Senators News: February 22nd

-Bryan Murray talked about the team’s playoff chances, “If we continue to play the way we are, we’re comparable to many of the good teams in this league. Are we the best team? Obviously, the standings say we’re not at this point. But we’re a competitive hockey team every night when we work hard, and we’re competitive because our back end produces a lot of points for us. This is the way the game is today, I believe. Your forwards get shut down pretty well late in important games, but if you have the back end that can produce plays and points, you have a chance.  I say all that, and we’d like to win in the playoffs. We’d like to be in the playoffs, and we’d like to win. So if something came along that makes us change our mind on a particular person, or a player that’s elsewhere now, we would do that.

-Murray also talked about trades, saying “If we could get a younger player coming in that could help us now but has a good future going forward, that’s the type of thing I much prefer to do, over trading away a young player for a veteran guy that is unrestricted and you will really have a hard time keeping here.”

The Hockey News, Sports Illustrated, and TSN have their latest power rankings out, with Ottawa 13th, 15th, and 12th.

Joy Lindsay Tweets Binghamton’s lines at practice: Hoffman-Locke-Bartlett, Klinkhammer-Da Costa-Petersson, Dziurzynski-Cannone-Downing, Grant-Hamilton-Lessard.

-Elmira won Monday night, with Corey Cowick scoring; Brian Stewart backed up and Louie Caporusso continues to be out with an injury.

-Many of you are familiar with Dwayne Klessel’s (Eklund) site Hockeybuzz.  Years ago I came across it seeking Sens news (I’m apparently one of the few people who did not go to the site because of its rumours), but it didn’t take long to find better sources of information.  Eklund and his site come to mind because Sam Page wrote a piece mocking him recently (referencing Hog‘s classic deconstruction).  I remain amazed at the amount of hostility he generates, as I didn’t think anyone took him seriously anymore.  Regardless, both articles are worth reading (for a chuckle if nothing else).

Senators News: February 21st

-Paul MacLean summed up yesterday’s win, “I thought our team was really ready to play. Obviously, scoring in the first minute or the first 90 seconds, getting two goals was good. It was a good sign of our preparation and our willingness to come here and compete today against a team that we knew was going to be able to skate real well.”

-For those interested in Erik Karlsson-Norris trophy speculation, Ian Mendes writes about it (summing up with a guess that he will be a nominee).

The Silver Seven‘s bobbykelly has an entertaining piece on Jim O’Brien as a prospect.  It’s a good article and well worth reading, but I have a couple of notes to supplement/clarify it.  Two things were responsible for O’Brien‘s turnaround: he got himself into NHL shape and he played with Erik Condra.  Bobbykelly also makes an odd comparison in evaluating the pick (comparing him only to the following ten picks).   I think a more realistic comparison is to judge him between Ottawa’s picks, which is this case is from #29 (where he was selected) to #60 (Ruslan Bashkirov).  Bobbykelly also missed Brett MacLean (#32,who has played more games than either O’Brien or T. J Brennan and has more points than both).  Using my comparative criteria, the Sens missed out on P. K. Subban, T. J. Galiardi, Nick Spaling, and you can throw in in Wayne Simmonds who was picked right after Bashkirov.

-I sometimes wonder if analysts listen to themselves when they speak.  Chico Resch was being interviewed on Sportsnet this afternoon and after dismissing the advantage of larger pads for goaltenders (calling it “media hype”) he proceeded to talk about Martin Brodeur stopping more pucks after making his pads bigger.

Joy Lindsay reports that Corey Lockeis seeing a doctor later today to determine the extent of the damage to his face, and whether he can play with a full shield this weekend. There is damage that needs to heal, and the B-Sens will not use him if playing will interrupt that healing in any way. He has a pretty nasty black eye after taking a puck to the right side of his face during Saturday’s game.”  And, “Parrish is still displaying concussion symptoms and is definitely out for the weekend.”  Joy speculates that if both can’t play that Corey Cowick will be recalled.

-I’ve found confirmation that Louie Caporusso is injured, although I still haven’t seen a report on what the injury is.

Red Line Report‘s latest issue is out with an updated list of 2012′s top prospects (with the position changes noted; for the previous report go link).
1. Nail Yakupov (Sarnia, OHL)
2. Filip Forsberg (Leksand, Sweden)
3. Mikhail Grigorenko (Quebec, QMJHL)
4. Matt Dumba (Red Deer, WHL) (+1)
5. Ryan Murray (Everett, WHL) (+1)
6. Morgan Rielly (Moose Jaw, WHL) (+1)
7. Pontus Aberg (Djurgarden, Sweden) (+1)
8. Alex Galchenyuk (Sarnia, OHL) (+1)
9. Griffin Reinhart (Edmonton, WHL) (+2)
10. Sebastian Collberg (Frolunda, Sweden) (+2)
11. Andrey Vasilevski (Salavat, KHL) (-7)
12. Jacob Trouba (US NTDP, USHL) (-2)
13. Matt Finn (Guelph, OHL) (+9)
14. Cody Ceci (Ottawa 67s, OHL) (+7)
15. Derrick Pouliot (Portland, WHL) (+4)
16. Radek Faksa (Kitchener, OHL) (+5)
17. Slater Koekkoek (Peterborough, OHL) (-2)
18. Damon Severson (Kelowna, WHL) (-2)
19. Zemgus Girgensons (Dubuque, USHL) (-1)
20. Jordan Schmaltz (Sioux City, USHL) (-3)
21. Teuvo Teravainen (Jokerit, Finland) (+9)
22. Phil Di Giuseppe (U. Michigan, NCAA)
23. Olli Maatta (London, OHL) (-3)
24. Scott Kosmachuk (Guelph, OHL) (+1)
25. Brendan Gaunce (Belleville, OHL) (+1)
26. Henrik Samuelsson (US NTDP, USHL) (+3)
27. Oscar Dansk (Brynas, SEL)
28. Anton Slepyshev (Novokuznetsk, KHL) (+5)
29. Brady Skjei (US NTDP, USHL) (+9)
30. Nick Ebert (Windsor, OHL) (-7)
Two players fell out of the top-30 this month: Martin Frk (#31, -3) and Gianluca Curcuruto (#50, -26).  Here’s the movement among former top-30 players: Colton Sissons (#32, -1), Chandler Stephenson (#54, -15), Troy Bourke (#59, -1), Scott Laughton (#62, -2), Calle Andersson (#74, -8), Jarrod Maidens (#87, -3), Eric Locke (#91, -8), Patrik Machac (#104, -23), Matia Marcantuoni (#105, -20), Ryan Olsen (#208, -136), and Luca Ciampini (#250, -70).

Senators News: February 20th; Binghamton 2, Albany 4

-No lineup changes are expected today against the Islanders.

Sergei Gonchar would prefer to stay in Ottawa rather than be traded, “We have good chemistry and it seems like all the guys are getting along very well. It’s not my decision, but I would say, ‘Yes’ (he’d like to stay). When we into this season, nobody really counted on us. They didn’t think we were going to make the playoffs. We were picked No. 15 in the league. Everybody felt this was going to be one of those years and next year would be the year we’d play better. We’ve surprised everybody and we’ve got a real good chance to make the playoffs.”  The days of being the whipping boy earlier this year are clearly forgotten (link).

Steve Lloyd Tweets that Eugene Melnyk told a Toronto radio station that the team is sticking with their 3-year plan and will continue to get rid of expensive, older players.  Lloyd concludes this means moving someone like Filip Kuba, but I don’t think that’s the only conclusion you can draw–if it’s indicative of anything it’s that Kuba won’t be back next year.

Bruce Garrioch writes about the poll Hockey Night in Canada conducted about underrated teams (the Sens were tied for third with Florida).

ESPN‘s power rankings are out with Ottawa 14th.

-Binghamton blew a 2-0 lead to lose 4-2 to Albany.  Mike McKenna made 35 stops in the loss.  Pat Cannone and Mark Borowiecki scored (both had two point nights).  Mike Bartlett was a team worst -2.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.

-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) 55-38-63-101 (1st=)
Shane Prince (C/LW, Ottawa 67s, OHL) 46-35-40-75 (2nd=)
Stefan Noesen (C/RW, Plymouth, OHL) 52-26-39-65 (1st=)
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (RW, Chicoutimi, QMJHL) 39-31-28-59 (3rd-)
Darren Kramer (C/LW, Spokane, WHL) 57-19-16-35 (6th=)
Matt Puempel (LW, Peterborough, OHL) 30-17-16-33 (injured)
Jakub Culek (C/LW, Rimouski, QMJHL) 45-11-18-29 (6th=)
Jordan Fransoo (D, Victoria, WHL) 58-2-14-16 (2nd=)
SEL
Jakob Silfverberg (C/RW, Brynas) 42-19-24-43 (1st=)
Mika Zibanejad (C/RW, Djurgarden) 19-4-5-9 (16th=)
Fredrik Claesson (D, Djurgarden) 42-1-6-7 (5th=)
Allsvenskan
Marcus Sorensen (RW, Boras) 24-7-6-13 (8th-)
NCAA
Ryan Dzingel (C, CCHA-Ohio State) 29-7-16-23 (2nd=)
Max McCormick (LW, CCHA-Ohio State) 23-10-11-21 (t-3rd=)
Michael Sdao (D, ECAC-Princeton) 25-8-9-17 (1st=)
Bryce Aneloski (D, WCHA-Nebraska-Omaha) 32-6-13-19 (1st=)
Chris Wideman (D, CCHA-Miami) 34-1-16-17 (1st=)
Ben Blood (D, WCHA-North Dakota) 31-2-12-14 (2nd=)
Jeff Costello (LW, CCHA-Notre Dame) 22-3-6-9 (11th=)
Brad Peltz (LW, ECAC-Yale) 9-1-0-1 (20th=)

Senators News: February 19th; Binghamton 6, Portland 2

Daniel Alfredsson likes the Sens quiet, late season schedule, “What I like about it is that the other teams have tougher schedules with a lot more games. I would not want to be in a situation where we have to play four more games (down the stretch) vs. four teams having games in hand on us. I like our situation a lot. We get this break and travelling-wise our schedule is pretty good as well. We have a two-game trip to Florida (in March), but everybody looks forward to going there, anyway. We can get the rest we need.”

Bruce Garrioch confirms the Sens are not in the Rick Nash sweepstakes

-Binghamton hammered Portland last night despite being outshot 38-33.  Robin Lehner picked up the win and Mike Hoffman lead the way with three assists (Mark Parrish scored twice, while Corey Locke, Mike Bartlett, Eric Gryba, and Dan Henningson added singles).  Tim Conboy was a team-best +3.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.

Andre Petersson is being booed by Binghamton fans after his disparaging comments about the city were reported.  He’s responded in the right way by addressing it immediately, saying “It was a long interview, first of all. It was in Manchester. We talked occasionally, outside of the locker room. They didn’t know anything about it. I said some really stupid stuff, but I really, really, regret it. I really like the crowd here. I like the team we have, all the guys. It’s fun playing here. It was really stupid. I don’t remember exactly what I said. But as I said, it was a one-hour interview, and we just talked, like a normal conversation. … It probably wasn’t exactly the words I used, either, twisted in some weird way. I’d like to say I’m really, really sorry. I really like the fans here. We have the best fans I’ve played for (in front of) in this league. There’s always a lot of people here. When I realized what was going on [fans booing], I wasn’t that surprised. Everything feels weird, and I’m really sorry for what I’ve done. I just want to play hockey every day and become the best player I can be” (link).  He shouldn’t have said what he said, but he’s reacting the right way and it will be interesting to see if Binghamton fans forgive him or not.  I think the fact that he’s a very talented player could help mend the fences.

-Elmira lost 8-1 last night, with Corey Cowick scoring the only goal and Brian Stewart taking the loss (Louie Caporusso did not play).

The Silver Seven‘s SwedeTom writes his opinion of Jakob Silfverberg‘s season for Brynas in the SEL, “Jakob had a bit of a slow start att the beginning of the season, partly due to an injury that kept him off ice for a few games but some of us thougth he looked tired from the very beginning of the matches. Then something happened, the team captain and former Ottawa forward Andreas Dackell got a long term injury and Silfverberg was appointed as the new captain. From that moment Silfverberg grew as a player and as a leader. If we look at his stats he´s the scoring leader of his team with 19 goals and 43points total, 3rd in the league but with less games playd than #1 and 2. He averages just above one point a game wich is very good in the SEL. Several experts name him as the best Swedish winger outside of the NHL at the moment. I know that many of you would have wanted for him to not go back to Sweden for this season. Jakob gave an explanation to why he chose to do so in an interwiew recently. ‘It’s a big step to take,’ he said, ‘and I didn’t feel mature enough to take that step. I needed this year to make sure I’m ready for it and now I’m sure. I´m ready.’ To the question if he would return to Sweden next season if he got sent to the AHL he answered, ‘No, my goal is to play in the NHL, if Ottawa thinks I need time in the AHL to reach that goal, thats what I’ll do.’

Senators News: February 18th; Binghamton 1, Wilkes-Barre 6

Matt Carkner talks about wanting to be re-signed by the Sens, “I’d love to be back here next year. But again, those are things that aren’t in my hands. All I can do is worry about myself, worry about playing, and right now it’s practising. I’m practising hard and obviously you never know what happens during the year. I’ve always worked hard to get back on the ice and that’s all I have to do.”  There’s a lot to like about Carkner‘s work ethic and his appeal as a “glue” guy, but I have to think his future with Ottawa has declined along with the disappearance of NHL heavy weights.

Don Brennan writes about Jim O’Brien through Paul MacLean’s eyes, “MacLean says O’Brien has taken his game to another level since he first saw him in training camp, when the former first-rounder struggled with taking direction and paying attention to detail. Where does MacLean see O’Brien settling in? ‘Down the road right now is where he is right now,’ said MacLean. ‘That’s where I would say at this point he’s going to stay, in that third-, fourth-line centre spot, killing penalties. He’s a right-handed centre, he can help us out. He brings a great work ethic to the game and he can get around the game. His mobility is fine and he defends real well. He can provide some offence. We’re not expecting huge numbers from him. Just a player you can put on the ice and you know you’re going to have a good shift.'”  This is a great compliment from MacLean and bad news for the futures of Zenon Konopka and Jesse Winchester.

Brennan also writes about Guy Ouellette, the Sens “tactical aggressions specialist” who helps players learn how to protect themselves on the ice and become better fighters.  Ouellette was in Binghamton this week as well.

Wayne Scanlan writes about the long-term drop in the number of powerplays since the lockout and worries the NHL is sliding back into the clutch-and-grab insanity of the pre-lockout world.  Although it isn’t mentioned, this drop is directly related with the drop in goal-scoring over the same period.  As a fan what drives me insane is the inconsistency of the officiating, but I don’t expect the NHL to correct that any time soon.

-Binghamton got hammered last night, with Robin Lehner taking the loss.  Corey Locke had the only goal, while Josh Godfrey, Wacey Hamilton, and Mike Bartlett lead the way at -3.  Here is the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.

Joy Tweets that no changes are expected to the B-Sens lineup tonight.

-Elmira lost last night, with Corey Cowick held off the score sheet (neither Brian Stewart nor Louie Caporusso played).

Hockey’s Future‘s DJ Powers lists prospect Ben Blood as tied for 10th among the top-ranked NCAA blueliners, writing “Blood is having the best year of his collegiate career right now, but a recent incident versus the University of Minnesota on January 14th has somewhat tainted that. The result was Blood being stripped of his assistant captaincy (He did issue an apology for his actions). Nevertheless, Blood is a player with excellent potential for success at the pro level. The Plymouth, MN native has played in all 29 games thus far, posting 14 points (two goals, 12 assists). His 14 points tie a career-best, which was set in his sophomore year two seasons ago. Despite the Minnesota incident, Blood has been a strong leader on North Dakota’s predominantly young blue line this season. One area that has developed quite nicely during Blood‘s collegiate career is his offensive side. He has shown to be an adept puck-handler that can help run the power play as well as set up and finish plays. While it is unlikely that he’ll post big numbers at the next level, Blood has the ability to be a solid offensive contributor from the blue line. Blood was offered a contract by Ottawa at the end of last season, but opted to return to North Dakota to finish out his collegiate career. Barring anything unexpected, the Senators will likely offer him another contract at the end of the season.”  None of Ottawa’s other NCAA blueliners warranted an honourable mention from Powers (Bryce Aneloski, Chris Wideman, or Michael Sdao).  It’s a no-brainer that the Sens will offer Blood a contract at the end of the season.

Senators News: February 17th

Don Brennan writes about Kaspers Daugavins who offered a number of comments, “It felt great. Because it gave us a 2-1 lead, first of all. And with my dad here, it’s kind of special. It was his first time watching me play pro here. It was a great feeling.”  Talking about his father, Armands, being along, “He’ll be happy for me. He just enjoys being here and watching NHL hockey. It’s tough waking up every morning at 2:30 in Latvia and watching it on TV. It’s not as nice. Here now you can watch it live and see a lot of great hockey players, not only me. You can see all these players and see real life how it is. He came to watch me over in the (OHL), but he never watched me in Binghamton or here. Finally, cool for him to see it live, pro hockey. He was giving it to me last night in the room, saying ‘Oh I spent all this time flying, you better score.”  And about his play, “Obviously, I try to work hard. Obviously, I know scoring is not my main job, it’s to play good defence and PK, mix in a couple of big blocked shots. It’s nice to score. You still try to play offence, but my priorities are defence.”

Brennan writes that Jason Spezza should get Hart consideration if he continues to remain among the top scorers, but I think it’s extremely unlikely.  You never hear his name when the great players are discussed and that’s indicative of how those who vote for the trophy consider him.  Darryl Dobbs writes about how Spezza‘s production has increased towards the end of the season the previous three years.

Pierre LeBrun writes about the trade market, including Ottawa’s plans.  “The Senators have looked around the league and made calls regarding a forward, but the asking price is more often than not one of Ottawa’s top prospects.  And that’s a no-go. ‘I’m not doing that, I can tell you that,’ Sens GM Bryan Murray told ESPN.com Thursday. ‘I’m not looking for a short-term fix.’ The Senators still have their eye on the big picture, which is to continue with their plan of developing a young and talented team. No shortcuts. Still, if a top-six winger with an expiring contract is available without requiring the Sens to give up the farm, Murray will look at it. ‘I’d be OK with a rental if it was the right price,’ said Murray.”  I’m a fan of the patient approach and I’m glad Murray won’t give up any important assets.

Adam Proteau has an article about potential player buyouts assuming an amnesty in the next collective bargaining agreement.  Here’s his Ottawa piece: “Likeliest buyout: Craig Anderson. If you’d asked the whom-to-amnesty question last year, the easy answer would have been Sergei Gonchar. But the veteran D-man has rebounded with a solid season. And although Anderson has stabilized Ottawa’s net somewhat, his numbers (.910 save percentage, 2.93 goals-against average) are rather ordinary and he’s got a cap hit of more than $3.1 million for three more years. If the team really believes in prospect Robin Lehner, does it make sense to pay Anderson that as a backup/tutor? I say no. Likelihood team buys him out: 2. The Sens don’t have a wealth of goalie prospects on the horizon and backup Alex Auld is an unrestricted free agent this summer. With more than $28 million in projected available cap space next year, owner Eugene Melnyk likely will instruct GM Bryan Murray to stick with what he’s got. ”  I’m not sure what point Proteau is trying to make by bringing up Anderson only to dismiss the possibility.  I don’t like the length of the contract either, but it does serve as a safety valve if Lehner struggles.

Joy Lindsay provides tonight’s lineup: David Dziurzynski-Corey Locke-Mark Parrish, Rob Klinkhammer-Stephane Da Costa-Jack Downing, Mike Hoffman-Pat Cannone-Andre Petersson, Derek Grant-Wacey Hamilton-Mike Bartlett; Mark Borowiecki-Eric Gryba, Dan Henningson-Tim Conboy, Patrick Wiercioch-Josh Godfrey.

-Elmira won last night, with Corey Cowick picking up two assists and Brian Stewart earning the win (Louie Caporusso did not play).

Senators News: February 16th

Don Brennan writes that the Sens are 5-0-1 when their fathers are with them.

Daniel Alfredsson talks about hitting 20 goals, “Not knowing how things were going to go coming into this year, I knew if I could stay healthy I could get to 20. It feels good. Hopefully, I can keep pushing and who knows, maybe even flirt with 30.”

Joy Lindsay reports that Mark Parrish, Tim ConboyStephane Da Costa and David Dziurzynski will be in the lineup for Binghamton’s game on Friday.  The lines today were: Dziurzynski-Locke-Parrish, Klinkhammer-Da Costa-Downing, Hoffman-Cannone-Petersson, Grant-Hamilton-Bartlett/Lessard; Borowiecki-Gryba, Henningson-Conboy, Wiercioch-Godfrey, Raymond-Schira.  Robin Lehner is expected to start.

Joy writes about the return of Patrick Wiercioch to the lineup after his horrific throat injury.  Kurt Kleinendorst said, “Initially, I had no idea how serious it was. Then after the period, when I got word of the seriousness of it, obviously I was very concerned. The thing is, when you spend the time we spend with each other, when you get to know these guys the way we get to know our players, we care a lot about each and every one of them. You don’t want anything bad to happen to any of them in any way, so obviously that was a concerning moment for me. When I went over to see him at the hospital, that was a concerning moment for me. But I was assured at the time that everything was going to be OK. We weren’t allowed to visit him. The coaches, they kept us updated. Every morning, they were giving us updates, telling us he was going to be all right, he was going to play again and everything was going to be OK, so that was always nice to hear.”

-For those keen on Rick Nash trade-mania, Lyle Richardson sums up the latest rumours, none of which include Ottawa.

-ISS has updated their rankings (click link for the last update; I’ve listed their previous ranking in brackets where applicable):
1. Yakupov, Nail, LW 10/6/93 L 5.10.5 189 Sarnia OHL (2)
2. Grigorenko, Mikhail, RW 5/16/94 L 6.03.25 200 Québec QMJHL (1)
3. Forsberg, Filip, RW 8/13/94 R 6.01 176 Leksands SweAl
4. Trouba, Jacob, RD 2/26/94 R 6.02 196 USA Under-18 NTDP
5. Murray, Ryan, LD 9/27/93 L 6.00.5 201 Everett WHL
6. Dumba, Matt, RD 7/25/94 R 5.11.75 183 Red Deer WHL
7. Gaunce, Brendan, C 3/25/94 L 6.02 215 Belleville OHL
8. Rielly, Morgan, LD 3/9/94 L 5.11.5 190 Moose Jaw WHL
9. Ceci, Cody, RD 12/21/93 R 6.02.5 207 Ottawa OHL (11)
10. Reinhart, Griffin, LD 1/24/94 L 6.03.75 207 Edmonton WHL (9)
11. Collberg, Sebastian, RW 2/23/94 R 5.11 Vastra SweJE (12)
12. Maatta, Olli, LD 8/22/94 L 6.01.5 202 London OHL (10)
13. Finn, Matthew, LD 2/24/94 L 6.00.25 195 Guelph OHL (17)
14. Skjei, Brady, LD 3/26/1994 L 6.03 203 USA Under-18 NTDP (20)
15. Aberg, Pontus, LW 9/23/93 R 5.11 187 Djurgarden SweE (14)
16. Galchenyuk, Alexander, RW 2/12/94 L 6.00.5 198 Sarnia OHL (18)
17. Koekkoek, Slater, LD 2/18/94 L 6.02 184 Peterborough OHL (15)
18. Pouliot, Derrick, D 1/16/94 L 5.11.25 186 Portland WHL (21)
19. Faksa, Radek, LW 1/9/94 L 6.03 202 Kitchener OHL
20. Girgensons, Zemgus, F 1/5/94 L 6.01.25 201 Dubuque USHL (24)
21. Dalton Thrower, D, 12/20/93 R 5.11.00 179 Saskatoon WHL (NR)
22. Bystrom, Ludvig, LD 7/29/94 L 6.00.75 208 Modo SweE (30)
23. Maidens, Jarrod, C 3/4/94 L 6.00.5 178 Owen Sound OHL (16)
24. Hertl, Tomas, LW 11/12/93 L 6.02 198 pounds Slavia CzeE (22)
25. Matteau, Stefan, LW 2/23/94 L 6.01 210 USA Under-18 NTDP (23)
26. Matheson, Mike, LD 2/27/94 L 6.01.25 180 Dubuque USHL (25)
27. Sissons, Colton, C/R 11/5/93 L 6.01 189 Kelowna WHL (26)
28. Kerdiles, Nicholas, C/L 1/11/94 L, 6.01.5 200 USA Under-18 NTDP (27)
29. Athanasiou, Andreas, C 8/6/94 L 6.00 179 London OHL (13)
30. Mike Winther, C 9/7/94 R 5.11.00 170 Prince Albert WHL (NR)

Falling out of the top-thirty: Thomas Wilson (28) and Anton Slepyshev (29)

Senators News: February 15th

Jason Spezza talked about the win last night, “I think it’s the challenge of playing (Steve) Stamkos, (Vincent) Lecavalier and (Martin) St. Louis. You have to be on your game when playing against those guys. Some rinks you have a pretty good feel in and I’ve had decent success in this rink in the playoffs and regular season and there’s no other way to explain it, I guess.

Nick Foligno talked about his 15-game goal-scoring drought, “Maybe I just (need to) take that quick shot. Sometimes I get a pass and you’re looking for that extra step around a guy, instead of trying to shoot it maybe through the defenceman and catch the goalie by surprise. Those are little things you don’t really pick up on when you’re struggling and trying to find that open lane to shoot it. Those are the ones that usually go in.”

Don Brennan shares my puzzlement over Paul MacLean using Chris Phillips on the powerplay, although I’d guess it’s both a reward and to have someone defensively reliable on the blueline.

Sports Illustrated ran another player poll on the league’s most easily intimidated player in the NHL, with Phil Kessel “winning”, followed by the Sedin twins and Alexander Semin.

Sports Illustrated‘s power rankings are out with Ottawa 17th

Andre Petersson talked about his North American experience (as translated by Google), “Had I not had another Swedish player here, I would have moved home three months ago.”  He says the Binghamton arena is the worst in the AHL.  “They said it [the call-up] was a reward because I was playing great down here. The coach told me to play easily [simply]. I’m in the fourth line and only played five or six minutes. Then it is not so easy to go in and dominate right away.”  And, “Yes, we were doing and talking about returning to HV71 until the transfer window closed on 31 January. But in the end I felt it was foolish to give up, when I it is so close. In addition, I play a lot in Binghamton.  Lot’s on the power play and even the penalty kill, which I barely played in my life before. Some games I’ve had 30 minutes of ice time and have almost got to say to the coach to calm down.”

The Silver Seven‘s Adnan wonders if Ottawa should move its AHL affiliate, which is an interesting question but he proposes four locations without an AHL team (Ottawa, Gatineau, Kingston, and Kitchener-Waterloo).  I think the sentiment is correct, given how every European prospect who comes through Ottawa hates Binghamton, but I’m not sure if the Sens want to invest in an entirely new location.

Josh Godfrey and Wacey Hamilton were sent down to Elmira (link).  It was Hamilton‘s first assignment and the first for Godfrey since October.   Elmira won their game last night, with Godfrey scoring and Hamilton picking up an assist (Corey Cowick was held off the scoresheet and neither Brian Stewart nor Louie Caporusso played).  The pair were recalled today.

Joy Lindsay Tweets that David Dziurzynski was forced to leave practice with an apparent leg injury.

Binghamton at the Fifty-Game Mark

Binghamton has now played 50 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 are 4-5-1, collecting nine points (a drop from the previous segment). They continue to be 5th in the division, 15th in the conference, and have dropped to 30th in the league (down from 28th). They are still 21st in goals for and have improved to 28th in goals against (up from 29th). 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 10-2-11-13 -6
Mike Hoffman 10-3-9-12 -6
Rob Klinkhammer 10-1-10-11 -7
Stephane Da Costa 9-5-5-10 -6 INJ 1
Andre Petersson 8-5-3-8 -7 (NHL 1-0-0-0)
Jim O’Brien 6-5-2-7 +2 (NHL 5-0-0-0)
David Dziurzynski
10-4-3-7 -1
Jack Downing 8-4-1-5 +3 (ECHL 2-2-0-2)
Pat Cannone
10-2-2-4 -5
Dan Henningson 8-0-4-4 Even
Mark Borowiecki 7-0-3-3 -2 INJ 1 (NHL 2-0-0-0)
Josh Godfrey 4-1-1-2 Even INJ 2 SCR 4
Derek Grant 8-1-1-2 -1 SCR 2
Eric Gryba
10-1-1-2 -3
Patrick Wiercioch
5-0-1-1 -4 INJ 4 SCR 1
Wacey Hamilton 10-0-0-0 -2
Bobby Raymond 10-0-0-0 -2
Mike Bartlett 10-0-0-0 -3
Craig Schira 10-0-0-0 -5
Francis Lessard 6-0-0-0 -2 SCR 4
Corey Cowick 6-0-0-0 -5 (ECHL 5-1-0-1)
Tim Conboy 3-0-0-0 -5 INJ 7
Andy Thomas 2-0-0-0 Even
Louie Caporusso (ECHL 6-3-3-6)
Maxime Gratchev (ECHL 5-2-1-3) (traded)
Mark Parrish
 (injured)
Robin Lehner 1-3-0 3.32 .906 INJ 3 GAA and SV declined
Mike McKenna 3-2-1 2.99 .916 GAA and SV declined
Brian Stewart (ECHL 2-3-1 2.82 .914, GAA and SV improved)

No one who played the full ten games is a plus and only Jim O’Brien and Jack Downing are pluses overall (Andre Petersson and Rob Klinkhammer were a team worst -7).   Robin Lehner continues to struggle to stay healthy and get into a rhythm.  Corey Cowick played his way down to the ECHL, while if Jack Downing can continue his strong play it’s hard to imagine him going back to Elmira.  Patrick Wiercioch returned from his throat injury, but the Binghamton blueline continues to struggle to produce offence.  Finally, Mike Hoffman has taken over the team lead in scoring (although he does not lead in points-per-game) and I’ll be interested to see if he can maintain a higher level or production.

Senators News: February 13th; Binghamton 3, St. John’s 6

Daniel Alfredsson talked about the effect of the players fathers being around, “I think everybody wants to show off for their dads, and I don’t think that’s ever going to change. Your old man is your old man. He’s not going to be impressed with too much. You’ve got to make sure you do something extra.”

The Silver Seven‘s Mark Parisi looks back on the Sens week that was including individual performances.  I agree with the bulk of his assessments, with the exceptions of Sergei Gonchar (he was mediocre, not bad), Colin Greening (the same distinction), and Milan Michalek (who was average, not good).

ESPN‘s power rankings are out, with Ottawa 17th

-Binghamton got hammered by St. John’s yesterday, with Mike McKenna allowing all six goals on 38 shots.  Josh Godfrey, Jack Downing, and Derek Grant scored, with Godfrey (a healthy scratch the past three games) leading the way with two points.  Stephane Da Costa was out of the lineup with a minor injury.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay’s game summary.

-Elmira lost 4-2 last night, with Brian Stewart taking the loss and Corey Cowick held off the score sheet (Louie Caporusso did not play).  The signs are not good for Cowick, who has no points in three straight games and is expected to produce more.

-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) 51-36-54-90 (1st=)
Shane Prince (C/LW, Ottawa 67s, OHL) 44-34-38-72 (2nd=)
Stefan Noesen (C/RW, Plymouth, OHL) 49-25-38-63 (1st=)
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (RW, Chicoutimi, QMJHL) 37-30-28-58 (t-2nd=)
Matt Puempel (LW, Peterborough, OHL) 30-17-16-33 (injured)
Darren Kramer (C/LW, Spokane, WHL) 54-19-15-34 (6th-)
Jakub Culek (C/LW, Rimouski, QMJHL) 43-10-18-28 (6th=)
Jordan Fransoo (D, Victoria, WHL) 55-2-13-15 (2nd=)
SEL
Jakob Silfverberg (C/RW, Brynas) 39-17-22-39 (1st=)
Mika Zibanejad (C/RW, Djurgarden) 16-4-4-8 (16th=)
Fredrik Claesson (D, Djurgarden) 39-1-5-6 (5th=)
Allsvenskan
Marcus Sorensen (RW, Boras) 23-7-6-13 (7th=)
NCAA
Ryan Dzingel (C, CCHA-Ohio State) 29-7-16-23 (2nd+)
Max McCormick (LW, CCHA-Ohio State) 23-10-11-21 (t-3rd+)
Michael Sdao (D, ECAC-Princeton) 24-8-9-17 (1st=)
Bryce Aneloski (D, WCHA-Nebraska-Omaha) 30-5-12-17 (1st=)
Chris Wideman (D, CCHA-Miami) 32-1-16-17 (1st=)
Ben Blood (D, WCHA-North Dakota) 29-2-12-14 (2nd+)
Jeff Costello (LW, CCHA-Notre Dame) 22-3-6-9 (11th-)
Brad Peltz (LW, ECAC-Yale) 8-1-0-1 (20th=)

None of the Swedes have played since last Monday.  I believe Jeff Costello is injured, but haven’t specifically seen a report to confirm it (while his team has played games since last week, he has not).