Ottawa 2, Boston 1 (OT)

The Ottawa Senators edged a young Bruin lineup 2-1 in overtime last night.  The game lacked energy, but had more structure than the first exhibition game against Toronto.  I won’t repost the box score (link), but I’ll take a look at the best and worst players for the Sens–keeping in mind that this is the exhibition season and, as such, doesn’t mean much.  Paul MacLean, incidentally, said he liked how the entire team performed.

Positive Performances
Peter Regin continued his strong play in all three zones, although like the rest of the team’s centers he struggled on faceoffs
Brian Lee was surprisingly good–he took shots that hit the net, was moderately physical, and cut down on the turnovers
Jared Cowen was solid, getting the second most minutes of any blueliner (eventually rewarded with top-unit powerplay time)
Nick Foligno continued to provide an offensive spark and seems to have chemistry with Regin
Nikita Filatov played hard at both ends of the ice, but wasn’t rewarded with the scoring opportunities he had against Toronto
Sergei Gonchar was good throughout the game, helping out the rookies riding shotgun with him

Struggling
David Rundblad‘s biggest issue last night was defensive coverage; he also needs to work on his pivots when players are rushing on the outside; he continues to demonstrate his fantastic hands
Bobby Butler was someone you’d be excused from asking if he’d played last night; he was unable to generate much of anything
Mark Parrish committed an early turnover and played the least of any Senator

Other
Mika Zibanejad had a rough first period (lot’s of turnovers), but got better throughout the game (he lead the team with three scoring chances) and was rewarded with the game winner
Kaspars Daugavins played a ton; I’m not entirely clear on why, but the coaches were happy with his game

For other opinions here’s Adnan of The Silver Seven (link) and SenShot‘s Jared Crozier (link).

Senators News: September 22

The news roundup for the day:

Senshot‘s Tony Mendes has posted his Ottawa Senators preview (link).  He reviews all the additions to the lineup and then lists his factors for success:
1. Staying healthy
2. Quick learning curve for younger players
3. Craig Anderson
His final verdict, “To be realistic about Ottawa this season, I fully expect Ottawa to miss the playoffs this year. Their team is too young and inexperienced to be competitive against some of the powerhouses in the eastern conference. This year will be more about development rather than results. Expect Ottawa to remain around the bottom of the league standings and ship out players for future assets come the trade deadline. If Ottawa plays their cards right this season, a lottery pick and another good draft could turn this rebuild into a short-term plan and Ottawa could be competitive in the 2012-2013 season.

-Tim Wharnsby of the CBC looked into Lee Sweatt‘s retirement (link).  Sweatt said “I felt I had achieved a lifetime goal. I didn’t need to prove myself all over again. I didn’t want to be a bubble guy again. I didn’t want to be the guy in the still living the dream at age 30 and sacrificing my goals outside the game.” And “I know, for some, this is difficult to understand. But I have a chance to help people. It’s not easy to understand [the financial investment world]. People need help and I can affect people’s lives.

Sportsnet‘s Ian Mendes talked to Sergei Gonchar (link), who among other things talked about Paul MacLean, “With Paul, he’s one of those people who has played in this league for a long time, so he has the experience as a player. And then he was a coach for a long time in this league too. With that experience, it’s going to help me and our whole team. I’m sure he has so much knowledge that he’s going to share, that it’s going to help all of us – older guys and younger guys. Having him behind us is really going to help us.”  He also discussed the powerplay, “The skill level is there, but the biggest thing we missed last season was a presence in front of the net. If we’re going to focus on the power play this year, we need to have a guy in front of the net on a consistent basis. And we’re going to shoot the puck a lot more and create traffic. We’re going to create those opportunities and chances and make sure we’re shooting the puck more and not just moving it around.

Senators News: September 21

A busy day in Sens news:

-The Sens cut their training roster down by six yesterday, releasing ATO Matej Machovsky and sending most of the junior players back to their teams (Stefan Noesen, Matt Puempel, Mark Stone, Jordan Fransoo, and Jakub Culek, link).

David Rundblad described his experience in the exhibition game in his blog (link), expressing surprise at how much faster the game was compared to the rookie tournament while saying he was satisfied with his effort.

-Ottawa’s lineup for tonight (link), including a preview of what will likely be Binghamton’s first line:
Nikita Filatov-Mika Zibanejad-Bobby Butler
Shane Prince-Stephane Da Costa-Jim O’Brien
Nick Foligno-Peter Regin-Erik Condra
Kaspars Daugavins-Corey Locke-Mark Parrish
Jared Cowen-Sergei Gonchar
Chris Phillips-Brian Lee
Mark Borowiecki-David Rundblad
Craig Anderson/Alex Auld

-Boston’s lineup for tonight has been announced (it’s a youthful group, link):
Forwards: Jamie Arniel, Patrice Bergeron, Jordan Caron, Chris Clark, Chris Kelly, Jared Knight, Lane MacDermid, Benoit Pouliot, Max Sauve, Tyler Seguin, Ryan Spooner, Jamie Tardif, Shawn Thornton
Defensemen: Matt Bartkowski, Colby Cohen, Andrew Ference, Dougie Hamilton, Steven Kampfer, Adam McQuaid, David Warsofsky.
Goaltenders: Anton Khudobin, Tuukka Rask.

-Here’s what Bryan Murray told Binghamton beat writer Joy Lindsay about trying to replace Lee Sweatt (link): “We kind of got to a budget level. We’re very disappointed Sweatt retired. I’m not sure what the real reason was, other than maybe just a business opportunity, but we will keep looking. And very definitely, if we don’t get them a top young defenseman to go down there out of our camp — maybe somebody that we were planning on keeping here — then we have to address that issue. I know that Tim is on a daily basis bugging me about it, and so we’ll try to keep a very close eye on that.”  Reading between the lines it sounds like they will consider him replaced internally depending on who gets sent down after training camp (and, therefore, there’s a scenario whereby whoever gets sent down would not replace Sweatt).  Given that what they lost was an offensive player I believe Rundblad is whom Murray is referring too.

The Ottawa Sun‘s Bruce Garrioch talked to Brian Lee about the situation on the blueline (link), and the former first-rounder remains philosophical, “We have lots of good players. I’m just going to do what I do well and things will take care of themselves.

-Grey Wyshynski (Puck Daddy) previews the Ottawa Senators (link).  It’s entertainingly written and he includes Francis Lessard in the roster discussion.  His final comment, “The Senators are being picked by some to finish last in the National Hockey League, as they’re in the midst of a serious rebuild. MacLean brings considerable experience but nothing in the way of NHL head-coaching experience. There are still a few shining lights on the roster. But overall, this is a team building for tomorrow … one that will be well-represented in the lottery, but far from the postseason.”  Wyshynski joins the chorus that see’s the Sens at the bottom of the NHL heap.

-Chris Nicholls of City News posted a list of the top goaltenders in the NHL (link), putting Craig Anderson at #18.  Here’s his top-30:
1. Henrik Lundqvist
2. Tim Thomas
3. Roberto Luongo
4. Ilya Bryzgalov
5. Pekka Rinne
6. Marc-Andre Fleury
7. Ryan Miller
8. Carey Price
9. Jonathan Quick
10. Martin Brodeur
11. Antti Niemi
12. Tomas Vokoun
13. Cam Ward
14. Jonas Hiller,
15. Jaroslav Halak
16. Corey Crawford
17. Jimmy Howard
18. Craig Anderson
19. Miikka Kiprusoff
20. Kari Lehtonen
21. Dwayne Roloson
22. Niklas Backstrom
23. James Reimer
24. Ondrej Pavelec
26. Tuukka Rask
25. Semyon Varlamov
27. Michal Neuvirth
28. Cory Schneider
29. Steve Mason
30. Mike Smith

-Elmira (ECHL) signed four more players (link): John Mori (CHL 43-9-15-24), Cam Fergus (CIS 28-16-16-32), Vinny Geonnetti (AAHL 24-2-11-13), and Clay Goodall (CCAA 27-3-8-11).

Senators News: September 20

Here’s today’s Sens news after dropping a 4-2 decision to Toronto in exhibition play:

-Sens TV has post-game interviews with Jared Cowen, Nikita Filatov, and Paul MacLean (link).

Nikita Filatov was hit by a blindside hit from Francis Lessard in practice (link), but returned with no apparent ill-effects.

-Bruce Garrioch tweets that the Sens are starting to send junior players back to their teams (link), but no names have been released yet.

The Ottawa Sun‘s Bruce Garrioch (link) talked to Zenon Konopka prior to the game last night and the veteran was pumped for the game, “Put it this way: If I had to choose a place to go into, maybe Long Island would be No. 1, but No. 2 would be Toronto. I’ve watched the rivalry ever since I played junior (for the 67’s). The Senators were playing the Leafs in the playoffs back then and I saw some playoff games. I’m excited to be part of it and to bring back a real intense rivalry.”  Unfortunately, the talk did not translate into performance.  Garrioch also notes that the plan is to have Stephane Da Costa play in as many as five of the remaining six exhibition games.

-Binghamton beat reporter Joy Lindsay reports that Bryan Murray is still looking to replace retired blueliner Lee Sweatt (link).

Capgeek has the projected salary of newly signed Mark Stone (630k, link), but it may be awhile before the number is fully confirmed.

Ottawa Senators Lose 4-2 to Toronto

The first game of exhibition play is in the books with the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated Ottawa 4-2.  It was not a spirited affair by any means, with minimal hitting and only one fight.  Toronto played an older, more veteran group.

I won’t repost the box score (link), but I’ll take a look at the best and worst players for the Sens–keeping in mind that this is the first exhibition game of the season and, as such, doesn’t mean much.

Positive Performances
Erik Karlsson was the most engaged “veteran” on the ice and was one of the best players on the ice (a moment that stands out for me was Colby Armstrong futilely trying to get the puck off him in the third period)
Jared Cowen played an outstanding game and was the best rookie on either team, scoring twice and fighting to defend a teammate (Tim Conboy, link).  After an indifferent rookie tournament, he’s making strides towards Paul Maclean’s difficult decision on the blueline
Peter Regin was the second best veteran on the ice; other than his faceoffs (which still need work) he played hard–this was the most physical I’ve seen him play
Nikita Filatov had one of those weird games where he was barely noticeable but picked up two assists (including a beauty on Cowen‘s first goal)
Mike Hoffman was riding shotgun on the fourth line and still looked good; he made smart plays in all three zones

Struggling
Patrick Wiercioch had what might be his worst game as a pro, with three “A” grade turnovers for scoring chances
Zenon Konopka disappointed; he was signed to be tough and good on faceoffs and provided neither; he looked slow and ineffective
Tim Conboy looked like a deer in the headlights and struggled all night

Other
David Rundblad, whose name Leafs broadcaster Joe Bowen struggled with nearly as much as Mika Zibanejad‘s,  mixed moments of brilliance with bad turnovers.
Mark Stone, newly signed, was virtually invisible.
Milan Michalek was hurt blocking a shot in the third period, but apparently it’s nothing serious

Follow the link for The Silver Seven‘s Peter Raaymakers take on the game.

Senators News: September 19

Here’s today’s news roundup:

-Impressive rookie Mark Stone has been signed to his ELC (link); no numbers have been released yet.

-Bruce Garrioch tweeted (link) that Craig Anderson, Mark Borowiecki, Stephane Da Costa, Nick Foligno and Mark Parrish won’t play tonight.  Ottawa’s line combinations and defence combinations (link):
Michalek-Zibanejad-Stone
Greening-Smith-Neil
Filatov-Regin-Butler
Hoffman-Konopka-Lessard

Cowen-Rundblad
Kuba-Karlsson
Wiercioch-Conboy
Auld will play the first half, Lehner the second

-Toronto’s lineup has also been posted (link), but only some of the lines (the goaltenders will split duties):
Grabovski-Kulemin-MacArthur
Kadri-Bozak-Armstrong
Hill-Colborne-Fattin
Crabb-Dupuis-Orr/Rosehill
Phaneuf-Aulie

The Canadian Press previewed the Senators (link), the gist of which is: “The Senators have plenty of room for improvement after finishing…26th overall. With former Detroit Red Wings assistant coach Paul MacLean taking over from  Clouston, the Senators decided a rebuild was the way to go. The right way [to play], says the 53-year-old MacLean, will be to make sure the  Senators’ effort levels are consistent every night, something that Clouston wasn’t able to get out of his players. The Senators are confident they are on the right track with the mix of youth  and experience, skill and toughness they’ve assembled. After Anderson, Spezza, who missed 20 games with a back injury, was the Senators’ best player down the stretch. He stands to fare better if he and captain Daniel Alfredsson can stay healthy. Binghamton call-ups Erik Condra and Colin Greening earned themselves NHL contracts in the off season with their play. Defenceman Erik Karlsson was arguably the only member of the Senators to emerge from the year with his reputation enhanced after breaking out offensively with 13 goals and 45 points.

In the off-season, the Senators added gritty centre Zenon Konopka, a faceoff  specialist with a penchant for dropping the gloves, and backup goalie Alex Auld through free agency and embarked on a reclamation project in trading for former  Columbus first-round pick Nikita Filatov at the NHL draft, who has yet to fulfil his potential.  The Senators’ first pick, No. 6 overall, was Swedish forward Mika Zibanejad and, by all accounts, he stood out last week at rookie camp, as did fellow  centre Stephane Da Costa, who joined Ottawa late last season as a free-agent signing out of Merrimack College. The Senators also have high hopes for Swedish defenceman David Rundblad, who was the Swedish Elite League’s top defenceman last season, and blue-liner Jared Cowen, who played last year with the Western Hockey League’s Spokane Chiefs before joining Binghamton for the playoffs. MacLean confirmed those players are all in the mix for the NHL roster.  Regin, Da Costa and Zibanejad will all get a look as the Senators try to find a  second-line centre. Another dilemma for MacLean in training camp will be trying  to find room for so many defencemen. Ottawa has six on one-way contracts in  addition to those trying to crack the team like Rundblad and Cowen.”

-ESPN’s fantasy projections are up (link).  Here’s their Ottawa list:
Jason Spezza 75-27-42-69
Daniel Alfredsson 77-23-40-63
Nikita Filatov 78-25-30-58
Bobby Butler 76-24-34-58
Sergei Gonchar 74-12-34-46
Peter Regin 82-15-30-45
Erik Karlsson 79-13-31-44
Milan Michalek 68-20-17-37
Mika Zibanejad 79-17-14-31
Filip Kuba 68-3-23-26
Jared Cowen 59-7-15-22
Matt Carkner 72-2-9-11
Zenon Konopka 69-2-5-7

Senators News: September 18

Despite a ton of Sens stories there isn’t much actual news:

-Most of the Senators scrimmaged yesterday (team Kyte versus team Marsh).  There isn’t much to be drawn from it (4 of the 5 goals were scored against Ottawa’s 4th and 5th goaltenders), but Chris Phillips needs to knock off the rust.  Jesse Winchester was hurt by a hit and will miss the rest of training camp (link) and Matt Carkner missed the scrimmage because of an injury suffered in training.

-The Ottawa Sun’s Don Brennan has an article on Mark Stone (link).  There’s not much new, but he mentions scout Bob Lowes was responsible for the pick.  Brennan also has a story on Filip Kuba (link), where the big Czech talks about last season, “I felt good at the end of the year. Even when I came back I felt strong, but I didn’t have the foot speed, that little explosiveness you have to work on. I thought I was ready, when I came back, and in the earlier stages it was okay, but then I found I was a little bit behind. We worked on it down the stretch, but December and January weren’t great months last season for anybody. That’s where we fell behind.

-Hockey Futures Ken McKenna says Mika Zibanejad had the strongest rookie tournament this year (link), saying “At the Leafs tournament in Oshawa, Ontario, Zibanejad provided ample evidence that the Senators made a wise selection in choosing the budding Swedish forward. Zibanejad displayed a sound offensive game, displaying a nose for the net while also showing that he isn’t afraid to go into the corners. As Binghamton Senators and the Senators’ prospect squad head coach Kurt Kleinendorst stated, Zibanejad already has few holes in his game, even at this early stage. Zibanejad led his team to the tournament title, something that Senators fans are hoping will be played out in a future Stanley Cup playoff when Zibanejad finally joins the Senators.

-There are a ton of interviews with players available on the Sens website (link).

-Here’s the Sens lineup for tomorrow’s exhibition game against Toronto (link):
Goaltenders — Alex Auld, Robin Lehner, Craig Anderson.
Defencemen — Jared Cowen, David Rundblad, Filip Kuba, Tim Conboy, Patrick Wiercioch, Eric Gryba, Erik Karlsson, Mark Borowiecki.
Forwards — Milan Michalek, Peter Regin, Colin Greening, Zack Smith, Bobby Butler, Nikita Filatov, Stephane Da Costa, Chris Neil, Mark Parrish, Zenon Konopka, Francis Lessard, Mark Stone, Mike Hoffman, Nick Foligno, Mika Zibanejad.

Senators News: September 17

There’s plenty of Sens news to look at today:

The Ottawa Citizen‘s James Gordon talked to Bryan Murray (link) who had some interesting things to say. Murray said he’d been targeting Craig Anderson back when he was playing for the Florida Panthers (08-09), but decided to trade for Pascal Leclaire instead; Gordon also writes “The team is interested to see where Peter Regin is now after a terribly disappointing year. Regin got hurt, but he also languished under coach Cory Clouston. Murray said Paul MacLean and his staff bring a “newness” and an ability to communicate, which sometimes results in “the performance of a lifetime” from some players in training camp.”  I’m not sure if Gordon’s comments are via Murray or his own, but Clouston’s communication problems are well-established.

The Ottawa Sun‘s Don Brennan also writes about Regin (link) about whom Bryan Murray said “I think it [the coaching change] helps Peter, because Peter felt he wasn’t getting everything he could get last year.”  Regin himself added, “I think I can help the team win some games and really be a guy that puts up points more often than I did. And my two-way game, working in my own end, too, and be responsible. The whole package. I never got into that last year and that’s what I want to find this year.”  I agree that Clouston did not give Regin much rope last season, so it will be interesting to see how he performs with a clean slate under MacLean.

-Elliotte Friedman was on The Fan 590 yesterday and had some interesting comments about the Senators and Ottawa fans: “They’re [the team] a long way away.  Ottawa’s fans…they jump off the bandwagon pretty quick.”  The sentiment seems common outside the region.  The commentators (Friedman along with Stephen Brunt and John Shannon) also believed the Sens organisational depth was below Edmonton’s (the other rebuilding Canadian team) and had a long way to go.

-Senators training camp has been divided into three rosters (link), here are the groupings:

Boschman
32 Machovsky
41 Anderson
17 Kuba
38 Conboy
39 Carkner
46 Wiercioch
63 Godfrey
65 Karlsson
6 Kramer
14 Greening
15 Smith
16 Butler
19 Spezza
21 Filatov
37 Locke
42 O’Brien
50 Culek
56 Downing
57 Grant
60 Stone
Kyte
29 McKenna
35 Auld
2 Cowen
51 Raymond
55 Gonchar
62 Gryba
64 Schira
9 Michalek
10 Prince
11 Alfredsson
24 Da Costa
27 Parrish
44 Pageau
48 Cannone
49 Lessard
53 Hamilton
54 Cowick
58 Gratchev
68 Hoffman
93 Zibanejad
Marsh
30 Stewart
40 Lehner
4 Phillips
5 Lee
7 Rundblad
52 Fransoo
74 Borowiecki
3 Puempel
13 Regin
17 Foligno
18 Winchester
20 Petersson
22 Condra
23 Daugavins
25 Neil
28 Konopka
36 Noesen
59 Dziurzynski
67 Caporusso

-Corey Pronman of Hockey Prospectus lists the top-100 NHL Prospects (link).  7 Sens made the main list (goalies were listed separately, so 8 including them):
17. David Rundblad
21. Mika Zibanejad
40. Nikita Filatov
46. Stephane Da Costa
76. Jared Cowen
85. Jakob Silfverberg
90. Patrick Wiercioch
4. Robin Lehner

-John Henkelman of Hockey Futures has updated the Senators prospect rankings.  Here are his top-20 (change from the previous ranking in brackets):
1. David Rundblad
2. Jared Cowen
3. Mika Zibanejad
4. Robin Lehner (3)
5. Jakob Silfverberg (4)
6. Matt Puempel
7. Nikita Filatov
8. Bobby Butler (7)
9. Patrick Wiercioch (5)
10. Colin Greening (14)
11. Erik Condra (9)
12. Stefan Noesen
13. Stephane Da Costa
14. Jim O’Brien (8)
15. Andre Petersson (13)
16. Mark Stone (19)
17. Mark Borowiecki (NR)
18. Eric Gryba (12)
19. Louie Caporusso (6)
20. Shane Prince

-Binghamton signed Ottawa training camp invites Maxim Gratchev (KHL 13-0-0-0) and Brian Stewart (4-5-0 3.05 .891) to AHL contracts (link).

Senators News: September 16

Sens training camp opened today with medicals.  The news of interest:

The Ottawa Citizen‘s Ken Warren writes about the expectations for the team (link).  Alfredsson said, “The expectations are not as high as we’ve had previously, but I think we’ve got a real good group of guys that can play to a real high level.  And who knows how far that’s going to take us? I think we’ll be exciting to watch and come February or March, I hope we’re in position to make a push for the playoffs. But most importantly, we hope to see progress.”  Paul MacLean said, “I don’t know who they are [people predicting Ottawa will finish last], but that doesn’t really matter, either. All I want to do is to get better every day. Do things right. Do it right every day.

The Ottawa Sun‘s Don Brennan talked to Daniel Alfredsson about his health (link), who said “I don’t think anybody’s going to camp 100%.  But I feel good, and obviously excited to start off. Training has been going good so far. I’m happy where I am. As you get older, that’s going to be tougher and tougher, but we’ll assess the situation, how I feel, as we go along. Starting off, I expect to play a lot.

-The Elmira Jackels announced three more signings (link): Dominic D’Amour (3-88 2002 Tor, CHL 59-11-12-23), Michael Devin (NCAA 34-6-10-16), and Jordan Lane (CHL 61-3-0-3)

Red Line Report‘s latest 2012 draft preview is out.  Here’s their top-thirty (with the position changes noted):
1. Nail Yakupov (Sarnia, OHL)
2. Nick Ebert (Windsor, OHL)
3. Ryan Murray (Everett, WHL)
4. Henrik Samuelsson (US NTDP, USHL) (+1)
5. Filip Forsberg (Leksand, Sweden) (+6)
6. Griffin Reinhart (Edmonton, WHL) (-2)
7. Alex Galchenyuk (Sarnia, OHL)
8. Zemgus Girgensons (Dubuque, USHL) (+1)
9. Mikhail Grigorenko (Quebec, QMJHL) (-3)
10. Olli Maatta (London, OHL) (-2)
11. Morgan Rielly (Moose Jaw, WHL) (-1)
12. Matt Dumba (Red Deer, WHL)
13. Sebastian Collberg (Frolunda, Sweden) (+2)
14. Jacob Trouba (US NTDP, USHL) (-1)
15. Martin Frk (Halifax, QMJHL) (-1)
16. Slater Koekkoek (Peterborough, OHL) (+2)
17. Jordan Schmaltz (Sioux City, USHL) (-1)
18. Derrick Pouliot (Portland, WHL) (-1)
19. Pontus Aberg (Djurgarden, Sweden)
20. Matia Marcantuoni (Kitchener, OHL)
21. Eric Locke (Barrie, OHL) (+1)
22. Calle Andersson (Malmo, Sweden) (+11)
23. Gianluca Curcuruto (Sault Ste. Marie, OHL) (-2)
24. Cody Ceci (Ottawa 67s, OHL) (+1)
25. Chandler Stephenson (Regina, WHL) (-2)
26. Brendan Gaunce (Belleville, OHL) (-2)
27. Teuvo Teravainen (Jokerit, Finland) (+1)
28. Troy Bourke (Prince George, WHL) (+3)
29. Damon Severson (Kelowna, WHL) (+3)
30. Jarrod Maidens (Owen Sound, OHL) (+7)
Falling out of the top-30: Scott Laughton (#31, -1), Ryan Olsen (#36, -9), Patrik Machac (#36, -7), and Luca Ciampini (#40, -13)

Senators News: September 15

Here’s the Sens news of the day along with scouting reports via McKeen’s:

-Tim Murray was interviewed on The Team 1200 yesterday (September 14) about the rookie tournament (link).  There wasn’t much new in his comments, but in summary: he said Mika Zibanejad would have to receive at least top-nine minutes to make the NHL club; thinks David Rundblad will do even better playing with better players and thinks he’s a little ahead of the other defensemen; he was happy with most of the lineup, specifically mentioning Andre Petersson, Louie Caporusso, Mark Stone, Mark Borowiecki, and Stephane Da Costa; he says there’s one blueline spot to be earned in Ottawa.

-Rob Brodie wrote an article on Colin Greening (link), whose outlook is very realistic, “I thought I was very fortunate to be up for 24 games last year, but that was last year. With a new season comes a new set of challenges and hurdles to get over. It’s all part of coming to camp. The prospect of potentially making the team out of camp is very exciting for me. I hope it happens for me, but that’s up to me right now. It depends on how I play in camp.

David Rundblad writes about the rookie tournament experience in his blog (link); Google translation provides the gist of what he’s saying (along with some hilarious errors), but in general he was happy with how the tournament went (but was unimpressed with how yappy Leaf rookies were).

The Ottawa Sun‘s Bruce Garrioch provides his five-keys to the Sens making the playoffs (link). His keys are: 1) a solid Craig Anderson, 2) a healthy Daniel Alfredsson (with the assumption that means he’ll be productive), 3) buying into Paul MacLean’s system, 4) a strong performance from Jason Spezza, and 5) rebound years from Sergei Gonchar and Chris Phillips (and no, I don’t know why these two players count as a single reason).  His criteria closely echoes other commentators in regards to veterans needing bounceback years.

-The Senators training camp roster has been released (link).  There are only six players on tryouts (two amateur, four professional).  Among the tryouts only three are unsigned within the organisation and they are:
Matej Machovksy (OHL 7-13-2 2.90 .904); attended the rookie tournament
Brian Stewart (AHL 4-5-3 3.05 .891)
Maxim Gratchev (4-106 2007 NYI, KHL 13-0-0-0); played 17-games with Binghamton  two years ago (09-10)

McKeen‘s yearbook includes scouting reports on David Rundblad, Patrick Wiercioch, Stephane Da CostaColin Greening, Mika Zibanejad, Robin Lehner, Jared Cowen, and Nikita Filatov.  Their analysis:

Rundblad (4.5/5) – “big, skilled, strong-shooting rearguard .. puck-control type, comfortable in possession and supported by a wide wingspang and good stickhandling skills .. quick to identify offensive openings and is a talented and accurate passer – tailors his speed and delivery .. still prone to overhandling the puck at times .. not a pretty skater – stride is short and mechanical .. uncomfortable moving backwards – generates nominal speed, while his pivots can be rough and sluggish .. compensates by patiently sustaining his positioning, but will concede the outside lane to puckcarriers .. displays good poise and shooting instincts running the power play .. keeps shots low and into areas for easier tips .. a high risk-reward type however – pinches aggressively and will forsake his defensive duties

Wiercioch (3/5) – “talented rearguard with good puck skills and deceiving mobility .. adept on his feet .. displays good co-ordination and all-around footwork, only needing to get quicker which should evolve as his lower body strengthens .. still growing into spacious frame .. comfortable and composed in possession [of the puck] – transitions the puck well and is a strong passer with a knack for finding open seams .. gets his point shot through to the net and keeps it low .. still developing defensively – and learning the nuances of defending pro speed and strength – which will mandate better gap control and crease-area coverage .. can be slow to identify threats and establish tight checking positions .. gets drawn up ice watching for ways to join the attack .. good upside as a strong top four NHL blueliners – with the proper refinements

Stephane Da Costa (2.5/5) – “methodical two-way playmaker with soft hands .. smooth, sturdy skater .. reacts quickly to changes – body and stick well-prepared .. talented puckcarrier, poised and skillful in possession .. makes tight, compact turns and subtle diagonal shifts to open up lanes .. accurate passer with a knack for sneaking feeds through seams .. delays his release point for an extra moment which opens up more options – and adds to his craftiness .. right-hand shooter on the powerplay, boasting a strong one-time plus an unassuming wristshot that generates surprising velocity .. neither big, belligerent or overly strong, however he is competitive and balanced – and guided by good sense and awareness .. manages the puck well thanks to a structured and responsible game – always back in proper support positions .. will fare better if he can get stronger over the summer

Colin Greening (2.5/5) – “big, strong two-way winger .. adequate puckhandler whose prime weapon is a heavy slapshot powered by a quick release .. hard-working and diligent defensively .. deceptive skater – not overly explosive or quick off the mark, yet generates excellent top speed from a wide, sturdy stride .. plays in the hard areas – earns time on the penalty kill .. excels on the forecheck and grinding along the boards – using his thick frame to body opponents off the puck .. displays solid net-front presence – gets into shooting lanes for tips – and on top of the crease with his stick and body in good position

Mika Zibanejad (4.5/5) – “determined two-way forward with good size and smarts .. anticipates the game well on both sides of the puck .. versatile – plays the wing and also mans the point on the power play .. talented passer and stickhandler, supported by quick, soft hands and a range upper body .. crafty 1-on1, boasting wide stick-handling range and clever moves to open up space for a heavy shot .. good developing skater .. top speed is fine, generates deceiving power from a wide, gangly stride .. startup and acceleration could be quicker .. must continue to get stronger and more balanced on his feet .. responsible – comes back deep on the backcheck and is comfortable operating in traffic .. knows how to use his body to play a tenacious physical game

Robin Lehner (4.5/5) – “big competitive goalie .. cocky, colourful, brimming with self-confidence .. plays an energetic stay-at-home style based on positioning and net coverage .. collapses rapidly to a tight butterfly, displaying excellent vertical quickness .. makes himself look tall, filling the top of the net with an imposing upper torso .. can be hesitant to aggressively cut down angles .. gets stranded on his pads when dropping prematurely, particularly moving laterally into a butterfly .. does a good job controlling rebounds off his chest, but can give up juicy ones on low shots

Jared Cowen (4.5/5) – “tough, strong-willed and studious .. excels as a proactive crease-clearer – knows how to use his size and strength to box out intruders .. does possess decent skills for his size and some imagination .. steadily adding velocity to a hard slapshot which stays low and on target .. good, solid skater – dextrous and strong on a wide base – but needs to keep increasing footspeed and quickness .. projects as a stout defender able to absorb pressure to clear the zone – or make an impact play with his physical tenacity

Nikita Filatov (3/5) – “fast gifted playmaker .. fluid and dynamic on his feet with a gift for manufacturing space using speed and puckhandling .. crisp passer, excellent first touch, and equipped with an understanding of how to position his body to receive passes .. determined and stealth-like in the offensive zone .. not as diligent or as passionate defensively, tends to lose interest and stops moving his feet .. will have to make a greater commitment to developing his strength and conditioning as his slightly-built frame was clearly not prepared for NHL warfare