Pinto Still Unsigned; Early Returns; MacEwen Waived; and BSens Early Results

The attempt to cap clean to sign Shane Pinto seems to have boiled down to just Mathieu Joseph (according to Bruce Garrioch), as there’s limited interest in Brannstrom (something not helped by Columbus desperately trying to move a defenseman). If that’s true, his play early on this season helps making that move easier (even if the rest of the NHL know they have Dorion over a barrel–only eight teams can currently afford to take him). This entire mess, including Joseph‘s contract, is of Dorion’s own making, so they are once again paying for his inability to properly assess talent.

As for the team itself, it’s an unremarkable 3-3-0. It’s too early to say much of anything other than the early returns on Tarasenko have been good (leads the team in points), Kubalik has been awful (no points), and without their top-four the Sens struggle (both games without Zub have been disasters–giving up 11 goals–collectively Brannstrom, Hamonic, and JBD can’t fill the void). The only surprise for me is Kubalik, but it’s too soon to be worried. November has been the breaking point for D. J. Smith’s seasons, so we have to wait and see.

Waiving MacEwen, whose three-year deal makes him immune to being claimed, only clears out 775k for the Sens in their effort to sign Pinto (he and JBD just aren’t enough combined: 1.58). MacEwen, who scored twice in his debut for the BSens, means Imama sits (since they have the same role but MacEwen is both a better fighter and player). The veteran clog in Belleville remains a problem Dorion created for himself and barring an early, major injury, the team will have to make a deal to get out of it. For now the team has rotated the scratches between Imama, Pilon, and Currie, but that’s not tenable for the whole season.

I’ve watched parts of the BSens last two games (their 5-2 loss to Lehigh Valley and their 5-4 win over Laval), but the entirety of their first game (3-0 over Hershey). I made a few notes/observations and we’ll start broadly: the team had terrible breakouts and structure and were getting killed on faceoffs; the second PP unit looked better than the first (which struggled badly). The team played with seven defensemen and initially JBD got the nod over Thomson, but it was a rough night for JBD so that switched after a bad penalty. Sogaard was excellent. Other specifics:
-Ostapchuk got run over by McIlrath
-Fizer was stopped on a breakaway (he has great speed)
-Reinhardt scored a very nice goal
-Guenette struggled being the top D on the pp
-Matinpalo had a nice one-timer via Thomson
-Great pass by Jarventie to Matinpalo (although he didn’t score)
-Pilon breakaway via a Guenette pass (he was stopped)
-Sokolov hit a post

The first line of SmejkalHighmoreSokolov has not worked (no apparent chemistry), so I expect it to change. I feel like coach Bell has a good sense of the bottom of his roster, but doesn’t know what to do with the top. It’s incredibly early in the season so too soon to judge player or coach performance and I expect juggling to continue for awhile.

This article was written by Peter Levi

Belleville Senators Preview

Let’s start off with the latest news before we dig into it: Matthew Boucher has returned to the BSens on a PTO. Boucher, who joined the team last year on a PTO (cf), already has an ECHL contract with Trois-Rivieres (Montreal’s affiliate). Last season he was a useful if unspectacular player, but I have no idea where he fits in the team’s crowded lineup (as a PTO, there’s no real commitment to him). In addition to his signing, we have further roster updates, with Toure thankfully loaned back to the OHL (now the third signed blueliner playing in junior, along with Hamara and Donovan) and Merilainen joining Sinclair in the ECHL (with the Allen Americans, who are based in Texas).

The Roster

I’ll go through each player in detail below, but we’ll start with the basics. Because position listings aren’t always accurate, I’ve indicated right/lefthanded and noted centers via the BSens site; I’ve also kept both reassigned goalies on the list just for clarity of depth; veteran contracts are in bold, while AHL/PTO contracts are in italics:

Forwards (16): Jarventie (L), Smejkal (L), Crookshank (L), Ostapchuk (CL), Reinhardt (L), Imama (L), Highmore (CL), Daoust (CL), Currie (CR), Pilon (CR), Sokolov (R), T. Boucher (R), Fizer (R; AHL), McPhee (L; AHL), Saulnier (CL; AHL), M. Boucher (L; PTO)

Defense (9): Guenette (R), Thomson (R), JBD (R), Matinpalo (R), Kleven (L), Heatherington (L), Larsson (L), Sebrango (L), MacKinnon (R; AHL)

Goalies (4): Sogaard, Mandolese, Merilainen, Sinclair (AHL)

Keep in mind that expected AHLer Chartier (CL) remains in Ottawa and would add another forward to the tally, but with four players on AHL-deals/PTO, the crowding is something of an illusion. The blueline is genuinely congested; despite the numbers, the team has only two (or three, depending on how Kleven pans out) who move the puck. That aside, who are you sitting? It feels like Sebrango is being buried (which was his status in Detroit), but I’m not sure how Matinpalo gets ice time with JBD in Belleville. I assume the Sens will want to move at least one of these players (JBD, waived around the league, is hard to move) to free up roster space.

While I don’t think it’s indicative yet, the scratches for the BSens’ first game: Currie, T. Boucher, Daoust, McPhee, Sebrango, and MacKinnon, with Mandolese backing up [Boucher is injured]. On paper that leaves them 12 forwards and 7 defensemen, so there’s something I’m missing.

Coaching/Management

The major change for the BSens happened in the middle of last season when Troy Mann was fired. His then assistant, former Ottawa 67 David Bell, took over, and was retained after his 14-8-6 record. Bell’s previous head coaching job was in 2016-17 in the OHL, which was only his second, and he’s never lasted more than one season (his coaching career beginning in 04-05, right after he retired). Maybe the 46-year old has been the victim of unfortunate circumstances, maybe not (he’s been on Belleville’s staff since 2019-20). The team’s GM, Ryan Bowness, joined the org last year and was very good at repairing the damage Pierre Dorion inflicted in the off-season. Let’s just briefly lay out his recent career:
2016-17 OHL Niagara 23-35-6 head coach
2017-19 AHL Ontario Reign assistant coach (Mike Stothers)
2019-24 AHL Belleville assistant coach (Troy Mann)
2024 AHL Belleville 14-8-6 head coach
Like so many ex-player coaches, Bell was a fighter during his career, although it’s clear that background says nothing about the kind of coach he is.
Besides the head coach, assistant coach Sexton is gone and Dennis (head coach in Kitchener last year) and McIver (an assistant in the ECHL last year) joined; one of the three development coaches (Brownrigg) is gone, while ex-Sens Donovan and Winchester remain.

The Players

Rookies are in green, veterans are in red, AHL or PTO players are in italics. I’ve included selective NHL experience (where I think it’s relevant for either context or call-ups) and AHL careers (for context):

Forwards
Matthew Highmore LW, DOB 96 (age 27), undrafted QMJHL, signed FA
21-22 NHL 46-5-7-12 0.26
22-23 SPR 68-19-42-61 0.89
AHL career: 165-50-75-125 0.76
NHL experience (Chi/Van):139-12-15-27 0.19
His time as a peripheral NHLer seems to be over and he’ll be looking to repeat as an impactful AHL producer.
Egor Sokolov LW, DOB 00 (age 23), 6’3, 2-61/20
21-22 BEL 64-19-31-50 0.78
22-23 BEL 70-21-38-59 0.84
There’s not much more for him to prove at this level so we should expect him to dominate. For the Sens this is either the year where moving him to the big club next year is inevitable or you move him.
Roby Jarventie LW, DOB 02 (age 21), 6’2, 2-33/20
21-22 BEL 70-11-22-33 0.47
22-23 BEL 40-16-14-30 0.75
This is his first AHL season where he’s not the youngest player on the team; he should get ample opportunity and I expect him to score at a high level.
Rourke Chartier CL, DOB 96 (age 27), 5-149/14 SJ, signed FA
21-22 BEL 33-10-15-25 0.75
22-23 BEL 40-20-8-28 0.70
AHL career: 222-62-73-135 0.61
A productive player when healthy (which isn’t often); I expect him to be sent down as soon as the Pinto situation is resolved.
Angus Crookshank LW, DOB 99 (age 24), 5-126/18
21-22 BEL injured
22-23 BEL 71-26-21-47 0.66
Look for a step forward in production; if he can’t do that, it’s going to be hard for him to push his way into the NHL (it’s not that he’s expected to be a top-six player, but as a pest he needs to be an offensive threat given his size).
Garrett Pilon CR, DOB 98 (age 25), 3-87/16 Wsh, signed FA
21-22 HER 60-17-25-42 0.70
22-23 HER 53-11-18-29 0.54
AHL career: 259-60-96-156 0.60
Took a step back last season and will be looking to recover; a puzzling signing, although he does fit Dorion’s ‘son-of’ fetish.
Cole Reinhardt LW, DOB 00 (age 23), 6’0, 6-181/20
21-22 BEL 70-15-15-30 0.43
22-23 BEL 66-11-23-34 0.52
Has settled into his role as an energy player, but I’m not sure there’s enough talent to be more than that at this level.
Brennan Saulnier CL, DOB 93 (age 30), undrafted NCAA, signed FA
21-22 LVP 43-3-3-6 0.14
22-23 BEL 30-6-9-15 0.50
Served as a useful spare part for part of last season, so he’ll look to continue that here (don’t get exited about his production last season, as that was a product of the injury plague the organization went through).
Matthew Boucher LW, DOB 97 (age 26), undrafted QMJHL, PTO
21-22 ECHL 21-13-10-23 1.09
22-23 BEL 50-6-10-16 0.32
Consistently inconsistent last year, which is why he wasn’t originally retained; if he stays he’ll need to even out his performance.
Bokondji Imama LW, DOB 96 (age 27), 6-180/15 TB, signed FA
21-22 TUC 54-5-7-12 0.22
22-23 TUC 50-5-10-15 0.30
AHL career: 257-26-36-62 0.24
Signed to fight, so that’s what he needs to do.
Philippe Daoust CL, DOB 01 (age 22), 6-158/20
21-22 QMJHL 38-24-23-47 1.23
22-23 BEL 9-2-5-7 0.77
We still don’t know what he is at this level, having missed most of last season due to injury.
Josh Currie RW, DOB 92 (age 31), undrafted QMJHL, signed FA
21-22 KHL 48-10-16-26 0.54
22-23 KHL 48-3-9-12 0.25
AHL career: 321-113-98-211 0.66
Seems to be on the downside of his career, which made the signing an odd one (feels a bit like the Jayce Hawryluk signing last year); I’m curious if he’s dinged up or being scratched his first game.
Graham McPhee LW, DOB 98 (age 25), 5-149/16 Edm, acquired via trade
21-22 BAK 33-5-6-11 0.33
22-23 BAK/BEL 41-1-5-6 0.14
Must be good in the room, because there’s no evidence he’s good on the ice.
Jiri Smejkal LW, DOB 96 (age 27), undrafted WHL, signed FA
21-22 Liiga 44-25-20-45 1.02
22-23 SHL 49-23-20-43 0.88
I’m interested to see how he’s used and how he performs at this level, as he hasn’t played hockey in North America in seven years. There’s a lot to like about his potential, but at his age he has to prove himself now.
Tarun Fizer CR, DOB 01 (age 22), undrafted WHL, signed FA
21-22 WHL 35-17-34-51 1.45
22-23 ECHL 62-27-23-50 0.80
I don’t know if he can play a depth role, but that’s what’s available for him here.
Zack Ostapchuk CL, DOB 03 (age 21), 2-39/21
21-22 WHL 60-26-17-43 0.71
22-23 WHL 55-31-36-67 1.22
I’m expecting some growing pains and a depth role to start, but he’s the kind of player who should be able to handle a third-line role.
Tyler Boucher RW, DOB 03 (age 20), 1-10/21
21-22 OHL 24-7-7-14 0.58
22-23 OHL 21-10-7-17 0.81
Can he play at this level, and if so, how effectively?

It’s a weird forward group whose arrangement is not clear to me. Excluding the AHL/PTO players (who would all play at the bottom of the lineup), let’s try to break it down from top-six to bottom six:
Top-six: Smejkal, Jarventie, Sokolov, Highmore, Crookshank, Currie, Chartier (still in Ottawa)
Bottom-six: Imama, T. Boucher, Ostapchuk, Reinhardt, Daoust, Pilon
On paper there’s plenty of talent as the roster, buoyed by an excellent 2020 draft (2021 has arrived, but there’s not much there; 2022 and 2023 may be even worse). I feel like the Sens signed several older players either on the downside of their careers (Currie, Pilon) or whose careers have flatlined (Imama), but time will tell. In theory the prospects should be able to shoulder much of the offensive load this year.
[Lines in game one: Smejkal-Highmore-Sokolov; Crookshank-Jarventie-Pilon; Imama-Ostapchuk-Reinhardt; Saulnier, Fizer; Heatherington-Guenette; Larsson-Matinpalo; Kleven-JBD; Thomson]

Defense
Lassi Thomson DR, DOB 00 (age 23), 1-19/19
21-22 BEL 44-10-16-26 0.59
22-23 BEL 56-7-36-33 0.59
After a weird week spent in Anaheim after being lost on waivers, I expect him to run the powerplay and he should put up career numbers.
Maxence Guenette DR, DOB 01 (age 22), 7-187/19
21-22 BEL 48-6-13-19 0.40
22-23 BEL 72-5-35-40 0.56
His primary roster competition is Thomson, which is a healthy thing. The odds are strong he’ll be another Max Lajoie–good at this level, but not quite able to handle full-time NHL duty
Jacob Larsson DL, DOB 97 (age 26), 1-27/15 Ana, signed FA
21-22 SDG 55-2-13-15 0.27
22-23 BEL 55-4-13-17 0.31
AHL career: 191-10-47-57 0.30
NHL experience (Ana/Ott): 172-3-21-24 0.14
Despite his age he’s clearly in the twilight of his North American career–he played his way out of the NHL in Anaheim and he’s an unremarkable AHL player. I have no idea why the Sens brought him back.
Dillon Heatherington DL (age 28), DOB 95, 2-50/13 Clb, signed FA
21-22 BEL 45-2-11-13 0.29
22-23 BEL 60-4-11-15 0.25
AHL career: 418-19-98-117 0.28
NHL experience (Dal/Ott): 23-0-2-2
An unremarkable older, defense-first blueliner. How useful is he?
Donovan Sebrango, DL, DOB 02 (age 21), 3-63/20 Det, via trade
2021-22 GRG 66-1-6-7 0.10
2022-23 GRG 39-4-3-7 0.18
Only twenty-one, the signs are not positive the Sens have any faith in him.
Jacob Bernard-Docker DR, DOB 00 (age 23), 1-26/18
21-22 BEL 58-2-7-9 0.15
22-23 BEL 41-2-4-6 0.15
NHL experience (Ott): 33-0-2-2 0.06
It’s difficult to think of a less impressive player. Being an adequate defender in the AHL is the only positive.
Ryan MacKinnon DR, DOB 94 (age 29), undrafted QMJHL, signed FA
2021-22 LVP 25-2-1-3 0.12
2022-23 BRI 20-0-3-3 0.15
Not sure what the thought process was in signing him.
Tyler Kleven DL, DOB 02 (age 21), 2-44/20
21-22 NCAA 38-7-3-10 0.26
22-23 NCAA 35-8-10-18 0.51
Highly touted pick will get a chance to show his stuff at this level, which is excellent, as there was no need to force him into the NHL.
Nikolas Matinpalo DR, DOB 98 (age 25), undrafted Liiga, signed FA
21-22 Liiga 50-4-4-8 0.16
22-23 Liiga 51-7-9-16 0.31
Has never played in North America and I have no idea what his skill cap is–can he move the puck?

The blueline arrangement seems simple. You’d think Guenette, Thomson, and JBD play the right side with Kleven and veterans Heatherington and Larsson the left. That said, what’s the point of signing Matinpalo in if he’s not going to play? The assumption must be that JBD will be riding the pine as the 7th defensemen in the NHL, so the situation is temporary. Sebrango and MacKinnon are extras, so don’t factor in. Despite the number of bodies, this group is very thin on talent and I suspect the team will struggle transitioning the play out of their own zone.

Goaltenders
Mads Sogaard DOB 00 (age 23), 2-37/19
21-22 BEL 19-14-1 .908
22-23 BEL 6-10-2 .893
NHL experience (Ott): 9-7-3 .889
Kevin Mandolese DOB 00 (age 23), 6-157/18
21-22 BEL 9-5-0 .901
22-23 BEL 6-8-3 .890
Leevi Merilainen DOB 02 (age 21), 3-71/20
21-22 OHL 31-16-5 0.891
22-23 Liiga 18-13-7 .917
Mark Sinclair DOB 96 (age 27), undrafted NCAA, signed FA
2021-22 NCAA 0-0-1 .905
2022-23 ECHL 19-7-3 .915

The goaltending situation is very straightforward, with Sogaard the expected starter and his buddy Mandolese the backup. With Merilainen in the system, there’s a quick call should the starting duo struggle or injuries occur (both have been prone to injury). This is a very young group, which is not dissimilar to last season, except the team has more support in case of injuries or poor performance.

With Belleville’s season opening tonight I’ve run out of racetrack to do projections, so we’ll save that for another installment.

This article was written by Peter Levi

Roster Decisions Continue; Dire Prediction from Methot; and Lassi Thomson on Waivers Again

The opening roster decisions are nearly complete. As expected, Josh Bailey was released from his PTO (despite the injury to Norris, there was never cap room for him so this was simply an audition for the league), while Max Guenette and Jiri Smejkal were sent to Belleville. The latter’s fate is probably not deserved (albeit expected), but Smejkal was always in a difficult spot because of the cap situation–anecdotally he made a good impression and both the wingers ahead of him on the fourth-line aren’t NHL players, so are easily displaced if the team ever gets out of cap hell. Smejkal was skating with the team as part of the lineup at practice the same day he was re-assigned due to an injury to MacEwen. These changes occurred the day after Roby Jarventie, Mads Sogaard, Dillon Heatherington, and Tarun Fizer (who I guess had only been re-assigned on paper previously) were cut. None of these moves are surprises, although like Smejkal, Jarventie deserved a better fate (albeit, I’ve argued there’s no point in keeping him in the NHL as a depth player).

Speaking of the lineup, if Ottawa sticks with the lines D. J. Smith was rolling yesterday my hopes are dim indeed. His comment that everything changes without two of his top-three centers is reasonable and I don’t expect him to have Joseph on the second line (how could he?). You could argue the Sens are entering the season with three AHL-centers and that just won’t get it done. Dorion’s self-inflicted cap problems are making a mess of what’s supposed to be an exciting opening to the season.

Marc Methot, known for his bold predictions (that he sometimes abandons), has said without Josh Norris this season the Sens don’t make the playoffs. That’s a reasonable opinion to have. For the Sens to thrive without Norris they’d need Pinto and Greig to take a step forward (or a prospect to take a giant leap forward). My theory is that Rourke Chartier escaped AHL-oblivion by serving as a placeholder for Pinto. Along with the gap in the #2 spot, the team also has an embarrassing fourth-line and those wasted minutes do add up.

As expected, the Ducks have put Lassi Thomson on waivers entering the regular season. The question fans will have is: will the Sens claim him back? I would [and four hours after I posted this, so would the Sens], but that aside, I don’t know what the Sens will do. This reminds me of is the Wade Brookbank saga, which goes back a long time (before I was writing about the Sens). Brookbank was a big (6’4), tough, undrafted defensemen signed as a free agent by the Sens in the summer of 2001 (the Marshall Johnston-era). Brookbank, who could only fight, was claimed by Nashville off waivers in 2003; he was traded to Vancouver two months later, claimed back by Ottawa from Vancouver two days after that, and then traded to Florida for nothing less than two weeks later. Brookbank‘s career in the NHL tallies just 127 games over 5 seasons, so in the end it’s much ado about nothing–Thomson is a much more talented player irrespective of what happens to him at this level. The similarities are simply the (possible) back and forth that could occur.

This article was written by Peter Levi

The Athletic’s Ottawa Projections; Norris Injured; JBD Sent to Belleville

Dom Luszczyszyn and Sean Gentile’s league projections are out with his Ottawa article landing recently (cf). While a number of team reporters at The Athletic thought the projections were too low (Vegas, Seattle, New Jersey, Montreal, LA, Edmonton, Colorado, Carolina, Buffalo; only the Rangers and Chicago reporters thought they were too high), Ian Mendes, along with two-thirds of the others, thought they were spot on (Mendes points out that his model has been correct for Ottawa the last few years). Those projections, 94 points, assume a healthy Josh Norris (currently in question) and a signed Shane Pinto (currently not signed). Here’s how it would look in context if the model was 100% correct (basically an impossibility, but Dom does extremely well):
Atlantic
Toronto 104
Boston 103
Florida 97
Tampa Bay 95
Ottawa 94
Buffalo 87
Detroit 85
Montreal 71
Rest of the Eastern Conference ahead/near of Ottawa
New York Rangers 105
New Jersey 103
Pittsburgh 96
New York Islanders 92

This puts the team right on the bubble (8th place). In terms of the model, the team has done itself a favour dumping JBD (see below), although drags Travis Hamonic, Parker Kelly, Mark Kastelic, and Zack MacEwen remain. Funnily enough, the immediate problems the team is having are not included among the worst case scenarios, meaning there are many ways Ottawa’s season could collapse (as is generally the case for a bubble team).

A few hours after I posted the news came out that Norris is likely to miss the start of the season with no time table for his return. As fans know, issues with his shoulder go back to 2019 and it seems likely both that the Sens will place him on LTIR and that the freed cap space will finally allow them to sign Pinto. The question is: what becomes of Norris and how will the team deal with his absence? Clearly they will try putting Pinto in the #2 spot, but it’s not clear he’s ready for that or that Greig (who would likely be #3) is ready yet either. It throws a lot of chaos into what was a solid top six.

However unrealistic it was, there was a brief hope when JBD was put on waivers that someone would take him (so the opposite sentiment Ian Mendes paints the fans with), but his two year, one-way deal is too much of a poison pill for other GMs. It’s difficult to imagine, but JBD has been as useless in the AHL as he is the NHL (99-4-11-15/32-0-2-2), so he doesn’t help the BSens (who, after losing Thomson for nothing, are desperately short of puck moving defensemen). A shoutout to Bobby Ryan, who (like me) thinks Lassi Thomson was a better option than JBD. The org’s move makes me wonder if Parker Kelly will also be on the bus to Belleville sooner than later (unless an IR Norris clears space for Pinto); you have to wonder if Staios was involved as well, as JBD seems to be a D. J. Smith guy and this would be a visceral reminder of the short rope Smith has this season (I’m just speculating, however). The other waiver player, Sokolov, I was less concerned about. He was always heading to Belleville this year, so waivers were inevitable and while fans here love him other organizations have their own beloved bubble players.

The above were the third batch of players sent to the BSens (I’ll list them out momentarily; a note not all of them were physically sent down, but put through the waiver process to that end). The second batch (in order of ‘most surprising’ to least): Tyler Kleven (I think this is the best thing for him, especially with Thomson gone), Zach Ostapchuk, Nikolas Matinpalo (who made no noise at camp), Cole Reinhardt, and Kevin Mandolese. Other than Kleven, none of these are surprising. The third batch, besides JBD and Sokolov, include the pylon known as Jacob Larsson as well as Matthew Highmore, both AHL-vets whose demotion is no surprise (they also had to clear waivers). There will be one final batch to come after this.

A little follow-up on Sean Tierney: we’ve learned he’s a Steve Staios guy, so was undoubtedly brought in for his sake. I don’t know how much Staios pays attention to analytics, but he’s joined the most Luddite organization in that respect and Dorion will ignore it.

The final BSens member from last season who was without a team heading into this one has landed, as Cole Cassels signed an AHL-deal with San Jose.

This article was written by Peter Levi

Dorion Loses Again, Pinto Saga Continues, Pre-Season Hype, Staios Arrives, Fizer Earns a Contract, and BSens Training Camp Opens

In just-Dorion-things: the team lost their most talented AHL-prospect in Lassi Thomson for nothing on waivers (a move that does nothing to help the cap situation). Thomson was the only meaningful remainder from the Matt Duchene trade, which made him the only meaningful return for Bowen Byram. There’s no guarantee the affable 23-year old Finn is going to become a good NHLer–maybe he’s another Christian Wolanin or Max Lajoie (both currently on two-ways in Vancouver and Toronto respectively), but at least the team got something back in those cases (current Vegas Knight Michael Amadio and the scrapheap/two-way Flame known as Clark Bishop). Among pro-blueline prospects, Thomson was the best puck mover in their system (cf), so it’s difficult to express how stupid this was on Dorion’s part. You have to wonder if the Toure signing was made in preparation for putting Thomson on waivers, given that they play the same side (cf), although there’s no comparing their talent (as I said in the link above, I suspect Toure‘s contract will be considered a problem within ~2 years). It’s a suitably botched ending to the last piece of the Duchene deal and a lovely accent on Dorion’s self-created problems.

Dorion has received no criticism from the local media for losing Thomson (Mendes included), but he is getting pushback on the fact that Shane Pinto remains unsigned (the Sens hilarious recent offer was revealed by Elliotte Friedman and that has finally forced some criticism). While the Mendes article is a mixed bag (Mathieu Joseph‘s contract is the problem), one interesting thing brought up is that there’s a limit to how much you can bury in the AHL (which is probably why so many teams magically get players on IR whenever inconvenienced by the cap): 1.15 million. I had thought Del Zotto‘s retirement freed up space, but no one has echoed that so apparently not. You also have to ask yourself what roster player makes that amount of money (or more) that you could bury–the answeris the aforementioned Joseph or Travis Hamonic, neither of whom is likely to get that treatment. It could also be a duo (neither Parker Kelly or Jacob Bernard-Docker are NHL players in my opinion), but is Dorion willing to do that? This is a mess of his own making, so we’ll see.

Pre-season mostly serves to eliminate players rather than reward them, but based on performance and media chatter (as in, the local media that largely serves as Dorion’s mouthpiece, but also including some others) through five of eight games has made a few judgements (excluding the established players). Who stood out? Roby Jarventie and Jiri Smejkal. The former is no surprise and I’ve been a fan of the talented Finn throughout. Smejkal, at his age, should be doing well in pre-season, although how much this really means remains an open question (I don’t think Jarventie is in the NHL barring a trade or injury, as Dorion has too many one-ways to make room for him and more developing wouldn’t hurt). On the opposite side, while he hasn’t been bad, no one is praising PTO Josh Bailey. Without roster moves there was no way for him to make the team anyway so I think his time with the team is simply as a showcase for the league.

As long expected Steve Staios, who has deep ties to Andlauer, has been hired as team president. I see this as the grim reaper knocking on Pierre Dorion’s future. I don’t expect head office moves to be made soon, but a poor start or missing the playoffs will put a merciful end to the Dorion-era.

The Sens have signed Tarun Fizer to an AHL-contract, which is a credit to him and the most he could have hoped for from camp. There’s not a lot of room in Belleville (as we’ll get into in my BSens preview), but the talent on the roster has gaps so he has opportunities.

Speaking of the BSens, their camp has opened. Let’s briefly look at the roster, including the extra bodies floating around. ELCs assigned: Crookshank, Currie (vet), Daoust, Fizer (AHL-deal), McPhee (AHL-deal), Pilon (vet), Saulnier (AHL-deal); Heatherington (vet), MacKinnon (AHL-deal), Sebrango, Toure; Merilainen, Sinclair (AHL-deal). The invites:
Grant Hebert, CL, DOB 1997, 22-23 ECHL 37-8-18-26
The former NCAA center is looking for an ECHL deal if he doesn’t already have one
Mikael Robidoux, RW, DOB 1999, ECHL 42-9-7-16
QMJHLer is a fighter in the ECHL and that’s all he’ll be focused on
Ryan Gagnon, DR, DOB 1996, ECHL 72-4-5-9
Canadian University grad played with Hebert and can only play physical
Eric Williams, DR, DOB 1995, ECHL 16-2-2-4/AHL 9-0-0-0
Former NCAAer has become a fairly effective ECHL player who has had cups of coffee in the AHL (35 games)
These are all older warm bodies to fill out the lineup, as the BSens roster is overflowing with players (cf) and none of the above address a missing need (the primary need is skill, especially on the blueline).

This article was written by Peter Levi

The Athletic’s Projection, Sokolov Re-Signed, Joseph Rumours, and Toure Signed

The Athletic are predicting a 10-15 point improvement for the Sens this season (the chart and more detailed analysis is here). I think that’s a fair guess. They see the team as being on the bubble with the potential to be much better or worse depending on the unknowns of the season (which fits a team on the bubble). The Athletic rates their top-six forward group as eighth in the league and rate their blueline 11th (which is a surprise). They warn that the team is overdependent on the powerplay (getting more pp time last season than any other by a wide margin), which is unlikely to repeat itself this year. There are also concerns about the goaltending and Chychrun (who played very protected minutes in Arizona). The thing about Chychrun is he’s on a good contract should things turn sour (the same cannot be said for Korpisalo).

The Sens finally re-signed Sokolov and I wonder what made the negotiations drag. Did the Sens want more term, or did Sokolov? Dorion has a tradition of two-year deals with the second one-way for prospects like Sokolov–was this part of the picture and the Russian rejected it? In the end the affable Russian signed a one-year, two-way deal that will likely see him in Belleville for most of the season (barring roster changes).

Speaking of roster changes, there are rumours that the Sens are trying to get rid of Mathieu Joseph‘s absurd contract (passim), but apparently the asking price is a 1st-round pick (they do have two in 2024). This ridiculous cost would be due to both the Sens not wanting money back and the fact that everyone knows they are in cap hell. All of this due to Dorion’s mismanagement–there was no need to sign Joseph to that deal in the first place (the problem is less the dollar amount than the term). It would be much easier for the team to move Brannstrom, which is what I thought the Sens would do when he was re-signed (Zub is also overpaid/too much term, but there’s less pressure to move him). Joseph is doing them a favour by scoring in the pre-season (something he did not in the regular last year), but like Zaitsev, they will have to over pay to get rid of him.

Both Tomas Hamara (coming off a difficult season in the OHL) and Jorian Donovan (coming off an excellent season in the OHL) have been sent from camp back to junior, as expected.

In just-Dorion-things: the Sens signed 20-year old Djibril Toure to an ELC. The 6’7 blueliner (and occasional clothing model) switched from junior-B to the OHL this past season and was seventh in scoring on his team. This has disaster written all over it (the numbers suggest he’s a lumbering defender with no puck skills). The Sens have gone down this road many times before (see below) and the fact that it never works has had no impact on repeating the effort. His numbers:
Djibril Toure (DR), DOB 03
20-21 CCHL 22-2-4-6
21-22 CCHL 23-0-8-8
22-23 OHL 57-5-11-16
I can’t recall anyone with this resume becoming a quality NHLer (I’m not sure any have become quality AHLers), but the org cannot resist big defensemen. There’s no room for him in Belleville, so I assume he’s returning to the OHL. The Sens have a ton of prospects just like him (the abandoned Ben Roger and Chandler Romero from ’21; Filip Nordberg and Theo Wallberg from ’22, and Matthew Andonovski and Nicholas VanTassell from this year), which (again) makes the signing baffling. If I was a betting man he’ll be bundled in a trade or directly jettisoned in ~2 years.

Speaking of jettisoned, former Sens prospects Jonathan Aspirot (who spent four seasons in the minors) has a PTO with Calgary. He’s the second-to-last member of that roster to land somewhere (whether Calgary signs him is an open question). I said a long time ago that he was an unremarkable player who was unlikely to pan out–one could argue he was an adequate AHL blueliner, but that doesn’t necessitate an ELC.

This article was written by Peter Levi

Prospect Tourney, Training Camp, Peter Chiarelli Rumours, and the End of Mike Babcock

The prospect tournament finished with the Sens 1-2-0 (beating Jersey 5-2, losing to Pittsburgh 8-3, and losing 2-1 to Montreal). The Sens had the most invitees of any team in the tournament (this is a weird year for prospects where the failures of the 2021 draft are hitting hardest) and high end prospect Ridley Greig only played in the first game (Scott Wheeler thought he was the best Sen in the tournament; Fizer, below, being the best invitee–we also get a shoutout from Wheeler for Josh Doan, the price paid for the Sens inexplicably picking up Derek Stepan during the rebuild).

ECHLer Tarun Fizer lead them in points (4-1-5) which likely earns him a shot at an AHL-contract (he’s made it to main camp). Leevi Merilainen was in goal for the win and the final game and was excellent in both; invitee (and local boy) Charlie Schenkel got lite up by the Penguins. Besides Fizer the tournament has served to remove invitees from camp (the wins and losses don’t really matter). For fans curious about Fizer, he was one of the few players at development camp with offensive talent (cf), whose background is as an undersized, productive center in the WHL (his last three seasons 112-42-82-124), who caught on in the ECHL last season (62-27-23-50, good for second on his team in scoring; none of his linemates from Victoria were drafted, but the top defenseman, Gannon Laroque, was picked by San Jose, 4-103/21).

The training camp roster is out, which naturally excludes the two unsigned RFAs (Pinto and Sokolov [he was signed hours after I posted this]). Besides Fizer above, 6’7 RD Toure has also been invited along with LW Clattenburg and LW Jackson Stewart. The latter is the only one who wasn’t at development camp, but like Clattenburg has no discernible skill so is simply an extra body. In essence, the only surprise is Fizer who, again, is simply looking for an AHL-contract. The only player fighting for an NHL spot is PTO Josh Bailey who will need to push someone out to get in.

There’s a rumour Peter Chiarelli is going to be added to the Sens management group and if that’s true let’s hope they keep him away from the draft. In both Boston and Edmonton his draft record is atrocious and whatever skills he has they do not apply to scouting or amateur talent assessment.

What do we make of the aborted Mike Babcock saga in Columbus? I think the story is less about Babcock, who simply can’t navigate modern coaching, and more about Columbus GM Jarmo Kekalainen and President John Davidson (no idea how either have maintained their positions). The only Sens connection I can really make to Babcock is when they had his son at development camp for a couple of years (2016 and 2017–he may have been there after, but I wasn’t paying attention), which fits Dorion’s obsession with bloodlines (passim). This likely finishes Babcock in the league (who wants the headache?), and probably helps the Blue Jackets as they will get a more fitting coach behind the bench.

This article was written by Peter Levi

Rookie Camp Roster, Bailey PTO, Sens Blueline, and Org Hires Sean Tierney

The rookie tournament is here and it’s always fun to see who is on the roster. I’ll skip the familiar faces, since our focus is on the invitees. Signed/drafted players participating: Merilainen (G), Andonovski (D), Donovan (D), Hamara (D), Kleven (D), Boucher (F), Daoust (F), Greig (F), Jarventie (F), Ostapchuk (F). The rest (which includes a ton of players from development camp, who are marked in green):
Goalies
Collin MacKenzie, DOB 04, OHL, .928 – undersized (6’0) local boy
Charlie Schenkel, DOB 04, OHL, .894 – 6’6 local boy
Defensemen
Caeden Carlisle (L), DOB 04, OHL, 59-5-13-18
Roberto Mancini (L), DOB 03, OHL 66-13-12-25
Simon Motew (R), DOB 03, OHL 57-4-25-29
Bronson Ride (L), DOB 05, OHL 71-4-12-16; 6’6
Thomas Stewart (R), DOB 03, OHL 61-4-17-21
Djibril Toure (R), DOB 03, OHL 57-5-11-16; 6’7
Forwards
Daniil Bourash (RW), DOB 04, QMJHL 66-41-29-70
Cole Burbidge (CL), DOB 05, QMJHL 68-19-31-50
Connor Clattenburg (LW), DOB 05, OHL 56-2-8-10; local boy
Tarun Fizer (CR), DOB 01, ECHL 62-27-23-50
Mikael Huchette (CR), DOB 03, QMJHL 15-4-4-8
Mitchell Martin (LW), DOB 03, OHL 47-13-21-34
Stuart Rolofs (LW), DOB 03, OHL 62-32-29-61; local boy
James Stefan (RW), DOB 03, WHL 64-22-42-64
Jackson Stewart (LW), DOB 04, OHL 54-8-3-11
Ty Thorpe (CR), DOB 02, WHL 65-37-34-71
Mitch Walinski (RW), DOB 98, CCC 22-14-12-26

There’s not much skill among the invitees and the only possible development to look for is players being signed to ECHL or AHL contracts (generally with older prospects like Fizer or Walinski).

The Sens signed Josh Bailey to a PTO. It’s rare for PTO’s to make a team, but it does happen (Brassard did it last year). My guess is he’s added to fill things out if Pinto‘s negotiations drag. His last two seasons:

Joshua Bailey, RW, DOB 89, 1-9/08 NYI
21-22 74-14-30-44
22-23 64-8-17-25

The soon-to-be 34-year old has spent his entire NHL career with the Islanders and is clearly nearing the end. He’s been a better in the playoffs (0.70) than the regular season (0.54), although the sample size of the former isn’t large. Because of MacEwen‘s contract there’s no space for him unless Pinto holds out or someone like Joseph is moved (which would free up much needed cap space for the Sens, but I doubt there are many takers–on paper only eight teams can afford him).

One thing worth considering for the upcoming season is the expected health of Ottawa’s blueline. While the top-four is solid on paper, two of its components have significant injury histories which would have a major impact on the team’s success. Let’s look:

Chabot GP over the last three seasons: 49-59-68
Injuries the last two years: ‘upper body’ (Feb/21), ‘upper body’ (May/21), Broken hand (Mar/22), Concussion (Nov/22), Broken wrist/torn ligament (Apr/23)
Chychrun GP over the last three seasons 56-47-48 (never more than 68 in his career)
Injuries the last two years: ‘upper body’ (Dec/21), Ankle (Mar/22), Wrist (Oct/22), Hamstring (Mar/23)

With Sanderson and Zub (who missed 29-games last year) you have a sophomore and a guy who isn’t valued as a puck mover. The defensive depth in Ottawa is not very good when it comes to the transition game (after Brannstrom, assuming he isn’t dealt, cf), there’s just two prospects: Thomson and Guenette. All the other blueliners (Hamonic, JBD, Kleven, Matinpalo, Larsson, Heatherington, Sebrango) are either established as deficient in that area or weren’t expected to do so as prospects. I don’t think the Sens can challenge for a playoff spot without having at least one of Chabot or Chychrun in the lineup.

The Sens hired Sean Tierney to be their Director of Hockey Analytics, which is interesting since the organization is notorious for its dismissal of analytics. Tierney’s background includes Analytics for Montreal’s AHL team (2017-21; Tierney’s Linkedin lists this entire era as Hamilton, but the franchise moved to Laval in 2017), which was under Andlauer, during which time (2019) he created Charting Hockey before moving to be the Director of Hockey Services for the Mark Cuban-backed Sportlogiq (2021) while continuing to teach for the Catholic Board (CDSBEO). What stands out is that he’s a local guy with a connection to Andlauer and no NHL experience. It felt like something Andlauer pushed and that has been confirmed, but whatever work Tierney does I think Dorion will ignore it as long as he’s the GM.

Back in June I talked about how the press had meaningfully ignored the NHL’s decision to give up on political messaging on jersey’s and how that fits the basic approach I see from those covering the league–wax poetic when it’s just talk, but ignore it if it might impact the bottomline. There’s a very easy comparison to make between TSN‘s coverage of Hockey Canada’s inclusion conversation and their approach to the NHL’s actions. This isn’t even addressing the issue itself, just an observation on the coverage. To quote George Carlin about censorship in the 70s: we’re just looking for a little consistency between rhetoric and action.

On the trivial side of things, apparently nearly all the usual local reporters who covered the Sens in the past are now off the beat (other than Bruce Garrioch). I stopped paying attention to Postmedia long ago (for obvious reasons), but at some point Don Brennan (passim) was removed and now even Ken Warren is gone (passim). Tim Baines, whom I’m essentially unfamiliar with (cf), is getting the beat according to Nichols.

This article was written by Peter Levi

Sens Sign Tarasenko, the Smejkal Theory, Plus Where Ex-Sens have Landed

It’s long been in the rumour mill and it’s finally happened: the Sens signed FA Vladimir Tarasenko to a one-year deal (5 million) in an effort to try and recoup some of the offense lost in the Debrincat deal. We’ll get to the cap crunch he’s created and other matters in a moment, but first let’s look at his last few seasons:

Vladimir Tarasenko, RW, DOB 91, 6’0, 1-16/10 Stl (a pick acquired from Ottawa to land David Rundblad*)
2020-21 Stl 24-4-10-14 0.58
2021-22 Stl 75-34-48-82 1.09
2022-23 Stl/NYR 69-18-32-50 0.72 (0.76/0.67)
*Amusingly, Rundblad (2015) and Tarasenko (2019) have won the same number of Cups

Tarasenko is 31 and will turn 32 in December. It’s fair to assume he’s in decline and he did nothing to help the Rangers get over the hump in the playoffs (neither did Patrick Kane, for that matter). That said, if healthy he should provide offense and gives the team (again, if healthy) a proper top six. The addition helps the top nine (for whenever the Sens get around to re-signing Shane Pinto). Does he help their chances to make the playoffs? Yes (again, if healthy). We can’t talk about Tarasenko without bringing up the other aged Russians free agents the Sens have signed before: a declining Alexei Kovalev in 2009 and a declining Sergei Gonchar in 2010. Kovalev was a disaster and was dumped on the Penguins after less than two seasons (for a pick that turned into Ryan Dzingel), whereas Gonchar remained a useful player for three full seasons. The plus side, I believe, is that it’s a one-year deal (something forced upon Dorion by the cap, incidentally). Tarasenko will remain hungry for his next contract and it makes him easier to move if things go wrong–given that he can’t be kept, if they aren’t in the hunt I suspect he’ll be dealt early. This is a pay cut from his prior contract (when he was making 7.5 million).

It’s interesting that he plays the right side, which given the depth chart (you can see a very similar one from Ian Mendes‘, which was posted shortly after mine) is not the obvious side, but when you realize he’s simply the Debrincat replacement it makes sense. What it will do (presumably) is shift Ridley Greig back down to Belleville (he’s not taking MacEwen‘s slot and there’s a notable gap in the BSens lineup on the right), which I’m fine with, but there will also be some roster shuffling to fit him in. The most obvious guy to get moved down is Kubalik (the third line suits him best anyway).

Finally, let’s consider the cap situation. CapFriendly has Ottawa with less than a million before they reach the ceiling–that’s not enough to re-sign Pinto. What will they do? I think a trade is likely (Brannstrom‘s deal seemed to be made to move him; getting rid of Forsberg wouldn’t surprise me either, although I’m not sure that’s possible post-surgery). If a trade fails (or perhaps in combination with), burying Parker Kelly in the minors (a 762k cap hit) would help. Kelly completely bottomed out this past season and is easily replaceable. What I’m really curious is how long Pinto‘s deal is for–is it a short bridge deal, or does Dorion do what he did last year and lock him up long term?

When making the Sens depth chart (link above) and thinking about the addition of Smejkal something occurred to me: as an older player with prospects ahead of him in his position (Jarventie and Crookshank), what was the logic of bringing him in? It’s possible this is a Pontus Aberg situation. Two years ago the Sens signed Aberg out of the KHL when he was 28. The Swede had prior NHL experience, but could never make it full-time. He didn’t make Ottawa’s roster out of camp, played 17 games in Belleville, and was then released in early December and went back to Sweden. The entire situation seemed like an extended tryout and when it failed the player and team parted ways. Smejkal is slightly younger (soon to be 27) and lacks NHL/AHL experience (although he did play in the WHL), but I can’t help but wonder if he’s essentially trying out to be the fourth-line winger and if that doesn’t pay off will disappear back to Europe.

Moving On

Let’s look at where the unsigned Sens and BSens of the 22-23 season have wound up:
Sens
Patrick Brown (18 GP with the Sens) – Boston (2yrs); cost the Sens a 2023 6th rounder (Ryan MacPherson)
Julien Gauthier (17 GP) – NYI (2yrs); 1-for-1 trade to get rid of Tyler Motte
Cam Talbot (36 GP) – LA (1yr); gave up Filip Gustavsson to acquire him
Dylan Gambrell (123 GP) – Toronto (1yr); cost the Sens a 2022 7th rounder (Adam Zlinka) that was further flipped to Arizona
Austin Watson (176 GP) – TB (PTO); cost the Sens a 2021 4th rounder (Jack Matier)
Derick Brassard (62 GP) – unsigned; signed as an FA
Nick Holden (141 GP) – retired; acquired with a pick for Dadanov (the pick was subsequently flipped for Hamonic)
BSens
Scott Sabourin – San Jose (2yrs/2-way)
Jake Lucchini – Minnesota (1yr/2-way)
Cole Cassels – San Jose (AHL-deal)
Dylan Ferguson – Minsk (KHL)
Viktor Lodin – IK Oskarshamn (SHL)
John Quenneville – IK Oskarshamn (SHL)
Antoine Bibeau – AIK (Allsvenskan)
Matthew Boucher – Trois-Rivieres (ECHL)
Matthew Wedman – Fort Wayne (ECHL)
Jonathan Aspirot – Calgary (PTO)

This article was written by Peter Levi

The Sens Depth Chart

As the doldrums of the NHL summer drag on the Sens have yet to resolve their remaining RFA situations (Pinto and Sokolov) or address the Formenton-situation (either because they can’t or won’t). I’ve been waiting for something to change, but at this point I decided to look at the team as-is (assuming contracts for the former two with Formenton not returning). What prompted me to do this is the varied lineups I’ve seen from journalists and fans. Key: those in bold are on one-way contracts; those in italics are on two-ways; those with a (v) take up a veteran slot in the AHL; those in green are either new to the roster or barely played last season. I realize some of the players can play other positions, but I’m going with how they’ve generally been used (keep in mind this is a depth chart arrangement).

NHL Depth Chart – Forwards
Tkachuk-Stutzle-Giroux
KubalikNorris-Batherson
Joseph-Pinto
(RFA)-Greig
Kelly-Kastelic-MacEwen

I don’t think there’s much room to argue this configuration, barring other roster changes. The Sens are weak on the right side, which is good for Greig, and while Kelly is likely on his way off the NHL roster and Joseph is misplaced, contracts get priority. That said, the Sens are very deep on the left side, even if that depth isn’t established enough to push out roster players. Let’s look at how I think the org see’s that depth by position:
Center: Chartier, Ostapchuk, Pilon (v), Daoust
I don’t think either Chartier or Pilon are good fill-in NHL players, but both have some experience; Ostapchuk is a rookie, but the Sens won’t hesitate to put him in the lineup because of his style of play; Daoust is coming off a major injury so we have no idea what he is as a prospect; the org would not lean on any of these players for a significant period. They also have an AHL-contract at this position (Saulnier), who was a good soldier for the org last year. At the AHL level it’s not clear any of these players are elite talents (with Chartier unable to remain healthy), so that’s going to hurt the BSens offensively.
Rightwing: Sokolov (RFA), Currie (v), Boucher
I expect the Sens will add someone on the right side in Belleville, but as it stands Sokolov is easily the first call-up, with the veteran Currie as 1A (assuming his decline in the KHL isn’t an overall decline); first-rounder Boucher needs to prove he can perform and stay healthy; theoretically there should be decent production from at least the top two (Sokolov was 26th in the league last season)
Leftwing: Highmore (v), Crookshank, Jarventie, Smejkal, Reinhardt, Imama
The Sens are loaded on this side, but presumably signed Highmore because of his NHL experience to take the pressure off prospects (he was 19th in AHL scoring last season); my guess is Crookshank is next in line because of his style of play, with the talented Jarventie better suited to strictly offensive opportunities; I assume the Sens signed Smejkal for a reason, which puts him ahead of Reinhardt, and Imama wasn’t added for NHL duty; they inexplicably have an AHL-deal on this side as well, with McPhee. Because of the players ahead of Smejkal, I wouldn’t expect big numbers from him (unless he can play center, or someone else in this group can). The intent with the Czech, unlike Matinpalo below, seems to NHL depth rather than as a pure prospect.

It’s worth pointing out that, with the possible exception of Jarventie, none of these players are expected to push things offensively (there’s a possibility with Crookshank, but that’s still up in the air), so where the Sens truly trail behind other teams is in proven scoring depth. Ideally Kubalik is on the third line with Pinto and someone else who can score (with a scoring winger added on the left side of the second line), but right now the Sens have to lean entirely on their top-six (with injuries it’s almost certain Pinto will spend parts of the season among them). It’s worth pointing out only two drafted players are being inserted into the system (Ostapchuk and Boucher).

NHL Depth Chart – Defense
Chabot-Chychrun
Sanderson-Zub
Brannstrom-Hamonic
Bernard-Docker
(R)

As with the forwards above, I don’t think any of this can be argued. Unlike the forward group, the Sens are stack on the right side (which is unusual), and the depth chart is much clearer than the forward group.
Left side: Kleven, Larsson (v), Heatherington (v), Sebrango
The org loves Kleven, but there’s no room for him in the NHL. Behind him are the lumbering spare parts known as Larsson/Heatherington. The former has a ton of NHL experience, but that got him run into the minors; both are stopgaps capable of minimal minutes. Behind them is failed first-rounder Sebrango who I wouldn’t expect to be called-up at all. Other than Kleven, none of these players can effectively move the puck at this level, so don’t expect much offensively.
Right side: Thomson, Guenette, Matinpalo
While Matinpalo is a wildcard, the other two are comfortable callups and I think Thomson is better than JBD already. The Sens have another blueliner on this side on an AHL deal (MacKinnon) so I don’t know if any further additions will be made. Fans should appreciate that, barring injury, Matinpalo is not going to get many offensive opportunities, so don’t expect big numbers.

On paper the Sens have a good blueline, but both Chabot and Chychrun struggle to stay healthy and other than Thomson there’s not much in the system to move the puck (Kleven has yet to prove he can do it at that level and we know JBD can’t). The good thing is, there’s still potential in that depth so it’s not as cut and dried as the forward group.

NHL Depth Chart – Goaltenders
Korpisalo
Forsberg

This is so simple I’m not going to spend too much time on it: Sogaard, Merilainen, Mandolese
Mandolese has more experience than Merilainen, but he’s been erratic his whole pro career so I think he’s the third goaltender until something changes. The Sens have picked up an AHL-goaltender already (Sinclair), so I don’t expect any more to be signed.

The entire goaltending group is a giant question mark. None of these players have demonstrated consistent good play over an extended period. It’s difficult to assess prospects at this position until they are 26-27, and the prospects (in the order above) are 23 (in December), 21 (in August), and 23 (in August). Any or all could blow up like Marcus Hogberg or simply never escape the AHL. On the plus side all three have shown their ability to elevate their play, so the question is consistency and the ability to stay healthy. At the NHL-level it’s even more dire, as Forsberg has never truly been a starter (and we have no idea how he’ll perform after surgery), while Korpisalo has been erratic throughout his career. If there’s a fail point to the roster, it’s right here.

This article was written by Peter Levi