Thursday, January 29, 2009

PRIDE CAN'T COMPLETE COMEBACK, FALL TO DREXEL



Recap | Box Scores
Jess Fuller Hempstead, NY --

Junior center Jess Fuller (Queens, NY) led Hofstra with 11 points, but it wasn't enough as junior forward Gabriela Marginean provided more than half of Drexel's offense, scoring 29 points as the Dragons posted a 57-50 victory over the Pride in a CAA matchup Thursday night at the Mack Sports Complex.

Freshman guard Nicole Capurso (Staten Island, NY) hit a three-pointer from the left elbow with 1:42 remaining, cutting a second-half deficit that was as high as 16 points down to four. Yet Andrea Peterson converted two free throws on Drexel's next possession to secure the win. Hofstra dropped to 12-7 overall and 4-4 in conference play. Marginean finished 12-20 from the field as Drexel improved to 11-8 and 6-2 against the CAA.

The Pride was seeking its fifth win in seven games before Marginean's fast start. The Romanian native surged to a hot start, shooting 7-10 in the first half, helping her team build a 27-19 lead at the break. Fuller gave the Pride an answer in the low post, scoring nine points before the break to keep it close.

Freshman forward Joelle Connelly (Arcade, NY) added four rebounds and fell just two points shy of scoring in double figures for the 10th time this season to complement Fuller in the paint. Senior guard Natty Fripp (Oakland, CA) chipped in nine points and seven rebounds.

No other Drexel player besides Marginean scored in double figures. The Dragons still extended its formidable lead early in the second half with a 10-2 run capped by Marginean's three-point play to extend the Drexel's lead to 41-25 with 14:44 remaining. The Dragons have now won four straight in the series.

Capurso, who added eight points off the bench for the Pride, made it a two-possession game with her trey late in the game, slicing Drexel's lead to 53-49. The Dragons survived thanks in part to its strong start.

Marginean would tally 12 of Drexel's first 13 points in the contest as the Dragons opened a 13-7 advantage at the 10:48 mark of the opening 20 minutes. Sophomore forward Ashley Wilcots (Virginia Beach, VA) came off the bench for Hofstra and scored seven first half points in just eight minutes of play to pace the Pride's first half offensive efforts. Wilcots twice helped Hofstra cut the deficit to four as she had a jumper at the 6:53 mark to cut the gap to 15-11 and they converted an old-fashioned three-point play with 5:20 left to make the score 18-14.

Drexel would outscore Hofstra, 14-6, over the first 5:16 of the second half to push its lead up to 41-25 before the Pride mounted a comeback. Fripp would hit a layup moments after Drexel took the 16-point advantage and then added a three-pointer at the 14:11 mark to close the gap to 41-30.

With the visitors ahead 43-32 after the two teams exchanged buckets, Hofstra would use a 5-0 spurt to narrow the deficit to 43-37 following Connelly's lay-up. The Pride would cut the gap even closer with less than four minutes left in the second half after Fripp forced a steal from behind and raced down court for an uncontested layup to make it 48-44 Drexel with 3:38 left in regulation.

Hofstra returns to the Mack Sports Complex court on Sunday when they host James Madison at 2 p.m.

-30-

Photo by Brian Ballweg for Hofstra Athletics

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Hofstra Wrestling Preview vs. Ohio State

This is video I shot on January 22, 2009 for a preview of Hofstra' wrestling match vs. Ohio State Sunday, January 25, 2009. Jim Sheehan is asking the questions to Pride head coach Tom Shifflet.

Ovechkin Living Up To Hype

Ovechkin Living Up To Hype

Jan 23rd, 2009 | By Brian Bohl | Category: Hockey, Top Story
Alexander Ovechkin has 31 goals this season. (Jim Leary/NYSD)

Alexander Ovechkin has 31 goals this season. (Jim Leary/NYSD)

UNIONDALE, NY- Alex Ovechkin usually makes highlight films thanks to offensive rushes that formulate into memorable plays. Yet the NHL’s reigning MVP and scoring champion is also capable of destroying teams with subtle actions.

Before centerman Nicklas Backstrom takes an offensive zone faceoff, Ovechkin deftly lines up directly behind the circle, waiting to unleash a lightning-fast snapshot off a clean draw. But Ovechkin can also score any place on the ice, evidenced by his two-goal performance, including the overtime game-winning tally, in Washington’s 2-1 victory over the Islanders earlier in the week.

Ovechkin is just in his fourth season but will likely reach 200 career goals in the next month. The 23-year-old winger has the potential to threaten some of the league’s most heralded scoring record. Against the Isles, he notched goals No. 30 and 31 to move past Philadelphia’s Jeff Carter for the top mark. It was the first time all season the Art Ross winner sat alone atop the leader board, though Ovechkin said he didn’t mind giving the competition a chance 47 games into the season.

“It’s happened,” he deadpanned. “I give a chance to a different guy.”

Ovechkin and Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby are the NHL’s two most marketable stars. The Islanders can also take some solace in the fact that the Capitals finished 23-46-10 for a dismal 49 points in 2003-04. Washington won the No. 1 overall pick and selected Ovechkin, and the 6-2, 212-pound forward galvanized the franchise and led the Capitals to the playoffs last season.

His goal totals in the first three seasons: 52, 46 and 65. Ovechkin is on pace to surpass the 50-goal mark at a time when there have been just 10 50-goal seasons after the lockout (including two from Ovechkin). One player can turn a lackluster club with no direction into a must-see event and contender in the conference.

“I don’t want to put myself on top of anybody,” Ovechkin said. “I just try and do the best that I can and try to help the team to win. I play hard all the time. No matter what happens, I just try, try, try and never give up.”

The Islanders have a chance to potentially select a player like that this spring in John Tavares. If the Isles, which enter the All-Star break 13-29-5 and eight points away from the second-worst team, win the draft lottery, the reeling team could finally have an impact scorer to put people in the seats and possibly even keep the Islanders in Uniondale.

While it takes more than adding one great player to morph into a championship contender, Washington coach Bruce Boudreau said a player like Ovechkin makes everyone else better.

“He raises the bar in that he wants everyone else to play as hard as him,” Boudreau said. “You watch how hard he plays, how can you not want to play with that intensity and passion every night when he’s doing that?”

Yann Danis began the season as the top netminder for Bridgeport in the AHL. He then stepped into the starting role following injuries to Rick DiPietro and Joey MacDonald and was burned twice by Ovechkin. The first goal was a laser from the left point and the second was an easy one-timer off Alexander Semin’s centering pass during an overtime power play.

Danis was making just his 14th career appearance, though more experienced goalies have talked about the need to account for impact players like Ovechkin every second they are on the ice. That type of dominant player can open up room for other scorers and add a different dimension to the offense.

“You can definitely see why he scores a lot of goals,” Danis said. “He’s got a good shot, quick release and very skilled. You have to steady ready when he’s on the ice, that’s for sure.”

Capitals goaltender Jose Theodore saw the Hart Trophy winner score an overtime goal to beat the Islanders at the Coliseum Dec. 16. When asked if Ovechkin has a comfort level playing a hapless opponent in an old arena, the netminder didn’t hesitate to respond.

“There are a lot of buildings he likes to play in,” said Theodore, who posted 27 saves for his 200th career victory.

Ovechkin is still two years away from being able to rent a car at a reasonable price. Yet he already joined Hall of Famer Mike Gartner and perennial All-Star Peter Bondra as the only Capitals with four-straight 30-goal seasons.

Once timid and unsure of himself as a rookie off the ice, Ovechkin now speaks fluent English. Standing inside the visiting dressing room at Nassau Coliseum, Ovechkin spoke with a gold chain of his uniform No. 8 around his neck. He will play in his third All-Star game this weekend in Montreal and has the Capitals in contention for a second straight Southeast Division crown.

It seems everything is coming easy for Ovechkin, who unlike DiPietro, is living up to his huge contract. Ovechkin signed a 13-year, $124 million contract that is shorter than DiPietro’s 15-year pact but nearly twice the size in salary. Consider he has a whopping 194 goals, 175 points and 369 points in just 291 games, and so far the Capitals seem to be getting a bargain.

“Sometimes I have lucky bounces and luck goals,” Ovechkin said. “But you know, goals are goals. Sometimes my teammates give me great passes.”

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WRHU Alex Ovechkin Wrap January 23, 2009

WRHU Islanders Report January 21, 2009



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vEY6oOz4dQ

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Ovechkin Continues Isles Misery



Ovechkin Continues Isles Misery

Jan 20th, 2009 | By Brian Bohl | Category: New York Islanders, Top Story
isles120

Ovechkin just too much for the Isles. (Brian Bohl/NYSD)

UNIONDALE, NY– Injuries and a sputtering offense continues to exacerbate problems in a dismal Islanders season. But for all the organization’s talk about a youth movement, the club was able to see what a young, home-grown star really looks like.

Alex Ovechkin continued the Islanders misery, scoring both of Washington’s goals in a 2-1 overtime victory for the Capitals in a Monday matinee contest. The Islanders continued to be winless in 2009 but picked up a point for the first time in January thanks to Kyle Okposo’s game-tying power play goal 12:18 into the third period.

Okposo was just one of the many young players who spent time in AHL this season or 2007-08, though Washington seems to be doing just fine going young. The 23-year-old Ovechkin is the reigning Art Ross trophy winner as the NHL’s leading scorer and notched goals 30 and 31, including the game-winner off Alexander Semin’s one-time feed 1:46 into overtime. Ovechkin has cracked the 30-goal plateau in his first four seasons.

“It was a sick pass,” said Ovechkin, who also scored a game-winning overtime goal at the Coliseum in December. “I thought he gave it to me a little earlier, but it’s Semin, so he created opportunities for me to score goals.

“They played hard and played a physical game against us. I think we were kind of sleepy and didn’t play our best game today. But it’s always fun when you win the game, especially in overtime.”

Islanders fans might want to look away instead of processing the numbers. Take your pick: 0-7-1 record this month, a 2-17-3 mark in the last 22 games and 0-3-1 in the past four home contests. Don’t forget 29 points, which is the league’s lowest total by eight points.

Yann Danis started the season as the third string goalie but made his third straight start filling in after injuries to Rick DiPietro and Joey MacDonald. Danis was making his 14th NHL experience and looked shaky early in the opening period.

Brendan Witt’s roughing penalty put the Capitals on the power play. Washington took advantage, working along the blue line to find open space. Mike Green slid a hard pass to Ovechkin, who fired a one-time shot from the top of the left circle past Danis for a power play goal 6:35.

It marked Ovechkin’s fourth straight 30-goal season. He joins elite company in Capitals history. Only Peter Bondra and Mike Gartner accomplished at least four consecutive 30-goal seasons in the franchise’s history.

Danis settled down, turning aside 36 shots. He still dropped to 0-6 this year and is looking for his first NHL win since 2005. The Islanders have scored just one goal in four straight games, making it tough for any goalie to succeed.

“I’m feeling a lot more comfortable as I play in more games,” Danis said. “I felt good.”

Okposo finally ended the Isles pointless streak at seven. Nicklas Backstrom put the home team on the power play and Ovechkin turned it into a 5-on-3 situation four seconds later when he lifted a clearing attempt over the glass for a delay-of-game penalty.

Mike Comrie kept the play alive with a good keep at far left blue line, sending it to Mark Streit at the other point. The All-Star defenseman sent it down to Frans Nielsen, who fired a hard pass across the crease to an open Okposo.

The winger added his sixth goal, firing a one-time shot from point-blank range to tie it at 1 with 7:42 left after Washington’s Jeff Schultz couldn’t get over in time to stop the pass and Jose Theodore was late getting over.

“In three out of the four games, we were right in there,” Okposo said. “We outplayed teams at times. We just haven’t been able to get the breaks but our chance will come.”

Theodore made 27 saves. Danis outplayed his counterpart for the most part, making 20 saves in the second and third period. He nearly made one mistake with 14:32 left in the third and Caps nursing the 1-0 lead. Okposo broke his stick on a power play attempt and Danis raced far out of the net to clear the puck. Instead, his weak pass went right to a streaking Ovechkin’s stick blade.

The perennial All-Star couldn’t capitalize, sending a shot at the vacant net’s right side. Danis enjoyed a fortuitous bounce, gloving the puck while diving pack to the crease. Danis started the season as the Sound Tigers starting goalie. Thrust into the spotlight, the 27-year-old has played well in allowing just seven goals in his three starts, though coach Scott Gordon was not willing to give his netminder a pass for his mistakes.

“Obviously, he made some pretty good saves,” Gordon said. “I have concerns about the first goal going through him, and also the puck play that almost resulted in an empty-netter. Right now he’s got an opportunity and he’s got to make the most of it.”

There was some controversy regarding the Capitals overtime power play goal. Ovechkin drew a slashing penalty on Witt in neutral ice. Ovechkin said the reason for the infraction was simple.

“He broke my stick,” Ovechkin said. “That’s why it [the minor penalty] was called.”

Witt disagreed.

“I didn’t break it,” he said. “I’m not that strong to do it with one hand.”

Regardless, the penalty set up a 4-on-3 because of the overtime rules, and Ovechkin found the open net 21 seconds later. That goal moved him one past Philadelphia’s Jeff Carter for the league lead.

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WRHU Islanders vs. Washington Capitals Game Wap Up, First Aired January 20, 2009



All photos by Brian Bohl
www.wrhu.org and 88.7 FM in New York