point performances. A 2007 Calder Cup champion in Hamilton, Locke is making his fourth straight AHL All-Star appearance and fifth overall, and he’s well on his way to a fifth consecutive 20-goal season.

2011 Western Conference AHL All-Star Team Starters


Jake Allen, Goaltender (Peoria Rivermen):
Rookie goaltender Jake Allen has burst onto the professional scene to the tune of 15 wins in his first 18 games for Peoria (15-3-0) this season. A second-round draft pick (No. 34) by the St. Louis Blues in 2008, the 20-year-old Allen earned four shutouts in eight appearances to begin the year and boasts a league-leading five whitewashes overall. The Fredericton, N.B., native also paces the AHL in save percentage (.945) while ranking second in goals-against average (1.76) for the Western Conference-leading Rivermen.

Paul Postma, Defense (Chicago Wolves):
Drafted by the Atlanta Thrashers in 2007, Paul Postma has registered 27 points (7-20-27) in 42 games for the Wolves, already just two points shy of the total he put up as a rookie in 2009-10. The 21-year-old Postma has fired more shots on goal than any other AHL defensemen (118), and his 27 points put him in a tie for fourth among AHL rearguards. A native of Red Deer, Alta., Postma is one of three players to appear in all 42 of Chicago’s games thus far.

Garrett Stafford, Defense (San Antonio Rampage):
Garrett Stafford is on pace for the most productive season of his eight-year AHL career, currently leading all league defensemen with 30 points (9-21-30) in 34 games for the revitalized San Antonio Rampage. An AHL All-Star as a rookie in 2004 – when he posted a career-best 46 points – and a Calder Cup finalist with Texas last spring, Stafford has collected 14 of his 21 assists on the power play, helping the Rampage achieve the league’s top-rated unit. The Los Angeles native also has two games played with Phoenix this season.

David Desharnais, Forward (Hamilton Bulldogs):
David Desharnais began 2010-11 on a 13-game scoring streak for Hamilton – still the AHL’s longest run of the season – and had put up a league-high 45 points (10-35-45) in 35 games prior to his Dec. 31 recall to Montreal. The 24-year-old Desharnais tied for fourth in the league last year with 78 points (27-51-78), his second 20-goal effort in as many AHL seasons. A native of Quebec City, Desharnais is currently fourth in the AHL with 21 points on the power play.

Alexandre Giroux, Forward (Oklahoma City Barons):
The Western Conference All-Star captain, Alexandre Giroux has earned his fourth career All-Star selection and his third consecutive vote to the starting lineup. The AHL’s two-time defending goal-scoring champion won back-to-back Calder Cup championships with Hershey in 2009 and 2010 and is now Oklahoma City’s leading scorer with 17-25-42 in 40 contests. The Quebec City native leads all active players with 325 career goals – tied for 11th place all-time – and earlier this year he became the 44th player in AHL history to reach 600 career points.

Travis Morin, Forward (Texas Stars):
For the second consecutive season, center Travis Morin has established himself as one of the Texas Stars’ most consistent point-producers. The native of Brooklyn Park, Minn., finished second on the Western Conference champion Stars with 52 points last year, and he currently leads Texas in goals (13), assists (17) and points (30) through 38 games in 2010-11. Morin, whose plus-10 rating is tops among all Texas forwards, has appeared in each of the Stars’ 142 regular-season and playoff games since the start of the 2009-10 season.

Whale’s Jeremy Williams Earns AHL All-Star Classic Berth

HARTFORD, January 11, 2011:  The American Hockey League today named Connecticut Whale right-wing Jeremy Williams to the Eastern Conference squad for the 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross.

CT WhaleThe 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross is coming up January 30-31 at Giant Center in Hershey, PA.

Williams, a seventh-year pro who signed with the New York Rangers as a free agent July 12, 2010, has scored 20 goals in 41 games on the season, which ties him for the AHL lead in that department.  The former Toronto Maple Leaf has also added 12 assists in action with the Whale, giving him 32 points on the year, second-most on the Whale club.  Four of Williams’ goals have been game-winners, tying him for third in the league in that category, including a pair of overtime tallies, and 10 have come on the power play, a total that is good for second in the AHL.  He also ranks fourth in the league in shots on goal, with 140.  Williams has also gotten into one NHL game this year with the Rangers, in which he was scoreless.

Originally a seventh-round pick (220th overall) by the Maple Leafs in 2003 out of the Western Hockey League, Williams has played in 370 AHL games in his career, with the St. John’s Maple Leafs, Toronto Marlies, Grand Rapids Griffins and the Whale, and has scored 142 goals and added 135 assists for 277 points.  In 31 total NHL appearances with the Maple Leafs and Rangers, the 26-year-old Regina, Saskatchewan native has posted nine goals and two assists for 11 points.

Tickets for the 2011 AHL All-Star Classic presented by Capital BlueCross – which include admission to both the 2011 AHL All-Star Skills Competition at 3 p.m. on Sunday, January 30, and the 2011 AHL All-Star Game at 7 p.m. on Monday, January 31 – are nearly sold out. Tickets remain available for the 2011 AHL Hall of Fame Induction & Awards Ceremony (January 31, 11 a.m.) and the Post-Skills Party (January 30, 6 p.m.). Contact the Giant Center box office at (717) 534-3911 for information.

The Whale finish off a stretch of four straight road games this Friday night, January 14 in Portland against the Pirates (7:00 PM faceoff, WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com).  That is followed by a pair of home games at the XL Center, this Saturday night, January 15 and Sunday, January 16.

Saturday’s game vs. the Providence Bruins faces off at 7:00 and features a special appearance by former Boston Bruin greats Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin.  They will be meeting and greeting fans, and signing autographs, in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM to promote the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” at Rentschler Field.  Sunday the Whale will take on the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at 3:00, and there will be a free postgame skate, sponsored by Stone Academy.

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.

Report: Mark Whipple Leading Candidate For UConn Job

According to Desmond Conner of the Hartford Courant and also confirmed by Ed Daigneault of The Republican-American, former University Miami offensive coordinator Mark Whipple has emerged as the leading candidate for the UConn Huskies head football coaching job. Daigneault states that announcement could come as early as tonight.

Mark WhippleWhipple has never been a head coach at the FBS level but has head coaching experience in Division II and at the FCS level.

In six seasons with the University of New Haven Chargers, Whipple was 48-17. He then spent four seasons with the Brown Bears where he was 24-16. He then took over at the University of Massachusetts in 1998 where he won the NCAA Division I-AA Championship. In all he spent six years with the Minutemen where he compiled a 49-26 record.

From 2004-2006, he was the quarterbacks coach for the Pittsburgh Steelers and in 2008 was an offensive assistant coach for the Philadelphia Eagles. And for the last two years, he was Asst. Head Coach/Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks coach under Randy Shannon at Miami before Shannon was let go.

Photo credit: Palm Beach Post

Defenseman Sam Klassen Reassigned to Whale

HARTFORD, January 11, 2011:  Connecticut Whale general manager Jim Schoenfeld announced today that the parent New York Rangers have reassigned defenseman Sam Klassen to the Whale from the club’s ECHL affiliate, the Greenville Road Warriors.

CT WhaleKlassen, a 6-2, 199-pound rookie out of the Western Hockey League, has skated in 34 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.  Klassen’s plus/minus rating of +11 ranks second among Road Warrior defensemen and tied for fourth overall on the team.

The Rangers signed Klassen as a free agent July 27, 2009.  In four WHL years with the Saskatoon Blades Klassen, a 22-year-old native of Watrous, Saskatchewan scored seven goals and added 74 assists for 81 points, and had 345 PIM, in 249 games.

Sam Klassen stats

The Whale finish off a stretch of four straight road games this Friday night, January 14 in Portland against the Pirates (7:00 PM faceoff, WTIC HD-2, www.ctwhale.com, www.wtic.com).  That is followed by a pair of home games at the XL Center, this Saturday night, January 15 and Sunday, January 16.

Saturday’s game vs. the Providence Bruins faces off at 7:00 and features a special appearance by former Boston Bruin greats Rick Middleton and Reggie Lemelin.  They will be meeting and greeting fans, and signing autographs, in the XL Center atrium from 6:00-7:00 PM to promote the February 19 Harvest-Properties.com “Whale Bowl” at Rentschler Field.  Sunday the Whale will take on the league-leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at 3:00, and there will be a free postgame skate.

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.

2010 NCAA Football Rankings – Postseason

AP & USA Today Polls

By virtue of winning the BCS National Championship Game on Monday night, the Auburn Tigers finish as the top team in both the AP and USA Today Polls. The TCU Horned Frogs, who beat the Wisconsin Badgers in the Rose Bowl, finish in second place receiving three first place votes in the AP Poll and one in the USA Today Poll.

The Oregon Ducks, Stanford Cardinal and The Ohio State Buckeyes round out the final top five of the 2010 season.

There were no teams from the Big East ranked in the top 25 of either poll. My UConn Huskies dropped out of the AP Poll but did receive eight votes from the writers. They also received seven votes from the coaches.

The only other team from the Big East to receive votes in both polls was the West Virginia Mountaineers.

For a full look at the final top 25 of the season, click on the read more button below.

AP Top 25 USA Today Poll
RK TEAM REC PTS PREV RK TEAM REC PTS PREV
1 Auburn (56) 14-0 1472 1 1 Auburn (56) 14-0 1424 2
2 TCU (3) 13-0 1392 3 2 TCU (1) 13-0 1336 3
3 Oregon 12-1 1379 2 3 Oregon 12-1 1333 1
4 Stanford 12-1 1300 5 4 Stanford 12-1 1254 5
5 Ohio State 12-1 1220 6 5 Ohio State 12-1 1197 6
6 Oklahoma 12-2 1108 9 6 Oklahoma 12-2 1096 8
7 Wisconsin 11-2 1055 4 7 Boise State 12-1 1012 10
8 LSU 11-2 1051 11 8 LSU 11-2 1007 12
9 Boise State 12-1 1031 10 8 Wisconsin 11-2 1007 4
10 Alabama 10-3 961 15 10 Oklahoma State 11-2 883 13
11 Nevada 13-1 866 13 11 Alabama 10-3 860 18
12 Arkansas 10-3 863 8 12 Arkansas 10-3 818 8
13 Oklahoma State 11-2 833 16 13 Nevada 13-1 734 15
14 Michigan State 11-2 696 7 14 Michigan State 11-2 676 7
15 Mississippi State 9-4 578 21 15 Virginia Tech 11-3 636 11
16 Virginia Tech 11-3 577 12 16 Florida State 10-4 506 23
17 Florida State 10-4 502 23 17 Mississippi State 9-4 505 22
18 Missouri 10-3 477 14 18 Missouri 10-3 473 14
19 Texas A&M 9-4 359 18 19 Nebraska 10-4 354 16
20 Nebraska 10-4 334 17 20 UCF 11-3 328 24
21 UCF 11-3 225 NR 21 Texas A&M 9-4 277 17
22 South Carolina 9-5 169 19 22 South Carolina 9-5 181 20
23 Maryland 9-4 144 NR 23 Utah 10-3 156 19
24 Tulsa 10-3 128 NR 24 Maryland 9-4 111 NR
25 NC State 9-4 119 NR 25 NC State 9-4 94 NR
Dropped out: Dropped out:
No. 20 Utah, No. 22 West Virginia, No. 24 Hawaii, No. 25 Connecticut No. 21 West Virginia, No. 25 Hawaii
Others receiving votes: Others receiving votes:
Utah 98, Iowa 54, San Diego State 52, Northern Illinois 47, Miami (OH) 21, Florida 19, West Virginia 16, Notre Dame 9, Connecticut 8, Air Force 5, Navy 3, Hawaii 2, Brigham Young 1, Eastern Washington 1 Northern Illinois 82, Tulsa 41, San Diego State 36, West Virginia 35, Iowa 31, Miami (OH) 13, Florida 10, Connecticut 7, Air Force 4, Hawaii 4, Notre Dame 3, Washington 1

The Winner of the 5th Annual SOX & Dawgs Bowl Spectacular Is…

Fifth Annual SOX & Dawgs Bowl Spectacular

Bloguin brother Blatant Homerism, who picked 25-of-35 games correctly for 438 points. College Wolf from the TWolves Blog finished a very close second with 436 points. In case you were wondering, I finished in 8th place.

It did come down to the final day as my father, who won last year, had Oregon and 35 points. Had Oregon been able to complete the comeback victory, my father would have jumped over everyone and taken home the prize once again.

But a big congratulations goes out to Blatant Homerism for taking home the title.  For his efforts, Allen has won a $25 gift certificate from Amazon.com.

A big thank you to everyone for participating in the contest. And thank you for your support of SOX & Dawgs. Without you, the site wouldn’t exist.

For a full look at the final results, click on the read more button below.

Rank Pick Set Correct Picks Points
1 Blatant Homerism AK 25 of 35 438
2 College Wolf from TWolvesBlog College Wolf 23 of 35 436
3 Husky Pride Red Sox 09 23 of 35 431
4 wolfpack83 Jim 24 of 35 422
5 tunwin22 timu 21 of 35 414
6 Locust Valley NY Picker scottlv2003 21 of 35 412
7 ecdawg ecdawg 23 of 35 407
8 Ian’s Picks * Ian 20 of 35 405
9 leisure ladd Ladd m 20 of 35 405
10 Rob Kelley’s Bowl Picks Rob Kelley 20 of 35 400
11 suebeewanthegreat Susan Bethune 20 of 35 397
12 SmellyalaterCoachE!!!!!!! TBIZZY 20 of 35 394
13 Burney Mark 20 of 35 392
14 Bennett Bennett 19 of 35 385
15 Tostitos I like Tostitos oracle1_geek 19 of 35 380
16 Northshire Pats Richard 19 of 35 379
17 Saturday Night Slant Saturday Night Slant 18 of 35 369
18 Thunder Treats DiLo DiLo 20 of 35 367
19 Racing Sausages Matt 17 of 35 361
20 Fornicator Ghandi 19 of 35 353
21 Mac Attack AllyS12 17 of 35 348
22 Traina Jimmy 17 of 35 343
23 That’s Another First Down! Amy M 19 of 35 340
24 Steve’s Picks beisbol29 16 of 35 333
25 UGA Husky Krautcop 17 of 35 330
26 Burning Davenport Tom 18 of 35 312