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Ottawa Senators
Ottawa Senators File:Alternate-1999.gif
Logo Alternate logo
Founded 1992
Home ice Scotiabank Place
Based in Ottawa, Ontario
Colours red, black, white
League National Hockey League
Head coach Bryan Murray, 2004-
General manager John Muckler, 2002-
Team Captain Daniel Alfredsson
Alternate captains Zdeno Chara
Wade Redden
Team Owner Eugene Melnyk
Most Games Daniel Alfredsson: 706
Most Points Daniel Alfredsson: 671
First Game Ottawa 5-3 Montreal
(Ottawa; October 8, 1992)
Largest Win Ottawa 9-1 New York Rangers
(Ottawa; January 24, 2003)
Ottawa 8-0 Toronto
(Toronto; October 29, 2005)
Largest Defeat Ottawa 0-10 Calgary
(Calgary; January 15, 1994)
Ottawa 1-11 St. Louis
(Ottawa; February 26, 1994)
Stanley Cups 0
This article discusses the current National Hockey League team. For the original NHL team, see Ottawa Senators (Original).

The Ottawa Senators are a professional ice hockey team based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. They play in the National Hockey League (NHL).

Founded: 1992-93 (franchise awarded December 6, 1990)
Arena: Scotiabank Place (capacity 20,004)
Former Home Arena: Ottawa Civic Centre (1992-1995)
Uniform colours: black, red, white
Logo design: Roman legionnaire
Division titles won: 4 (1998-99, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2005-06)
President's Trophies won: 1 (2003)
Stanley Cups won: none
Rival(s): Toronto Maple Leafs, Montreal Canadiens, Buffalo Sabres, Philadelphia Flyers
Minor league affiliates: Binghamton Senators (AHL), Charlotte Checkers (ECHL)
Nickname: "Sens"
Local Radio: TEAM 1200 AM and BOB 93.9 FM
Local Television: A-Channel Ottawa
Mascot: Spartacat

Team History

File:Senslogo1mgs.jpg
Original Ottawa Senators logo, 1918-1934

The original Ottawa Senators

One of the greatest and most famous teams of the early years of hockey, the Ottawa Senators existed from 1901 to 1934, winning nine Stanley Cups in that time. The team then relocated to St. Louis, Missouri, as the St. Louis Eagles, but folded after the 1934-35 season.

Expansion

The NHL's planned 1992 expansion had several strong contenders, but, starting in 1989, original owner Bruce Firestone put together an energetic bid to revive NHL hockey in Ottawa, using the last surviving original Senator, Frank Finnigan, as its public face. The new-look Senators won one of the two slots (along with the Tampa Bay Lightning) and began play in 1992. The Senators' bid had been considered something of a long-shot, and ran into financial trouble immediately. Firestone had trouble borrowing money to meet the 50 million dollar expansion fee. It is of note that in the 1995-1996 season, the Senators moved from the Ottawa Civic Centre to the Palladium (now known as Scotiabank Place) on January 15th 1996, which was in the near-by city of Kanata (which amalgamated under the City of Ottawa in 2000).

Beginning of a new era

Unfortunately, as with the Lightning's campaign—which many felt similarly won its bid over a more favoured St. Petersburg group because it was led by former NHL great Phil Esposito—good public relations could not disguise the lack of talent. The modern-day Senators played their first game in the Ottawa Civic Centre, a small arena by professional standards, seating 9,862, and beat the Montreal Canadiens 5-3. Tragically, Finnigan died before the team started play, and the win against the Habs was the last bit of glory the new Senators would see; they were the second worst team in the league, losing 70 games in the 1992-93 season (only the San Jose Sharks had a worse record, which included an NHL record 71 losses) , and suffered through several miserable seasons there after.

Rod Bryden era

For several years management had trouble securing financing for the construction of an arena. The team received no financial help from government, including a refusal by the Ontario government to pay for a new $25M highway interchange. On August 17, 1993, Bruce Firestone resigned after missing mortgage and development payments and was replaced by Rod Bryden, a former high tech tycoon. A year later he managed to borrow enough to pay for a $188 million arena called the Palladium. Although widely acknowledged as a well-designed arena, in the years since construction the arena has been criticized for being difficult to reach. It is located in the far west end of Ottawa, and is a long trip from many other areas, especially in the east or the Outaouais. Difficulties are compounded by frequent traffic difficulties at game time, as well as the isolation of the arena, which makes it difficult for celebrations to continue naturally after the game. Highway improvements are planned.

Turnaround

File:ScotiaBankPlace Inside.JPG
Scotiabank Place, 2006

Two major things happened for the Ottawa Senators in January 1996: Jacques Martin became their head coach and the team moved into their new arena, the 18,500-seat Palladium (later the Corel Centre, and now known as the Scotiabank Place, seating 19,311) in Kanata, a suburb of Ottawa and now part of the city of Ottawa. While Ottawa finished the 1995-96 season with a poor record, it marked the start of a remarkable franchise turnaround. Daniel Alfredsson became the first Senator to win the Calder Trophy. The 1996-97 NHL season saw the Senators make the playoffs for the first time. They clinched the seventh seed on the last game of the regular season thanks to a late goal from Steve Duchesne on Dominik Hasek of the Buffalo Sabres giving the Senators a 1-0 win in the game. They faced the same Buffalo Sabres in the first round of the playoffs where they lost a thrilling seven-game series.

The Senators won their first playoff series following the 1997-98 NHL season, defeating the New Jersey Devils in six games. Despite defeating the heavily favoured Devils in the opening round, the Senators' lack of depth and experience was exposed in the second round against the Washington Capitals who quickly disposed of the Sens in five games.

New Millenium

Ottawa was locked in a contract dispute with Alexei Yashin during the 1999-00 NHL season. Yashin (who some fans referred to as 'Cashin' throughout this incident) held out for the entire season, but it was ruled that he still owed the Senators a year. The regular season was successful, as they finished with 93 points, in second place, however a 4-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs ended the playoffs quickly. Yashin played during the 2000-01 season, but was traded in the summer of 2001 to the New York Islanders for Zdeno Chara, Bill Muckalt, and the Islanders' first round, and second overall, pick, which the Senators used to draft Jason Spezza. The Senators lost again to the Maple Leafs in the first round, this time in a 4-0 sweep, where they were repeatedly stymied by Leafs' goaltender Curtis Joseph.

The Senators finished the 2001-02 NHL season with 94 points, in third place. In the playoffs, they defeated the Philadelphia Flyers in 5 games limiting the Flyers high powered offense to a measly 2 goals for the franchise's second playoff series win, but fell again to their nemesis, the Maple Leafs, in a tense seven-game affair.

Ottawa's jerseys (from top-left clockwise: Home, Away, 3rd Jerseys)

The Senators filed for bankruptcy on January 9, 2003, after a long history of debt. They continued regular season play after getting some emergency financing from the NHL. Despite the off-ice problems, Ottawa won the President's Trophy in the 2002-03 NHL season, finishing with a league-best 113 points. In the playoffs they defeated the Yashin-led New York Islanders and Philadelphia Flyers before coming within one game of making it into the Stanley Cup final series, falling to the eventual champions, the New Jersey Devils. In September 2003, the team was purchased by pharmaceutical magnate Eugene Melnyk.

Ottawa has made the playoffs every year since their original visit. However, they have had limited success, having won only four series in their eight trips to the postseason, including several consecutive losses to the Maple Leafs, leading to a heated rivalry between the two teams.

In the first round of the 2004 NHL playoffs, the Senators lost to the Toronto Maple Leafs for the 4th time in 4 series against the Leafs. Ottawa had developed a strong rivalry with their Ontario cousins and there was a great deal of pressure on the team to finally defeat their archrivals, especially since they consistently finished higher in the regular season standings. Two days after the Senators' loss, Jacques Martin was fired and Patrick Lalime was later traded to St.Louis. Jacques Martin had been coach of the Senators for eight and a half years. Martin was widely respected, had a 341-255-96 regular season record with the Senators and had led the team to eight consecutive playoff appearances, and was widely credited with changing the team into a strong league leader. However, after losing eight of twelve playoff series, including four out of four over five years to the Maple Leafs, team management felt that a new coach was required for playoff success. On June 8, 2004, Bryan Murray became the team's fifth head coach.

2005-06 Season & Playoffs

On August 23, 2005, shortly after the end of the 2004-05 NHL lockout, Marian Hossa, was traded with defenceman Greg de Vries to the Atlanta Thrashers for former first round draft pick Dany Heatley, who had requested a trade out of Atlanta to shake his personal demons associated with Atlanta after being involved in a car crash that killed teammate Dan Snyder, who was driving with Heatley at the time. Heatley has since regained the All-Star form he displayed in his rookie year on a line with Alfredsson and young centre Jason Spezza, who led the AHL in scoring during the lockout.

On October 5th, 2005, Daniel Alfredsson and Dany Heatley became the first players to score the winning goals for a shoot out in NHL History, they both scored against Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Ed Belfour. Their sticks were subsequently sent to the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Dany Heatley also set a team record with the longest consecutive point-scoring streak at 22 games. On February 2, 2006, the team set its own record scoring three short handed goals in one game in a 7-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins. Antoine Vermette and Mike Fisher both scored short handed within the same penalty in the second period and team captain Daniel Alfredson scored the third short handed goal in the third period.

Dany Heatley became the first Ottawa Senator in franchise history to reach 100 points on April 13, 2006, recording two assists during a 5-4 overtime loss to the Florida Panthers and five days later became the first to reach the 50-goal mark and the fifth player to do so in the league in the 2005-06 season.

On April 15, 2006 against the Toronto Maple Leafs, Daniel Alfredsson became the second player in the franchise to accomplish this feat with an assist. Heatley and Alfredsson now hold the team record for most points in a season with 103.

Jason Spezza also set a club record with 71 assists despite missing 14 games due to an injury. Meanwhile, Wade Redden became the first Senator to finish first in the plus/minus category with a + 35 despite missing 17 games due to an injury and personal reasons.

Andrej Meszaros narrowly missed on being the first rookie to win the plus/minus title with a + 34 rating.

On April 29, 2006, the Ottawa Senators defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs, four games to one. Ray Emery became the first rookie netminder since Philadelphia's Brian Boucher in 2000 to win a playoff series. The Senators were defeated by the Buffalo Sabres in the second round on May 13 2006, losing the series four games to one. This loss was particularily devastating since the Senators were widely tipped to win the Stanley Cup and were the highest seeded team left in the playoffs after the elimination of the Detroit Red Wings. Despite the high expectations, however, the Sens dropped the first three games of the series including two at home; ultimately losing on home ice, in overtime, on a short-handed goal scored by Buffalo's Jason Pominville in Game 5 of the series.

Respected hockey broadcaster Bob McKenzie described the Senators 2005-2006 postseason as "an epic failure".

Jerseys

Third Jersey

The Third Jersey of the Ottawa Senators was introduced in 2000. It was black with coloured stripes of red, white, and gold. On the gold strip were black arrows following each other around the jersey. The same striping pattern went on the sleeves too. The logo is the same as on the home jersey, a Roman's head looking out.

Season-by-season record

CQF = Conference Quarter Finals, CSF = Conference Semi Finals, CF = Conference Finals

Season GP W L T OTL PTS GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs
1992-93 84 10 70 4 -- 24 202 395 1716 6th in Adams Out of playoffs
1993-94 84 14 61 9 -- 37 201 397 1710 7th in Northeast Out of playoffs
1994-95 48 9 34 5 -- 23 117 174 749 7th in Northeast Out of Playoffs
1995-96 82 18 59 5 -- 41 191 291 1553 6th in Northeast Out of playoffs
1996-97 82 31 36 15 -- 77 226 234 1087 3rd in Northeast Conf QF, 3-4 (Sabres)
1997-98 82 34 33 15 -- 83 193 200 1091 5th in Northeast Conf SF, 1-4 (Capitals)
1998-99 82 44 23 15 -- 103 239 179 892 1st in Northeast Conf QF, 0-4 (Sabres)
1999-00 82 41 28 11 2 95 244 210 850 2nd in Northeast Conf QF, 2-4 (Maple Leafs)
2000-01 82 48 21 9 4 109 274 205 1062 1st in Northeast Conf QF, 0-4 (Maple Leafs)
2001-02 82 39 27 9 7 94 243 208 1347 3rd in Northeast Conf SF, 3-4 (Maple Leafs)
2002-03 82 52 21 8 1 113 263 182 1135 1st in Northeast Conf Final, 3-4 (Devils)
2003-04 82 43 23 10 6 102 262 189 1270 3rd in Northeast Conf QF, 3-4 (Maple Leafs)
2004-05 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
2005-06 82 52 21 -- 9 113 314 211 1443 1st in Northeast Conf SF, 1-4 (Sabres)
Grand Totals GP W L T OTL PTS GF GA PIM Highest Season Finish Highest Playoff Finish
14 NHL Seasons 1036 435 457 115 29 1014 2971 3069 15905 1st in NHL (2002-03) Conf Final, 3-4 (Devils) (2002-03)
Season was shortened due to the 1994-95 NHL lockout.
Season was cancelled due to the 2004-05 NHL lockout.
Including only newest franchise's NHL years.

Notable players

Current squad

As of April 21, 2006

Goaltenders
Number Player Catches Acquired Place of Birth
1 Canada Ray Emery L 2001 Cayuga, Ontario
30 United States Mike Morrison L 2006 Medford, Massachusetts
32 Canada Kelly Guard L 2004 Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
39 Czech Republic Dominik Hasek L 2004 Pardubice, Czechoslovakia
Defencemen
Number Player Shoots Acquired Place of Birth
2 United States Brian Pothier R 2002 New Bedford, Massachusetts
3 Slovakia Zdeno Chára - A L 2001 Trencin, Czechoslovakia
4 Canada Chris Phillips L 1996 Fort McMurray, Alberta
5 Germany Christoph Schubert L 2001 Munich, West Germany
6 Canada Wade Redden - A L 1996 Lloydminster, Saskatchewan
14 Slovakia Andrej Meszaros L 2004 Povazska Bystrica, Czechoslovakia
17 Czech Republic Filip Novak L 2005 Ceske Budejovice, Czechoslovakia
24 Russia Anton Volchenkov L 2000 Moscow, U.S.S.R.
Forwards
Number Player Shoots Position Acquired Place of Birth
9 Czech Republic Martin Havlat L RW 1999 Mlada Boleslav, Czechoslovakia
10 United States Tyler Arnason L C 2006 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
11 Sweden Daniel Alfredsson - C R RW 1994 Gothenburg, Sweden
12 Canada Mike Fisher R C 1998 Peterborough, Ontario
15 Canada Dany Heatley L RW 2005 Freiburg, West Germany
16 Canada Brian McGrattan R RW 2002 Hamilton, Ontario
19 Canada Jason Spezza R C 2001 Mississauga, Ontario
20 Canada Antoine Vermette L C/LW 2000 Saint-Agapit, Quebec
21 United States Bryan Smolinski R C/LW 2003 Toledo, Ohio
22 Canada Chris Kelly L C/LW 1999 Toronto, Ontario
25 Canada Chris Neil R RW 1998 Markdale, Ontario
26 Czech Republic Vaclav Varada L LW/RW 2003 Vsetin, Czechoslovakia
27 Canada Peter Schaefer L LW 2002 Yellow Grass, Saskatchewan
36 Canada Steve Martins L C/LW 2005 Gatineau, Quebec
44 United States Patrick Eaves R RW 2003 Calgary, Alberta
45 Canada Denis Hamel L LW 2003 Lachute, Quebec

Hall of Famers

Team Captains

Retired numbers

Ottawa Senators top draft picks

Franchise scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in the history of the Senators. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

Note: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, P/G = Pts per Game, * = Active

Player POS GP G A Pts P/G
*Daniel Alfredsson RW 706 262 409 671 .95
Alexei Yashin C 504 218 273 491 .97
Radek Bonk C 689 152 247 399 .58
Marian Hossa RW 467 188 202 390 .84
*Wade Redden D 694 88 248 336 .48
Shawn McEachern RW 454 142 162 304 .67
*Martin Havlat LW 294 105 130 235 .79
Magnus Arvedson RW 393 92 118 210 .53
Andreas Dackell RW 401 65 115 180 .45
Alexandre Daigle C 301 74 98 172 .57


Sens Trivia

Senators are the only team in the history of the NHL to be eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs by a short-handed goal in overtime, May 13, 2006.

See also

External links

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