Senators News: Feburary 13th; Ottawa 2, Buffalo 0

-Ottawa beat the Sabres 2-0 in a game lacking entertainment value; the Sabres dominating the first half of the game, but kept a long parade to the penalty box that combined with an inability to beat Craig Anderson could not sustain momentum their momentum.  Erik Karlsson and Erik Condra scored the goals (the former on a 3-on-2 shorthanded chance and the latter in a scramble in front of the net less than two minutes later).  The only other thing of note was Robyn Regehr running Alfredsson from behind for no particular reason.  Here’s the boxscore; Scott had the scoring chances 20/17.

-The Sens face Pittsburgh (8-5-0) tonight; the Pens are lead by Sidney Crosby (17 points) and backstopped by Marc-Andre Fleury (5-3-0 2.46 .906).  Patrick Wiercioch is being scratched in favour of Andre Benoit.

Adrian Dater has Ottawa 14th in his power ratings, who writes:

I’m in agreement with my colleague Mr. Muir on his early favorite for the  Vezina: Craig Anderson, who is big, quick and reads the play extremely well. He  may anticipate where the puck is going better than any goalie in the league.  Blueliner Erik Karlsson has been tremendous, too. It will still be tough without  Jason Spezza (back surgery), but if Anderson keeps playing this well, pencil  Ottawa in for another playoff berth.

-Binghamton crushed Wilkes-Barre 5-1 last night; Robin Lehner made 24 saves for the win while Shane Prince, Derek Grant, David Dziurzynski, Pat Cannone, and Jack Downing scored the goals.  Here’s the boxscoreNathan Lawson did not finish the game and Marc Cheverie has been recalled from Elmira, so is seems like there could be an injury situation.

-Elmira faces Reading (33-12-6) tonight; the Royals are lead by Yannick Tifu (46 points) and backstopped by Philipp Grubauer (19-5-1 2.30 .912).

-Here the latest prospect update (for players with more than 10 games played I’ve indicated where they are in scoring; for blueliners they are compared to other defensemen on the team):

CHL
Cody Ceci (OHL Ottawa/Owen Sound) 55-12-37-49 (1st)
Matt Puempel (OHL Kitchener) 38-24-9-33 (3rd)
Stefan Noesen (OHL Plymouth) 36-17-15-32 (7th)
Jordan Fransoo (WHL Victoria) 50-4-12-16 (3rd)
Jakub Culek (QMJHL Cape Breton) 9-4-3-7 (10th) (injured)
Jarrod Maidens (OHL Owen Sound) (injured)
Chris Driedger (WHL Calgary) 27-12-3 2.43 .918
Francois Brassard (QMJHL Quebec) 24-17-3 2.88 .904

Allsvenskan (Swe)
Mikael Wikstrand (Mora) 37-11-11-22 (1st) WJC 6-0-4-4 (1st)

KHL
Nikita Filatov (Salavat) 45-10-11-21 (6th)

NCAA
Ryan Dzingel (Ohio) – 30-13-15-28 (1st)
Jeff Costello (Notre Dame) – 22-7-15-22 (4th)
Max McCormick (Ohio) – 30-8-9-17 (3rd)
Bryce Aneloski (Nebraska-Omaha) – 29-4-13-17 (2nd)
Michael Sdao (Princeton) – 23-6-6-12 (1st)
Tim Boyle (Union) – 14-0-2-2 (t-6th)

USHL
Robbie Baillargeon (Indiana/Omaha) – 43-16-19-35 (1st)

-It didn’t take long for Columbus GM John Davidson to do the obvious and fire Scott Howson and then hire former Blues super scout Jarmo Kekalainen to take over the role.  The organisation will get better at long last.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 12th

-Ottawa faces Buffalo (5-7-1); the Sabres are lead by NHL scoring leader Thomas Vanek (23 points) and backstopped by Ryan Miller (5-5-1 2.98 .913).  Craig Anderson is expected to start; the only other change to the lineup is that Jim O’Brien slides in due to the injury to Peter Regin.

Paul MacLean talked about the production of his top players:

[Michalek] works so hard without the puck and with the puck that I think at some point in time he’s going to score. We’re not concerned. Yeah, we’re like everybody, we’d like to see him get two or three last week and this week, but I think he’s such a diligent player and conscientious player, that the puck is going to go in the net for him if he keeps working at it. Same with (Kyle) Turris. You can’t try to be something you’re not. The more you try to force things, the worse things usually get. So you if you just go out and allow for the structure of the team, and work hard at it, then their skill is eventually go to be there where they can find an opportunity.

Patrick Wiercioch talked about defending in the NHL:

I know it’s tough to defend, especially in the game up here. It’s so sound technically, with the systems, everyone has kind of got a guy. Any time you see a guy maybe breaking through or has that split second of opportunity, you try to give him the puck so he can do something with it. If it’s there I’ll go for it, doesn’t matter who it is. It’s more just the amount of time. I think a half second in this league is so crucial. If you’ve got a half second, even going back to the puck and turning out with the puck out of the corner, it opens up so much more opportunity. So even moving it up that much quicker to them hopefully gives them a chance to either make a play or keep going with it.

Scott looks at Senators scoring chances at the quarter pole (12 games in this shortened season) which for Corsi fans is a treat.

Mark Zwolinski thinks the Sens will trade to fill in for the injured Jason Spezza, but I have a hard time believing it.  There’s no real market of top centers and those available are on expiring contracts–the Sens would have to pay a hefty price for a rental and I just don’t see the point.  Ottawa is not a Stanley Cup contender so there’s no need to give up prospects to try and make the dance.

-Binghamton faces Wilkes-Barre (25-19-3); the Penguins are lead by Chad Kolarik (39 points) and backstopped by Jeff Zatkoff (16-12-0 1.96 .920).

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 11th

-Here are my thoughts on Saturday’s lossScott had the scoring chances 15-15, which definitely seems high on Ottawa’s side.  Ryan Classic thoughts on the game amused me (his emphasis on how bad the game was as entertainment is fully justified).  Ben Bishop and Stephane Da Costa were the only players Paul MacLean singled out as having had good games.

Stephane Da Costa talked about the difference in his play this season as compared to last:

I tried to cheat a little too much last year because I felt I wasn’t producing as much as I wanted to. And it just didn’t work for me. So I’m trying to be honest, and trying to play just how I can. When we play honest, that’s when the chances are coming more, I think.

A clear, honest assessment from Da Costa who probably needs to put on a few more pounds of muscle before he’s ready for prime time.

Mark Parisi‘s ups and downs seem more focussed on the funny than anything else, so any disagreement seems out of touch with the spirit of the piece.

Pierre LeBrun‘s power rankings have the Sens 18th, which if Pierre had to watch that tedious Winnipeg game is only appropriate.

Adam Proteau writes about San Jose GM Doug Wilson (and others) trying to get goalie equipment reduced–all I can say to that is good luck.  The league has talked about it for years and nothing has been accomplished.  It would be nice, but it’s just hard to see anything happening.

-Binghamton lost in back-to-back games on the weekend, first to 4-3 to Hershey and then 3-2 (SO) to AlbanyRobin Lehner took the loss in each, making 25 stops in the first and 44 in the second.  Jean-Gabriel Pageau, Derk Grant, Brett Lebda, and Corey Cowick and Hugh Jessiman scored.  Here are the highlights from Sunday’s game.

-Elmira defeated Wheeling 5-0 yesterday; Marc Cheverie picked up the shutout while Louie Caporusso added an assist.

Stu Hackel writes a long piece about fighting and “the code” which I think dances around making any kind of point.  The main take away should be that “the code” doesn’t really exist–it’s a term thrown around to justify things, but it’s completely meaningless because no one can really define it and it doesn’t dictate the actions of people on the ice.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Ottawa 0 Winnipeg 1

In what was a good road game for Winnipeg, but a bad game for entertainment, Ottawa fell 1-0 to the Jets and continued their habit that began in Carolina of giving mediocre goaltenders (Al Montoya) easy shutouts.  The Sens were awful in the first and mediocre to bad the rest of the way (their powerplay was atrocious).  Here’s the boxscore.

Game Notes
Peter Regin only played 3:48 before leaving the game with an injury
Ben Bishop was excellent in the loss
-it was a rough night for a number of players, but Erik Karlsson (lot’s of turnovers including the one that lead to the Jets only goal) and Mike Lundin (bad decisions and on his one scoring chance firing it at Montoya‘s chest) stood out among them
-the tendency of players to over pass the puck continues (Daugavins in the slot in the first springs to mind)
-it was a good night for Stephane Da Costa despite being unable to cash in on opportunities (his best was off a great pass from Patrick Wiercioch that sent him in all alone); he also threw a big hit on Ponikarovsky
Zack Smith took yet another dumb penalty in the game–I’m not sure how much reputation plays into that
Montoya‘s reaction to the win struck me as a little over the top

The Goal
1. Winnipeg, Ponikarovsky
Karlsson turns it over and Ponikarovsky tips Enstrom’s shot passed Bishop

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 8th

-A quiet night on the Sens front as neither Ottawa nor Binghamton plays tonight.

Mark Borowiecki was re-assigned to Binghamton which is no surprise with Mike Lundin healthy.  He’ll be a big boost for Binghamton and may be the ticket for Ben Blood to return to Elmira–I missed my chance to look smart as that change has now been announced.

-Here are my thoughts on last night’s 3-2 loss to CarolinaScott had the scoring chances at 26-20.

-Elmira faces Kalamazoo tonight; the Wings are lead by Aaron Clarke (35 points) and backstopped by Joel Martin (19-17-5 2.64 .920).

Pierre LeBrun and Adam Proteau wonder if having a third referee would help avoid mistakes on the ice and I just don’t see it.  Officiating in the NHL has always been capricious and that will continue no matter how many refs are involved.

-I wrote about how many former Hartford Whalers were coaches (looking specifically at the 88-89 roster) last April; Tal Pinchevsky writes about the topic (but broadly for the Whalers) for NHL.com.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Ottawa 2 Carolina 3 (OT)

Last night the Sens gave up two one-goal leads and lost to Carolina 3-2 in overtime.  It was an entertaining game and unfortunate result for the Sens who may have deserved a better fate.  Here’s the boxscore.

Game Notes
Peter Regin continues to be snake bitten as he had a number of good scoring opportunities (including  a pair in overtime)
-The Sens had a good number of excellent scoring chances but could not cash in–often missing the net (like Chris Neil in the first) or catching iron (like Colin Greening in the third)
-The posts were kind to Ottawa as well, as Semin hit one late in the first off a Kyle Turris turnover
Da Costa looked better tonight but was unable to get his shots on net when he had scoring chances
-It didn’t result in a goal, but Zack Smith took a dumb boarding penalty on Jeff Skinner in the first (speaking of Skinner, does anyone hold other players sticks more than that guy?)
-Ottawa’s defensive play in the second period was pretty loose and directly lead to Carolina’s first goal

The Goals
1. Karlsson (Silfverberg, Smith)
Silfverberg makes one of those extra passes that almost never works…but it worked and gave Karlsson an empty net
2. Carolina, Larose
Beats Anderson on a clear breakaway
3. Alfredsson (Turris, Gonchar)
Scores from a near impossible angle (high short side)
4. Carolina, Semin (pp)
Scores from the slot on the powerplay
5. Carolina, Harrison
Breakdown in OT leaves Harrison alone in front (Silfverberg gets way out of position) and he makes no mistake

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 7th; Binghamton 3, Adirondack 0

-Ottawa plays Carolina (4-4-0) tonight; the Canes are lead by Eric Staal (10 points) and backstopped by Cam Ward (2-3-0 3.43 .895).  Both Sergei Gonchar and Mike Lundin are expected to play, so Patrick Wiercioch and Mark Borowiecki will sit.

Daniel Alfredsson talked about Jakob Silfverberg‘s play:

He’s a guy that plays well in all situations, knows the defensive side and the offensive side of the game, and knows what it takes to win. He’s done that a couple of times now. I remember in Florida, same thing in the third period he goes down, blocks a shot and we get a breakaway out of it. He’s a really smart player to go along with his offensive instincts. I think he’s probably got one of the best shots in the league and if I was a kid, I’d definitely study the way he shoots the puck.

-Here’s my look at Ottawa at the 10-game mark.

-Binghamton defeated Adirondack 3-0 last night in a game I was unable to watch.  Robin Lehner made 29 saves for the shutout while Corey Cowick, Danny New, and Brett Lebda (empty-netter) provided the offense.  Here is the box score.

-Elmira defeated Reading 6-4 with Louie Caporusso picking up 3 points.  Marc Cheverie has been sent down to Elmira.

Brandon Dubinsky was fined the maximum $10,000 dollars for boarding Rob Scuderi; given Dubinsky‘s 4.2 million dollar salary is 0.2% of this years earnings (so if you made $30,000 a year it would cost you $71.42).  I know this is the maximum fine in the CBA, but to make a real statement the NHL would have suspended him for games, not asked him to cover a movie night for a few friends.

-Michael Grange has a story about how Colton Orr‘s weight was a major problem for him keeping up with the pace of the NHL because of how it interfered with his skating.  Orr is the kind of player Randy Carlyle likes, but Grange carefully does not delve into the general value of fighting or how (if) it impacts the outcomes of games (something that has been debunked repeatedly: here, here, here, etc).

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Ottawa Senators at the 10-Game Mark

Ottawa has reached the 10-game mark and it’s time to take stock and see how the team has performed.  The Sens went 6-3-1 which puts them 5th in the conference and 2nd in the division.  Their 29 goals for is tied for fourth in the conference and their 19 goals against is tied for second.  Ottawa has the 4th best powerplay (27.3%) despite being 29th in the league in powerplay time awarded; they have the 3rd best penalty killing (90.9%) while being the 9th most penalized team, and they have the 4th best 5-on-5 goals for/against ratio (1.50).

Player’s stats (INJ=games missed due to injury, SCR= scratched, SUS=suspended, AHL=games in the NHL):

Kyle Turris 10-4-5-9 +3 TOI 18:12
Erik Karlsson 10-4-4-8 +5 TOI 28:17
Milan Michalek 10-2-5-7 +4 TOI 18:16
Daniel Alfredsson 9-2-4-6 -2 TOI 17:37 INJ 1
Jason Spezza 5-2-3-5 +3 TOI 19:10 INJ 5
Chris Neil 10-3-1-4 +3 TOI 12:29
Sergei Gonchar 7-1-3-4 +1 TOI 23:56 INJ 3
Colin Greening 10-1-3-4 +4 TOI 14:19
Zack Smith 10-0-4-4 -1 TOI 13:45
Patrick Wiercioch 8-0-4-4 +2 TOI 14:19 SCR 2
Chris Phillips 10-3-0-3 -2 TOI 19:35
Jim O’Brien 10-3-0-3 Even TOI 11:49
Erik Condra 10-1-2-3 +3 TOI 13:08
Mika Zibanejad 5-1-2-3 Even TOI 12:02 [AHL 4-2-0-2 +3]
Marc Methot 10-0-3-3 +3 TOI 23:29
Andre Benoit 9-0-3-3 +2 TOI 15:25 SCR 1
Jakob Silfverberg 10-2-0-2 +3 TOI 14:26
Peter Regin 10-0-2-2 Even TOI 11:39
Guillaume Latendresse 6-0-1-1 +1 TOI 13:12 INJ 4
Kaspars Daugavins 4-0-1-1 -4 TOI 9:25 SCR 6
Mark Borowiecki 6-0-0-0 +1 TOI 12:59 SCR 4
Stephane Da Costa 1-0-0-0 Even TOI 6:56 [AHL 6-0-3-3 +1]

Craig Anderson 6-2-1 1.33 .956
Ben Bishop 0-1-0 5.00 .833

A number of things stand out: Anderson‘s ridiculous numbers; Karlsson leads the team in plus/minus while the rarely used (scratched most often) Daugavins is at the bottom of that category.  Peter Regin was awful offensively until the tenth game of the season and it will be interesting to see if the slump or the good game is the aberration.  Zibanejad has been more productive than Silfverberg in less action, but that’s not to say that Silfverberg has played poorly.  Among the AHL blueliners Benoit has played the most and Wiercioch has produced the most, which is what I’d expect.  Latendresse has been injured (as expected), but unproductive when he’s been in the lineup.  Methot has been largely as advertised; Phillips has the worst plus/minus among blueliners.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 6th

-Here are my thoughts on last night’s game and here are Paul MacLean‘s:

I thought Peter Regin was very good tonight, Stephane Da Costa played very well for us. (Erik) Karlsson, I thought, was outstanding in the game. Mark Borowiecki had his best game to this point. Patrick Wiercioch was fine. Andre Benoit was fine. The team, as a group, really showed a good work ethic and we stuck to the structure of our team. We did a better job of getting the puck to the net and getting some opportunities and playing not as tentative offensively. We’ve got to find the right guys to put on the ice after we score a goal. The experiment is not working with what we’re doing. The shifts right after goals, for and against, are always real important and the last two (games), we get the lead and then within 20 or 30 seconds, they’ve got the game tied up, so we’ve got to do a much better job of being focussed at those times in the games. Those are big shifts that we can maintain momentum or give momentum back.

It’s interesting who MacLean singled out beyond the obvious (Karlsson and Regin): young players for the most part (Da Costa and Borowiecki barely played in last night’s game).  MacLean has a strong tendency to stroke his young players in the media (much like Luke Richardson does in Binghamton), which is all to the good.  Speaking of Regin, he had this to say:

Of course, it has been awhile. I had high expectations for myself coming into this season. It has been a long time and maybe the timing has been a little off and it took a more time than I was hoping or expecting.

Scott had the scoring chances 14-10 for Ottawa.

-Binghamton plays Adirondack (18-22-3) tonight; the Phantoms are lead by Danny Syvret (22 points) and backstopped by Scott Munroe (9-11-0 2.65 .913).

-Elmira plays Reading (31-11-5) tonight; Reading is lead by Yannick Tifu (43 points) and backstopped by Philipp Grubauer (19-5-1 2.30 .912).

Stu Hackel takes a look at the early surprises this season; there’s nothing Ottawa-related here, but it’s worth checking out.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Ottawa 4 Buffalo 3

Ottawa beat the Buffalo Sabres 4-3 last night in entertaining fashion.  The Sens piled up a 4-1 lead midway through, but loose play made for a dramatically close finish.  Here’s the boxscore.

Game Notes
-It was back to the usual random officiating this evening; it had no major impact on the game
Da Costa struggled early, but overall played decently in very limited ice time (a team low 6:56; Mark Borowiecki was the only player who appeared for less than 10 minutes)
-Does anyone fall more than Mika Zibanejad?  He made some great plays tonight, but virtually every shift he was off his feet
Peter Regin may have finally found his confidence as he picked up a couple of assists and started to shoot the puck more
Marc Methot had the hit on the night, slamming Vanek into the boards in the first period
-Although he only wound up with one assist Kyle Turris was excellent
-It seems to go without saying these days, but Erik Karlsson was dominant

The Goals
1. Karlsson (Turris, Michalek) (pp)
Shoots a soft shot through a screen
2. Buffalo, Ennis
Phillips attempts (and fails) to block a shot and Neil doesn’t collapse to cover for him, leaving Ennis wide open to cash in the rebound
3. Phillips (Regin)
Simple shot simply goes through Enroth
4. Alfredsson (Zibanejad)
Great turnover by Zibanejad who sets up Alfredsson in the slot
5. Neil (Regin, Smith)
Regin makes a great pass to a wide open Neil in the slot
6. Buffalo, Leopold
Leopold gets lost in coverage and tips the puck in
7. Buffalo, Pominville
The goal was initially waived off; the puck bounced off Pominville’s ankle

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)