"We probably surprised a few people last
year with our injuries and being able to finish the way that we did,"
Senators forward Zack
Smith told the team's website early in training camp. "I
think this year there are a lot more expectations from different
people, but if we're a healthy club it's going to be exciting to see
what we can actually do."
"The puck goes in the net for him,"
coach Paul
MacLean said recently of his new sniper. "He seems to
shoot at a way bigger net than all the other guys seem to be shooting
at. He brings that pedigree with him; he's scored 30 goals in this
League more than one time. So he has that ability and he's certainly
showed that through every day of training camp here."
"I don't think we'll be 27th,"
Murray told NHL.com before training camp started. "But you
never know. You start the year and you're optimistic as hell and then
something happens. But I think we've got enough offense."
That something Murray is referring to obviously is
injuries, which no team can really plan for, especially in the
salary-cap era. Having a healthy Erik
Karlsson, Jason
Spezza, Craig
Anderson, Milan
Michalek and Jared
Cowen all season long, with the additions of Ryan and free agent
Clarke
MacArthur, should make the Senators a better team than the one
that reached the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs in the
spring. But just as the Senators didn't allow injuries to ruin them
last season, they will have to prove they can maintain the same level
of motivation and execution if that adversity is not present this
season.
MacLean may have one of the most potent top lines
in the NHL this season, as he has stuck with the combination of
Spezza surrounded by Michalek and Ryan on the wings throughout
training camp with the intention of at least starting the season
relying on that trio to play major minutes at even strength and on
the power play. With Ryan just entering his prime years at age 26,
Michalek needing a good season in the final year of his contract and
Spezza embracing his new responsibilities following Alfredsson as
captain, the line appears to have all the ingredients necessary to
succeed. Spezza is one of the NHL's most creative playmakers, and in
theory surrounding a player like that with two sharpshooters like
Ryan and Michalek should work. If there is one area of concern it
would be Ottawa's second line, centered by Turris. MacLean has used
MacArthur on the left wing of that line throughout camp, with various
players getting auditions at right wing, including Cory
Conacher, Mike
Hoffman and center Mika
Zibanejad. Having a secondary source of scoring often is cited as
a vital component for any team. That would appear to put some
pressure on the Turris line, however it eventually looks, to
alleviate the scoring burden on Spezza's line. Among the bottom six
forwards, the main question is whether last season's playoff hero,
Jean-Gabriel
Pageau, will force MacLean to move Zibanejad or Zack
Smith from center to the wing in order to make room for him in
the middle. Thus far in training camp, Pageau's play has suggested
that his performance in the spring was not a fluke.
Spezza says. "I look at it as an
opportunity to play with a great player [Ryan], but if it doesn't
work and we don't have chemistry, then he'll have chemistry with Kyle
Turris because we're different players. If for whatever reason it
doesn't work with me it's going to work with him because it's going
to work with someone."
Except MacLean sees it differently. "I
hope it's the other way around, that Spezza's line can take pressure
off the Turris line. That's what we'd like to have happen. He's
playing well, and if he continues to play well he's going to make it
very hard. Those are hard decisions. His game has been very
consistent and training camp is a long time, we'll see how he can
come as you go, but right now he's playing well enough for sure. You
just want to keep watching him every day and see how he keeps going."
SUMMER MOVES
IN:
Joe Corvo, D (free agent, Hurricanes), Curtis Lazar, RW/C (draft),
Ludwig Karlsson, RW (free agent, Northeastern University), Clarke
MacArthur, LW (free agent, Maple Leafs), Bobby Ryan, RW (trade,
Ducks)
OUT: Daniel Alfredsson, RW (free agent, Red Wings), Andre Benoit, D (free agent, Avalanche), Sergei Gonchar, D (trade, Stars), Guillaume Latendresse, LW (free agent), Mike Lundin, D (free agent), Stefan Noesen, RW (trade, Ducks), Peter Regin, C (free agent, Islanders), Jakob Silfverberg, RW (trade, Ducks)
OUT: Daniel Alfredsson, RW (free agent, Red Wings), Andre Benoit, D (free agent, Avalanche), Sergei Gonchar, D (trade, Stars), Guillaume Latendresse, LW (free agent), Mike Lundin, D (free agent), Stefan Noesen, RW (trade, Ducks), Peter Regin, C (free agent, Islanders), Jakob Silfverberg, RW (trade, Ducks)
The Ottawa defense was a strength last season
despite missing Norris Trophy-winner Karlsson for most of it. With
Karlsson fully recovered from his lacerated Achilles tendon and Cowen
getting his contract issue settled by signing for four years and
$12.4 million, the Senators' defense should be stronger than it was
last season in spite of the loss of veteran Sergei
Gonchar. The top pairing of Karlsson and Marc
Methot remains intact, but the second pair should see Cowen with
Patrick
Wiercioch ascending to a role of prominence for the first time in
his career. Wiercioch, 23, was signed to a three-year, $6 million
contract during the offseason in the hope he could build off a season
where he had 19 points in 42 games, tying him in scoring with such
stars as the Boston
Bruins' Zdeno
Chara, Jack
Johnson of the Columbus
Blue Jackets and Ryan
McDonagh of the New
York Rangers. Wiercioch will be given a chance to play with
Karlsson and the Spezza line on Ottawa's top power-play unit as well,
so his production should increase this season. Most of the intrigue
comes on the third pairing, where there are numerous candidates to
play alongside veteran Chris
Phillips, including free-agent acquisition Joe
Corvo and the rugged Mark
Borowiecki. Eric
Gryba, who emerged last season as a strong, physical presence
defensively, has missed most of training camp with an undisclosed
injury, but he also will be in the mix to fill that No. 6 spot. Then
there's the longshot Cody
Ceci, Ottawa's first-round pick at the 2012 NHL Draft (No. 15).
The injury to Gryba could mean he has a chance to stick on the roster
to start the season.
"Right now Patrick and Erik will anchor
the first unit of the power play and we'll give them every
opportunity to show that they can do it," MacLean said. "We
anticipate that they're going to be very good at it. I'm not going to
say [when Gryba may return], but I do know one man's injury is
another man's opportunity, and that hasn't changed since the start of
organized sport. If somebody's out, somebody has to take his place,
and that's an opportunity for someone."
The Senators may have the best goaltending tandem
in the NHL, but the question remains as to just how much of a tandem
it will be. Anderson is coming off one of the best seasons any goalie
has had in the NHL's modern era, with a 1.69 goals-against average
and .941 save percentage, albeit in just 24 games. His backup, Robin
Lehner, 22, is one of the top young goalies in the League.
Anderson played 63 games in 2011-12, his only full season with the
Senators, and if he maintains his level of play, there's no reason to
believe he won't have a similar workload this season. But he's fully
aware he will have to earn it. Lehner was outstanding in limited
action last season, with a 2.20 GAA and .936 save percentage in 12
games. Should Anderson show any signs of coming back down to earth,
Lehner will be ready to pounce on the opportunity. Ultimately, it
will be the Senators who benefit from the internal competition for
the net.
"We're always trying to prove ourselves
and everything you do in this game you earn," Anderson said
early in camp. "Your ice time you earn, you earn the respect
of your peers by going out there and working hard and performing at
the level you're expected to."
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