NHL: Pinto scores in 5th consecutive game to help propel streaking Senators over Stars

OTTAWA, ON – One man’s misfortune is another man’s big break. Such was the case for Magnus Hellberg on Monday.

After starting netminder Anton Forsberg was ruled out of the game due to injury, Hellberg came in to make just the third start of his NHL career. The first came almost nine years ago to the day.

All Hellberg did on Monday was make 29 saves as the Senators defeated the Dallas Stars 4-2.

“I’ve been waiting to get a start for a couple of weeks now, so obviously it was nice to finally be in net,” said Hellberg, who signed a contract with the Senators during the summer after spending the previous five seasons in the KHL.

“I have that inner drive to play at the best level and I feel that I can play in this league as a full-time job. Obviously I’m really happy that it worked out this summer and that I’m able to play in this league.”

Brady Tkachuk had a goal and an assist, while Shane Pinto scored in his fifth consecutive game in the win.

“It’s just going in for me right now. It’s getting pretty lucky but I’m just happy we found a way to win that one. That was another mature win by us and we just have to keep it rolling,” said Pinto, who is the first Senators’ rookie to score in five straight games.

Derick Brassard also scored in his season debut giving the Senators a 4-1 lead. Thomas Chabot had the other goal as the Senators (4-2-0) won for the fourth straight time.

The Senators were perfect on the penalty kill shutting down the Stars on their three chances. Killing those penalties was huge according to Senators coach DJ Smith.

“I thought our penalty kill was the difference and it settled us down. We started getting composure, got a little more emotionally involved and physical,” he said.

During their four-game winning streak the Senators have outscored the opposition 10-1 in the third period.

“We understand how hard we have to work in a game to get to the third period and not be down. I thought we worked really hard in the second to set that up,” Smith said.

Tkachuk had given the Senators a 2-1 lead five minutes into the third before Pinto made it 3-1 just under six minutes later.

Joel Kivirianta scored at 6:31of the first period and Wyatt Johnston scored late in the third to cut the Senators lead to 4-2. The Stars (4-1-1) recorded the first eight shots of the game as they came out hard at Hellberg, who had only made two previous NHL starts.

“I liked our start. I thought we came out of the gate really good. I thought as the game wore on, their commitment and energy increased and ours decreased, so we’ll have to look at why,” said Stars coach Peter DeBoer.

“But you have to give them credit. They were the hungrier team for most of the game tonight. Tough to win in this league when that’s the case.”

The Stars maintained their 1-0 lead late into the second period before Chabot ripped a point shot past Wedgewood at 19:23 of the period while the Senators were enjoying their third power play of the period.

Wedgewood was a wall stopping all 22 shots he faced up to that point. Hellberg was just as impressive at the other end of the ice with 20 saves as the game went into the third tied 1-1.

NHL: Tkachuk has a pair of goals in Ottawa Senators’ 5-2 win over Coyotes

OTTAWA, ON – Home has been pretty sweet for the Ottawa Senators early in this NHL season.

After starting the campaign with two road losses, the Senators have won three straight home games while scoring 18 goals in the process.

The latest win came Saturday as three third-period goals lifted the club to a 6-2 win over the Arizona Coyotes. The win meant a little more for Senators’ forward Mark Kastelic, as he was playing against his hometown team for the first time, and he scored a goal.

“It was pretty special to play against them for the first time,” the native of Phoenix said.

“I skate with a lot of those guys in the summer, and it was just kind of a full circle moment for me and my parents as well. They came in from Arizona and it’s really exciting that we got the win, but we have to put it behind us now and look forward.”

Brady Tkachuk had two goals for the Senators (3-2-0) while Tyler Motte and Shane Pinto each had a goal and an assist. Drake Batherson, Jake Sanderson and Tim Stutzle each had two assists. It was the line of Kastelic, Austin Watson and Parker Kelly that had coach DJ Smith talking after the game.

“That’s a line for us that plays north-south and gets us playing emotionally the right way. I think they did a heck of the job in the third,” Smith said. “The do it right, they go 100 miles an hour and they don’t give any time and space. They’re good at what they do.”

The Senators scored twice in the opening period as Shane Pinto and Josh Norris found the back of the net behind Karel Vejmelka. But the Coyotes (1-5-0) responded with two goals of their own in the second period, sandwiched around a goal by Tkachuk.

Dylan Guenther scored his first NHL goal at 1:40 of the first period to get the Coyotes on the board, and after the Tkachuk goal at 3:35, Clayton Keller responded just 22 seconds later to pull the Coyotes to within one at 3-2.

“They were super stoked,” Guenther said of his teammate’s reaction to his goal. “I think it’s pretty cool when they’re just as excited as you are. And it’s nice for me, too, to get one here. I’ve been getting a lot of chances.”

Kastelic, Motte and Tkachuk scored in the third period to help the Senators pull away.

“I thought we played pretty sloppy in the second period. First period we had some jam, then we took some bad penalties and got out of rhythm on the four-on-fours, turned some pucks over and didn’t do, to me, what we had been doing,” Smith said.

“But give credit to the leadership, whatever they said between the second and third, they corrected that.”

Andre Tourigny, who coached the Ontario Hockey League’s Ottawa 67’s for three seasons before becoming the Coyotes’ head coach in 2021, was happy with the effort if not the result.

“I thought we played solid in the first period. We had a lot of pressure and urgency. We didn’t score but I don’t think the period was that bad. We played a really good second period obviously and I think in the third they got opportunistic and that was the game,” said Tourigny, who was also an assistant with the Senators in 2015-16.

“All the way through the game the guys stayed focused, the stayed together, they battled hard. I think it was a step in the right direction for us as far as attitude, effort commitment and focus.

“Obviously we have to clean up a few things defensively, but if the attitude stays and effort stays like that there’s brighter days ahead.”

NHL: Senators scored five unanswered goals in win over Capitals

OTTAWA, ON – No one can blame Shane Pinto for having some fun these days.

The Ottawa Senators centre’s third goal in as many games proved to be the winner in a 5-2 win over the Washington Capitals Thursday night. Pinto’s goal was the third of five unanswered goals after the Senators were down 2-0 after the first period.

He was held to just five games last season due to a shoulder injury but is more than making up for lost time with a strong start to the season. During his many months of rehab last season, Pinto admitted he pictured himself being able to make a difference.

“Just to play a game, that’s all I wanted to do,” said Pinto. “But definitely to help the team win, that’s what I wanted to do coming in to this year, but I definitely visualized this.”

Drake Batherson scored a pair of power-play goals, while Tyler Motte and Alex DeBrincat added empty-net goals for their first with the Senators. Anton Forsberg stopped 22 shots in the win.

It’s the first time since January 2017 that Ottawa (2-2-0) defeated Washington at home.

T.J. Oshie and Anthony Mantha scored for Washington (2-3-0) in the opening period on the power play. Darcy Kuemper made 39 saves.

“I feel like the first 20 1/8minutes 3/8 we were chipping pucks with speed, going on the forecheck and turning pucks over,” said Oshie. “By the end of the first, I thought we’d backed them up a little bit. I believe we had some entries just by carrying the puck.

“We were shooting, we were supporting each other, and that kind of just went away. I don’t know, maybe they tired us out or we got a little overconfident with the puck, or whatever it was.”

Ottawa took its first lead of the game 5:53 into the third as Tyler Motte found a trailing Pinto who scored on a wrist shot from the slot to put the Senators up 3-2.

Moments later, Forsberg made a huge save on Marcus Johansson to preserve the lead.

“I just tried to get something over there and I was kind of lucky it hit my glove,” said Forsberg. “I mean obviously that’s one of the saves you want to make as a kid so it’s always nice.”

While they didn’t make it to the scoresheet, the trio of Mark Kastelic, Austin Watson and Parker Kelly were instrumental to the Senators victory.

All three were physical and rattled the Capitals early in the second period and generated the energy the Senators lacked in the first period.

“Those couple shifts there I was like, “Oh my God what a hit, oh my God what another hit,” said Batherson. “There was like six in a row there, so it was great. We love that. All three of those guys bring a ton of energy and got the boys going.”

Trailing 2-0 after a lacklustre first period, the Senators were able to square things up on a pair of power-play goals of their own.

Batherson scored his second goal in as many games off a pass from Brady Tkachuk 5:48 into the second period.

Less than two minutes later, Thomas Chabot fired a shot from the point and Batherson was able to jump on the rebound in front to beat Kuemper for his second of the night.

“It’s a different team here and there’s more maturity, and they’re able to be more composed and they’re able to turn it up another gear,” said Senators head coach D.J. Smith. “Clearly we weren’t at the gear we wanted to be, but give that dressing room credit. Those guys, you know what they did is got themselves ready for the second and third.”

The Capitals struggled to generate much momentum in the second and were outshot 15-5 by the Senators.

“We shot ourselves in the foot too many times with the puck,” said Capitals coach Peter Laviolette. “The first period, we did exactly what we wanted to do. We put the puck north, we put it behind them, we’re in the offensive zone, we’re delivering pucks at the net. The second period and third period, we played east-west hockey, we didn’t deliver any pucks. Not good enough.”

Washington got going early scoring a pair of power-play goals to take the lead in the first.

The Capitals had a two-man advantage for 72 seconds and Johansson fed Oshie to open the scoring midway through the period.

Mantha scored 24 seconds later with a shot from the point to go up 2-0.

NHL: Senators earn 1st win of season in home-opener goal frenzy against Bruins

OTTAWA, ON – The Ottawa Senators provided plenty of entertainment in their home opener Tuesday night with a 7-5 win over the Boston Bruins.

Mark Kastelic’s first of the season in the second period held up as the winner, but the fun started before the puck even dropped.

Things got underway with former Ottawa captain Daniel Alfredsson on hand for the ceremonial puck drop sending the sellout crowd into a frenzy and the noise grew as the newly acquired Claude Giroux, who calls Ottawa home, opened the scoring in the opening minutes of the game.

All four lines contributed for the Senators. Brady Tkachuk, Drake Batherson and Tim Stutzle each had a goal and two assists. Shane Pinto and Artem Zub also scored for Ottawa (1-2-0).

Coming into the home opener, Ottawa had only scored three goals through its first two games. Anton Forsberg stopped 26 shots.

David Pastrnak and Patrice Bergeron led the way for the Bruins (3-1-0) with a goal and two assists each. David Krejci, Nick Foligno and A.J. Greer also scored. Jeremy Swayman made 26 saves.

Leading 6-5, Zub added some security midway through the third when he picked up his own rebound earning a deafening ovation from the 19, 811 on hand.

Krejci and Greer scored in a span of 62 seconds to tie the game 3-3 by the two-minute mark of the second period.

Ottawa went on to score three goals to make it 6-3. Pinto made the most of a two-on-one to have a wide-open net. The Senators then took advantage of some poor defensive coverage by the Bruins with Stutzle picking up his first of the season when he was left alone out front. Anton Stralman then had a brutal giveaway behind his net allowing Austin Watson to feed Kastelic out front.

But the Bruins came back with another pair of goals to make it 6-5 by the end of the period. Foligno buried a rebound by crashing to the net and with 14.5 seconds remaining in the period Pastrnak connected for a power-play goal.

Ottawa couldn’t have asked for a better start. Giroux scored his first with the Senators in the opening minutes of the game and two minutes later Stutzle fed a cross-ice pass to Tkachuk for his second of the season.

Batherson had a goal called back midway through the period due to goaltender interference but got it back a couple of minutes later when Tkachuk found him out front.

Bergeron banged in a Pastrnak rebound to make it 3-1 late in the first period.

NHL: DeBrincat’s overtime goal lifts Senators past Canadiens in pre-season action

OTTAWA, ON – Alex DeBrincat will quickly become a Senators’ fan favourite if he can be the difference maker he was Saturday night when he scored the overtime game-winner in a 5-4 win over the Montreal Canadiens.

The NHL pre-season winner was DeBrincat’s second goal of the night and showed just how dangerous he can be offensively.

The newly acquired winger finished the game with five shots and may be encouraged to shoot the puck a bit more after Saturday’s heroics.

“He was looking to pass more than you want your top goal scorers to do,” said Senators head coach D.J. Smith. “He looks like he can score from everywhere.”

Ottawa had the man advantage to start overtime and Smith opted to ice four forwards, which proved successful.

“You’ve got to put your four best players depending on that night and it would be pretty hard to hold DeBrincat off the way he shoots the puck,” said Smith. “That’s a good problem for us to have.”

Shane Pinto also scored a pair of power-play goals, while Mathieu Joseph scored his first of the pre-season for Ottawa (2-3-0). Mads Sogaard allowed three goals on 14 shots through two periods of play. Antoine Bibeau allowed one goal on two shots in relief.

The Canadiens played a solid game, but are still looking for their first win of the pre-season.

Jake Evans scored twice for the Canadiens, while Rem Pitlick and Justin Barron also scored for Montreal. Cayden Primeau was solid making 30 saves.

“I know it’s pre-season, but obviously we want to win those games and I think we’re all a little bit disappointed,” said Pitlick. “It was nice to contribute a little bit since Jake (Evans) and I played together last year so it was nice to connect.”

Primeau looked good through 60 minutes but could have used a little more defensive support.

“I think he deserved a better fate,” said Canadiens coach Martin St. Louis. “We didn’t help him on the penalty kill.”

Saturday’s game was the first of four straight against one another.

Ottawa trailed 3-2 after 40 minutes and looked like they might be done after Barron made it 4-2, but caught a break when Brendan Guhle fell at the blue line allowing Tyler Motte to steal the puck and find Joseph down low to make it a one-goal game.

Pinto tied it 4-4 with his second power-play goal of the game late in the third.

“We were doing the right things pretty much the whole game and you see it pays off in the end,” said DeBrincat. “I think that’s something we need to learn. We just have to keep sticking with it and if it’s not going our way we have to keep battling and we’re going to come back sooner or later.”

DeBrincat opened the scoring for the Senators early in the second period when he was able to settle a loose puck, spin and fire a shot past Primeau for his first of the night.

Pitlick regained the two-goal lead with a power-play goal for the Canadiens, but Pinto made it a one-goal game with a power-play goal late in the second.

“You want to do as much as much as you can to help the team win and whatever that is I’m going to do it,” said Pinto. “If it’s on the power play I hope I keep on doing that, but it was a good confidence booster for sure.”

Montreal jumped out to a 2-0 lead after the first on a pair of goals by Evans.

NHL: Panthers blank Senators 4-0 to snap Ottawa’s four-game winning streak

OTTAWA, ON – Ottawa Senators fans went home empty-handed after the final home game of the season as the Florida Panthers beat the home team 4-0 Thursday night.

The loss snapped Ottawa’s ( 32-42-7) four-game winning streak.

Carter Verhaeghe led the Panthers (58-17-6) with a pair of goals, while Sam Reinhart and Sam Bennett also scored. Spencer Knight picked up his second career shutout stopping 27 shots.

Filip Gustavsson made 26 saves for Ottawa.

With the top seed in the Eastern Conference already locked up, the Panthers rested a few of its starters including Jonathan Huberdeau, Aleksander Barkov, Claude Giroux, MacKenzie Weegar and Gustav Forsling.

Florida held a 1-0 lead to open the third, but thanks to a pair of goals scored 21 seconds apart, they led 3-0 by the two-minute mark of the third.

Bennett was able to jump on an Anthony Duclair rebound out front to make it 2-0 and moments later Eetu Luostarinen found Verhaeghe who roofed it over a sprawled Gustavsson.

Verhaeghe scored his second of the night midway through the period for his 24th of the season.

The Panthers had a great opportunity to extend their lead early in the second with a two-man advantage for 51 seconds, but they were unable to capitalize.

Florida kept coming, but Gustavsson was solid making a big save on Verhaeghe. At the other end of the ice, Knight was holding his own stopping Auston Watson on a great chance.

Bennett grabbed the puck from Drake Batherson at the goal line and passed it to Reinhart, who scored his 33rd of the season from the hashmarks to give the Panthers a 1-0 lead in the first.

Ottawa wraps up its season Friday against Philadelphia, while the Panthers close out the season in Montreal.

NHL: Giordano’s OT winner completes Maple Leafs’ comeback over Senators

OTTAWA, ON – Mark Giordano is learning that playing for the Toronto Maple Leafs means having fans everywhere you go.

The noise was deafening as Giordano scored the overtime winner for a 5-4 victory over the Senators in Ottawa Saturday night.

“It was a pretty good crowd for us tonight,” said Giordano. “I thought there were a lot of Leaf fans in the building. Really good atmosphere — I’ve noticed that since I’ve been here, the atmosphere in away buildings. It’s pretty nice to know that wherever you play, you know you’re going to get that good buzz in the building.”

Giordano has been a nice addition for the Leafs and his teammates appreciate all he has to offer.

“I think he’s a huge part of our team,” said Michael Bunting, who had a goal and an assist. “He’s a veteran and he came in and had that veteran presence right away. He was the captain for a very long time in Calgary and then the captain in Seattle. He carries [himself] like that. He’s a great add and a great guy off the ice, and he’s playing unbelievable for us right now.”

Ottawa had its biggest crowd of the season, but the majority of the 18,655 on hand at Canadian Tire Centre were cheering for the Leafs.

The blue and white faithful had plenty to cheer for as Mitchell Marner scored twice with Kyle Clifford also scoring for Toronto (49-20-6). Erik Kallgren stopped 25 shots.

Tim Stutzle continues to impress in his sophomore season as the 20-year-old scored twice to hit the 20-goal mark for the first time.

Stutzle has six goals and seven assists through his last eight games.

He nearly won it in overtime, but Kallgren was able to make the save.

“He continues to get better,” said Senators coach D.J. Smith. “He’s playing against the league’s best and he’s not backing down. Again, he might be the best player out there, he’s one of them. There’s certainly some high-end players over there, but Timmy’s really coming.”

Michael Del Zotto and Dylan Gambrell also chipped in for Ottawa (28-40-7). Anton Forsberg made 36 saves.

Stutzle broke a 3-3 tie at the six-minute mark of the third, taking advantage of a terrible giveaway by Ilya lyubushkin to bury his 20th of the season.

Stutzle admitted he relished the challenge of playing the high-octane Leafs.

“[Auston] Matthews and Marner are some of the best players in the league so those are guys I love watching every night and watch the highlights every time and they make so many nice plays together and they play with so much confidence,” said Stutzle. “Those are two guys I try to mold my game after and playing against them I think gives me a huge push.”

The Leafs got off to a slow start, but more than made up for it when it counted.

Marner made it 4-4, scoring his second of the game at the midway mark of the period.

“We didn’t come out the way we wanted to,” admitted Marner. “We knew they were going to come at us fast and try to get behind us. They did a good job of that, but I thought the second period and third period there we kind of just took over and played the game we needed to. And we got the result we wanted.”

Trailing 2-0 to start the second, the Leafs came back to tie things 3-3 after 40 minutes.

Clifford opened the scoring in the frame for Toronto as he tipped Justin Holl’s shot for his first of the season.

Ottawa took a 3-1 lead midway through the second as Austin Watson fired a shot through traffic and Gambrell tipped it past Kallgren. The assist gave Watson his 100th career point in his 400th NHL game.

“When you actually take some time to think about it, it’s pretty emotional for me,” admitted Watson. “This game has given me a life that I don’t know if I deserve, but I’m here anyways. I can’t thank the Nashville Predators, Ottawa Senators and the league enough for, you know, it’s allowed me to live out my dreams, but take care of life outside the game as well. So I just have a lot of gratitude today.”

Despite trailing, the Leafs never seemed concerned they wouldn’t be able to get back in control.

“I thought for a bit there we were outworked and outcompeted,” said Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe. “From the time they made it 3-1, though, I thought our guys really dug in from that point on and we were really good.”

Toronto made it a one-goal game just over a minute later as Bunting was able to jam home a puck from in close and Marner tied the game late in the period as he one-timed T.J. Brodie’s drop pass from the top of the faceoff circle.

The Senators couldn’t have asked for a better start, jumping out to a 2-0 first-period lead.

On a two-on-zero rush, Brady Tkachuk passed the puck to Stutzle through the slot, who one-timed it home to open scoring.

Del Zotto made it 2-0 late in the period with a shot from the blue line that popped over Timothy Liljegren and in.

NHL: Jets keep slim playoff hopes alive with 4-3 win over Senators

OTTAWA, ON – The Winnipeg Jets needed a reminder that the season isn’t quite over and they responded with a 4-3 win over the Ottawa Senators Sunday night.

The Jets looked like a disinterested team after the opening 20 minutes, but a harsh talking to seemed to do the trick to get everyone back on track.

“We got yelled at after the first,” said Paul Statsny, who scored the Jets’ third goal. It woke everyone up. We’ve been needing that for a while, so it was just good to have.”

Nikolaj Ehlers had a goal and two assists, while Pierre-Luc Dubois scored his 100th NHL career goal and Kyle Connor’s third-period goal proved to be the winner.

The Jets will be without Mark Scheifele for Monday’s game in Montreal. Scheifele suffered an upper body injury in the second period and will be re-evaluated in Winnipeg.

The Jets (34-28-11) likely would have ended up on the losing side of things if not for the play of Connor Hellebuyck, who made 31 saves.

Trailing by a goal late in the third the Senators pulled the goalie and Hellebuyck made some huge saves to keep this one from going to overtime.

“That’s probably the best we’ve looked six-on-five,” said Senators coach D.J. Smith. “We haven’t been very good six-on-five and we were dangerous and had chances. That’s why Hellebuyck is one of the best goalies in the league. If you get an average goalie in there we may get five or six tonight.”

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There was no denying who the best player of the night was in interim head coach Dave Lowry’s mind.

“That’s a goalie win,” said Lowry. “He gave us a chance in the first period. He legitimately was probably the only guy that started on time. He gave us a chance to get going and then he made some huge saves right at the end of the game for us, as well.”

Captain Brady Tkachuk led the way for the Senators (26-40-6) with a pair of power-play goals.

Josh Norris also scored, while Mads Sogaard, making his second NHL start, stopped 21 shots.

Tim Stutzle returned to the Senators lineup after missing the last two games, while Drake Batherson missed his third straight due to a non-COVID illness.

This was the first time Stutzle addressed the media since last week’s game in Montreal when he was hit by Nick Suzuki and later criticized by Brendan Gallagher.

“I respect (Gallagher) as a player, I mean everyone has their own opinion,” said Stutzle. “They can say what they want. I have my own opinion too, but in the end, like I said I respect him as a player. He’s a veteran player so that’s all I want to say about him.“

The Senators were coming off a disappointing 5-1 loss to the Rangers Saturday night and were anxious to redeem themselves.

“We really wanted those two points tonight and as you can tell we were fighting to the very last second,” said Tkachuk. “This one’s going to be a frustrating one, but we have to move past.”

Trailing 3-1 to start the third, Tkachuk scored a power-play goal in the opening minute, but Connor regained the two-goal lead with a Jets power-play goal of their own.

Tkachuk made things interesting, scoring his second power-play goal of the game with six minutes remaining. He whacked the puck out of midair and, following a lengthy review, the goal stood.

Tkachuk was a threat down low all game and has shown to be an effective net-front presence.

“I pride myself as that’s where I feel I’m at my best is around the net causing chaos with pucks landing and just be hungry and try and put them in the back in the back of the net,” said Tkachuk. “But all those plays don’t happen without teammates getting it there and making good plays around the net, shots, tips and we have a lot of guys who sacrifice in front of the net.”

After getting yelled at, Winnipeg jumped out to a 3-1 lead after two periods.

Dubois picked up his 100th NHL career goal on the power play early in the second when he took a pass right in front and beat Sogaard far-side.

Ehlers and Stastny had a beautiful two-on-one that finished with Stastny scoring his 19th of the season.

“I didn’t like our first period,” said Lowry. “I didn’t like our puck management, I didn’t like the pace that we were playing at, I didn’t like the (lack of) urgency in our game. To their credit, we had an answer in the second period and we did things in the second that we wanted to do at the start of the game.”

Despite being outshot 12-5 the Jets managed to come out of the first period tied 1-1.

Ottawa opened the scoring in the first two minutes when Brady Tkachuk dropped a pass back from below the goal line to Norris out front for his 32nd of the season.

The Senators did a good job keeping shots away from their young goaltender, but he didn’t have much chance on Ehlers’s goal. Ehlers looked to make a cross-ice pass, but it deflected off Victor Mete’s stick and skipped past Sogaard.

NHL: Barkov completes Panthers’ comeback in shootout after Sens squander 3-goal lead

OTTAWA, ON – The Ottawa Senators were forced to settle for a single point after a 4-3 shootout loss to the Florida Panthers Saturday night in Ottawa, but knew they were lucky to walk away with anything.

The Panthers came in waves from start to finish and gave the 17,201 at Canadian Tire Centre a first-hand look at why they lead the Eastern Conference.

Florida trailed all game until Aleksander Barkov tied it late in regulation and went on to score the shootout winner.

Ottawa had an opportunity in overtime on the power play but just couldn’t beat Sergei Bobrovsky, who made 19 saves. At one point Senators head coach D.J. Smith had four forwards on the ice.

“If you’re a Senators fan that’s pretty exciting to watch Timmy [Stutzle] flying out there with scoring chances up and down,” said Smith. “It’s a coach’s nightmare, you want a little less than that, but as a fan these are the stars of the future. I remember Barkov when he was this age and he was a good player, but he isn’t what he is today.”

Trailing 3-2 the Panthers sent the game to overtime when Barkov scored the equalizer with 2:16 to play to complete the comeback.

“We just have the mindset that we’re going to come back no matter what,” said Barkov. “We played a good game even when we were down, nobody had one thought that we weren’t going to win this game.”

Anthony Duclair and Patric Hornqvist also scored for Florida (44-14-6), who are 8-1-1 in their last 10. Newcomer Claude Giroux had two assists.

In many ways Anton Forsberg deserved a better fate after stopping 46 shots for the Senators (23-36-6).

“That’s a really, really good hockey team,” said Smith. “But you know, we stayed with it long enough, we checked enough and Forsberg… let’s make no mistake [about] how good he was.”

Smith also said the team likely wouldn’t have played as well as it did without the support from the fans.

Ottawa had its biggest crowd of the past two years and the noise in the building gave the Senators momentum.

“This is probably the best lineup in the league,” said Forsberg. “Obviously that’s the teams you want to compete with and that’s the fun games to play so it was fun to be out there.”

Alex Formenton, Artem Zub and Dylan Gambrell scored in regulation for the Senators (23-36-6). Drake Batherson picked up an assist in his return after missing 28 games with an ankle injury.

The turning point seemed to come midway through the second.

Ottawa had taken a 3-0 lead early in the second on Gambrell’s goal and then the Panthers were able to get on the board with a power-play goal. Giroux found Duclair, who one-timed it for his 26th of the season at 8:55.

Just over a minute later Hornqvist carried the puck down low and backhanded it towards the net where Forsberg made the initial save, but Hornqvist was able to grab the rebound and pop it in at a very sharp angle.

Forsberg appeared to make an impressive behind the back save along the post, but after a lengthy review it was ruled the puck was in his glove behind the goal line to make it a 3-2 game.

Forsberg said in the moment he didn’t even know if the puck was in his glove, but then felt he had made the save and was somewhat surprised it was ruled a goal.

During his media availability Forsberg was shown a picture shared by the NHL and admitted they made the right call after seeing the closeup.

“I saw the monitor a few times and thought it was in,” said Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette. “Took longer than I thought it was going to take, but I guess they wanted to make sure.”

Despite being outplayed and outshot 19-8 the Senators held a 2-0 lead after the first period.

Formenton opened the scoring at 7:54 after winning a foot race and burying a shot under the crossbar.

Ottawa made it 2-0 when Zub picked up a Josh Norris rebound at the hashmarks and wristed a shot past Bobrovsky for his first on home ice this year.

NHL: Senators snap 3-game skid as Norris scores winner against Flyers

OTTAWA, ON – For 40-some minutes there was a whole lot of nothing going on. How quickly things change.

Josh Norris scored the winning goal midway through the third period Friday as the Ottawa Senators defeated the Philadelphia Flyers 3-1 and snapped a three-game losing streak.

A slapshot from Norris beat Martin Jones at 9:16 for a 2-1 lead while the Senators were on the power play.

“I guess I just like that area of the ice and for some reason pucks just seem to go in,” Norris said, about the fact that most of his power-play goals come from the same spot.

“My job’s easy, the guys just slide me the puck and I shoot it and hope it goes in, and lately it’s been going in so it’s a good feeling.”

Tim Stutzle scored in the first period to give the Senators (22-34-5) a 1-0 lead and Anton Forsberg made 27 saves for the win, many of those big and in the dying minutes with the Flyers pressing hard.

Alex Formento iced the win when he scored shorthanded into an empty net from behind his own goal line with 2:38 to play.

The lone Flyers’ goal came off the stick of Cam Atkinson. Jones made 32 saves for the Flyers (19-31-11) in a solid but losing effort.

“Forsberg made some really, really good saves. Sometimes you have to tip your cap. I think it came down to execution,” Atkinson said, before turning his thoughts to his own netmnder.

“He played great for us. Their first couple goals were absolute snipes. He kept us in the game all night and gives us a chance to win. That’s what you need out of our goalies, and they’ve certainly been doing that for us as of late.”

Stutzle was a game-time decision after getting a little banged up in their previous game, but was excited to get in against the Flyers.

“Yesterday I didn’t feel real good and today I skated and it was ok so I was happy to be able to play tonight,” he said

“It’s always good to get a goal in the first period. I think the whole team was really good and we were all together. And what are you going to say about [Forsberg]. He was unbelievable again and he helped us win the game in the last couple of minutes. It was a great team effort.”

NHL: Senators fall to Blue Jackets for 3rd straight loss

OTTAWA, ON – Trade deadline is a difficult time for a number of teams, but it appears to be weighing on the Ottawa Senators.

Ottawa (21-34-5) dropped its third straight game at home Wednesday in a 4-1 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets and both coaches and players admitted the March 21st deadline is casting a heavy shadow.

“We’ve got a lot of guys that haven’t scored in a long time,” said Senators coach D.J. Smith. “I don’t know if that’s to be expected. The guys that score, score and the guys that don’t usually check and then there’s some other guys that obviously tonight, this week can’t get over quick enough when it comes to the trade deadline. I think to get that out of some guy’s minds whether you know if you’re here or not. To me it looks like it’s weighing on a few guys.”

With the Senators well out of the playoff picture players know change is inevitable. The question is how much change will take place?

“I think maybe there’s some guys that it’s weighing on them a little bit,” admitted Ottawa’s Nick Holden. “It’s always hard when you’re on a team that everybody’s talking about and they’re maybe moving guys. Selling instead of adding, so it’s a tough time of year and I’m sure it’s in the back of guy’s minds for sure.”

The Senators could also be without its best defenceman. Thomas Chabot was hurt early in the second period after taking a hit from Sean Kuraly, who scored an empty-net goal. Chabot was hit along the boards, appeared to be favouring his right arm, and was briefly assessed when he returned to the bench. He went out for one more shift, but was clearly in pain and left the game.

Following the game Smith said “It looks like he’s going to be out a little bit,” and they would know more Thursday.

Columbus was solid right from the start, led by Jack Roslovic’s two goals. Eric Robinson also scored for Columbus (31-27-3), who have won their last three. Elvis Merzlikins, playing his 40th game, stopped 30 shots.

“It was kind of a weird game a little bit,” said Zach Werenski, who had two assists. “I thought we played well in the first. It’s a tie game after, but I thought we were patient. Elvis made some really big saves. We found some ways to score and to get a lead, and then we played with that lead I thought pretty well in front of [Merzlikins]. The puck was bouncing a lot tonight. Just a weird game. It felt weird out there.”

The Senators have struggled defensively of late and Wednesday was no exception. Ottawa has given up 18 goals through their last four games.

While losing Chabot was difficult, the Senators just seem to be struggling in their own end of late.

“I think we might be overthinking,” said Holden. “It’s like we’re a step behind. We’re waiting for the play to happen and then we’re reacting to it, whereas, say a month ago, when we were fast on pucks and fast on bodies everybody was just going, anticipating, getting in the right spots. Right now, we’re kind of just playing it slow not wanting to get beat anywhere, which is actually creating more space and they’re beating us.”

Two Columbus goals were a result of poor defensive play and Smith insinuated there could be lineup changes for Friday’s game against the Flyers.

The two teams exchanged goals in the first despite Ottawa not recording its first shot until the nine-minute mark.

Down in the low slot, Ennis opened the scoring midway through the period after redirecting a Chabot shot. Just over five minutes later a weak defensive effort by Nikita Zaitsev allowed Werenski to find Roslovic for a tap-in.

Columbus took a 3-1 lead after 40 minutes.

A bad line change early in the period allowed Werenski to feed a stretch pass to Robinson, who then stepped into the circle and fired a shot off the far post and in.

On Columbus’s third goal Zaitsev, who had a rough night overall, failed to tie up Roslovic in front and he was able to bury a Patrik Laine rebound.

“I’m trying to build that structured game and be able to make plays consistently,” said Roslovic. “Don’t turn the puck over, just make the right plays and be a good all-around player.”

NHL: Schmaltz scores winner to lift Coyotes to 5-3 win over Senators

OTTAWA, ON — There was a collective sigh of disappointment from the Ottawa Senators on Monday night following a 5-3 loss to the Arizona Coyotes.

It was hard to argue that the Senators didn’t deserve a better fate considering they dominated play for much of the night, but a couple of mistakes were the difference.

“I think there was a stretch over 20-some minutes that they didn’t have a shot and we’ve got to find ways to score and our power play can’t give up a shorthanded goal,” said Senators coach D.J. Smith. “We tie it in the third after having the puck the whole time and we make a real careless play and you lose the game.”

Give the Coyotes credit, they capitalized on their chances.

With just 15 shots on goal they didn’t generate a lot of offence, but when the Senators faltered they took advantage.

Tied 2-2 after the first period, the Coyotes took the lead when Lawson Crouse scored his third of the game, shorthanded, late in the second after taking advantage of a Senators giveway and winning a foot race for a loose puck to break in alone.

Ottawa tied things up at the seven-minute mark of the third when Connor Brown buried a Brady Tkachuk rebound, but 16 seconds later the Coyotes regained the lead as Nick Schmaltz took a pass in front and beat a sprawled Gustavsson.

The Coyotes (19-36-4) forward has 15 points in his last six games (6 goals, nine assists)

“Yeah it’s on the guys on the ice,” said Tkachuk. “It’s happening to our line in back-to-back games so we’ve got to learn from those and not let it happen again. The momentum was on our side and that completely deflates the group so as a line we have to buckle up in those situations and have to learn from that. It’s definitely frustrating.”

The Coyotes beat the Senators 8-5 nine days ago and have played well of late, but know this was not one of their better efforts.

“In that kind of a game, you can look at it two ways,” said Arizona coach Andre Tourigny. “You can look at our performance, and really, it was not very good. Let’s not kid ourselves. But you can look at it as well saying, even though it was not as good as we wanted, we found a way to stay with it. We knew we could win the game even if we did not play the way we wanted to.”

Crouse’s three goals were all scored differently, one at even strength, one on the power play and shorthanded. Barrett Hayton had an empty-net goal to round out the Coyotes scoring.

Scott Wedgewood made 40 saves to pick up his tenth win of the season.

“It’s a special feeling,” said Crouse. “I’ve said it in a few interviews now: You always want to be out there and try to make the biggest difference you can make. And to get my first hat trick tonight in front of some friends and family, it’s a really good feeling. To cap it off with a win makes it that much more special.”

Josh Norris scored twice for the Senators (21-33-5), while Filip Gustavsson, in his first NHL start since Feb. 20, stopped ten shots.

Norris looked dejected following the game as he met the media.

“I thought we deserved a lot better,” he said. “We did a lot of really good things and we’ve just got to take care of the puck, not give up a shorty and probably win the game so it’s frustrating.”

While Tkachuk often points out the team is still young and learning, on this night they were all held accountable.

“I think with our group, we don’t want to make any excuses whether young or old we just want to win,” he said. “Everyone wants to win and has the mindset of winning every single day. So yeah, we’re not gonna make any excuses or feel sorry for ourselves.”

An eventful first period saw the teams tied 2-2 after the opening 20 minutes.

Norris scored his first, jamming home a Tkachuk rebound. The Coyotes went on to take the lead when Crouse scored back-to-back goals. The first was a great shot high glove side and the second was on the power play as he tipped a Shayne Gostisbehere point shot.

Norris tied the game on the power play with his second of the night.