The Day

Black Wolves look to end two-game skid Rangers celebrate ’94 Stanley Cup championsh­ip

- By VICKIE FULKERSON Day Sports Writer By VIN A. CHERWOO

Head coach Glenn Clark, during Wednesday’s weekly State of the Black Wolves conference call, appeared to be pleased. New England, after being blown out 15-5 by the Buffalo Bandits on Jan. 27, was much more competitiv­e in its following outing Feb. 1 at Georgia, a 10-8 loss.

“We generated some chances,” Clark said. “You get more concerned when you’re not generating chances. That’s a positive and you build on that. I think it was a good response game; a couple breaks and the game could have went either way.

“It was a real concern after getting really sort of shellacked like we did. What is the response going to be? We did a good job bouncing back from that.”

Less than two hours later, however, New England sent a press release titled “Black Wolves make roster ROCHESTER AT NEW ENGLAND 7 p.m. Mohegan Sun Arena

moves.”

The Wolves, headed into today’s game against the Rochester Knighthawk­s at Mohegan Sun Arena (7 p.m.), signed forward Quinn Powless to the practice roster and released forward Seth Oakes. Defenseman John LaFontaine was moved to injured reserve and practice squad men Dave Emala and Adam Perroni were activated.

New England (3-3) will face off with Rochester (2-5), trying to break its two-game losing streak ... and with somewhat of a new look, as it turns out.

Callum Crawford leads the Black Wolves in scoring with 34 points (16 goals, 18 assists), while Reilly O’Connor has 28 (14 goals, 14 assists). Rochester is led by Cody Jamieson (36 points) and Joe Resetarits (29).

New York — From the moment Mark Messier came to the New York Rangers in 1991, he knew he was expected to lead the team to its first Stanley Cup championsh­ip in more than 50 years.

“There was no escaping the pressure of 1940,” Messier said about the last year the Rangers had won the Cup. “Coming here and understand­ing what the Original Six franchise was and this history, there was no escaping it. The pressure was real, from the fans, the organizati­on.”

Messier accomplish­ed the task in 1994 as the Rangers ended their 54-year title drought by outlasting the Vancouver Canucks in seven games in the Stanley Cup Final. Honored with a parade in the Canyon of Heroes in lower Manhattan that June, the players from that team were back Friday night at Madison Square Garden to celebrate the 25-year anniversar­y.

“When you are in New York, not a day goes by that you don’t run into someone that you get reminded, get smiles,” Adam Graves said before the ceremony that preceded the Rangers’ game against Carolina. “Back then you never thought you’d be impacting the way we have been, it is very special.”

From general manager Neil Smith, coach Mike Keenan, to stars Messier, Brian Leetch, Mike Richter, Craig MacTavish and Stephane Matteau, each were introduced one by one to a rousing ovation. The only absences from the group were Alexander Karpovtsev, who was killed along with most of the KHL Lokomotiv team in a plane crash in 2011, and Brian Noonan, who was said to have a prior commitment.

Messier said he’s been approached by countless people over since who thanked him and claimed to have witnessed the Game 7 win in New York.

“I didn’t realize Madison Square Garden holds 2 million people,” he joked, “because I’ve talked to 2 million people over 25 years that were here that night. That’s been interestin­g. It never gets old ... never get tired of speaking with people on the street or in the subway or trains, or taxi drivers that recognize the guys or myself and thank us for the Cup.”

Messier is also remembered for his famous declaratio­n before Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals against New Jersey when, with the Rangers trailing 3-2 in the series, he guaranteed the team would win Game 6.

Messier said he was simply trying to let his teammates know he believed in the team.

“I really felt we could go into New Jersey and win, and I wanted the guys to know it,” he said. “The papers the next day were what they were. It wasn’t going to motivate New Jersey any more.”

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