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Official Ottawa Senators Thread

Playoff fever kicks off in Ottawa
By Mike Aubry ,Ottawa Sun


Senators playoff fever has officially taken hold in Ottawa as fans lined up Saturday to nab first-round tickets.

"We're diehard fans, and we can't wait for the playoffs. Go Sens army!" said Joe Lemtini, first in line, who came with his two best friends at 6 a.m., four hours before the box office opened.

The Algonquin College grad already had one set off playoff tickets but showed up in person to secure the rest of the games.

An intimate crowd of 40 fans -- less than other years -- snaked their way through the queue to guarantee their spot.

"When we first started here, there were lineups on both sides of the stadium, down the stairs, right across the top and right out the door," said Scotiabank Place security guard Bill Brooks, who has worked at the stadium for 17 years.

"We used to have more than a thousand people just so anxious to get into the games and into the playoffs."

He said with more people buying tickets online, the numbers have steadily decreased.

But Brooks said it's about the experience and having tangible tickets to grasp in your palm.

"I like the personal, one-on-one issue," he said. "It's a lot of fun to meet people, to share old stories of the past and what's coming on in the future. Everyone bonds here."

Dave Caroccetto made sure he was in line with a strong coffee at 6:15 a.m., but he wasn't buying tickets for himself.

His son's birthday is coming up, and he's going to surprise him with playoff tickets so that he can take his girlfriend to a game for the first time.

Yet not everyone in attendance was rooting for the Sens.

Jos Vanderploge is a Boston Bruins fan through and through, and if they don't play Ottawa in the playoffs, he's going to turn over his tickets to friends.

Fans had high hopes for their team, no matter who they face -- either the Boston Bruins or the New York Rangers -- in the first round.

"We can take either of those teams," said Anthony De Angelis. "If we survive round 1, everything else is gravy. If they can beat Boston or the Rangers, I think they can beat anyone."

Scotiabank's entertainment team made sure spirits were high in the queue, handing out Timbits, door prizes and Sens trivia questions.

"We just want to get people pumped up and excited about it," said Laura Robinson, a Scotiabank employee.

"Some of these people were waiting for a few hours, so we wanted to keep the excitement built up."

Playoff tickets range from $45 to $250 each, and each person can buy a maximum of eight tickets.

Twitter: @ottawasunmaubry

How to buy Sens tickets:

Devout Sens fans picked up their playoff tickets early Saturday morning but there?s still time to nab a seat. The Senators have three home playoff games scheduled.

Capitaltickets.ca is selling tickets online, priced between $45 and $250, with a limit of eight tickets per person.

Tickets are also on sale by phone at 613-599-FANS(3267), toll free at 1-877-788-3267, at Sens Store locations in Carlingwood Mall and Place D?Orleans, at any Ottawa Sports Experts location, at Scotiabank Place or Les Galleries de Hull.

Season ticket-holders for the 2012-13 can buy tickets at regular season prices, a saving of up to 60%.

Home post-season play should start the week of April 16.
 
Sens kick off playoffs Thursday night

The Sens journey to winning the Stanley Cup starts Thursday night in the Big Apple.

The first-round series between the Sens and the NY Rangers starts Thursday, April 12 followed by game 2 on Saturday, April 14 at Madison Square Garden.

The first home playoff game for the Sens is Monday, April 16 at 7:30 p.m.

Game four in the series is at Scotiabank Place on Wednesday, April 18 , also at 7:30 p.m.

Here is the complete schedule:

?Thursday, April 12, 2012 at 7 p.m.  (at New York)             

?Saturday, April 14, 2012 at 7 p.m.  (at New York)           

?Monday, April 16, 2012  at 7:30 p.m.  (at Ottawa)               

?Wednesday, April 18, 2012 at 7:30 p.m. (at Ottawa)           

?Saturday, April 21, 2012 at 7 p.m.  (at New York)           

?Monday, April 23, 2012    TBD  (at Ottawa)                       

?Thursday, April 26, 2012  TBD  (at New York)

1319095217873_ORIGINAL.jpg
 
First-round preview: Rangers-Sens
Updated: April 8, 2012, 1:25 PM ET
By Katie Strang | ESPN.com


With the resilient New York Rangers clinching the Eastern Conference title and the surprising Ottawa Senators securing a playoff berth following last year's dreadful 26th-place finish, both teams have already surpassed expectations this season.

Can they deliver a series that follows suit?

Squandering the opportunity to lock up the team's first Presidents' Trophy since the 1993-1994 Stanley Cup-winning season, the Rangers enter the playoffs with two straight losses against an undesirable opponent in the eighth-seeded Senators. Ottawa took three out of four games against New York and earned a point in each game. Neither team, however, is surging into the playoffs on a successful streak.

Like the Rangers, the Senators enter Thursday's Game 1 on a skid of their own. Their 4-2 loss to New Jersey in Saturday's finale was their third straight and the team's middling play earned them a concerning 4-6-0 record over the last 10 games.

The Rangers rebounded after a late-season dip in March, but never seemed to fully regain their momentum while being chased in the standings the last six weeks of the season. Following Saturday's disappointing 4-1 loss to the Capitals, they hope to start anew.

"It's been a fun year," goaltender Henrik Lundqvist said following Saturday's season finale, "but I hope -- and everyone else hopes -- that the best is yet to come."

subh_fivepoints.jpg


1. Henrik Lundqvist: The 30-year-old goaltender claimed the Rangers' end-of-season award as MVP, and deservedly so. Lundqvist has been the catalyst to the team's ascent to the Eastern Conference standings and his play will be vital to the Rangers' playoff hopes. The remarkably steady Swede has struggled against the Senators this season, however, giving up nine goals in three games.

2. Depth Test: Perhaps the biggest obstacle facing both the Rangers and the Senators heading into postseason play is their questionable level of depth. While Ottawa's top three forwards of Jason Spezza, Daniel Alfredsson and Milan Michalek have combined for 96 goals, they are the only players on the team to reach the 20-goal benchmark. The Rangers' top line of Carl Hagelin, Brad Richards and Marian Gaborik is a formidable trio, but they have struggled for secondary scoring in spurts this season as well.

3. Ottawa's Young Guns: Ottawa boasts some of the brightest young stars in the league, particularly standout defenseman Erik Karlsson. The 21-year-old Norris Trophy candidate scorched his fellow blue-liners with a league-leading 78 points (19 goals, 59 assists), but how will he fare come playoff time? Senators coach Paul MacLean acknowledged Karlsson will certainly be a target. As the season has gone on, opposing teams have tried to focus on neutralizing Karlsson's impact. The biggest thing for Karlsson in the playoffs will be "to keep the game simple," MacLean said. "Take what they give you and be ready to go, be ready to jump." The Senators also hope center Kyle Turris can become a key contributor.

4. Big-Game Brad: Marquee free-agent acquisition Brad Richards' numbers won't knock your socks off -- 25 goals and 41 assists in 82 games -- but his value has been evident in his ability to step up in important situations. The former Conn Smythe Trophy winner, who inked a nine-year $60 million deal with the Rangers last July, tied with team captain Ryan Callahan for fourth in the league with nine game-winning goals.

5. Captain Alfredsson: Since securing a spot in the postseason, Senators coach Paul MacLean has lauded the leadership of Daniel Alfredsson, but could this be the last of the captain's 15-year tenure with Ottawa? The 39-year-old Swede has shown that he has plenty left in the tank with 27 goals and 32 assists in 75 games this season, and is a proven playoff threat. If this is his last postseason appearance, can he make it one to remember?

subh_keymatchup.jpg


? Henrik Lundqvist vs. Craig Anderson: With an assumed Vezina Trophy candidate between the pipes on one end of the ice, the Rangers have the clear advantage in goal. Lundqvist has delivered probably his finest season to date with a career-high 39 wins, and an impressive .930 save percentage and 1.93 goals-against average. If the Senators stand a chance, they'll need Craig Anderson (33-22-6, .914, 2.83) to step up.

nhl_e_subh_hero_282x60.jpg


? Brad Richards: For the power-play to keep rolling, the Rangers will need Brad Richards to perform. When the dynamic center is playing at his peak, his creativity and vision boosts the entire unit. Seven of his 25 goals this season have come on the power play. Although the long-suffering unit has shown life of late -- with eight man-advantage goals in the last six games of the regular season -- the Rangers' power play (23rd, 15.7 percent) has otherwise struggled consistently throughout their successful 2011-12 season. The team has prevailed in spite of its Achilles heel, however, and if history is any indication, a troubling power play doesn't necessarily have to be a deal-breaker. The defending Stanley Cup-champion Boston Bruins converted only 10 of 88 opportunities for a sobering 11.4 percent. Didn't seem to hurt them too much.

? Milan Michalek: Milan Michalek got off to a surging start for the Senators and finished with a team-leading 35 goals, but cooled off in the last month of the season. Following a hat trick against Tampa March 6, the 27-year-old Czech native recorded only three goals in the last 14 games of the season. If the Senators want to pull off a surprising series win against the dominant Rangers, his return to a steady scoring clip will be essential.

subh_predictions.jpg


?  Don't expect the Blueshirts to breeze past this Ottawa team. The Senators will give the Rangers plenty of trouble in the first round, but in a test of depth for both teams, New York will wear them down to prevent the upset. Rangers in 7.
 
moon111 said:
Sucker Punch said:
Ugh, we're getting Cole and Healy.  CBC hates us.
And why wouldn't they?  Think of all the money they're losing having a team in the playoffs nobody cares about. :)

So out of spite, they're intentionally making their product worse?

God forbid they make the best of it.
 
Sucker Punch said:
Couterier with the hat trick.

This Zijebanard kid better be good.  I don't want another Brian Lee.

Every time I watch Coutourier play I wish we took him instead of Zibby.......I have a bad feeling about Zibanejad.
 
NdeJonge said:
Sucker Punch said:
Couterier with the hat trick.

This Zijebanard kid better be good.  I don't want another Brian Lee.

Every time I watch Coutourier play I wish we took him instead of Zibby.......I have a bad feeling about Zibanejad.

Is it a burning sensation or an itch?
(hup hup nigel de jonge?)
 
Silfverberg scored the Championship winning goal, was named the MVP, and became the youngest captain to win the SEL Championship.

EDIT: He also broke Daniel Alfredsson's league record of most goals in the SEL playoffs, with 13.
 
Sucker Punch said:
Silfverberg scored the Championship winning goal, was named the MVP, and became the youngest captain to win the SEL Championship.

EDIT: He also broke Daniel Alfredsson's league record of most goals in the SEL playoffs, with 13.

He's arriving in Ottawa on Sunday, Stone is here already he was at practice today. Doesn't sound like either will get any game action - just here to practice and take in the playoff atmosphere - that will change if things get dire I imagine. 

No Alfie at practice either.
 
Corn Flake said:
Chris Neil getting suspended for that hit on Boyle?  Looked like he should be to me.

For what?

Not late, not a headshot, didn't leave his feet, wasn't blindside, no history of discipline.

The only way he gets suspended is if you can make a compelling argument that he intentionally targeted Boyle's head in an attempt to injure him.

EDIT: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obT7dtdXefc

Clean hit.  That video isn't very good, but it doesn't even look like a headshot to me, looks like he caught body before head.
 

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