Senators News: March 8th; Binghamton 2, Toronto 0

Ben Bishop will get the start tonight against the Rangers.  Jim O’Brien returns from injury and Zenon Konopka draws out of the lineup.

Peter Chiarelli made an interesting comment about scouting, ‘when he was in Ottawa that the team did some research into drafting, and one of the conclusions was that “weight is much more important than height when scouting players.”‘  Unfortunately the comment isn’t qualified (presumably Erik Karlsson would fail by that standard), but it’s an interesting comment that trends against the conventional wisdom for height.

Stu Hackel writes about his coach of the year candidates, beginning with this proviso, “the NHL Broadcasters Association, which is in charge of the award, generally selects a coach whose season is marked by a conspicuously measurable result. If a coach guides a team to a big improvement over the previous year, he’ll get very serious consideration. So will a coach who has been able to keep his team winning despite serious obstacles, such as many and/or key injuries to his players, such as Pittsburgh’s Dan Bylsma did last season and is doing again, or getting his team to play well despite the franchise’s off-ice problems, as Dave Tippett did two seasons ago in Phoenix. Those are really good standards, and it’s hard to fault them. They reflect excellent coaching. But they also tend to shortchange some guys who more consistently push the right buttons and get strong outcomes year after year.”  Here are his thoughts on Paul MacLean, “No one expected much from the young Senators this season, perhaps not even the organization itself. But they’ve been one of the NHL’s big surprises and MacLean has been a huge part of that. He’s managed the expectations very well, and his long NHL playing and coaching experience has informed this group, giving it direction. He’s provided a big change in culture from the tense atmosphere he inherited and put the Sens on an upward path. For a first-year head coach, that’s very impressive.”

Robin Lehner made 22 saves to shutout the Toronto Marlies yesterday afternoon.  Mark Borowiecki had the winner and Corey Cowick added an empty-netter.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.

Joy Lindsay Tweets today’s lines at practice: Cowick-Hamilton-Parrish, Grant-Cannone-Petersson, Dziurzynski-Da Costa-Downing, Bartlett-Lessard; Borowiecki-Gryba, Henningson-Conboy, Wiercioch-Schira, Godfrey.

Binghamton at the Sixty-Game Mark

Binghamton has played 60 games and it’s time to take a look at how they’ve done over the last 10 (for the previous segment go here link). The B-Sens were 4-5-1, precisely the same record as the previous ten game segment. They continue to be 5th in the division, 15th in the conference, and 30th in the league. They are 20th in goals for (up from 21st) and remain 28th in goals against. Player’s stats (INJ=games missed due to injury, SCR= scratched, SUS=suspended, NHL=games in the NHL, ECHL=games in the ECHL):

Corey Locke 9-5-5-10 +1 INJ 1
Mike Hoffman 10-5-4-9 Even
Pat Cannone 10-3-3-6 +2
Rob Klinkhammer 7-1-4-5 -2 (NHL 2-0-0-0 +2)
Derek Grant 10-2-3-5 +2
Andre Petersson 10-1-4-5 Even
Eric Gryba 10-1-4-5 -1
Mark Parrish 7-2-2-4 -3 INJ 3
Craig Schira 9-0-3-3 +7 SCR 1
Mark Borowiecki 10-2-1-3 Even
Stephane Da Costa
6-0-2-2 INJ 4
Jack Downing 9-1-1-2 +2 (ECHL 1-0-1-1 -1) SCR 2
Dan Henningson 10-1-1-2 +2
Mike Bartlett 10-1-1-2 -2
Tim Conboy
10-0-2-2 +1
David Dziurzynski
10-0-2-2 -2
Corey Cowick 1-1-0-1 +2 (ECHL 11-3-2-5 -1)
Josh Godfrey 6-0-1-1 -4 (ECHL 1-0-0-0 +1) SCR 3
Patrick Wiercioch 10-0-1-1 +2
Wacey Hamilton 10-0-1-1 -2 (ECHL 1-0-1-1 +1)
Francis Lessard 5-0-0-0 Even SCR 4
Bobby Raymond (ECHL 2-0-1-1 +6) SCR 6
Louie Caporusso (injured)
Ben Bishop 2-1-0 2.35 .944 (NHL 1-0-0 3.00 .893)
Mike McKenna 0-3-1 2.92 .919 GAA and SV improved
Robin Lehner 2-1-0 3.24 .907 (NHL 2-2-0 2.01 .935) GAA and SV improved
Brian Stewart (ECHL 4-1-0 2.71 .914, GAA improved)

Corey Locke lead the team in scoring during the segment and now leads them overall (despite missing 22 games).  Mike Hoffman continues to produce (second in scoring), although he’s without a point in his last three games.  Craig Schira, who had been in the midst of a horrible year, lead the team in plus/minus, while Josh Godfrey was at the bottom at -4.  Eric Gryba was the most productive blueliner and is closing in on the team lead for defensive scoring (an area Binghamton is not very good at).  Newly acquired Ben Bishop along with Robin Lehner earned all the wins through the ten games, but Mike McKenna‘s numbers (GAA and SV) continue to improve.

Senators News: March 7th

Jim O’Brien was a late scratch last night due to an upper body injury.

Colin Greening talked about his Gordie Howe hat-trick last night, “The guys were letting me know (about the Gordie Howe) between periods. It’s the first of my career. It’s just something that happened. The last five games or so, I haven’t been playing as many minutes. It shows a lot of confidence from the coaching staff to put me back with (Michalek) and (Jason Spezza). We had some good chemistry.”

Paul MacLean talked about Robin Lehner‘s performance, “I thought he played real good, obviously in the games he won. In the Chicago game (a 2-1 loss) he allowed it to be respectable, and we can’t fault him, really, on the game in Florida (a 4-2 loss). So we gave him an opportunity to show us he could be a goalie here.”

Sports Illustrated‘s power rankings are out with Ottawa 18th.

Joy Lindsay Tweets that Stephane Da Costa is back in the lineup for this morning’s game against the Toronto Marlies

-The Sens have reached out to bloggers, offering them access similar to the traditional media.  The bigger blogs are being targeted and it’s about time the team made more of an effort to harness the power of online media.  How much this additional access would mean in terms of actual content is up in the air.

-Tim Murray was on Sportsnet last night and said the Sens hope to bring Mika Zibanejad over to play a few games in Binghamton and then skate with the black aces while Ottawa is in the playoffs.  With Djurgardens’ schedule, at best he could play the final two games in Binghamton.

Ottawa 7, Tampa Bay 3

Ottawa was able to survive falling asleep early in the second period to bury the Lightning.  Sergei Gonchar, Colin Greening, and Kyle Turris were able to end lengthy goal-scoring droughts and Ben Bishop was good enough to win.  I don’t see the Lightning play very often, but there were a lot of dives tonight–the officials did a good at ignoring most of them.  Here’s the box score.

First Period
The Sens started the game with an early powerplay they weren’t able to generate much pressure with, but after Mathieu Garon pulled his groin the offense began to roll for Ottawa.  Gonchar opened the scoring on a great pass from Greening; then Greening broke his own lengthy goal-scoring streak on a great pass from MichalekTurris rounded out the scoring in the period, his shot deflecting in off Clark.
Second Period
The Sens came out flat and missing Chris Phillips who suffered a broken nose in the first period.  Tampa scored early when Daugavins lost his check (Shannon) who was wide open in the slot and beat BishopWallace then scored on the rush, beating Bishop high on the short side.  Paul MacLean called a time out and Ottawa began to push back.  Aulie fought Greening after a hit he didn’t like, resulting in an Ottawa powerplay where Karlsson scored.
Third Period
Ottawa dominated the period until a St. Louis dive resulted in a Stamkos powerplay goal.  The Sens did get their own opportunity not long after and capitalised with a great shot by Michalek.  The Lightning tried to push, but weren’t able to generate enough scoring chances and Michalek ended the game with two empty-net goals.

Here’s a look at the goals:
1. Gonchar (Greening, Cowen)
The Lightning got running around in their zone leaving Gonchar wide open back door and Greening found him with a great pass
2. Greening (Michalek, Kuba)
Kuba shoots wide and Roloson overcommits, leaving half his net open as Michalek was able to pass it to a wide open Greening in front
3. Turris (unassisted)
Karlsson’s rush is stopped, but Turris fires the loose puck off of Clark and in
4. Tampa Bay, Shannon
Daugavins loses his check leaving Shannon alone in the slot
5. Tampa Bay, Wallace
Cowen turns the puck over at the blueline and Wallace is able to beat Bishop high short-side
6. Karlsson (pp)
Hedman clears the puck right too Karlsson and beats Roloson high short-side
7. Tampa Bay, Stamkos (pp)
Condra and Smith get mixed up on coverage leaving Stamkos wide open and he beats Bishop high short-side
8. Michalek (Alfredsson, Kuba) (pp)
Great pass to the top of the circle and he fires it top-shelf.
9. Michalek (en)
10. Michalek (en-sh)

Top-performers:
Colin Greening – key assist on the first goal and scored himself
Milan Michalek – the easiest natural hat-trick he’ll ever get, but he played very well throughout

Players Who Struggled: no one really struggled tonight, although I think Ben Bishop would like back the Wallace goal.

Senators News: March 6th

Ben Bishop has been recalled from Binghamton while Robin Lehner has been sent down (link); Bishop is expected to start tonight against Tampa

Daniel Alfredsson talks about the season so far, “We didn’t know what to expect with this team. There were a lot of questions and I was asked a lot if I would look to go somewhere else (at the deadline). I was like everybody else. I was just really happy we didn’t have to make that decision. We put ourselves in a position where we have a really good chance of making the playoffs. The major factor is: Do I feel I still have it in me and go through another summer of workouts, training camp and playing another year? Then, health-wise and then family. Those are the three components. When I thought about it last summer, I just wanted to come back and see what I could do (after the back surgery) to see if I was healthy and if I could get healthy. I’ve been able to do that so it’s been really encouraging throughout the year. It’s been a lot of fun and, hopefully, the best is yet to come.”

Erik Karlsson was fined $2,500 for his slash on Sean Bergenheim.

TSN and The Hockey News‘ power rankings are out with Ottawa 12th in both.

-Binghamton has signed Dan Henningson (17-1-4-5 +1) to a standard AHL contract.  Henningson was on a PTO from the ECHL’s Chicago Express.

Joy Lindsay reports that Corey Cowick (18-4-4-8 -1) has been recalled from Elmira and is expected to play tomorrow.  The lines at practice: Corey Cowick-Corey Locke-Mark Parrish, David Dziurzynski-Stéphane Da Costa-Jack Downing, Derek Grant-Pat Cannone-André Petersson, Mike Hoffman-Wacey Hamilton-Mike Bartlett/Francis Lessard; Mark Borowiecki-Eric Gryba, Dan Henningson-Tim Conboy, Patrick Wiercioch-Craig Schira, Josh Godfrey.

-Binghamton has also announced their Clear Day rosters, which designates those eligible to compete in the remainder of the 2011-12 AHL regular season and in the 2012 Calder Cup playoffs. Binghamton can still add signed junior players or players on amateur tryout contracts after their  seasons are complete.  The roster: Ben Bishop, Robin Lehner; Mike Bartlett, Mark Borowiecki, Pat Cannone, Tim Conboy, Stephane Da Costa, Jack Downing, David Dziurzynski, Josh Godfrey, Derek Grant, Eric Gryba, Wacey Hamilton, Dan Henningson, Mike Hoffman, Rob Klinkhammer, Francis Lessard, Corey Locke, Mark Parrish, Andre Petersson, Craig Schira, and Patrick Wiercioch.

Hockey Futures writes about prospects on the rise or declining, and Jakob Silfverberg is included on the upswing: “The primary cause for Silfvergberg‘s offensive explosion is at least partially due to simple physical maturity. The 21-year-old has added about five pounds of muscle over the last year and it shows, as he is very strong protecting the puck and battling for it in the corners. Expect the talented forward to come to join the Senators organization for the 2012-13 season, where he could make an immediate offensive impact in the top-nine.”  Colin Greening is on the downswing, “After a fairly strong start to the first half of the season, Greening has gradually seen his production decline over the past month. He picked up only one point in the month of February, an assist on the 26th, and prior to that he had been held off the scoresheet 10 games in a row. Some of his decline is likely due to wear and tear, as it is common for first-year NHL players to hit a wall around the mid-way point of the season. Much of it however is also due to a lack of confidence, and his decreased time on the ice is a reflection of that. Regardless of how he finishes his season however, Greening should be considered a solid top-nine forward in the NHL.”  Greening‘s declining production fits in with the rest of the Sens secondary scoring.

Senators News: March 5th

-Paul MacLean was not a happy camper after last night’s poor performance, “Our competition after the first period stayed the same and theirs elevated. They took over the game. That led to us being frustrated instead of trying to raise our competition to (match theirs) as the game went on. We got frustrated and took selfish penalties that took us out of the game that led to even more frustration and lack of execution. As a result, we don’t get (the benefit) of what was a really good first period.”  Robin Lehner said, “It was frustrating. After the first, I thought we looked really good. I don’t know what happened in the second. Our whole team kind of collapsed a little bit and they came out very hungry. Their first goal was a fluke. It was very lucky. The second goal [Barch] I feel like I’ve got to have. That’s one of the best parts of my game. I was with him and for some reason I lost my balance. I’ve got to have that goal. Then, we had to face some adversity, we got some penalties and things didn’t go our way.”

-Paul MacLean talked about scratching Zack Smith, “He has to play harder, be more physical in the role that he has and be a better penalty-killer … So be more consistent.”

-Binghamton assistant coach Steve Sterling offered this evaluation of Rob Klinkhammer in 2008, “He’s got NHL size and his skating is a little above average for the NHL. I would say based on his tenacity and those attributes he would have an outside chance to be a fourth line player in the NHL. Go up and down his wing and bang and crash and muck it up. Kill some penalties. His hands are average and his offensive sense is average and he gets into trouble when he gets excited and his brain can’t keep up. He’s a classic 10th or 11th forward who you know is going to do the dirty stuff. That’s what’s going to keep him here or help him rise.”

ESPN‘s power rankings are out with Ottawa 12th.

Joy Lindsay Tweets that Binghamton’s game turned on Tim Conboy being tossed for arguing a penalty call, with Kurt Kleinendorst saying, “He [the official] took a great game and just flipped it upside-down … weak call, and then probably an even worse call.”

-Prospect updates (their position in team scoring is noted in brackets, defence compared to defence; I’ve also indicated if the player’s scoring position has change (with a + for up, – for down, and = for unchanged):
CHL
Mark Stone (RW, Brandon, WHL) 60-39-69-108 (1st=)
Shane Prince (C/LW, Ottawa 67s, OHL) 52-40-42-82 (2nd=)
Stefan Noesen (C/RW, Plymouth, OHL) 57-32-40-72 (1st=)
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (RW, Chicoutimi, QMJHL) 43-32-31-63 (2nd+)
Darren Kramer (C/LW, Spokane, WHL) 64-20-17-37 (t-6th-)
Jakub Culek (C/LW, Rimouski, QMJHL) 50-13-23-36 (5th=)
Matt Puempel (LW, Peterborough, OHL) 30-17-16-33 (injured)
Jordan Fransoo (D, Victoria, WHL) 64-3-16-19 (2nd=)
SEL
Jakob Silfverberg (C/RW, Brynas) 48-24-28-52 (1st=)
Mika Zibanejad (C/RW, Djurgarden) 25-5-7-12 (15th+)
Fredrik Claesson (D, Djurgarden) 46-1-6-7 (t-5th=)
Allsvenskan
Marcus Sorensen (RW, Boras) 29-8-9-17 (9th-)
NCAA
Ryan Dzingel (C, CCHA-Ohio State) 33-7-17-24 (t-1st=)
Max McCormick (LW, CCHA-Ohio State) 27-10-12-22 (t-3rd=)
Bryce Aneloski (D, WCHA-Nebraska-Omaha) 36-6-14-20 (1st=)
Michael Sdao (D, ECAC-Princeton) 29-9-10-19 (1st=)
Chris Wideman (D, CCHA-Miami) 36-1-16-17 (1st=)
Ben Blood (D, WCHA-North Dakota) 35-2-15-17 (2nd-)
Jeff Costello (LW, CCHA-Notre Dame) 26-5-6-11 (9th=)
Brad Peltz (LW, ECAC-Yale) 9-1-0-1 (20th=)

Ottawa 2, Florida 4; Binghamton 2, St. John’s 5

The Sens played yet another game where they were disjointed and often on their heels.  The first line was completely ineffective until Bobby Butler was removed from it and overall the Sens did not do enough to generate chances.  Robin Lehner could not duplicate his prior superhuman efforts, although none of the goals he allowed were soft.  Here’s the box score.

First Period
The game got off to a slow start with neither team able to establish a forecheck.  After a lifeless Ottawa powerplay the momentum was swinging towards Florida when Ottawa scored on a simple play–fire the puck at the net with traffic in front.  Chris Neil added a second goal on a Jim O’Brien rebound to give the Sens a 2-0 lead.
Second Period
The Panthers quicky took the momentum scoring twice early, first an excellent tip by Goc and then Barch deeked Lehner on a clear breakaway off a bad Senators line change.  Neil was called for a double minor and the Panthers cash in to take the lead and control most of the period.  Through the first two periods the entire first line (SpezzaMichalekButler) and Karlsson had been completely invisible.
Third Period
The Sens came out stronger in the third period (beginning to line juggle) and began to generate scoring chances when Karlsson was called for a trip when Weiss simply fell down.  The Sens killed the powerplay, but then a frustrated Karlsson took a dumb penalty slashing Bergenheim.  The Sens could do nothing on an abbreviated powerplay and after Kyle Turris hit the crossbar Skille powered through Karlsson and beat Lehner to salt the game away.

Here’s a look at the goals:
1. Cowen (Turris)
Snap shot through a Klinkhammer screen
2. Neil (O’Brien, Foligno)
Fires home O’Brien’s rebound through a crowd
3. Florida, Goc
Fantastic tip just in front of Lehner popped the puck over him and in
4. Florida, Barch
Sent on a clear breakaway on a bad Sens line change and deeks Lehner
5. Florida, Samuelsson (pp)
Alfredsson can’t control Samuelsson’s stick and he fires the puck home right in front of Lehner
6. Florida, Skille
Karlsson is overpowered by Skille who drives to the net and beats Lehner

Top-performers:
Chris Phillips – was strong defensively tonight
Kyle Turris – he needs to score consistently, but he had an assist and his line was the best tonight
Jim O’Brien – continues being strong defensively and picked up an assist on the second goal

Players Who Struggled:
Erik Karlsson – lead the team in turnovers, was weak defensively, and added nothing offensively
Bobby Butler – another invisible game for him

-Binghamton was outshot 40-23 and could not keep up with St. John’s who put four past Ben BishopJack Downing and Corey Locke scored for Binghamton and Patrick Wiercioch broke his pointless streak.  Craig Schira and Wiercioch lead the way at +2.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.

-Elmira won 3-0 this afternoon, with Brian Stewart earning the win and Corey Cowick scoring a goal.

Senators News: March 4th; Binghamton 0, Hershey 3

Rob Klinkhammer (35-12-23-35 -5) was recalled by the Sens yesterday and despite declining production this is a reward for his play.  This will be Klinkhammer‘s second NHL call-up as he played one game for Chicago last year and the plan is for him to play with Daniel Alfredsson and Kyle Turris in the hopes of generating secondary scoring.  Zack Smith will be healthy scratch for the first time this season (a decision I don’t like) and Kaspars Daugavins will remain out of the lineup.  Unsurprisingly, Robin Lehner will get the start.

Robin Lehner is keeping a level head about the hype surrounding him, “I heard it from one of the guys, I haven’t really seen it. You’ve got to put a little perspective on it, too. I’ve played four games this season. I’m happy with my performance in the four games, but it’s not there yet, to be that hyped. I understand why it’s hyped. I’m a really young goaltender. I feel like I’ve been playing solid, okay … it’s just the way it is here in Ottawa. I don’t mind it, and I don’t mind it when it goes bad, either. One bad game here and we’ll see if Lehn-sanity sticks. It probably won’t. These guys (Senators) have been teaching me lots about it. I don’t try to get too high when I’m good and too low when I’m down. You can hate me, but never break me. I know how it is. I know my role here. I’ve been following Craig and this team for the whole season. He’s been great. He’s been carrying this team. He has 29 wins this year. He’s been rock solid. I’m just trying to be here for this team right now. If I get the chance, I’ll just try to play my best, so we might get some points out of it. When he comes back, I’m not expecting anything. We’ll see what happens. Whatever they think is best for me, I’ve got to trust them and do what they say.”

-Binghamton was completely dominated by Hershey last night, outshot 38-17 with Mike McKenna taking the loss.  Pat Cannone lead the team with five shots and Patrick Wiercioch extended his pointless streak to 10 games.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.  Ben Bishop will start today against St. John’s.

-Elmira won 4-1 last night, with Brian Stewart earning the win Corey Cowick held off the scoresheet (Louie Caporusso remains out of the lineup).  Bobby Raymond had an assist in Florida’s 5-4 win.

Senators News: March 3rd

Robin Lehner didn’t throw his teammates under the bus after their abysmal performance last night, saying “They’re a good team with lots of skilled players and obviously they were flying from the start. It’s too bad we came up short, I think we came back real good in the third and got some good chances, it just wasn’t there and now we’ve got to move forward.”  Daniel Alfredsson commented, “Robin played another great game, made some really spectacular saves and we just couldn’t come up with that extra goal for him.”

-Paul Maclean described the performance succinctly, “Their skilled players had the puck a lot and when that happens, you end up chasing them around.”

Wayne Scanlan writes an interesting article at the decline of Hobey Baker winners as NHL players.  He quotes Pierre McGuire’s theory on why this is the case, “1. Top players are leaving college early to turn pro; 2. Major junior leagues in Canada are keeping more of their prospects, in part because of education packages; 3. NCAA hockey is watered down somewhat through expansion.”  Bryan Murray agreed with the first two points, but couldn’t comment on the third.

-In the same article Murray said he thought they could replace one of their traded 2nd round picks (one went to Phoenix and the other to St. Louis) via free agency, meaning a college free agent.

John MacKinnon writes about the efforts of David Branch and Bob Nicholson to eliminate fighting in Canadian junior leagues, “You fight, you will be ejected. It’s best to be cautiously optimistic about this if you’re one who believes fighting cheapens the sport and exposes the combatants to needless risk of brain trauma and a variety of long-term conditions associated with that, such as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), which can lead to early onset of dementia.”  MacKinnion notes that USA Hockey executive director David Ogrean is also moving in that direction, but despite all this momentum MacKinnon rightly believes it will be a long time before these efforts impact the NHL.  He ridicules those who defend fighting, “The notion that fighting fulfils some sort of regulatory function in the sport  has always struck me as bully-boy rationalization: You’d better let me fight you  or I just may go berserk with the stick, or worse.”  He points out that in the most important games (the playoffs and the Olympics) no one fights.  One element of the discussion that he doesn’t mention, but I find immensely irritating, is that as soon as the topic comes up the media asks current and former fighters what they think–what answer do they expect?  If you want to gauge opinions ask a broad swath of people around the game.  Regardless, the article is well worth reading in its entirety.

Pat Hickey writes that Brian Burke dismisses the value of Moneyball-like statistics in hockey and is even offended at its possibilities, “This whole Moneyball thing aggravates me anyway. . . . Nobody has ever won a championship with Moneyball. I can prove a player is a statistical twin of a  player who is twice the player he is because of the other things that he brings.”  Burke is clearly exaggerating, because he understand statistics mean something or they wouldn’t be tracked, but as Hickey didn’t specify the kinds of data Sloan Sports Analytics Conference at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was presenting I can’t really judge what he said.  Statistics can lead you astray, in part because they can often be argued, but whatever the NHL scouting community uses they do see hockey players in a very similar way.

-Speaking of Burke, he made the obvious move last night to fire Ron Wilson and replace him with Randy Carlyle.  I think the length of deal he gave to Carlyle is ridiculous and I’ll be interested to see how players react to him (in effect the Anaheim players fired him this year), but he might be enough of a shock to the system to put the Leafs back in the hunt.  Normally I’d say the league is an imitating one and that the Carlyle hire follows other hard-nose changes such as Darryl Sutter in LA, Dale Hunter in Washington, and Ken Hitchcock in St. Louis, but clearly Burke is going with a known quantity in Carlyle.  On a personal level, I would have liked to see Marc Crawford hired in order to remove him as a TSN analyst.

-Just as a reminder, you can follow this site on Twitter

Ottawa 1, Chicago 2; Binghamton 5, Syracuse 2

The Senators can thank Robin Lehner for making a game that wasn’t close look respectively (he made 37 saves).  The Hawks dominated the game and the Sens were unable to generate momentum or even many chances.  Here is the box score.

First Period
Ottawa was atrocious to start the period with loose defensive play requiring Robin Lehner to repeatedly bail them out (especially saves on Patrick Kane and Andrew Brunette).  Matt Gilroy had the defensive play of the period, harassing Kane enough that he didn’t get a shot on a breakaway.  Despite their poor play, Ottawa scored first with Michalek surprising Emery on a one-timer.
Second Period
The Sens continued to struggle to start the second period.  Lehner stopped Patrick Sharp on a breakaway and then a penalty shot, but the Hawks finally scored on a 6-on-5 to tie the game and then went ahead on the powerplay.  MacLean threw the lines in the blender and the Sens played much better afterwards, but still had no answer to the Patrick Kane line.
Third Period
The Sens played their best in the third, but were still sloppy defensively (giving up a breakaway to Andrew Shaw) and had trouble getting pucks to the net.  Ultimately they had no answer offensively for the Hawks (including Gilroy missing an empty net).

Here’s a look at the goals:
1. Michalek (Spezza, Gilroy)
Spezza makes a perfect pass to Michalek above the circles and his one-timer catches the far post
2. Chicago, Bickell
Michalek leaves Bickell unattended in front and he beats Lehner high
3. Chicago, Hossa (pp)
Niether Kuba nor Konopka are able to collapse far side in time to prevent Hossa from scoring on the wrap around after Lehner makes the initial save

Top-performers:
Robin Lehner – made a number of huge saves and gave his teammates a chance to win
Milan Michalek – scored the team’s only goal and lead them in scoring chances
Colin Greening – was strong defensively and along the wall

Players Who Struggled:
Kyle Turris – was a big reason why the Patrick Kane line dominated and generated virtually nothing offensively
Bobby Butler – has gone back to being invisible, failing to generate offence

Binghamton jumped out to a 4-0 lead on Syracuse, chasing Antero Niittymaki and cruising to a 5-2 win.  Ben Bishop made 42 saves to earn the victory, while Mike Hoffman scored two goals and Andre Petersson, Corey Locke, and Pat Cannone had the others.  Locke and Hoffman each had three-point nights.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.

Elmira lost 3-1 tonight, with Brian Stewart dressing as the backup and Corey Cowick held off the scoresheet (Louie Caporusso is still injured).  Bobby Raymond had no points but was a +5 in Florida’s 9-3 victory.