Senators News: February 5th

-Ottawa plays Buffalo (3-5-1) tonight; the Sabres are lead by NHL leading scorer Tomas Vanek (19 points; no one is mocking his contract this season) and backstopped by the always opinionated Ryan Miller (3-4-1 3.11 .906).

Paul MacLean talked about the tendency of the team to over pass the puck:

I call it ‘Give it to Johnny’, because we’re always trying to pass to the other guy, because Johnny has a better shot than I have or Johnny is in a better place. I thought we were tight, I didn’t think we were loose and confident with the puck.

I think the confidence comment is the right one–there are a lot of Sens right now who are afraid to shoot.

Nichols shares thoughts on Stephane Da Costa‘s recall and he’s exactly right that he’s in Ottawa because Peter Regin isn’t performing.  I’m with Nichols in liking Regin, but he’s a player who has clearly lost his confidence and in the absence of Jason Spezza he does have to start producing.  I’m not sure Da Costa is really ready for prime time, but he is an offensively gifted player who could help.

Varada has a rambling piece which I think is about the rebuild, but there isn’t much meat on the bones.  I did want to comment on one thing he said:

Silfverberg and Stone both kind of came out of nowhere, projected to either be lower pairing players or not play in the NHL at all.

Admittedly Varada might mean fans had this perspective, but that’s not true within the scouting community or the organisation.  Stone is a surprise, but his stock was badly hurt in his draft year due to injury and playing on a stacked team, while Silfverberg was always projected as an NHL player (you can read Pierre Dorion‘s comments here and scouting thoughts on Stone here).

-Former NHLer Brett Ledba has signed a PTO with Binghamton; Ledba was playing with Rockford (27-0-11-11) where he sported an ugly -12 rating.  With Robin Lehner around to clean up his mistakes he looks like a useful addition to Binghamton’s depleted blueline.

Bobby Kelly looks at the weekend that was for Binghamton and makes a good point that David Dziurzynski is missing out on an excellent opportunity to see some NHL action.  After receiving praise last season he’s struggled this year and has been unable to step up in the absence of so many of Binghamton’s top players.

-I’m starting to think virtually every draft year (excluding 2010 which was considered a stinker throughout) is going to start with praise for its depth and then see that opinion change.  The Sens have done pretty well in these circumstances under Bryan Murray, but it is food for thought.

-Here’s a very long blog about the Penguins move away from European players–Don Cherry must be proud!

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 4th

-As reported by SensProspects yesterday Stephane Da Costa has been recalled by the Senators.  The lines at practice are: Zibanejad-Turris-Alfredsson, Michalek-Smith-Silfverberg, Greening-Regin-Neil, O’Brien-Da Costa-Condra.  I like Regin with physical players–maybe he’ll find his confidence there.  I don’t like Smith playing in the top six.  I wish Paul MacLean would give up putting Chris Neil, Zack Smith, and Colin Greening on the powerplay–they don’t produce enough, can’t distribute the puck, and Neil has taken penalties several times already.

-Here are my thoughts on Ottawa’s 2-1 loss to Montreal, including links to Greg Kimmerly’s wonderful history with the Sens.  Scott has the scoring chances 16-18, which seems about right.  The Raaymaker talks about the blown call (Allan Muir also makes note of it) and I agree with his summation:

in the end, Ottawa lost the game, and the waved-off goal wasn’t the only reason for that.

Can’t say I agree with his Michalek comments (echoed by Mark Parisi below) nor that Carey Price is a Sens killer–Ottawa just didn’t put enough pressure on Price, so credit the defense not the goaltending.

Mark Parisi offers his ups and downs for the Sens week that was.  I largely agree with Mark, although not about his downward trend for Michalek (who has always been a streaky scorer) or Latendresse (who is sick).  Mark apparently agrees with Adnan that Silfverberg was previously “invisible”, a standard which apparently can’t be defined but must remain in the eye of the beholder.

Scott Burnside offers up his power rankings and has Ottawa 10th.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Ottawa 1 Montreal 2

Today’s Ottawa-Montreal was watched with the mute button firmly pressed–I didn’t want my ears assaulted by the lamentable Bob Cole.  The game itself was a decent one, albeit the Sens continue to get no love from the officiating crews (Greg Kimmerly and Brian Pochmara–we remember Kimmerly very well from his past performances) and unfortunately they affected the outcome of the game with a bad no-goal call in the third period.  Here’s the boxscore.

Game Notes
-It was a great pass and a great shot by Patrick Wiercioch and Jakob Silfverberg for Ottawa’s first goal (a rebuttal to Adnan‘s invisible claim if nothing else)
Mark Borowiecki continues to struggle with decisions in his own end, abandoning the front of the net which allowed the Habs to tie the game
Peter Regin has completely lost his confidence (he was a team worst -2), as he choose to make a one-time pass rather than shot with a clear lane after Silfverberg served him up
Regin wasn’t the only one over passing, as several chances in front were botched by last ditch pass attempts (Jim O’Brien and Erik Condra come to mind)
-Unfortunately the only thing fans will be talking about in this game is the phantom call that negated the goal–I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: NHL officiating is awful–you just have to accept it and work through it because it’s not going to change

The Goals
1. Silfverberg (Wiercioch, Turris) (pp)
Fantastic pass from Wiercioch gives Silfverberg the breakaway and he makes no mistake
2. Montreal, Desharnais
Borowiecki leaves the front of the net no one covers for him, leaving Desharnais all alone to slide the puck under Anderson
3. Montreal, Cole
Anderson over commits to the cross ice feed and the deflected puck gives Cole a wide open net

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 3rd; Binghamton 0 St. John’s 1

Paul MacLean reflected on their loss to Carolina:

I think our execution level again is something we need to continue to work at. I thought the game was pretty fast I thought they were at times quicker than we were, especially on their forecheck, which led to some poor execution by us. But at the same time, it was a 1-0 game and we had an opportunity to tie it late in the game

I have to agree wholeheartedly with MacLean that a lack of execution was a big problem in the Sens loss.  Scott had the scoring chances 16-21, which seems about right.

-MacLean expects no lineup changes played for this afternoon’s game against the Habs (5-2-0); Montreal is lead by Andrei Markov and Raphael Diaz (8 points each) and backstopped by Carey Price (5-1-0 1.82 .932).

Nichols wonders both about the long term future of Jason Spezza as well as the short-term impact on the Sens this season.  In terms of the latter, I agree with Nichols that it’s a excellent opportunity for the centers in the organisation to try and impress.  Fans need to remember the organisation is still in the midst of a rebuild and making the playoffs is more of a bonus than a necessity (particularly given how good the draft class of 2013 is).  In the former case, the future, I think the Sens have to hope that Kyle Turris can step into Spezza‘s shoes, given that I agree with Nichols that Jason‘s injury history is a big red flag.

-It was a rare telecast of the Binghamton Senators last night (a 1-0 loss to St. John’s; here’s the boxscore) and I caught the action and have a few thoughts:
>Robin Lehner was excellent
>the dumb penalty quotient was high, with Danny New, Derek Grant, Chris Wideman, and Darren Kramer all taking them; Kramer‘s was by far the worst as it not only lead to a goal, but it was the first of four straight which killed whatever momentum Binghamton had at that point
>the team had an awful start and didn’t generate a scoring chance until the 14 minute mark of the first period
>Eric Gryba was far and away the best defenseman for Binghamton, although he did get burned on the IceCaps only goal as O’Dell simply skated around him
>Ben Blood continues to struggle; losing battles along the board and getting lost positionally
>It was a game of ups and downs for Jean-Gabriel Pageau; he had some golden chances in the game, but also made a brutal turnover in the third period that lead to a 2-on-1 for St. John’s; he also ate a huge hit by Arsene and I’ve noticed throughout the year that he struggles to avoid open ice hits
>Pat Cannone needs something to change; his body language is terrible and he clearly lacks confidence (even failing to make an open five-foot pass on the powerplay)
>Hugh Jessiman was completely invisible for two periods
>Tyler Eckford‘s only notable play was to make a lazy turnover on the PK in the third
>Grant had the best chance offensively for Binghamton

-Elmira defeated Evansville 3-1 last night; Louie Caporusso picked up a goal

Stu Hackel looks at Gary Bettman’s 20-years as NHL commissioner and its worth reading.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 2nd; Binghamton 2, St. John’s 4

-Here are my thoughts on Ottawa’s 1-0 loss to Carolina last night.  There’s not much to say about Adnan‘s recap other than I disagree with him that Jakob Silfverberg was invisible.

-For those who missed it, Craig Anderson was named the NHL’s first star of the month.

-Binghamton lost 4-2 to St. John’s last night; Robin Lehner made 30 saves in the loss while Jean-Gabriel Pageau and Shane Prince provided the offense.  The B-Sens were shorthanded 9 times and everything I’ve read about the game said they played terribly.  Here’s the boxscore.  Binghamton faces St. John’s again this evening.

-Elmira lost 4-1 to Toledo last night, with Louie Caporusso picking up the Jackals only goal.

-The farcial Phoenix ownership situation continues as Greg Jamison missed his deadline on a sweetheart deal and now a hardline group of city councillors will make it impossible for he (or anyone else) to get the same.  It’s seemed inevitable from the beginning of the process that the Coyotes will move, but the question remains when and where.

-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) 52-12-35-47 (1st)
Matt Puempel (OHL Kitchener) 34-23-8-31 (2nd)
Stefan Noesen (OHL Plymouth) 33-17-13-30 (7th)
Jordan Fransoo (WHL Victoria) 45-3-10-13 (3rd)
Jakub Culek (QMJHL Cape Breton) 9-4-3-7 (10th) (injured)
Jarrod Maidens (OHL Owen Sound) (injured)
Chris Driedger (WHL Calgary) 25-11-3 2.41 .916
Francois Brassard (QMJHL Quebec) 23-15-3 2.90 .903

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

KHL
Nikita Filatov (Salavat) 43-9-11-20 (4th)

NCAA
Ryan Dzingel (Ohio) – 27-12-13-25 (1st)
Max McCormick (Ohio) – 27-8-8-16 (3rd)
Jeff Costello (Notre Dame) – 19-6-10-16 (6th)
Bryce Aneloski (Nebraska-Omaha) – 26-4-11-15 (2nd)
Michael Sdao (Princeton) – 20-6-6-12 (1st)
Tim Boyle (Union) – 14-0-2-2 (t-6th)

USHL
Robbie Baillargeon (Indiana/Omaha) – 40-14-16-30 (t-1st)

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Ottawa 1 Carolina 0

In one of the least entertaining games of the season the Sens lost 1-0 to Carolina.  The game was filled with lacklustre play, mental errors, and without any energy whatsoever.  Here’s the boxscore.

Game Notes
-Ottawa started with a whimper, getting an early powerplay they did nothing with (a theme for their powerplay in general)
-Paul MacLean put the lines into the blender eventually, but the third line struggled defensively beforehand
-a rough night for Kaspars Daugavins who had trouble handling the puck; it was particularly rough when he lost control of the puck on a 2-on-1 shorthanded break in the first
-on the dumb penalty side of things both Marc Methot (2nd period) and Zack Smith (3rd period) were guilty
Methot, who didn’t have a great game, did save a goal in the third; not to be outdone, Alfredsson made a great play in the second that prevented Semin from going in alone on Anderson
-it has been a rough start to the season for Peter Regin (who apparently changed his stick this season), but he’s a lot better playing with top players

The Goal
1. Carolina, Staal
Makes a nice tip (Methot was slightly out of position and unable to tie up his stick)

I have no idea what to make of this game.  It wasn’t a lack of effort, but a lack of execution.  Dan Ellis (who got the win and the shutout) wasn’t particularly good, but the Sens just didn’t put enough pucks on net.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: February 1st

-Ottawa faces Carolina (2-3-0) tonight; the Canes are lead by Eric Staal (6 points) and backstopped by Cam Ward (1-3-0 4.50 .861).  Sergei Gonchar is back, so Mark Borowiecki sits; Guillaume Latendresse is out with the flu (presumably Kaspars Daugavins will be inserted).

Scott provides the scoring chances in the Montreal game (13-15).

Varada and James debate whether Craig Anderson is the best goaltender Ottawa has ever had.  Varada says:

Andy might be playing behind one of the weakest Senators teams of the last several years, and he’s outright stealing games.

Are they one of the weakest Sens teams?  I think that’s debatable (the first Sens team to make the playoffs was pretty awful).  It’s fun to speculate, but as James points out the sample size it just too small at this point.

-Binghamton faces St. John’s (19-22-3) tonight; the IceCaps are lead by Jason Jaffrey (23 points) and backstopped by Eddie Pasquale (12-15-2 2.58 .916).

-Elmira plays Toledo (24-17-4) tonight; the Walleye’s are lead by Willie Coetzee and Andrej Nestrasil (37 points) and backstopped by Mark Guggenberger (16-6-3 2.36 .909).

-The Jackals traded Matt Campanale to Las Vegas in return for forward Matt Carter (29-2-3-5) and blueliner Cameron Cooper (13-0-1-1).

-I’ve got to think fighting fans are thrilled that Shawn Thornton was concussed by John Scott last night.  Getting punched in the face is an important part of the game, especially when the puncher can’t actually play hockey.  Scott had this to say:

You never want to hurt somebody.

Really?  You punch people in the face, but you don’t want to hurt anyone?  Maybe Scott has a concussion too….

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: January 31st

-The big news is that Jason Spezza is out indefinitely as he will have back surgery.  The Sens historically are not good without Spezza so it will be interesting to see how they manage in his absence.

-Here are my thoughts on last night’s game.

Alfredsson talked about dealing with frustration with the first period of last night’s game:

We kind of told ourselves after the first that we thought we got a couple of calls against us that were tough and we just have to keep moving our feet and we’ll get some power plays and it’s nice when you can capitalize on it.

-Binghamton has recalled Darren Kramer and Dustin Gazley while signing Elmira d-man Kyle Bushee to a PTO.

-Elmira suspended Justin DaCosta who signed a deal with Kookoo in the Finnish second division.  The departure to Europe is also why the team suspended Artem Demkov not long ago (he’s playing for Hamburg in the DEL).

Bob McKenzie‘s mid-season draft rankings are out (I’ve put ISS‘ rankings, where different, in brackets, with NR designating the player did not make their top-30):
1. Seth Jones
2. Nate MacKinnon
3. Jonathan Drouin
4. Aleksander Barkov
5. Elias Lindholm (6)
6. Sean Monahan (5)
7. Rasmus Ristolainen (8)
8. Hunter Shinkaruk (14)
9. Nikita Zadorov
10. Valeri Nichushkin (7)
11. Alexander Wennberg (21)
12. Darnell Nurse (10)
13. Frederik Gauthier (19)
14. Andre Burakowsky (18)
15. Ryan Pulock (17)
16. Adam Erne (15)
17. Anthony Mantha (NR)
18. Max Domi (28)
19. Bo Horvat (22)
20. Josh Morrissey
21. Mirco Mueller (NR)
22. Zachary Fucale (NR)
23. Kerby Rychel (27)
24. Jason Dickinson (13)
25. Curtis Lazar (11)
26. Jacob De La Rose (NR)
27. Valentin Zykov (16)
28. Ryan Hartman (25)
29. Robert Hagg (12)
30. J. T. Compher (26)

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Ottawa 5 Montreal 1

Ottawa overcame the absence of Jason Spezza and Sergei Gonchar, along with an early deficit and a sluggish first period, to crush Montreal 5-1.  Craig Anderson made 31-saves for the win, but did not need to be dominating to secure the win.  Here’s the boxscore.

Game Notes
-Despite two fights and a ton of penalties the game was not particularly explosive
-Speaking of fights, both were completely incidental and irrelevant (particularly Zack Smith‘s)
Smith came close to an own-goal in the third as he cleared the puck off his own post
Chris Neil took two dumb penalties (one while on the powerplay), but he did score late
Mark Borowiecki continues to struggle and had a particularly egregious turnover in the third
-Along with his goal Jim O’Brien had a short-handed breakaway
-So many NHL teams front their goaltenders to block shots, but tonight the Sens were able to benefit from the strategy as three of their goals were second chances off blocks and a fourth was deflected in by a defender attempting to block
Anderson‘s best save was off Prust point-blank in the third
-Despite playing well Zibanejad had the least amount of ice time on the team

The Goals
1. Montreal, Plekanec (pp)
Anderson stumbles and is unable to stop the puck from trickling through his feet
2. O’Brien (Karlsson, Condra)
Bangs in Karlsson‘s shot after its blocked by the crowd in front
3. Alfredsson (Wiercioch, Turris) (pp)
Wiercioch‘s point shot is blocked and Alfredsson hammers home the loose puck; it was a nice break for Alfie as just moments before he rang a shot off the post
4. Zibanejad (Greening, Benoit) (pp)
Big slapper deflects off Habs defender through Budaj
5. Phillips (Smith, Greening)
Hammers home the puck from the slot
6. Neil (Benoit, Smith)
Another shot blocked in front gets cashed in on the wrap-around

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: January 30th

-Ottawa plays Montreal (4-1-0) tonight; the Habs are lead by Andrei Markov and Raphael Diaz (7 points) and are backstopped by Carey Price (4-1-0 1.98 .924).  Jason Spezza will miss the game as he remains injured.

-Here are my thoughts on last night’s gameScott had the scoring chances 10-14.  Jeremy Milks has a good blog talking about the game and the performances of individual players, but as always he can’t stop beating a dead horse:

Keith Jones on NBC last night said he liked the increase in fighting this year and had no problem with fights off the opening faceoff. As a longtime NHL player, Jones understands the motivation behind it. While most journalists and commentators shift ncomfortably when the subject comes up because they don’t want to come off as barbarians in today’s buttoned-down environment, Jones was genuine about it and didn’t try to soften it up for the viewers.

What is Jeremy’s point?  All I can see is that Keith Jones likes fighting which is good because fighting makes some people uncomfortable.

Nichols continues his yeoman’s work of transcribing interviews and in this case it’s Paul MacLean who had the following to say:

Well it is for sure. Again, it’s like a playoff mode where you have to have the ol’ three legged stool of power play, penalty killing and goaltending. I think that’s really what it is right now and for us, we’d really help our penalty killers and our goalie a lot if we didn’t take our five or six minor penalties every night. Again, that sense of sloppiness and execution in our game, if we clean that part up, we feel we’ll take less penalties. You’re taking penalties because you make a bad pass and you turnover a puck and now you’re reaching to try and recover from a play and you wind up taking a penalty. So if we can get that execution stuff cleaned up, it’s going to help us a lot.

On Craig Anderson:

One thing about Craig, he’s very athletic and he’s a lean athlete…and he’s very competitive. I think the work he did is a little bit different than some of the other (guys). He didn’t just go out there and stop tons of pucks, like you said, you’re playing three-on-three or four-on-four and get into bad habits. So he ended up with Francois Allaire and Roberto Luongo in Florida at his house and community rink down there. They actually did the goalie-specific stuff that Francois is very well known for being very good at it. Craig’s not the typical Francois Allaire goaltender, but still, at the same time, the drills and stuff that is goalie specific that (Francois) put them through – I think it’s really helped him well and served him well to this point.

On Kyle Turris:

The work that he put in with Chris Schwarz at the end of last season has given him confidence. He has grown into a man. The difference of, last year at times, he’d going in and put his arm out and he’d be looking up at the ref because he’s the guy going down. Now he goes in and he puts his arm or body on somebody and maybe that guy is going down. Or more importantly, he’s staying up. He’s not the guy that is down on the ice anymore; and that gives (him) a lot of confidence. If you can feel strong and stable on your skates, it gives you tons of confidence. I think his maturity and his growing into his body and being stronger has really helped him a lot and that’s given him confidence. We challenged him last night to play against Sidney Crosby and to try and do a job on him. Yeah, they had some scoring opportunities and (Kyle’s line) had some scoring opportunities. But for the most part, it was a one-one game and Crosby wasn’t… he was still a factor in the game… but at the same time, I thought Kyle’s group did a very nice job against him.

And that’s a challenge that he is going to have to take on. If he’s going to be the number two centerman, he’s either playing against Malkin or a Crosby. And he’s going to be playing against… you go down the list, it’s Plekanec or somebody else in Montreal. In Boston, it’s going to be Krejci or Bergeron – one of those guys. When you’re starting to play against the better guys in the league, you have to be aware of what’s going on. You have to be focused on what it is. And you can’t just do it one night. Like he did it last night and that’s great, but now we’re playing Washington tomorrow so, who is it? Is it Backstrom tomorrow night? You’ve got to do it every night and you have to do it against the good guys every night and that’s going to be the test – our team, like every team, — is the consistency and our ability to get to that level and stay there.

On Jakob Silfverberg:

Well I think, I agree (that he is close to breaking out) because when he was in Binghamton at the start of the year, when I was down there watching him, he’s very similar to that type of player right now. He’s a smart enough player to, he can play the game and he’s kind of feeling his way around and where he can be successful and getting some comfort with the league and with the players. I agree that at some point here, the puck is going to start going in the net for him and he’s going to start making plays and things are going to start to happen for him. Yeah, he just has not played in the NHL [excluding two playoff games last year]. I mean, he’s played in the (Swedish Elite League) and he’s been an elite player. I think he shows that in the way that he’s got his way around the AHL at the start, and ended up being a really consistent player for Luke (Richardson) down there. And I think as we’ve talked about, he’s starting to do the same thing up here for us and at some point, he’s going to start to produce some offence. He does all the good things without the puck. Defensively, very little schooling as to being in the right place (is necessary) and being inside, he knows how to get around the rink. He knows his way around the rink and I think he’s used to the smaller rink here in North America from playing in Binghamton. Now he’s just getting used to being in the National Hockey League where things are just a little bit quicker and he’s starting to catch up with it, and I think he’s going to be fine.

On the young blueliners:

Well, I think that we can assess it that they can all play in the league; it’s whether or not we can play them all at the same time is the one concern we have. I think Andre Benoit may not have played in the National Hockey League but he has a lot of experience in the (AHL) and he played in the KHL. So he gives us a little bit of a veteran presence and a comfort that … Patrick (Wiercioch) played with him in Binghamton and (Mark) Borowiecki played some with him in Binghamton as well, so there’s a partner that they know and  have a comfort level on the ice with him. We’ve played each of them a little bit with Sergei (Gonchar) on the left side and some with Phillips as well. We felt in the first three games that Patrick Wiercioch played fine. Wiercioch and Borowiecki are two different players. Patrick can get the puck moving and he’s a puck-mover, and he can get it moving. The play that he made on the power play on the Turris goal in the home opener here was a great play; a NHL-type play. Well, Borowiecki made a couple of NHL-type plays last night. One-on-one (with) Malkin, (Borowiecki) was physical; that’s the element that Borowiecki brings. He doesn’t bring that puck-moving eliteness that Patrick does but Patrick doesn’t bring the physicality that Borowiecki (brings). You can compare the apple to the orange, but I think both of them I think are ready to play in the National Hockey League… it’s whether we have enough ice-time or patience to keep them out there at the same time, is a challenge that we have. But the more we play them and the more we see them, the (higher) comfort level we’re going to find with them. And then we have to factor in the Michael Lundin when he comes back. He’s a player that is totally forgotten. He’s an NHL defenceman. He can skate. He can move the puck. He can do some things that are a combination of maybe what (Borowiecki and Wiercioch) bring. Right now, we just have to wait and let that sort itself out. (Lundin’s) not close (to returning). I think he had the pins taken out of his fingers yesterday or the day before. But, he’s still not skating with the team yet until he gets the proper flexibility and that could be, I’m going to take a guess and say another ten days at least before he gets to skate with us. And then it could be another ten days before he even gets into the lineup. We’ll see how it is, but we’re looking forward to getting him into practice to see what he can do.

Adrian Dater offers his power rankings with Ottawa 14th, saying:

This remains a surprisingly good team. Not great, but good. Goalie Craig  Anderson continues to play superbly in net, posting a .975 saves percentage  through his first four starts. The Avalanche didn’t want to pay him after he  took them to the playoffs in 2009 and dealt him away for Brian Elliott, who  later moved on to St. Louis as a free agent. Now Anderson and Elliott are two of  the top goalies in the league. Erik Karlsson is showing that last year’s Norris  Trophy wasn’t a fluke, with five points and a plus-5 in his first five games.  And how about Kyle Turris, with four goals in his first five?

Robin Lehner was named the AHL’s player of the week.

Stefan G:Son explores why Sens prospect Mikael Wikstrand decided to re-sign with Mora in the Allsvenskan rather than sign with an SEL club.  He quotes Wikstrand:

Ottawa said it was up to me, but at the same time they obviously wanted me in the SEL, I know what I can get here in Mora. Lots of time on the power play and the kill and the time to develop my game. There were lots of clubs calling, actually, but I felt that I wouldn’t get as much ice-time there for next year that I would here. With Mora I can play the 25-30 minutes per game that I need. I like to play that much and that’s why it felt right to stay here another year. Ottawa obviously wanted me in the SEL but also said that I got to make my own decision if that felt right.

Stefan points out that the move isn’t unprecedented (Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Mikael Backlund are just two examples), and then there’s Anaheim prospect Max Friberg who hurt his draft status to stay at home and play in the Swedish third division.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)