NHL: After fun in California sun, Senators back on ice vs. Ducks

Date:

Share post:


Something has got to give Wednesday night when the Ottawa Senators visit the Anaheim Ducks to start a three-game California road trip.

Ottawa, last in the Atlantic Division with 53 points, has the worst road record in the Eastern Conference at 8-17-1. Meanwhile, Anaheim, which is seventh in the Pacific Division with 47 points, has the worst home mark in the NHL at 9-21-1.

It’s the second game of Ottawa’s four-game road trip, which started with a 4-2 loss at Philadelphia on Saturday. The NHL schedule-maker was kind enough to give the Senators a three-day break before playing the Ducks, which meant time to heal up and enjoy the warm, sunny southern California weather.

Ottawa, which has lost four in a row, did some dry training on Monday by the Pacific Ocean.

“Obviously nice to have a change every once in a while and do something different,” defenseman Jacob Bernard-Docker said. “It’s nice to hop in the ocean after the workout.”

The warm salt water obviously had some healing powers. Regular goalies Joonas Korpisalo (illness) and Anton Forsberg (lower-body) and captain Brady Tkachuk (upper-body), who all missed the loss to the Flyers, were back on the ice for practice at the Honda Center on Tuesday.

Tkachuk, a late scratch after taking part in the morning skate in Philadelphia, had his iron man streak of 219 consecutive games snapped, the eighth longest in franchise history.

“We have a lot of bumps and bruises,” defenseman Thomas Chabot told TSN 1200 radio after Saturday’s game. “We’re going to take advantage of the rest and fine-tune some of the details to have a good rest of the road trip.”

The game with Anaheim is the front end of back-to-back that concludes Thursday at Los Angeles. The Senators finish the trip up the coast at San Jose on Saturday.

“It’s probably a good time to recover,” Ottawa coach Jacques Martin said. “(Off) Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, then we have (a) back-to-back. It’s a welcome break, and we’ll have some practice time to focus on a couple of areas.”

It’s the third game of a five-game homestand for Anaheim, which is 4-5-1 over its last 10 games. The Ducks opened the homestand on Friday with a 4-3 victory over New Jersey then lost to Western Conference leader Vancouver 2-1 on Sunday night.

Anaheim managed just 18 shots on goal and a first-period score by Alex Killorn against the Canucks. With regular goalie John Gibson out because of illness, Lucas Dostal, who made an eye-popping 52 saves against the Devils, was back in net and stopped 29 more shots.

Conor Garland scored the game-winner for Vancouver in the second period with a redirection of a Nikita Zadorov feed 11 seconds after Anaheim had killed off a penalty.

“Those games hurt because you’re in the game,” Ducks coach Greg Cronin said. “At the same time, they had more chances than we did. I don’t think we generated enough.”

Garland’s game-winner came after Anaheim had killed back-to-back penalties.

“The second goal was unnecessary,” Cronin said. “We killed two penalties in a row and (Sam Carrick) comes out of the box and we’re in a five-on-five situation and it seemed like we didn’t react to it. It looked like we had lost our structure to give a tap-in goal like that, as a game-winner. That’s frustrating.”

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NHL: NHL roundup: Flyers’ Scott Laughton scores 4 in win vs. Wings

Scott Laughton tied a franchise record with a career-high four goals as the Philadelphia Flyers topped the visiting...

NHL: Kraken hand Bruins another blowout loss

Oliver Bjorkstrand scored twice and Philipp Grubauer made 33 saves as the Seattle Kraken defeated the visiting Boston...

NHL: Kevin Lankinen, Canucks end Panthers’ point streak

Kevin Lankinen recorded a 27-save shutout and J.T. Miller had two assists in his return to the ice...

NHL: Nikita Kucherov, Jake Guentzel lead as Lightning dump Flames

Nikita Kucherov scored one goal in a six-point performance to match a career high and goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.