Entries Tagged as 'Ottawa Senators'

History, Will Teach Us Nothing

My apologies to Sting.

The remarkable issue from last night’s game against the Ottawa Senators is not the fact the Coyotes have a four game winning streak, second one of the season, or that they finally beat the Senators (the last time coming in 2002), or that they are six games above .500 (sixth in the conference), or even the fact that this time last year they were a measly 13-14-2.  No, it’s not any of those things.

What we had was that a team that has been in financial trouble twice in their history, playing against another that has had the same misfortune.

Can you guess which one is which?

Well, if you are aware of history (see the link above – whether the song fits, I don’t care, I just liked it), the Ottawa Senators, as a hockey franchise has been around a long time.  Sure, the new version was the result of expansion (some say southern) of 1992 that brought the Tampa Bay Lightning into the NHL at the same time.  However, the Ottawa Senators has been around for many, many decades.

Starting with the NHL in its inception, as history will tell us, that the Senators were around long before the NHL was a figment of anyone’s imagination; the Ottawa Senators helped found the league back in 1917.  They were a pretty successful franchise having won multiple Stanley Cups between 1918 – 1927.

Then, disaster struck.  In the first expansion to the United States, coupled with an economic depression, the Ottawa Senators could not turn a profit and ended up closing the team in 1934, and would not be resurrected until 1992.

The economic conditions still did not improve, even with the newly formed Senators.  The Senators were a very competitive team, but then it turns out that they filed for bankruptcy protection in 2003.  It looks like they were having attendance issues then as well.  It didn’t matter if the team was winning or losing, people just didn’t want to come see the Senators play.  The team was a complete financial mess.

Eugene Melnyk rescued the team by purchasing them soon after the club entered bankruptcy, and the links between these two franchises, the Senators and the Coyotes, continue to grow thicker.

Jim Balsillie, the Canadian businessman who wanted to uproot the Coyotes and transport them to Canada, had thoughts about the Ottawa Senators as well.  We learned this summer that Balsillie tried the same tactics that he used with the Coyotes with the Senators.  Eugene Melnyk felt then that Balsillie was not conducting himself properly noting,

“And I told him right off the bat that I thought it was … that it’s not the way you go about things. There’s a professional way. You meet other owners, you get to know the business, but you don’t … I don’t think you knock the door down to try to get a team.

“I think the way they have gone about it has got to be the most bizarre way of trying to enter professional sports.”

quoted in The Star

So, what happened?  Four years later, the Senators went to the Stanley Cup Finals only to lose in five games to the Anaheim Ducks.  Could that happen here?  Not sure, but anything is possible.  The best part is the Coyotes have been playing excellent hockey and may be the NHL’s best kept secret.

What still persists is the perception that the market does not work down here.  Well, it initially didn’t work in Ottawa either, but that team didn’t move anywhere.  It would have been extra painful if it had.  For some reason though, the critics don’t seem remember those times, the time when the Canadiens were struggling, the Senators, the Canucks, and so on and so on.

When the Coyotes arrived here, they were in the playoffs, the building was full (even when it wasn’t built very well for hockey), and people had a buzz about the team.  Now?  Losing breeds contempt and the casual fans don’t want to be jilted again.  Couple that with a horrible economy that Arizona has, the situation gets even more bleak.

Canada lost two of their teams to the lower 48, the Quebec Nordiques and the Winnipeg Jets.  Now, with a franchise that had history, that had a renewal, it looked very bleak and it could have changed the business of hockey.  Commissioner Gary Bettman didn’t wrangle the Ottawa Senators from the market, he waited until the situation resolved itself.  With Melnyk, it had.

These articles north of the border documenting the attendance woes of the Coyotes franchise doesn’t help matters in changing the perception (of course, fans filling the building would help more).  What’s lacking down here is an owner because thanks to Balsillie and company, they wrecked what was already a challenging market.  The fans need to know that they are staying here and the only way to insure that is to have an owner to purchase the team with that commitment in mind.

The best thing that the players can do is to continue winning hockey games.

Coyotes Impeach Senators

For the second time this season, the Coyotes stack together four wins in a row as they beat the Ottawa Senators 3-2.  It was also the first time since 2002, the Coyotes beat the Senators.

They came out strong and completely caught the Sens off-guard for the first ten minutes, which saw Ed Jovanovski score his 6th goal of the season, his first after coming back from his injury, and Taylor Pyatt scoring his third goal of the season.

The Coyotes completely dominated the majority of the game, save for the last three minutes, and definitely had their opponents on their heels.  The tough part of the Ottawa Senators is that they have now lost three in a row, and truly have no answers.  The Coyotes knew they had to catch them breaking and they did.

Daniel Winnik was a beast, as usual, setting two hard body checks, with the second one drawing a penalty.  What I don’t get is when a player makes a solid check that is clean, shoulder into breastbone, and some guy has to come running to fight.  Did Winnik get goaded into taking the penalty?  Nope, he took a punch in the face for a chance on a power play.

Winnik is evolving into that special skater and we are seeing two solid lines.  Shane Doan does not have to carry the team.  In the past four games, ten different Coyotes have scored goals.  The team is scoring by committee – anyone of them can put the puck in the net – and that’s the way they have to play.

The only concerns came in the form of not converting on the power play that would have pushed the game to 4-0 and the last two minutes where the team scrambled a bit when the Senators pulled the goaltender.  Between the pipes, Ilya Bryzgalof was solid again tonight and gave his team the chance to close it out.

The newspaper reports and blog looked at the game this way:

Another Road Game, Another Loss for the Senators from the Ottawa Citizen

Jovo, Pyatt Fuel Coyotes Past Senators from the Arizona Republic

Coyotes 3, Senators 2 from Dave Vest, and Phoenix Coyotes.com

Senators Surge in Final Minutes, not enough from Silver Seven

Coyotes Host Senators

With the last four road games, the Senators have been winless.  They haven’t found a way to win in the West posting losses against the San Jose Sharks, and the Los Angeles Kings.  According to them, they have been making mistakes and due to those mistakes, the emotions have kicked in and have cost them victories.   The only win they have earned was against the Columbus Blue Jackets at home.

In the past five games, their opponents have outscored the Senators by a 2-to-1 margin, and given up the first goal in 4 of 5 games.  In the shootout loss against the Bruins, they scored the first two only to have the Bruins score three unanswered.

They hate to travel as their road record is 3-6-1, their plus/minus on the road is a minus-14, and they are minus-4 on the power play/penalty kill differential.  Plus, Senators goalie Brian Elliot is struggling.

So, they look to be a fragile team.

However, the Senators are still seventh in the Eastern Conference (because they play well in their own barn), and have a multitude of weapons with three players (Daniel Alfredsson, Mike Fisher, and Milan Michalek respectively) scoring more than 20 points.  So, it’s not like this will be an easy game, and they might be even so frustrated that they plan to take it out on the Coyotes.

Hopefully, though the frustration level will be higher on the Senators’ bench than the Coyotes.  Because when fragile teams come to Glendale, the Coyotes can’t seem to put them away.

And this time, they need to.