Craig Anderson gave the Ottawa Senators the kind of goaltending they needed to keep their very faint Stanley Cup Playoff hopes alive. Anderson made 46 saves in his first start after a seven-game absence, good for a 5-3 win against the Chicago Blackhawks on Friday. Erik Condra and Cody Ceci scored in the first period, and Milan Michalek gave Ottawa a 3-0 lead with his 14th goal 23 seconds into the second. Chicago scored two goals later in the period before Ottawa center Kyle Turris scored a power-play goal 6:00 into the third to put the Senators up 4-2. Clarke MacArthur scored at 10:54 to increase the lead to 5-2 and tie Bobby Ryan for the Senators' lead in goals with his 23rd. MacArthur had a goal and two assists.
"The bottom line is, we got two points and
we found a way to win, and that's all that really matters,"
said Anderson, who sustained an upper-body injury March 10. "We
played pretty solid, and for the most part we did what it took to get
the job done."
Blackhawks defenseman Brent
Seabrook scored a shorthanded goal with 3:00 left. Patrick
Sharp scored a power-play goal midway through the second period
to draw Chicago within 3-1 before Anderson made a sensational
left-pad save on Andrew
Shaw's scoring chance from the edge of the crease. Former
Senators forward Marian
Hossa scored with 41 seconds left in the second to draw the
Blackhawks within 3-2.
"We had the puck a lot," Sharp
said. "We created some scoring chances, we did some good
things with it at different times in the game, but a few mistakes
ended up in the back of our net, and they've got some skilled players
over there that take advantage of those mistakes and they put it in
the back of the net."
Goaltender Antti
Raanta made 24 saves in his first start in six games for the
Blackhawks, who on Thursday were shut out for the second time in
three games, a 3-0 loss to the Boston Bruins in Chicago's first game
at TD Garden since it won the Stanley Cup there last spring. The
Blackhawks, who lost for the third time in four games, would have
clinched a Stanley Cup Playoff spot with a win or a point from an
overtime or shootout loss. They also could have clinched if the
Dallas Stars lost to the Nashville Predators, but the Stars won 7-3.
"I didn't like our game tonight,"
Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. "We had a good start,
and obviously giving up a shorthanded goal right off the bat, they
got some momentum off it and they played well, and they got [goals]
late in the period and early in the second, and we were down 3-0. And
then we played a perfect second period and tried to claw our way back
into it, but way too many quality chances against. I know we
generated a ton offensively, but I didn't like what we gave up
defensively more than anything tonight."
Chicago (42-18-15), which has seven games
remaining, is in second place in the Central Division with 99 points,
eight behind the first-place St. Louis Blues and one ahead of the
Colorado Avalanche. St. Louis and Colorado each have two games in
hand.
"These are big games for everyone that we
play against, including ourselves," Blackhawks captain
Jonathan Toews
said. "The time is now to play our best hockey, so if we can
kind of think of it in the way where we're going to battle through
this, and it's not fun and it's kind of tough to play hockey when
things aren't clicking for you, but once we do get on the same page
and we do get working I'm sure we'll be re-energized as a team and
things will start going our way the way we're used to when we're
working well as a team."
The Senators won for the second time in three
games (2-0-1) following a four-game losing streak. Ottawa (30-29-14)
moved past the Carolina Hurricanes into 12th place in the Eastern
Conference with 74 points.
"You cannot focus on what could be or what
should be, et cetera, et cetera, you have to just stay in the moment
and take it one game at a time," Anderson said. "Anything
can happen, but if we think, 'Oh yeah, we can win the next eight and
get ourselves in,' you're just defeating yourself. You have to go one
game at a time, and if we continue to win, anything can happen. You
just don't know and you have to play it out."
Condra opened the scoring with a shorthanded goal
at 9:25 of the first period after MacArthur was sent off for
goaltender interference when he fell on top of Raanta, who later
injured his right leg when he fell awkwardly at 12:50 of the first.
Corey Crawford
got ready to come in, was on the ice to stretch, but Raanta remained
in the game. Crawford had appeared in 27 of Chicago's previous 32
games since missing 10 from Dec. 10-30 because of a groin injury.
Ceci made it 2-0 with his third goal of the season with 30 seconds
left in the first period.
"I thought we competed better tonight,"
MacArthur said. "We had a little lapse in the second, but
you're playing Chicago, they're going to make a push and we were able
to make plays in the third and not clam up. I thought we kept the
puck moving ahead and did a better job in the third."
Senators forward Chris
Neil and Blackhawks defenseman Niklas
Hjalmarsson each went down to the ice briefly after their legs
collided at 16:32 of the second period. Shaw was given a major
penalty for spearing Zack
Smith, a game misconduct and a roughing minor at 14:33 of the
third. Smith got minors for slashing and roughing. Blackhawks left
wing Matt
Carey made his NHL debut. Carey signed with the Blackhawks as a
free agent after his freshman season at St. Lawrence University. Ryan
had season-ending surgery Thursday in Montreal. The forward, who had
23 goals and 25 assists for 48 points in 70 games, missed Ottawa's
previous two games because of a sports hernia injury he aggravated in
a 3-1 road loss to the Stars on Saturday.
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