Senators News: March 28th

Jason Spezza states the obvious, “We feel like we’re in a place where can dictate our own future. If we win games, we’re going to make the playoffs. There won’t be a ton of scoreboard-watching as long as we (get) the wins.”

-I’m not sure why anyone cares what Darren Pang thinks, but Sens fans are up in arms after he said he’d take Alex Pietrangelo over Erik Karlsson.  That’s exactly what happened in the 2008 draft (Pietrangelo was 4th overall, Karlsson was 15th), and Pang makes the argument everyone has to make when comparing another defenceman to Karlsson–he’s better defensively.  One can argue the issue back and forth, but the key point is that Pang is the colour man for the St. Louis Blues and as long as that’s the case he’s a homer–if he were in Toronto he’d take Jake Gardiner, if he were in Montreal he’d take P. K Subban, etcetera.  Pang is nothing to get excited about.

Sports Illustrated‘s power rankings are out with Ottawa 13th.

Rob Brodie writes that the Sens ratings have never been better on Sportsnet.

Rory Boylen looks at numbers behind goal scoring in the NHL and misses the point.  He talks about how 5-on-5 goal scoring hasn’t changed much while overall scoring has declined.  Boylen suggests the decline in powerplays is the reason for the drop, but he misses the point that if there are fewer powerplays that means more minutes are played 5-on-5 and yet, those numbers haven’t increased.  The inference is that goal scoring overall is declining.

Chris Wideman talks about his decision to sign an ATO with Binghamton, “I’m definitely excited to be here. I think it’s a great opportunity. I’m just excited, and excited to be playing with Pat Cannone again and see some of the guys I’ve met over the last few years at development camp. It should be a good experience. [Cannone is] great. He was like my older brother at school, so I’m sure he’ll be the same way here. He picked me up from the airport last night with a big smile on his face, and it’s just great to have a familiar face around and have someone showing you the ropes. All the guys have been great today, helping me on the ice and off the ice, so it’s been a pretty smooth transition so far.  I know Mike [McKenna] from skating at home over the summers. He’s another familiar face. It’s great to have some guys I know, and like I said, everybody’s been really nice and really helpful, so it’s been good. I just think it’s a good experience [to play in Binghamton]. I think it’s a great way to get started in your pro career, and I think it’s just a great experience that will give me a leg up for next year and really show me what I need to work on to be ready for pro hockey. You just have to be a little more focused on your positioning, because guys can break you down a little easier. Guys are stronger and a little faster, so being a smaller guy, you really just have to be smart in how you play guys. Even after the first day, I learned so much today, and I’m just excited about the whole opportunity. I’m not going to out-muscle anybody out there or beat anybody up, but I think just moving the puck and trying to get involved offensively when I can. Just being a good teammate, that’s important itself. I think it will be a good experience.”

Kurt Kleinendorst talked about Louie Caporusso‘s rookie year, “Louie‘s had a good year. I think he’s made a lot of progress. It’s unfortunate, because he was one of the guys we had hoped to keep here through the end of the year, and I liked him a lot. I thought he’s played so well. And at the same time, we were hoping to keep him over in Elmira and have him go through a nice, long playoff run, and it would have been a great finish for him. That’s still a possibility, but that’s unlikely.”

-Kleinendorst also talked about the possibility of Ben Blood joining the team on an ATO, “Obviously, Ben was one of the players that was kind of on the radar. But again, every single guy, his situation’s a little bit unique. I’ve not heard anything, and it wouldn’t surprise me one way or the other. If Ben decided to stay and just finish the school year, who could argue with that? Education is important, and a couple guys did that last year. But if he decided to come in and join us for the last eight games, I’ve got to think that’s a possibility, but I can’t speak for the organization. I really don’t know what’s going to happen.”

-I’ve begun profiling all the Sens prospects beginning with Ben Blood (link).

Stu Hackel doesn’t like the current playoff format (echoing Ken Campbell), but does mention that inter-divisional playoffs also have problems–I remember the 1987-88 season where the New York Rangers and Pittsburgh Penguins both missed the playoffs with over .500 records while the Leafs made it when they were 28 games under .500.  There’s no perfect system, but the current configuration is fairer than the old system.  Campbell’s suggestion of seeding the entire league one through sixteen is pie in the sky.

Prospect Profile: Ben Blood

Ben Blood (D-L, 6’3, DOB 1989, 4-120/07)
2006-07 USHS Shattuck 63-11-25-36 144pim (ppg 0.57) 2nd d-pts
2007-08 USHL Des Moines/Indi 57-10-13-23 -8 100pim (ppg 0.40) 2nd
2008-09 NCAA N. Dakota 31-0-1-1 +3 12pim (ppg 0.03) 6th
2009-10 NCAA N. Dakota 43-5-9-14 +11 96pim (ppg 0.32) 3rd all-academic
2010-11 NCAA N. Dakota 44-2-10-12 +32 48pim (ppg 0.27) 4th
2011-12 NCAA N. Dakota 42-3-18-21 +5 73pim (ppg 0.50) 1st “A”

Ben Blood is the longest serving amateur in the organisation, hailing back to Bryan Murray’s first draft which was largely dominated by John Muckler’s philosophy (he was ranked #116 by Central Scouting).  Blood is a big, strong, defensive blueliner who is finishing his senior year at North Dakota (perhaps best known for this incident with Chad Rau, which resulted in the loss of his assistant captaincy).  He’s enjoyed a career year in points and I’m sure the Sens would like him to play in Binghamton now that his college season is over (they offered him an ELC last summer, but he rejected it to play his senior year in the NCAA).  When he was drafted Blood was thought to be a well-rounded defenseman, but his offensive output in college has remained muted so he projects as a physical, depth player.  Here’s a UND profile of Blood from earlier this season, and this is an old scouting report from Hockey Futures: “Blood has an intriguing combination of skill and size.  He is fluid and sturdy on his skates, especially considering his size.  Blood’s lateral movement and quickness is somewhat lacking, but this should improve with time.  Blood plays well in all three zones and is excellent on special teams.  His soft hands, poise with the puck, vision, and heavy, accurate slap shot make him an excellent power play quarterback.  He also possesses a quick release and precise wrist shot.  Blood has excellent hand eye coordination and has the ability to unleash a wicked one-timer when setup.  In the defensive zone, Blood is a formidable presence and shuts down players by angling them to the boards.  He is terrific positioning, especially in one-on-one situations and uses his size to effectively clear out traffic in front of the crease.  He could play a more physically, but Blood’s game is focused on being disciplined and not hurting his team with an errant play or missed body check.  Blood is also a good communicator both on and off the ice.  He possesses good leadership qualities and could be a future team leader.”  A final note, Blood‘s height is listed as either 6’3 or 6’4 (I’ve gone with the Sens website number).

Senators News: March 27th

-With five days off the Sens will get to sit and watch the standings change as Washington and Buffalo will play twice over that period (including tonight).  For those who like percentages, the win put Ottawa’s chances to get into the playoffs up to 96% (link).

Bruce Garrioch speculates that Ben Bishop will miss the rest of the regular season.

TSN and The Hockey News‘ power rankings are out with Ottawa 13th and 16th.

Stu Hackel looks at Quebec’s chance to land an NHL franchise.  The article is worth reading through and Hackel’s understandably cautious, but I think it’s beyond the point of speculation to say that Phoenix will move to Quebec.

-As expected, Sens prospect Chris Wideman has joined the Binghamton Senators on an ATO.

Joy Lindsay provides Binghamton’s practice lines: Grant-Cannone-Petersson, Hoffman-Da Costa-Parrish, Dziurzynski-Hamilton-Downing, Puempel-Bartlett-Schneider/Lessard; Patrick Wiercioch-Eric Gryba, Mark Borowiecki-Craig Schira, Chris Wideman-Dan Henningson, Josh Godfrey-Tim Conboy.  Louie Caporusso was injured in Binghamton’s last game and is expected to miss the rest of the season (as is Corey Locke).

Ottawa 6, Winnipeg 4

In an entertaining, sloppy game filled with turnovers and scoring chances, the Sens won through excellent goaltending from Craig Anderson and efficient scoring.  The win sinks the Jets chance at the playoffs while putting the pressure on Buffalo to keep pace.  Here’s the box score.

First Period
Ottawa opened the game with a pair of bad turnovers (Kuba and Michalek; the first resulted in Wheeler missing the net on a breakaway, while Anderson made the stop on the second).  During an ineffectual powerplay the Sens gave up a mini-breakaway to Bogosion (Karlsson fell asleep on his coverage).  Spezza had a great chance off a turnover, but couldn’t beat Pavelec five-hole.  The Jets dominated most of the first period, playing a wide open style and capitalising on Senator turnovers.  Spezza created another great chance, but Michalek wasn’t able to bang home his rebound.  Late in the period the Sens switched to trap-mode to cut down on the chances against.  In the closing seconds the Sens scored, with Neil cleaning up the garbage on a great shot by Spezza.
Second Period
The Sens opened the period strongly and Daugavins scored a beautiful goal off a turnover created by Condra.  The Jets got the goal right back after Kuba took a penalty.  Winnipeg tied the game as the Neil got watching the puck and Wellwood scored on Kane‘s rebound.  There was the oddity of a penalty call against the Jets being whistled down when the Sens had possession.  Condra hit the crossbar on a floater from well out, then short-handed Daugavins nearly scored on the identical move from earlier in the period followed by Michalek missing an empty net on a beautiful set-up from KarlssonSpezza, clearly ticked off after back-to-back tripping penalties, walked through the Jets and then gave Turris an empty net to give the Sens back the lead.  Ottawa gave the lead right back as Cowen can’t get to the puck Anderson leaves behind the net and Miettinen has a wide open cage to tie the game back up (Neil losing his check once again).
Third Period
Daugavins turned the puck over at his own blueline which resulted in a Wellwood penalty shot, but Anderson bailed him out.  A great turnover created by Karlsson lead to a goal by Alfredsson.  The pair nearly combined for another goal, but Alfredsson just missed the net.  Smith then had a mini-breakaway, but couldn’t beat Pavelec.  The Jets got the momentum towards the end of the period and through a scramble Kane put the puck in with his arm (the played was reviewed, but counted). Alfredsson scored on the next shift, giving the Sens back the lead, and Michalek sealed it away with a bank shot into the empty net.

A look at the goals:
1. Neil (Spezza, Karlsson)
Spezza creates something out of nothing and Neil bangs home his rebound
2. Daugavins (Condra, Smith)
Condra creates the turnover and Daugavins out waits Pavelec to score on the empty net
3. Winnipeg, Miettinen (pp)
Bangs in a rebound Anderson loses sight of
4. Winnipeg, Wellwood
Neil loses track of his check, leaving Wellwood wide open to score off Kane’s rebound
5. Turris (Spezza, Karlsson)
Great individual effort by Spezza gives Turris an empty net to score in
6. Winnipeg, Miettinen
Anderson tries to leave the puck to Cowen, but Stapleton is closer and gets the puck to Miettinen before Anderson can effectively get back in the net (Neil lost Miettinen in coverage)
7. Alfredsson (Karlsson)
Karlsson picks off an outlet pass and gets the puck down low to Alfredsson who beats an outstretched Pavelec
8. Winnipeg, Kane
A big scramble in front and the puck bounces off the arm of Kane (the play was reviewed)
9. Alfredsson (Kuba, Turris)
Alfredsson cleans up the garbage off Kuba’s blast from the point
10. Michalek (unassisted) (en)

Top-performers:
Craig Anderson – despite giving up four-goals he was a huge reason why the team won
Erik Karlsson – three assists and a plus five in the game
Daniel Alfredsson – scored two key third period goals, including the winner

Players Who Struggled:
Chris Neil – he scored, but defensive lapses lead to two goals against

Senators News: March 26th

Craig Anderson talked about his play and his health, “I knew they could count on me going in there and I had to make sure I held up the fort. A lot of it comes down to how the team is playing. Statistics are a direct result of how the team is playing. If the team is playing well, we’re scoring a lot of goals, we get out to a lead, stats sway in your direction. You get down a couple of goals, the game changes and before you know it, your stats aren’t looking that great. The strength is almost there. It’s not where it was before the injury but I knew that going in. I was able to do everything I could do before the injury, minus shooting the puck 50 mph, maybe I can only shoot it 35 mph. There was some battles around the net where I had to really battle with it. It’s only going to get better. Who is to say by next weekend it’s not 100%? It might be.”

ESPN‘s power rankings are out with Ottawa 16th.

Kurt Kleinendorst talked about last night’s loss, “I probably shouldn’t be surprised. For whatever reason, we just can’t find a way to sustain anything. I could come up with some reasons, but they would all sound like excuses, so I’m just not going to go there. But it is frustrating because when we come out and play hard, and when we have some jam and a little bit of desperation to our game, we’re hard to play against and tough to beat. That’s when we have success. It’s really so obvious, but they don’t quite get it for some reason.”

Matt Puempel talked about his first game for Binghamton, “Being cleared for the last couple weeks, I haven’t really thought about the concussion or anything like that. It was kind of good to not think about it because you show you’re not hesitant. I was just trying to make a couple hits, just get involved physically, because that really is the first contact I’ve had since January. With the change and everything, you kind of focus on different things. It’s less about coming back from a concussion and more about just getting a chance to play here. It was pretty much my first game I finished since December, so it was good. It was a lot of fun. It will take time to adjust, coming off an injury and then up to this level, it’s a really good league, and you can’t take that for granted. There was definitely an adjustment period, but it was a ton of fun. It felt good to get the first one out of the way and felt good for a first pro game.”

-Elmira won in a shootout, with Brian Stewart getting the win and Corey Cowick adding a goal.

-Prospect updates for those still playing (their position in team scoring is noted in brackets, defence compared to defence):
CHL
Mark Stone (RW, Brandon, WHL) 3-1-2-3 (t-2nd) (Brandon leads Calgary 2-1)
Shane Prince (C/LW, Ottawa 67s, OHL) 3-1-2-3 (3rd) (67’s leads Belleville 2-1)
Stefan Noesen (C/RW, Plymouth, OHL) 2-2-0-2 (1st) (Plymouth trails Guelph 0-2)
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (RW, Chicoutimi, QMJHL) DNP (n/a) (Chicoutimi leads Acadia-Bathurst 2-0)
Jakub Culek (C/LW, Rimouski, QMJHL) 2-1-1-2 (8th) (Rimouski’s leads Val-D’Or 2-0)
Darren Kramer (C/LW, Spokane, WHL) 2-0-0-0 (t-11th) (Spokane trails Vancouver 0-2)
Jordan Fransoo (D, Victoria, WHL) 2-0-1-1 (2nd) (Victoria trails Kamloops 0-2)
SEL
Jakob Silfverberg (C/RW, Brynas) 6-5-4-9 (1st) (Brynas will play Farjestad in the second round)
Mika Zibanejad (C/RW, Djurgarden) 5-0-2-2 (8th) (Djurgarden is 1-2-2 in relegation with five games left to play)
Fredrik Claesson (D, Djurgarden) 5-1-1-2 (2nd) (Djurgarden is 1-2-2 in relegation with five games left to play)
Allsvenskan
Marcus Sorensen (RW, Boras) 3-1-0-1 (9th) (Boras is 2-2-1 in relegation with five games left to play)
NCAA
Chris Wideman (D, CCHA-Miami) 1-0-1-1 (1st) (Miami lost in the NCAA tournament and was eliminated)
Ben Blood (D, WCHA-North Dakota) 2-0-1-1 (1st) (North Dakota lost in the NCAA tournament and was eliminated)

Senators News: March 25th; Binghamton 4, Adirondack 5

-Last night’s win pulled a whole pile of players off the schnide and provide a respite from the pushing of the collective panic button.  The Sens remaining games are against Winnipeg, Philadelphia, the Islanders, Carolina, Boston, and New Jersey.  They should be able to collect six points throughout the stretch which would mean Buffalo needs nine points in their remaining six games to overtake them (Ottawa owns the tie-breaker) and ten points for Washington in their remaining seven games to overtake them (the Caps own the tie-breaker).  The odds of both teams leapfrogging the Sens to knock them out of the race are slim (Sports Club Stats has them at 91%).

Daniel Alfredsson talked about last night’s win “We respect that team a lot and I think it brings that little bit extra out of you. We were hounding pucks, we were backchecking a lot and it paid off.”

-Binghamton nearly came back from a four-goal deficit, but ultimately lost to Adirondack.  I watched the third period of this game (Matt Puempel made his debut for Binghamton).  Lehner was pulled after allowing 4 goals on 28 shots (from what I read it was less about his performance and more about trying to spark the team), and if Mike McKenna could have made a save in the third period there might have been a different result (he took the loss).  Parrish, Petersson, Dziurzynski and Hoffman scored the goals.  Eric Gryba and Dan Henningson both finished -3 while Mark Borowiecki was a team-high +2.  Here’s the box score.

Corey Cowick scored twice in Elmira’s 7-1 win last night (Brian Stewart dressed as the back-up).  Bobby Raymond had no points in Florida’s 4-2 win.

Ottawa 8, Pittsburgh 4

Tonight the Sens exploded on the Penguins, firing on all cylinders.  Anderson had to come in relief for Bishop and was stellar in preventing a comeback.   For those watching the CBC broadcast they were treated to Greg Millen spending the first half of the game talking about Dan Bylsma.  Here’s the box score.

First Period
Unfortunately I missed half of the first period, including the first three goals (Michalek and two by Cooke).  Neither the first five minutes nor the last were very involved.
Second Period
Bishop drew a penalty and Phillips capitalised on the powerplay to give the Sens a lead.  The Sens scored two shifts later, with a double deflection beating Thiessen.  The Pens responded immediately as Karlsson turned it over and they capitalised on a two-on-one.  Bishop got hurt making a save along the goal line and Anderson came in relief.  The Sens carried the play after the penalty kill.  Alfredsson restored the team goal lead on a partial breakaway short-handed–he subsequently hit the post.
Third Period
Phillips was hit by a shot and missed the next five minutes of the period (the CBC didn’t notice).  The Sens did a good job at cutting down the Penguins chances through the first half of the period.  Crosby cut the deficit to one with Gonchar giving the puck away.  The Penguins gave back the two-goal lead as they got caught on a pair of terrible pinches gave Spezza a clear breakaway and he beat Thiessen five-hole.  Neal hit the post on the powerplay, but the Sens sealed it away with another goal by Alfredsson.  As the Penguins went into goofy mode trying to stir things up the Sens added their final goal on a beautiful three-way passing play ended by Greening.

A look at the goals:
1. Michalek (Greening, Kuba)
Left all alone he bangs in a loose puck
2. Pittsburgh, Cooke
Cowen gets caught and Bishop has the shot go through him
3. Pittsburgh, Cooke
Cowen gets caught again and Crosby makes a beautiful pass to Cooke who is all alone
4. Gonchar (Foligno, Alfredsson)
A great pass to a wide-open Gonchar who beats Thiessen five-hole
5. Phillips (Turris, Alfredsson) (pp)
A great seam-pass that Phillips one-times
6. Turris (Foligno, Gonchar)
Simple shot to the net is deflected twice and beats Thiessen
7. Pittsburgh, Kennedy
Karlsson turns the puck over and Kennedy one-times a cross-ice pass to beat Bishop
8. Alfredsson (Michalek, Cowen) (sh)
Partial breakaway and Alfredsson beats Thiessen top shelf
9. Pittsburgh, Crosby
Gonchar gives the puck away and both O’Brien and Karlsson lose track of Crosby who is left all alone in the slot and makes no mistakes
10. Spezza (Michalek)
Spezza is sent in on a clear breakaway from his own blueline and beats Thiessen five-hole
11. Alfredsson (Foligno)
Foligno drives the net and Alfredsson is left all alone and he beats Thiessen on the back-hand
12. Greening (Karlsson, Spezza) (pp)
A great three-way passing play with a wide-open Greening deflecting the puck in

Top-performers:
Milan Michalek – broke out in a huge way tonight
Daniel Alfredsson – see above (a four point night!)
Craig Anderson – came in cold and was excellent in preventing the Penguins from coming back

Players Who Struggled:
Jared Cowen – was guilty on both of Cooke‘s goals

Senators News: March 24th

Ben Bishop will start tonight against Pittsburgh, which makes sense as I don’t think Paul MacLean wants to throw Craig Anderson to the wolves.

-Sens fans are starting to panic now that Ottawa has only won one of their last six.  I think everyone needs to take a deep breath and relax.  Whether the Sens make the playoffs or not doesn’t detract from how much better they’ve been this year given the expectations.  It’s worth keeping in mind that if they do make the playoffs they aren’t going to get past the first round, so how valuable is that experience really going to be for the roster?  That being said, it’s worth looking at the primary problem for the team: a lack of secondary scoring.  A number of players who are expected to produce are in the midst of deep funks:
Daniel Alfredsson (3 points in his last 12 games)
Kyle Turris (3 point s in his last 11 games)
Nick Foligno (3 points in his last 11 games)
Matt Gilroy (1 point in his 11 games as a Senator)
Sergei Gonchar (1 point in his last 13 games)
Bobby Butler (0 points in his last 10 games played)

Paul MacLean talked about last night’s loss, “Glad we don’t have to play them again. They certainly bring the worst out in us. We weren’t as prepared to play the game, play with enough discipline … It falls on the coaching staff to make sure the players are prepared to play.”

Kurt Kleinendorst talked about last night’s win, “We didn’t give up. I really like the way we’re playing. I told the guys that. It’s really fun for me to stand behind the bench and watch them play because we’ve worked awfully hard and haven’t had great results up to this point, but we’re working hard now and we are getting good results. I’m happy for our guys because individually you’re starting to see their growth and development.

-Sens prospect Chris Wideman‘s NCAA career is over (Miami lost 4-3 in OT) so he may be on his way to Binghamton sooner than later

Ottawa 1, Montreal 5; Binghamton 4, Rochester 3 (OT)

Tonight’s game was over early in the first period, as a rusty Anderson wasn’t ready and neither were the Sens.  Ottawa showed some fight after the game was 4-0, but it was too little, too late (with a little help from the video review boys in Toronto).  I think I mentioned it in the last game against Montreal, but is there any team that dives more than the Habs?  Regardless, the Sens took a number of pointless penalties throughout the game, so the officiating wasn’t a deciding factor.  Here’s the box score.

First Period
Anderson flubs the first shot he faces to give the Habs an early 1-0 lead.  Condra had a fantastic chance short-handed, but couldn’t beat Price one-on-one.  The Habs scored just after their powerplay expired, with Cole overpowering Karlsson to bang home a rebound, and afterward  Paul MacLean pulled AndersonBishop promptly made two big saves after Turris was late covering for a pinching Gonchar, but Gonchar took a penalty on the play and the Habs scored immediately off the faceoff with Cole left unchecked to bang in a rebound. Nokelainen made it 4-0 on a 2-on-1, beating Bishop short side.  The Sens finally answered at the end of the period as Spezza scored when left all alone in the front.  Neil took a pointless penalty in a scrum at the end of the period to give the Habs a powerplay to start the second.
Second Period
Anderson returned to the net to start the period.  Klinkhammer saves a goal short-handed, breaking up a cross-crease pass.  Alfredsson had a good goal waived off (it was called a high-stick)–if memory serves, the Sens have not had a video review goal ruled in their favour this year.  The Sens were dominating the period, but Konopka took a pointless penalty to put the Habs back on the power play.  The Sens continued to have most of the pressure after the kill, but couldn’t beat Price.
Third Period
A slow start to the period turned into a Montreal powerplay when an Alfredsson turnover lead to scoring opportunities for ColeEller scored on the man advantage after Anderson over committed on a pass-attempt.  Anderson subsequently stopped Nokelainen on a breakaway.  Of all the fights tonight the one I liked best was Neil coming to the defence of Karlsson after he was charged by Blunden–protect your best players.

A look at the goals:
1. Montreal, Cole
Anderson misplays the shot which beats him high through his glove
2. Montreal, Cole
Anderson gives up a rebound and Karlsson can’t control Cole in front who bangs home the loose puck
3. Montreal, Cole (pp)
Cole is left all alone and bangs home another rebound
4. Montreal, Nokelainen
Beats Bishop low short side on a 2-on-1
5. Spezza (Michalek, Phillips)
Michalek centers the puck and Spezza is left all alone and beats Price high
6. Montreal, Eller (pp)
Anderson over commits on a pass-attempt and can’t recover

Top-performers: there aren’t any top-performers in a game like tonight’s, but Chris Phillips and Filip Kuba were strong defensively.

Players Who Struggled:
Craig Anderson and Ben Bishop – collectively three bad goals allowed just won’t get it done
Matt Gilroy – still waiting for him to make an impact
Kyle Turris – he wasn’t terrible tonight, but he has to start producing

-Binghamton blew a 2-0 lead, but were able to come back to take the game into overtime and win it.  Robin Lehner made 25-saves for the win while David Dziurzynski, Mike Hoffman, Dan Henningson, and Eric Grbya (with the OT winner) scored for Binghamton.  Gryba finished a team-high +2 on the night, while Mark Parrish and Craig Schira were a team-worst -2.  Here’s the box score and Joy Lindsay‘s game summary.

-Elmira won 3-1 tonight, with Brian Stewart picking up the win and Corey Cowick adding a goal.  Bobby Raymond had no points in Florida’s win.

Senators News: March 23rd

Craig Anderson will start tonight, his first start since February 22nd.  Jason Spezza also returns to the lineup, with Bobby Butler expected to come out.

-Paul MacLean talked about tonight’s match-up, “We know it’s going to be a difficult game because every time we play them it’s a difficult game. The neutral zone is a big focus. They do a real good job there. It’s going to be up to us to make sure we don’t turn it into an obstacle for ourselves. We’re going to have to generate more scoring opportunities on Carey Price. He’s been a big factor in every game we’ve played them. We’re going to have to make sure that we try to be more relentless attacking their net.”

Eugene Melnyk‘s unfortunate tendency to speak on the record produced something dumb once again, “At the end of the day, I’ve got little ones, a nine and 13-year-old, and I’ll be damned if some guy is going to pour a beer on them or whatever, or curse.”  Swearing?  He wants to eliminate swearing in the arena?  Good luck with that.

Joy Lindsay Tweets that Robin Lehner is expected to start tonight.  Matt Puempel should debut in Sunday’s game.

The Hockey Writers list Ottawa’s top-ten prospects:
1. Mika Zibanejad (they expect him to play full-time with Ottawa next season)
2. Robin Lehner
3. Jakob Silfverberg (they think he will challenge for a roster spot)
4. Mark Stone
5. Stephane Da Costa (they compare him to Adam Oates)
6. Matt Puempel (they imply he will be in the AHL next year, but he’s too young to do that)
7. Stefan Noesen (they see him as a third-line winger)
8. Shane Prince (they aren’t sure if he’ll return to the OHL or play in the AHL next fall)
9. Patrick Wiercioch
10. Andre Petersson (they consider him a one-dimensional player along the lines of Linus Omark)

Lists like these are always good at generating debate, but there are always curious elements in them–the one that stands out for me is how little (if ever) organisational comments are considered when deciding on what’s going to happen to a player.  To pick one example, Bryan Murray has remarked that he thinks Andre Petersson is Jason Spezza‘s winger of the future (link)–I’ve seen that echoed nowhere in the prospect assessments that I’ve read.  If that’s how the GM feels it should reflect itself in how he’s viewed.

John-Eric Iannicello believes Jared Cowen is the top rookie in the Northeast division, although he doesn’t provide any clear reasons why.