Parri Ceci wanted his son to follow in his footsteps and play in the Canadian Football League. Now a defenseman for the Ottawa Senators, Cody Ceci got to star on a CFL field Sunday but not in the way his father had envisioned. Ceci's second-period goal was the difference in Ottawa's 4-2 victory against the Vancouver Canucks at the 2014 Tim Hortons NHL Heritage Classic at BC Place.
"I played football for a couple years,"
Ceci said. "He (his father) probably would have liked to see
me play football, so this was as good as it would get."
Clarke
MacArthur had a goal and an assist, and Erik
Karlsson and Colin
Greening also had goals for the Senators. Craig
Anderson made 29 saves to earn his 20th win. Jason
Garrison and Zack
Kassian scored for the Canucks, and rookie goaltender Eddie
Lack made 24 saves as the surprise starter ahead of veteran
Roberto
Luongo.
"I have to make decisions each and every
time right now, with such short strokes, on what's going to give us
the best chance to win," Canucks coach John Tortorella said.
"Eddie was playing lights out in the games he's played. He has
been very good all year long. He deserved to play this game."
In addition to the two points lost, the Canucks
also played most of the final two periods without top-line forward
Daniel Sedin.
Sedin was carrying the puck behind the Vancouver net early in the
second period when he was hit into the boards by Ottawa defenseman
Marc Methot.
Sedin remained down on the ice for several moments, but was able to
skate off slowly on his own. He remained on the bench for a bit, but
then left for the locker room, with two Canucks employees helping him
make the long walk from the ice to the locker room. The Canucks had
no update on Sedin's condition after the game. The Canucks next play
Tuesday at the Phoenix Coyotes. The victory moved the Senators within
three points of the Detroit Red Wings for the final wild-card spot in
the Eastern Conference with 21 regular-season games remaining.
"We have to keep winning,"
Senators coach Paul MacLean said. "If you want to get in, you
have to win. We have to get ready for the next game. … We have to
turn around [Monday] and go to Edmonton and get ready to play another
difficult opponent. We go day-by-day, game-by-game. We still think
we're going to like where we are after 82 games."
Aiding the effort Sunday was Ceci, the 15th pick
of the 2012 NHL Draft playing in his first professional season. A
highly regarded athlete, Ceci didn't fully focus on hockey until he
joined the Ottawa 67s of the Ontario Hockey League when he was 16
years old. Hockey certainly has looked to be a better choice than
football. The goal Sunday was Ceci's second in the NHL, and both have
been game-winners. In addition, his two goals in 24 games with the
Binghamton Senators of the American Hockey League this season have
come in overtime.
"I guess that's all I'm good for these
days," Ceci said of his game-winners. "I didn't know
if it was going to hold until end of the day, and it did. It's a
special feeling. I'm not complaining. It's just been a funny year for
me that way. They've all been pretty special goals."
"He scored a couple of big ones in
Binghamton and scored a big one in overtime against St. Louis and
then another big one [Sunday]," Senators captain Jason
Spezza said. "He's got a flair for the dramatic. That's a
good quality for a young player."
Spezza was a supporting player in the winning
drama Sunday. He carried the puck into the Vancouver zone midway
through the second period, and Ceci joined the play to give the
Senators a 3-on-2 advantage. Spezza slid the puck to his right to
Ceci, who stepped around Vancouver defenseman Dan
Hamhuis and fired a wrist shot that beat Lack at 10:11 of the
period.
"I just jumped up," Ceci said.
"Spezza saw me coming down the wing. I had a step on one of the
defensemen and I ended up shooting it far side, and it ended up going
through."
The Canucks pushed for the equalizer, outshooting
the Senators 11-6 in the third period, but Vancouver, which entered
the game 27th in the League at 2.34 goals per game and missing one of
its top scorers, was unable to score the tying goal.
"I still think we're trying to find our
way offensively to make the next big play," Tortorella said.
"With Danny going out, that hurt me a little bit as far as
some of the line combinations. … First 10 minutes of the first
period was good, but I thought our third period was our best period
of the game. We just don't convert; our power play doesn't work.
Couldn't crawl back into it."
It was an exciting finish to the final game played
outside a traditional NHL arena this season.
"We thank the Canucks and Senators for
contributing to the terrific atmosphere at BC Place [Sunday] and for
providing such an entertaining conclusion to two historic months for
the National Hockey League," Jack-ass Commissioner Gary
Bettman said. "While the weather outside prevented us from
opening the roof at this outstanding stadium, the energy indoors from
the more than 54,000 fans made for a memorable afternoon. Through the
2014 Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic, the 2014 Coors Light NHL Stadium
Series, the 2014 Olympic Winter Games in Sochi and the 2014 Tim
Hortons NHL Heritage Classic, our teams and our players displayed the
very best qualities of our sport to over 375,000 fans in-person and
an international viewing audience of millions more. We thank our
fans, our clubs and our players for this 'season like no other,' and
we look forward to an exciting run to the Stanley Cup Playoffs."
The retractable roof remained closed at BC Place
due to the rain and snow falling outside, but it did little to
diminish the unique atmosphere of playing in an ice rink built on the
home field of the British Columbia Lions of the CFL.
"It was definitely different,"
Ceci said. "We all enjoyed it. It reminded us of the old days
playing out on ponds."
"It was pretty cool," Canucks
forward Alexandre
Burrows said. "First time for me to play in front of that
many people, and the crowd seemed to be into it. You will remember
that one for a long time."
The big crowd of mostly Canucks fans was happy
early as Vancouver scored twice in the first 11:27 of the game; it
marked the first time they scored more than one goal in a period in
10 games, dating to the first period of their game Jan. 26 against
the Phoenix Coyotes. Garrison opened the scoring 4:54 into the game
with his fifth goal of the season. Greening was called for high
sticking at 3:17, and the Canucks took full advantage when Garrison's
shot from the point went off Senators forward Kyle
Turris' stick out high and went under the crossbar. The
power-play goal was the Canucks' first in four games and snapped an
0-for-8 streak. Kassian's 11th of the season made it 2-0 at 11:27.
Karlsson had the puck deep in the right side of the Ottawa zone, but
turned it over to Kassian due to pressure from Vancouver's Brad
Richardson. The Canucks forward sent a low shot on net that
eluded Anderson. The Senators scored twice in a span of 1:47 later in
the first to tie the game, with MacArthur having a hand in both
goals. Eric
Gryba ended up with the puck in the Vancouver end. His shot was
blocked, but the puck bounced to Erik
Condra in the middle of the zone. Condra caught the shot on the
heel of his stick, sending a low, soft shot on net that MacArthur
redirected off the post and past Lack at 15:15. Moments later, during
an Ottawa power play, the Senators tied the game. MacArthur won a
puck battle along the wall on the left side of the Vancouver zone and
pushed the puck to Karlsson at the point. Karlsson slid left to right
across the top of the Canucks zone until he found a seam on the right
side. He fired a shot along the ice to the far side that went through
a Turris screen and past Lack's right foot at 17:03. The goal was
Karlsson's 16th, tops among NHL defensemen. After Ceci put the
Senators ahead in the second, Greening finished the game with an
empty-net goal at 18:27 of the third. The Canucks will look to
regroup and stay in the hunt for a playoff spot. They remain tied
with the Dallas Stars and Winnipeg Jets with 66 points, but the Stars
hold the final wild-card spot in the Western Conference by virtue of
having played two fewer games.
"That's a game we should have won,"
Canucks captain Henrik
Sedin said. "If you have a two-goal lead in this league,
we know how hard it is to come back from those deficits."
The Senators left Vancouver hoping the win will
propel them toward a spot in the postseason. The Heritage Classic was
the first of a four-game trip against the three Western Canada teams
and the Winnipeg Jets.
"We hope it launches our march,"
Spezza said. "… It's hard to come out here to Western
Canada and play in all these rinks and take a lot of points. It's a
necessity for us though. We hope this is a big jumping-off point for
us."
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