Late Morning Red Sox Delight – 3/25

Josh Beckett showed he was in mid-season form against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Wednesday afternoon and today, the Boston Red Sox will host the Florida Marlins in a Grapefruit League game at City of Palms Park.

The game is scheduled to start at 1:05 p.m. and there is no television or radio coverage.

Tim Wakefield will make the start for the Red Sox and he’ll be followed by Daisuke Matsuzaka, Scott Atchison and Fabio Castro. Chris Volstad starts for the Marlins and he’ll be followed by Rick VandenHurk and Chris Leroux.

Lineups and links after the jump.

 

 

Here are the lineups for today’s game:

Florida Marlins

Red Sox logo

1. Chris Coghlan LF 1. Jacoby Ellsbury CF
2. Cameron Maybin CF 2. Marco Scutaro SS
3. Dan Uggla 2B 3. Victor Martinez C
4. Jorge Cantu 3B 4. Kevin Youkilis 1B
5. John Baker C 5. David Ortiz DH
6. Mike Lamb DH 6. J.D. Drew RF
7. Wes Helms 1B 7. Adrian Beltre 3B
8. Bryan Peterson RF 8. Jeremy Hermida LF
9. Brian Barden SS 9. Bill Hall 2B
Chris Volstad SP Tim Wakefield SP

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Team Health Reports [Baseball Prospectus]

Ellsbury Not On Power Trip [Boston Globe]

Relief for an anxious pitcher [Boston Globe]

Josh Beckett dominates [Boston Herald]

Good sign for Alan Embree [Boston Herald]

Dustin Pedroia wrist injury just a sprain [Boston Herald]

Mike Lowell hip to it [Boston Herald]

Sox Nation sees Red over Opening Day [Boston Herald]

For openers, it sounds like Beckett [Clubhouse Insider]

All eyes on Matsuzaka [ESPN Boston]

Embree: Prepping for Opener [ESPN Boston]

Quick hits from the Fort [ESPN Boston]

Soxprospects.com: Bullpen breakdown [ESPN Boston]

Lester opens up on the outdoors [Extra Bases]

Pedroia is feeling just fine, thanks [Extra Bases]

A secret slips [Extra Bases]

The conspiracy theories start circulating [Full Count]

What Happened With the Red Sox: Wednesday [Full Count]

Lowell: No pressure to impress [Full Count]

Francona doesn’t name Opening Day starter … or does he? [Full Count]

Red Sox Pitchers Must Be First Line of Defense Against Opposing Base Stealers [NESN.com]

Red Sox’ Only Spring Goal Remaining Is to Stay Healthy [NESN.com]

Embree: “I could probably throw today” [ProJo Sox Blog]

Francona still coy about Opening Day [ProJo Sox Blog]

With Red Sox thin at shortstop, Bill Hall could be a key player [Providence Journal]

Beckett looking to push duration [Providence Journal]

Red Sox Journal: Beckett makes it look too easy [Providence Journal]

Beckett offers another example of his importance [Rob Bradford – WEEI.com]

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/25

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

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UConn Football links

Pro Day postulations [Chip Malafronte – New Haven Register]

Kashif Moore: Humble, Focused And Jacked [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Today’s Pro Day Participants [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

What They Did On The Bench [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Teams In The House At Pro Day [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Broad Jump Results [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

High Jump Finishes From Pro Day [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Pro Day 40-Yard Dash Times [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

A Couple Of Pro Day Thoughts [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

DC’s also answering questions in his mailbag [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Notes from UConn’s pro day [ESPN.com – Big East Blog]

Pro day wrapup [John Silver – Journal Inquirer]

Pro Day performances [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

More Pro Day musings [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Video: Pro Day For The UConn Football Team [Shawn Courchesne – Hartford Courant]

Went To UConn’s Pro Day [Thoughts From a Fat White Guy]

Huskies Host Pro Day [UConnHuskies.com]

Easley makes up for early drop at UConn’s Pro Day [CT Post]

UConn’s Hicks, Ryan Try To Impress NFL Scouts [Hartford Courant]

UConn football players show off skills in front of scouts [New Haven Register]

NFA grad tries to help NFL chances at UConn’s pro day [Norwich Bulletin]

Baylock the man behind UConn’s pro day [Norwich Bulletin]

 

 

UConn Women’s Basketball links

Hartley is Miss NY Basketball [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

From The Courant Archives: March 26, 1997 [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Geno On ESPN’s “Outside The Lines” Sunday [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

No. 1/1 Women’s Basketball Ready For Dayton Regional [UConnHuskies.com]

Husky rewind: Even Auriemma impressed [CT Post]

Despite Dominance, UConn Women Know The Stakes [Hartford Courant]

Old School Thoughts On UConn Streak [Hartford Courant]

Notebook: Huskies shooting the lights out as they head to Sweet 16 [The Day]

Huskies savor perfect first half [The Republican-American]

Huskies reach 35 wins for third straight year [The Republican-American]

Cyclones up for “monumental challenge” of UConn [The Gazette]

Week 1 wrap-up; breaking down entertaining Sweet 16 matchups [SI.com]

Connecticut Continues Demolishing Opponents [The Quad]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Sweet 16: Sustained success comes with a price [CT Post]

They could have been contenders [New Haven Register]

Top 10 NCAA Tournament Moments With New England Ties [NESN.com]

Other UConn related links

Baseball: Van Woert Leads Huskies Over Yale 7-1 [UConnHuskies.com]

Women’s Lacrosse: Trio of Triple Scorers Lead Huskies Past Holy Cross Lacrosse [UConnHuskies.com]

Evening Red Sox Delight – 3/24

The Boston Red Sox made the trip up I-75 to Bradenton to face the Pittsburgh Pirates and came away 6-4 winners on Wednesday afternoon.

Josh Beckett looked like he’s ready for the 2010 season as he struck out nine in five innings, including seven in a row at one point. He only gave up a run on three hits and two walks.

Boston Red Sox pitcher Josh Beckett(notes) warms up before the first inning of a spring training baseball game against the Pittsburgh Pirates in Bradenton, Fla., Wednesday, March 24, 2010 (AP Photo)Joe Nelson bolstered his chances of a gaining a spot in the bullpen with a hitless and scoreless inning adding two strikeouts. Brian Shouse had a hit and a strikeout in an inning while Tommy Hottovy allowed a hit and had two strikeouts. Fernando Cabrera got roughed up as he gave up three runs on two hits and a walk with two strikeouts. The two hits were home runs.

One of the home runs that Cabrera allowed was to Jeremy Farrell, who happens to be the son of Red Sox pitching coach John Farrell.

Victor Martinez was 2-for-3 including a two-run homer. Bill Hall and Mike Cameron each added a solo home run with Hall adding another RBI on a sac fly. Jacoby Ellsbury also had a hit and an RBI on a sac fly.

The Red Sox are back in action tomorrow afternoon when the Florida Marlins come to City of Palms Park at 1:05 p.m.

Links after the jump

 

 

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Lowell gaining comfort at first [Brownie Points]

Embree has solid Minors outing [Brownie Points]

Lowell’s biggest adjustment to first base? More talking [Clubhouse Insider]

Scout on Lowell: ‘I would not have any interest in him’ [Clubhouse Insider]

Lowell’s mobility limited . . . in more ways than one [CSN New England]

For openers, he’s not Joshing [ESPN Boston]

Notes: ‘Candelita’ in the wind [ESPN Boston]

Wrapping up a busy day [Extra Bases]

Lowell discusses progress of ‘the’ hip [Full Count]

Nelson not worried about opt-out date [Full Count]

Ten Amazing Photos From Spring Training 2010 [NESN.com]

Josh Beckett Dominates Pirates, in Line to Start Opening Day [NESN.com]

Beckett appears lined up for Opening Day [ProJo Sox Blog]

Lowell: Hip still not back to pre-’08 mobility [ProJo Sox Blog]

Nelson impressive in bid for bullpen role [ProJo Sox Blog]

Ellsbury’s evolution far from complete [RedSox.com]

Beckett buckles down as season nears [RedSox.com]

Patriots sign Crumpler

The New England Patriots started to fill a big hole in their offense today when they signed veteran free agent tight end Alge Crumpler.

The four time Pro Bowl slection has spent nine seasons in the league between Atlanta and Tennessee and he has 367 career receptions for 4691 yards and 37 TD’s. He is now the only tight end on the roster who has payed in a NFL game.

Afternoon Red Sox Delight – 3/24

It was a rough Tuesday night for the Boston Red Sox against their cross-town spring training rival the Minnesota Twins.

First, Clay Buchholz thought it was Christmas because he got lit up like the Christmas Tree at Rockefeller Center in NYC. But more importantly, Dustin Pedroia had to leave the game with a mildly sprained wrist after making a diving play at second.

The good news for Pedroia and the Red Sox is that the sprain doesn’t appear to be too serious and it looks like he’ll be back in the lineup on Friday. Phew…. If Pedroia was seriously hurt, this would have left the Red Sox with a huge hole because their middle infield depth isn’t too strong right now. But for now, they don’t have to worry about Pedroia, they just need to find a backup shortstop.

Buchholz gave up six runs (five earned) on four hits, three walks, a hit batter and three wild pitches in just 1 2/3 innings. He did have two strikeouts. Ramon Ramirez allowed a run on two hits in 1 1/3 innings. Jonathan Papelbon (1 inning, 1 walk, 2 strikeouts) and Hideki Okajima (1 2/3 inning, 1 strikeout) each allowed a hit while Daniel Bard struck out one in 1 1/3 innings. Manny Delcarmen was perfect in his inning of work.

Offensively, the Red Sox had eight hits with Kevin Youkilis, David Ortiz, Jason Varitek and Brett Harper smashing doubles. Gustavo Molina and Angel Sanchez had the RBIs for the Red Sox.

We are a little behind today but the Red Sox are in Bradenton to take on the Pittsburgh Pirates. The game began at 1:05 p.m. and is available on MLB GameDay Audio. You can also catch it on the MLB At Bat app for the iPhone and iPod Touch.

Josh Beckett will make the start for the Red Sox and he’ll be followed by RHP Joe Nelson, LHP Brian Shouse, and RHP Fernando Cabrera. Paul Maholm gets the ball for the Pirates and he’ll be followed by RHP D.J. Carrasco, RHP Brendan Donnelly, LHP Brian Burres and RHP Wil Ledezma.

Lineups and links after the jump.

Boston Red Sox

Pittsburgh Pirates

1. Jacoby Ellsbury LF 1. Akinori Iwamura 2B
2. Mike Cameron CF 2. Ronny Cedeno SS
3. Victor Martinez C 3. Lastings Milledge LF
4. Mike Lowell 1B 4. Garrett Jones RF
5. Jeremy Hermida DH 5. Bobby Crosby 1B
6. Bill Hall SS 6. Ramon Vazquez 3B
7. Tug Hulett 2B 7. John Raynor CF
8. Josh Reddick RF 8. Jason Jarmillo C
9. Jorge Jimenez 3B 9. Paul Maholm SS
Josh Beckett SP Paul Maholm SP

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

Buchholz unsure of 2010 role [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]

Sweet revenge: An unlikely prospect settles score with Lackey [Alex Speier – WEEI.com]

Sox’ catching prospects are being well-received [Boston Globe]

Pedroia dives in, hurts wrist [Boston Globe]

Dustin Pedroia sprains wrist [Boston Herald]

Inconsistency shapes Clay Buchholz [Boston Herald]

Terry Francona mulls backup plan [Boston Herald]

Mike Cameron ends up being good as Gold [Boston Herald]

Dustin Pedroia’s X-rays negative [Boston Herald]

Pedroia sprains his left wrist [Clubhouse Insider]

Pedroia says he’s fine, expects to play Friday [Clubhouse Insider]

Buchholz may be losing spot in Red Sox rotation [CSN New England]

Pedroia expected to return Friday [CSN New England]

Good news on Pedroia: X-rays negative [ESPN Boston]

Angioma survivor offers hope for Westmoreland [ESPN Boston]

X-rays negative for Pedroia [Extra Bases]

Embree throws perfect inning [Extra Bases]

MLB condenses playoff schedule [Extra Bases]

What Happened With the Red Sox: Tuesday [Full Count]

Why Joe Nelson is ‘LOST’ and some other Red Sox stuff [Full Count]

Embree uses veteran wiles to baffle minor leaguers [Full Count]

Pedroia Scares Me [Hit and Run With Dan Roche]

Marlins To Keep An Eye On Lowell [MLB Trade Rumors]

Victor Martinez Will Be Critical for Red Sox Success in 2010 [NESN.com]

Brian Rose: Red Sox Will ‘Have to Create Some Runs’ to Help Rotation [NESN.com]

For Hermida, patience will be a virtue [Providence Journal]

Red Sox Journal: For some, day of decision draws near [Providence Journal]

No questioning Beltre’s work ethic, defense [RedSox.com]

Buchholz left shaking his head after outing [RedSox.com]

Pedroia sprains left wrist, day-to-day [RedSox.com]

Pedroia gets clean bill of health [RedSox.com]

Former Springfield reporter Jade McCarthy goes it alone on NESN — for now [Red Sox Monster]

Ranking ’em from top to bottom [Tony Massarotti – Boston Globe]

Paw Prints – The Daily UConn Roundup – 3/24

Paw Prints The Daily Roundup

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UConn Football links

“Welcome to college football” [Chip Malafronte – New Haven Register]

Practice 4 News/Update [Desmond Conner – Hartford Courant]

Welcome to college football [John Silver – Journal Inquirer]

Danbury’s Omokaro out [Neill Ostrout – CT Post]

Video: Tuesday Practice In Storrs [Shawn Courchesne – Hartford Courant]

Bulldozing Wylie working hard to earn time in UConn offense [CT Post]

UConn football notebook: Danbury’s Omokaro injured [CT Post]

UConn Defensive Line Deep, Experienced [Hartford Courant]

More links after the jump

UConn Women’s Basketball links

If you hadn’t heard, the UConn women will take on the Iowa State Cyclones in the Sweet 16 on Sunday, March 28th. The game is scheduled to scheduled to begin at 12:04 p.m and will be shown nationally on ESPN.

Charles, Moore in the running [Jim Fuller – New Haven Register]

Notable Games From The Courant Archives: March 30, 1996 [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Tina Charles A Semifinalist For Sullivan Award [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

WBCA Names Wade Trophy Finalists [John Altavilla – Hartford Courant]

Charles A Semifinalist [Rich Elliott – CT Post]

Next up: Iowa State/An Old Dominion fan’s perspective on UConn [Vickie Fulkerson – The Day]

Join Women’s Basketball In Dayton [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn women blow out Temple in NCAA second-round game [CT Post]

UConn’s first-half offensive numbers [CT Post]

Cardoza, Temple overwhelmed by UConn machine [CT Post]

UConn’s Faris makes most of her moments on the court [CT Post]

UConn women’s notebook: Moore on fire to set UConn tone [CT Post]

Up next for UConn women: Iowa State [CT Post]

UConn Women Rout Temple [Hartford Courant]

How Tough Is Caroline Doty? Ask Her Twin Brother [Hartford Courant]

A Little Recognition For Gardler, Faris [Hartford Courant]

UConn Women’s Extras … [Hartford Courant]

They have that wow factor [The Day]

Faris’ versatility back on display in tourney [The Day]

UConn women crush Temple in NCAA Tournament [The Republican-American]

Maya Moore nearly perfect [The Republican-American]

Temple gets throttled in loss to Connecticut [The Temple News]

UConn overwhelms Temple women, 90-36 [Philadelphia Inquirer]

UConn Men’s Basketball links

Some More Thoughts On The 2009-10 Huskies [Mike Anthony – Hartford Courant]

Calhoun Not Ready To Look Ahead [Hartford Courant]

Calhoun: ‘This will not happen again’ [New Haven Register]

Disappointing season over, Huskies left to wonder ‘what if ?’ [The Day]

Long offseason ahead for Huskies [The Republican-American]

Washington’s overtime loss to UConn in 2006 still haunts Ryan Appleby [Seattle Times]

Other UConn related links

Cablevision To Add ESPNU [UConnHuskies.com]

Women’s Ice Hockey Among the Nationally Ranked in Final Poll [UConnHuskies.com]

Softball: Huskies Host Home Opener Wednesday Against Sacred Heart [UConnHuskies.com]

UConn vs Temple 3/23 Post-game Press Conference Quotes

Here’s the transcript from the post-game press conference after the UConn Huskies destroyed the Temple Owls 90-36 in the second round of the NCAA Women’s Tournament on Tuesday night

UConn head coach Geno Auriemma:

Opening Statement:

There’s not much I can add to what you just saw. It was pretty incredible. Just a really special performance by these kids in the first half. When Maya gets it going like that early, it just snowballs for everyone else. The NCAA tournament is about these two (Gardner and Faris), people that aren’t on the cover of the media guide and people don’t talk about them on ESPN. They sit there and they watch and they wait, and then they help you win games, and they do it night in and night out. It’s a big, big reason why we’re here where we are now. They really exemplify what college basketball players are all about. They don’t get a lot of attention, they don’t get a lot of notices, they just get a lot done.

 

On playing in Norfolk…

When I found out we were coming here, I knew exactly where we were going to play. And I was anxious because I had never been in this building. It was everything I thought it would be. I’d been down here so many times when I was an assistant at Virginia. The people down here know all about basketball, and they know women’s basketball as much if not more than any other place in the country. The people here have been absolutely incredible. I’m not surprised, either. We’ve been in a lot of venues across the country. I can see why they have it here. They should have a regional here, if they haven’t already. It’s a great place to play basketball, and the people appreciated it.

On whether he had any sympathy for Temple coach Tonya Cardoza…

Yeah, I did. I do that a lot in those situations, when that happens. I said at one point to Wood Selig, who’s the new AD here, when we’re playing like this, it’s impossible to beat us. I don’t know what you do in that situation. But what are you going to do? Say hey, stop making every shot because our friend’s on the other sideline? But I understand.

On whether this first half was close to perfection…

It would be hard to find a lot of fault with it. I mean, I’m good at that, but I had a hard time picking it apart at halftime. If you take away what the score was, you’ve got to appreciate what those kids are able to do. I don’t care if you’re just running up and down doing drills, with no defense, you still have to put the ball in the basket. You still have to make the plays. So it’s not as easy as we make it look sometimes.

On Kelly Faris’ improvement over the course of the season…

Kelly’s one of the best players we have on our team. The only thing that gets Kelly in a bit of a jam is when she’s playing too fast and trying to do things too soon.

On UConn’s consistency…

That’s probably the one thing, when I do look back on things, is that through the years, we’ve been able to sustain it at a real high level through a bunch of different players and still wind up putting ourselves in a position to compete for a national championship. And to do it for that long, I think that’s something that our coaching staff and hopefully our administrators are really proud of, that they can count on that. It’s not easy. So it’s the consistency that I’m probably most proud of, no question.

Freshman Guard Kelly Faris

On UConn’s intensity level throughout the game…

Just the energy in the locker room was amazing at halftime. We tried to keep everyone focused because we knew we still had another half to play. After a half like that, you still need to build on things.

On her own performance…

IT just takes that one player to get everyone going, Maya did a great job of that today. Our team builds off  everyone else. That’s what makes our team what we are. Obviously everyone could see we just went out and had fun and we jelled together and had a blast.

Junior Guard Maya Moore

On whether this is the best performance by the team in her time at UConn…

For us, it was definitely a once-in-a-lifetime kind of a half. You could just tell from the person making the shot out there and the court to the last sub on the bench, everybody was just full of energy for what we were doing. What you saw out there was 6 a.m. Sept. 1, 2009, getting up, workouts, individuals, in the gym, constantly doing drills again and again until you get it right so in and working out so in a game in March, you can go out there and enjoy it.

On the play of Kelly Faris…

Kelly was amazing. She constantly gets better. I think that’s what makes her so effective. First of all she works hard, she listens, she’s always in her defensive stance….You have a lot of faith in her because she’s not afraid to do something amazing. She’s not afraid to make that tough pass, make that hard cut, make that hard lay-up. And she has a nose for the ball. It’s amazing when you don’t have to worry about your freshman.

On whether UConn’s performance surprised even her…

As a team, it was a great surprise. Because you go in hoping you’re going to hit every shot, but you don’t really believe you’re going to hit every shot. But at a point there, we thought every shot was going to go in. You don’t really get to experience that often. Coach was telling us in the locker room that it’s great we get a chance to experience having your hard work pay off in a game like that and having everybody involved. It was a pleasant surprise.

On UConn defensively…

It thought we were great. Just how active we were. I thought we did a great job getting a lot of deflections, communicating with each other, knowing what they wanted to do and taking that away, having each other’s help. We have our teammates’ backs. As long as we keep doing that, we’ll keep playing and winning the way we are.

Senior Forward Meghan Gardner

On whether the first half was by design or just “natural combustion…”

I think it was a little of both. We work hard in every shoot-around to make sure we do everything perfectly and we’re prepared for everything they throw at us. And I think we were due for a good shooting game.

Temple Head Coach Tonya Cardoza

Opening Statement:

Obviously, that’s not the way we intended to come out. They jumped on us right from the start and because we don’t score a lot of points we had difficulty scoring. It was pretty tough to even put up a good fight. Most importantly, I just didn’t want my players to quit. They’re [UConn] so empowering in so many different ways and just about everything they tried to do worked for them. I just wanted my players to fight to the very end.

We’re disappointed in the loss but I’m just so very proud of us getting to this point and how hard we worked all year. This loss is no indication on our entire season so the most important thing is making sure our players know that.

On the moment between you and Geno before the game…

That’s just between he and I.

On Maya Moore’s development as a strong player…

Maya is just a competitor. It was a challenge and I’m sure the fact she was playing against our team and against me didn’t matter. She doesn’t care who it is—she wants to go out and kill you and that’s how she approached this game. From the moment the ball left her hands, it went in and she didn’t stop. That’s just the competitor in her and hat’s why they’re so good. Maya came here [UConn] as a freshman, and she took the pressure off everyone else around her. No one really knew who the star was going to be or how we were going to approach that season. She just put it on her shoulders in how she played no matter who we were competing against. She went out there and took the pressure off all those girls so they can just play the game they enjoy.

On what was going through your head at the end of the half…

Wow! Watching them on film, we tried to figure out how we were going to guard all them. They’re a great passing team and they showed it. They’re that good. Watching them in person is something totally different, and it’s from one through twelve. The girls coming off the bench can be their own team and beat a lot of teams. It just comes from practicing each other which only makes them that much better.

On whether you feel your stamp is still on the UConn team…

Most definitely! If we can’t win, I’m always rooting for them. I love those guys and they’re always going to be my family. I feel like I do have a stamp on them. Kalana is one of the kids I recruited heavily. Tiffany, Caroline, and Lorin are still my kids. Of course, I’m proud of what they accomplished and I wish them well. I hope they win it all. No matter where I end up, I’ll always be a Huskie.

On whether or not this half was the best after watching the team for 14 years…

I’ve seen a lot of good ones. At this level and time, maybe it was really impressive. After 14 years, I’ve watched some really good basketball.

Junior Center Marli Bennett

On whether or not UConn is even better in person than what they looked on film…

I believe so. That’s a fairly true statement. They are the number one team in the nation for a reason and they proved it tonight. They played an outstanding game, shot great from the field, and they ran the floor.

On the season as a whole…

We worked hard all season and no one really expected us to be in this position competing for the NCAA championship. I’m so proud of my teammates for what we have accomplished. We’re probably the smallest team in the NCAA, but we fight hard and we worked hard all season.

On the gap between UConn and the other major powers…

When something is not going right, they keep going on the offensive end. They play so well together and it shows on the court, especially offensively. They all work extremely hard.

Junior Guard Qwedia Wallace

On Maya Moore making all her shots…

Wow! Every time they shot the ball, it seemed like it was going in. We had to make sure we didn’t hang our heads. Just trying to stay together as a team is what we tried to do because it is a little disheartening when it seems like everything they’re throwing up goes in. I felt like as long as I talked to my teammates, huddled and tried to stay together, then that’s all that would matter.

UConn Women Give Geno A Nice 56th Birthday Present

UConn's Maya Moore shoots one of her three three-pointers in the first half over Temple's Marli Bennett (Bettina Hansen/Hartford Courant)

There will come a time when one of UConn Huskies head coach Geno Auriemma’s ex-players or assistant coaches beats his team. Unfortunately for Temple Owls second year head coach Tonya Cardoza, Tuesday night in the second round of the NCAA Women’s Tournament wasn’t the time.

The Huskies shot an absurd 78% in the first half that helped them to a 90-36 win over the Owls in front of 4,832 at the Ted Constant Convocation Center in Norfolk, VA.

It’s the 74th straight win for the Huskies (35-0) and it came on Auriemma’s 56th birthday. The Owls finish up their season at 25-9.

Maya Moore had a perfect night as she was 6-of-6 from the floor, including 3-of-3 from three-point land, and was 4-of-4 from the free throw line to finish with 19 points. She also had five rebounds and three assists. Kelly Faris came off the bench to get her first double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds.

Despite being double-teamed for most of the game, Tina Charles had 12 points and six rebounds. Tiffany Hayes added 11 points, Caroline Doty had nine points and Meghan Gardler had eight. The only one who didn’t score was Jacquie Fernandes.

Shaqwedia Wallace was the only member of the Owls in double figures with 12 points. Marli Bennett chipped in with nine points and Jasmine Stone added seven points and eight rebounds.

This game was pretty much over from the start as Moore opened up with two straight threes. Temple got on the board with a Bennett three-pointer but the Huskies went on a 27-2 run over the next eight minutes to open up a 33-5 lead.

A Kristen McCarthy basket with 7:25 to go in the first half made it 35-11 but that would be the final time the Owls would score a field goal in the half. The Huskies closed out the half on a 20-1 run to open up 55-12 lead.

Auriemma pulled his starters with 14:48 to go and the Huskies up by 48 at 68-20. The UConn bench outscored Temple 22-16 the rest of the way.

This was the best first half of basketball UConn has played in a while. And if they continue to do that the rest of the tournament, there will be no stopping them.

The Huskies now will head to Dayton, OH for the Sweet 16 on Sunday. They’ll take on the winner of the Green Bay/Iowa State game that’s currently being played.

 

Notes and musings:

Temple Owls vs UConn Huskies 2nd Round NCAA Women’s Tournament 3.23.10 box score

The starters were Caroline Doty, Tiffany Hayes, Kalana Greene, Maya Moore and Tina Charles.

The Huskies ended up shooting 61.8% (34-of-55) from the floor while the Owls shot 23.3% (14-of-60).

UConn had 22 assists on their 34 made baskets.

The Huskies shot 10-of-13 (76.9%) from the free throw line.

UConn was 12-of-17 (70.6%) from three-point land.

The Huskies outrebounded the Owls 47-27 and outscored them 28-16 in the paint.

UConn had 15 points on 22 Owls turnovers. The Owls had 12 points on 15 Huskies turnovers.

The rest of the notes are courtesy of the UConn Huskies Sports Information Department:

– With tonight’s second round NCAA win over Temple, Connecticut advances to the “Sweet Sixteen” for the 17th straight season.

– Connecticut will meet the winner of the second round game between No. 4 seed Iowa State and No. 12 seed UW-Green Bay on Sunday, March 28 in the Dayton Regional Semifinals at the University of Dayton Arena.

– UConn moves to 73-15 all-time in NCAA Tournament play and has won each of its last eight games in NCAA play.

– UConn reaches 35 wins for the third consecutive season and the seventh time in the program’s history – this marks the first time that Connecticut has notched 35 wins in three consecutive seasons.

– With tonight’s win, UConn head coach Geno Auriemma moves to 8-1 all-time in games played on his birthday (March 23).

– UConn has gone on to win the NCAA National Championship four times (1995, 2002, 2003, 2004) when it has won on Geno Auriemma’s birthday (March 23).

– UConn has gone on to advance to the NCAA Final Four in each of the previous seven seasons in which it has won on head coach Geno Auriemma’s birthday (March 23).

– UConn first half field goal percentage of .778 (21-of-27) was its best mark in any half this season and its highest percentage in any half since shooting .806 (25-of-31) against St. John’s on Feb. 23, 2001 in the second half.

– UConn moves to 18-2 all-time in NCAA second round action following tonight’s win over Temple.

– UConn is 1-2 all-time vs. Temple following tonight’s win and a perfect 1-0 vs. the Owls since Geno Auriemma has taken over the reigns as Connecticut head coach.

– UConn improves to 57-11 all-time when receiving an automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament.

– UConn improves to 55-7 all-time when earning a No. 1 seed to the NCAA Tournament.

– UConn has won 27 of its last 29 games it has played when it has earned a No. 1 seed.

– UConn is 48-5 in NCAA Tournament action since 2000 following tonight’s win over Temple.

– UConn extended its NCAA-record winning streak to 74 consecutive games following tonight’s NCAA second round win over Temple.

– UConn’s 2010 Senior Class boasts an overall mark of 142-6 during their career in Storrs.

– UConn has won each of its last 136 games against non-ranked opponents – dating back to Dec. 21, 2004 when it lost at Arizona State.

– UConn improves to 267-11 all-time when playing as the nation’s No. 1 ranked team.

– UConn opened up tonight’s contest shooting 8-of-9 (.889) from the field, including a 3-of-3 showing from behind the arc, to take a commanding 19-5 lead in the first 6:07.

– UConn opened the game by making its first five 3-point field goal attempts.

– Maya Moore scored each of Connecticut’s first eight points, including a pair of 3-pointers.

– UConn went on a 33-5 run in the opening 10:47 to take a 28-point lead.

– UConn closed out the first half with a 20-1 run over the final 7:02 before intermission.

– UConn held Temple without a field goal for the final 7:25 of the first half.

– UConn missed a total of six shots in the first half (21-of-27) while Temple managed to make just five shots (5-of-32) in the opening frame.

– UConn’s 55 points in the first half marked the 12th time this season the Huskies have tallied at least 50 points in the opening 20 minutes.

– Temple’s 12 first half points ties the fifth lowest allowed in a half in an NCAA first or second round game.

– UConn has won its last 91 consecutive games in which it has scored at least 80 points.

– UConn scored more points in the first half (55) than Temple scored for the entire game (36) – marking the 28th time the Huskies have posted more points in the first half than their opponents have managed for the entire game during the current 74-game winning streak.

– Kalana Greene’s six points moves her into 19th place among UConn’s career scoring leaders with her current total of 1,411 as she surpassed Chris Gedney (1,409) in tonight’s contest.

– The Huskies have gone 225 consecutive games without allowing an opponent to shoot more than .500 from the field. Boston College was the last opponent to post a shooting percentage more than .500, coming on March 8, 2004.

– Kelly Faris’13 points marked her second game with double-figures points this season.

– Kelly Faris’ 13 points and 10 rebounds marked her first career double-double.

– Kelly Faris’ 10 rebounds marked her first career game with double-figure rebounds.

– Kalana Greene’s six points marked her 24th game this season in double-digit scoring and the 72nd of her career.

– Maya Moore’s 19 points marked her 34th game with double-figure points this season and her 108th in 112 career games.

– Maya Moore finished tonight’s game 6-of-6 from the floor, including a 3-of-3 performance from behind the arc, and was 4-of-4 from the charity stripe.

– Maya Moore’s 19 points marked her 19th straight game with double-figure points and her 12th in 13 career NCAA Tournament games.

– Tina Charles 12 points marked her seventh straight game with double-figure points and her 33rd this season.

– Tiffany Hayes 11 points marked her 20th game with double-figure points this season and her fourth in an NCAA Tournament game.

– Maya Moore’s 19 points marked her 45th career game with 20 or more points and her 14th this season.

– UConn’s 90 total points marked the eighth game this season that the Huskies have registered 90 or more points.

Afternoon Red Sox Delight – 3/23

The Boston Red Sox will make the 9.7 mile trip across Ft. Myers to Hammond Stadium tonight as they look to clinch their fourth straight Mayor’s Cup against the Minnesota Twins. They currently lead the Twins 3-1 with three games left.

The game will begin at 7:05 p.m. and will be broadcast on WEEI 850 AM. NESN picked up the game last minute yesterday but will be showing it on a tape-delay basis beginning at 10:30 p.m. It is also available on MLB.com if you have the MLB.tv or Gameday Audio package. You can also catch it on the MLB At Bat app for the iPhone and iPod Touch.

Clay Buchholz, who last faced major leaguers on March 14, will make the start for the Red Sox. He’ll be followed by RHP Jonathan Papelbon, LHP Hideki Okajima, RHP Daniel Bard and RHP Manny Delcarmen.

Former Red Sox farmhand and Southington, CT native Carl Pavano gets the ball for the Twins. He’ll be followed by RHP Matt Guerrier, RHP Pat Neshek and RHP Jesse Crain.

The Red Sox made some roster moves today as they optioned Michael Bowden, Aaron Bates and Ramon A. Ramirez (not the one who pitched for the Red Sox last year) to Triple-A Pawtucket. They also reassigned Jorge Sosa to minor league camp. The Red Sox now have 40 players on their spring training roster, with eight of those being non-roster invitees.

 

Boston Red Sox

Minnesota Twins

1. Marco Scutaro SS 1. Denard Span CF
2. Dustin Pedroia 2B 2. Orlando Hudson 2B
3. J.D. Drew RF 3. Joe Mauer C
4. Kevin Youkilis 1B 4. Justin Morneau 1B
5. David Ortiz DH 5. Michael Cuddyer RF
6. Adrian Beltre 3B 6. Jason Kubel DH
7. Jason Varitek C 7. Delmon Young LF
8. Jeremy Hazelbacker LF 8. J.J. Hardy SS
9. Che-Hsuan Lin CF 9. Nick Punto 3B
Clay Buchholz SP Carl Pavano SP

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

Video: Clay Buchholz & Nick Swisher ESPN Sunday Night Baseball Ad [SOX & Dawgs]

Video: Youk Asks His Teammates About His Facial Hair For Opening Day [SOX & Dawgs]

Bonser takes breather; Embree to debut [Brownie Points]

Filling the final roster spots [Extra Bases]

Jimenez excited to join Sox in big league camp [Full Count]

Pre-Game Notes: Tuesday Afternoon [Full Count]

Report: Red Sox will be most improved defensive team in ‘10 [Full Count]

Tony Mazz: Joe Mauer’s Deal Could Raise Price for Victor Martinez [NESN.com]

Fred Lynn Breaks Down Red Sox’ Defense [NESN.com]

Former Red Sox Farmhand Chris Carter Battling to Make Mets Roster [NESN.com]

Sorting out the relief pitching [ProJo Sox Blog]

 

Francona still waiting on naming Opening Day starter [ProJo Sox Blog]

Bonser says groin injury ‘nothing major’ [WEEI.com]