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2022 CIAC Boys Basketball State Championship Capsules

Division I

WHO: No. 2 Notre Dame-West Haven (25-1) vs. No. 8 East Catholic (19-6)

WHEN: Sunday, 8:15 p.m.

ON THE AIR/WEB: NFHS Network (subscription required)

HOW THEY GOT HERE: Notre Dame: Bye; def. Danbury 83-53; def. Notre Dame-Fairfield 77-47; def. Windsor 60-57; East Catholic: Bye; def Farmington 57-46; def. Wilbur Cross 73-63; def. Fairfield Prep 47-40.

CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY: Notre Dame is 0-3, last appearing in 2003. East Catholic is 6-7, last playing, and winning, in 2019.

KEY PLAYERS: East Catholic: James Jones, 6-4, Jr., G; Luke Reilly, 6-2, Jr., G; Allyn Wright, 5-11, So., G; Notre Dame: Mekhi Conner, 6-0, Jr., G; Timaury Gay, 6-4, Jr., G; Andrew Lazarre, 6-1, Sr.

OUTLOOK: East Catholic is playing its best basketball of the season at the most opportune time. The Eagles have gotten solid play from Jones, Wright and Reilly among others on both ends of the floor. They will need to be even better on Sunday. They will need to control tempo, shoot it well from the 3-point line and rebound. Notre Dame had to come from behind in the final minutes to beat Windsor in the semifinals. The Green Knights are going to try and speed up the game with their full-court pressure, spearheaded by Conner and Lazarre. If they can get up by double digits, it’s going to be hard for East Catholic to come back from that.

MORELLI’S PICK: Notre Dame.

Division II

WHO: No. 1 Bristol Central (27-0) vs. No. 2 Northwest Catholic (25-2)

WHEN: Saturday, 8:15 p.m.

ON THE AIR/WEB: NFHS Network (subscription…

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Limp Bizkit announce North American 2022 tour dates

Limp Bizkit have announced plans for a North American tour next month – buy your tickets here.

The nu-metal icons’ ‘Still Sucks’ jaunt will take in 19 dates kicking off at the Hard Rock Live in Tampa, Florida, before making their way to Atlantic City, New York, Green Bay, Las Vegas and Reno before wrapping things up on May 31 in Ontario, Canada.

They will be supported by Wargasm, $not, Scowl, Yung Gravy and Dying Wish on the dates.

The new shows come after the band cancelled a series of concerts on their ‘Limited Last Minute Post Pandemic Popup Party Edition’ tour last year “out of an abundance of caution and concern for the safety of the band, crew and, most of all, the fans.”

Fred Durst and Wes Borland of Limp Bizkit at Lollapalooza 2021. CREDIT: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

Tickets are on sale now and you can get tickets here. You can see the band’s full list of tour dates below:

APRIL
28 – Tampa, Hard Rock Live* 
30 – Hollywood, Hard Rock Live* 

MAY
3 – Norfolk, VA @ Chartway Arena*
4 – Roanoke, VA @ Berglund Center*
6 – Atlantic City, NJ @ Hard Rock Casino* (non-AEG show)
7 – Wilkes-Barre, PA @ Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza*
10 – Lowell, MA @ Tsongas Center*
12 – Uncasville, CT @ Mohegan Sun Arena* (non-AEG show)
13 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden*
15 – Baltimore, MD @ Chesapeake Employers Insurance Arena*
18 – Youngstown, OH @ Covelli Centre^
19 – Saginaw, MI @ The Dow Event Center^
21 – Gary, IN @ Hard Rock Casino^ (non-AEG…

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Bueckers remains UConn’s biggest question for NCAA Tourney

STORRS, Conn. — UConn star Paige Bueckers is by all accounts physically fit again as her Huskies enter the women’s NCAA Tournament looking for a 14th consecutive appearance in the Final Four and a 12th national title.

Last season’s national player of the year has come off the bench in five games since returning from the left knee tibia plateau fracture and torn meniscus she suffered in early December. The sophomore has averaged under 14 minutes a game since her return and scored 30 total points, 16 of them in the Huskies’ Big East quarterfinal win over Georgetown.

 

But coach Geno Auriemma said there will be no minutes restriction on Bueckers in the tournament and he hasn’t ruled out starting her when the No. 2 seed Huskies (25-5) take on Mercer (23-6) on Saturday.

Bueckers, who averaged 21.2 points, 6.2 assists and 5.5 rebounds in the six games she played before the injury, acknowledges it has been a struggle getting back to that level of play and having confidence in her body.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

 

DANCING AGAIN

Mercer comes into the tournament as a 15 seed but is making its seventh NCAA appearance and fourth in a row.

The Bears lost last March as a 16 seed to top-seeded South Carolina, 79-53, but fell by just five points to Iowa in 2019, the last time they were a No. 15 seed.

The Bears have allowed just one opponent to score over 70 points this season and that came in…

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Coventry girls set to take on Thomaston in Class S final

Since her career with the Coventry High girls basketball team started, Natalie Neal has dreamed of stepping onto the court at Mohegan Sun Arena.

The senior only has one game left in a Coventry uniform, but that game will make her dream come true.

The third-seeded Patriots (19-6) will play No. 1 Thomaston (21-4) in the Class S title game at 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Mohegan Sun Arena.

“Coming in freshman year, going to the state championship was all I ever wanted,” Neal said. “This year, we finally go the chance to. So I’m more than excited to make it this far.”

It’s Coventry’s first title game since 2009 and fifth overall. The program’s only state crown came in 1988.

“Coming into this season, we knew we were a skilled team, and they’re a hard-working team and they’re a disciplined team,” coach Kevin Clancy said. “So the goal was definitely a state championship. They believed it, they wanted it and it’s just awesome that it’s been able to get to that point to get to the finals.”

The Patriots found consistent success throughout the regular season. But many of the players trace the team’s current momentum back to a 15-point loss to Canton in the quarterfinals of the NCCC tournament.

“Losing in the NCCC tournament was really fuel and motivation that we want to make it as far we can here,” junior Charlotte Jordan said.

Coventry’s state tournament began with a first-round bye. That was followed by wins over No. 19 Lyman Memorial (63-30), No. 6 Housatonic (40-25) and a nail-biting 39-36 win over No. 15 Immaculate in the semifinals.

“I’ve kind of been preaching to the team about what they’ve accomplished just by getting to this point,” Clancy said. “It’s so great because there are so many girls that play high school basketball for all…

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Jeff Jacobs: How do you stop 7-2 Donovan Clingan? We asked state coaches

They are unbeaten. They are not untied through 32 minutes.

Carrying a 42-game winning streak into the CIAC Division II basketball championship against Northwest Catholic on Saturday night at Mohegan Sun, Donovan Clingan and Bristol Central certainly have left opponents tied in knots since last losing in the 2020 CCC quarterfinals.

Clingan is averaging 30 points, 18 rebounds and six blocks for a 27-0 team. He scored 51 on Windsor, which lost to East Catholic in the Division I semifinals. He scored 45 and grabbed 28 rebounds in the 73-66 victory against Northwest Catholic to win the CCC tournament.

When asked in a GameTimeCT survey for the best way to defend the 7-foot-2, 260-pound UConn-bound center, Conard’s Jared Leghorn and Seymour’s Joe Carrafiello full-court pressed for divine assistance.

“The first thing I would do is go to church the night before,” Carrafiello responded.

“Pray,” Leghorn wrote.

Hearst has a long reach, but not quite that long. So we reached out to Kevin Walton of Wilbur Cross and Joel Geriak of Wilton, two mortal coaches who took Bristol Central into overtime this season.

“Our plan going in was to try and keep him to 25 points,” Geriak said. “That alone tells you how good the kid is.”

The consensus among the 20 coaches in the survey is there are two ways to best deal with Clingan: 1. Double-team him, front and back, and be physical. 2. Up the tempo and play as fast as possible. Or both if you are fortunate enough to have the personnel. The objective is to take a physical toll.

After surviving Wilton, 54-52, in OT on Tuesday night, Bristol Central coach Tim Barrette declared…

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Who will win No. 1 Bristol Central vs. No.2 Northwest Catholic? CIAC coaches share their thoughts

From the moment Bristol Central and Northwest Catholic elected not to petition to play in Division I this season, basketball fans knew the possibility of these two CCC powerhouses meeting in the Division II state championship was possible.

The two teams didn’t play during the regular season. But Bristol Central did defeat Northwest Catholic in the CCC tournament final just a couple of weeks ago.

Now the Rams and the Lions square off to decide Division II. Bristol Central is No. 1 in the GameTimeCT poll, riding a 42-game winning streak. Northwest Catholic is tied for second in the poll.

The two teams have been in those two spots for most of the season. So what will happen on Saturday night at the Mohegan Sun Arena?

We polled coaches across the state, with the understanding that there responses would be used for this story. We asked who would win and why.

Of the 20 responses received, it was split down the middle as to who would win. Here are their reasons responses:

Ronan O’Leary, WCA: Bristol Central “Donovan Clingan is too much of a force for (Northwest) Catholic to stop.”

Danny Oglesby, North Haven: Northwest Catholic. “They have the best guard play and more overall depth and size to handle Donovan.”

Craig Behun, O’Brien Tech: Bristol Central. “Prior to BC’s game against Wilton, I would have picked NWC to win, but I think the close call against Wilton will have the Rams focused and fired up.”

Tim Tallcouch, Newtown: Northwest Catholic. “Second chance at Bristol Central. Playing at this point I believe there is enough video out there to adjust.”

Jared Leghorn, Conard: Bristol…

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GOALIES SHINE, BUT PENGUINS FALL BY A HAIR TO CRUNCH, 1-0

BOXSCORE

WILKES-BARRE, Pa. – The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins lost to the Syracuse Crunch in a narrow, 1-0 decision at Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza on Friday night.

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (25-24-4-4) staged a goaltender’s duel, as both Louis Domingue and Max Lagacé were lights out from the opening puck drop. Domingue recorded 32 saves for the Penguins and was only foiled by a bad bounce off of one of his teammates in the third period.

Syracuse stormed out of the gates and put the Penguins on their heels early, but Domingue was dialed in. Domingue was credited with seven saves before the game was three minutes old.

Eventually, the Penguins settled in and tilted the ice with back-to-back power play opportunities. Anthony Angello hit the post during one of those man advantages, but the game remained knotted, 0-0.

Both teams remained perfect on the penalty kill through 40 minutes, keeping the deadlock intact going into the third. The Penguins almost scored on another power play in the third period, but this time, Mitch Reinke struck iron.

Gage Goncalves ultimately netted the game’s only goal when he centering pass redirected off a Penguin atop the crease and knuckled behind Domingue with 7:50 left in regulation.

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton failed to score one of its signature extra-attacker goals and suffered the shutout loss at the hands of the former Penguin, Lagacé. The Crunch netminder recorded his first clean sheet of the season with 24 saves.

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton’s homestand concludes tomorrow, Saturday, Mar. 19, against the Utica Comets. Saturday is also the Penguins’ annual St. Patrick’s Day Celebration. Puck drop between the Penguins and Comets is scheduled for 6:05 p.m. at Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza.

Individual game tickets for the Penguins’ remaining home games as well…

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East Catholic boys bringing new crew to Mohegan for Division I final vs. Notre Dame-West Haven

East Catholic High boys basketball coach Luke Reilly is well-versed in dealing with the bright lights of state championship weekend at Mohegan Sun Arena. He will be making his sixth appearance in the title game with the Eagles on Sunday.

But it will be a whole new experience for every player on the Eagles roster when they step onto the court to face Notre Dame-West Haven in the Division I final at 8:15 p.m.

“It’s so special, and just to comment on Mohegan Sun and the way the CIAC is doing it, it’s a world-class arena, and I would say if you look across the country, the way these state championships run in each state, it’s second to none,” Reilly said.

“It’s just a thrill….Pulling in on the bus and behind the scenes and walking the corridors that all those big time players have walked and just taking a moment to enjoy getting there. Then it becomes strictly business and there’s a game to be played. So you definitely want to take time to stop and smell the roses but you’re there to play a game and win as well. So it’s a delicate balance, but it’s certainly something you want to treasure.”

East Catholic (19-6) is making its 14th appearance in the championship game. The Eagles took home the title in 1965, 1968, 1972, 2014, 2016, and in 2019, the last time the tournament was played in its entirety

“I think Coach (Reilly) has been in many ways the standard around the state and certainly in his area,” Notre Dame-West Haven coach Jason Shea said. “They’ve had so much success …. Our programs are very similar. Both programs, the kids play extremely hard, they’re all coachable, but certainly he’s been a model program for all of us. And he’s been at…

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No repeats in next round of Game Of Claims

Whata Treasurer and driver Anthony Napolitano (Curtis Salonick photo)

WILKES-BARRE, PA – Queen Kendall and Toddler Tantrum were winners in the first week of the Game Of Claims Pacing Series for $10,000-base price horses, but on Monday at The Downs at Mohegan Sun Pocono, they both had to take a back seat to Whata Treasure, who closed from last to win by 3¾ lengths in 1:53.1 for driver Anthony Napolitano, who topped the local drivers colony with four wins.

Whata Treasure was claimed for $10,000 out of the first leg, and despite the hike in price to $12,500 for the second prelim, he was again taken out of the claiming box on a day where twelve horses changed hands for a total of $132,500.

New owner Lawrence Smith will have to decide whether a first and a second in the first two prelims will be enough to make the final, or whether to drop him back in next week and risk losing him before the final on March 28.

WHATA TREASURE REPLAY

There were no repeat winners in Monday’s five divisions, each worth $10,000, at this level, but the horse who caught the eye the most was Owen, who had a closing fourth in his GOC bow, was taken by owner/trainer Stacey Currie, then won the day’s opener in an overpowering 1:52.1, taking a new lifetime mark while motoring his own last half in 55 flat under Jim Pantaleano’s guidance.

Other winners for this tag Monday were two for driver Simon Allard, Ain’t It Fun (1:54.2) and IC A Free Spirit (1:55), and Sanattle Slew (Anthony Napolitano, 1:55.4). All these winners went back home to familiar surroundings afterwards.

The four $7500 purse events which today saw the entrants…

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Thomaston downs Bolton in Class S girls basketball semifinal, earns trip to final at Mohegan Sun

NEW BRITAIN — Five years removed from its last state final appearance, the Thomaston girls’ basketball team will make the trip back to the Mohegan Sun following its 48-42 Class S semifinal victory over Bolton on Monday.

The top-seeded Bears appeared in five straight title games from 2013-2017, winning twice. This year, they met little resistance in the first three rounds before edging Bolton by six points.

“I feel happy for our players because they worked really hard to get here,” Thomaston coach Robert McMahon said. “To see them finish it off like this is great. Now we have one final step, and we will see what happens then.”

Thomaston was led by sophomore Nicole Decker who led all scorers with 18 points. Ava Harkness contributed 12 points to the winning effort, while Aurelia Barker scored 10.

“We knew when Nicole was in kindergarten that she would get the keys to the car,” McMahon said. “We waited a long time to get her here and we are soaking up every minute.”

Thomaston jumped out to a first-quarter lead and never relinquished it, leading at the end of every quarter.

“We knew they had two sophomore guards that we needed to stop,” Decker said. “We just played good defense and didn’t foul, that was a big thing today. I think we did a good job on them.”

After a tough loss in the semifinals of the Berkshire League tournament, Thomaston has returned with a vengeance and a determination not to experience that losing feeling again.

“We went into practice after that with a ‘we are not going to lose again’ mentality,” Decker said. “And we are not, we are going to…

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