Ottawa Citizen

NO TIME TO SULK FOR SENATORS

Boucher says players have to shake off crushing loss and get back to their game

- BRUCE GARRIOCH bgarrioch@postmedia.com Twitter: @sungarrioc­h

The Ottawa Senators don’t have time to feel sorry for themselves.

The Sens went back to work Monday, the worst playoff loss in franchise history behind them, and their Stanley Cup dream on the verge of being crushed. Now or never. Do or die. Yes, all the clichés apply to the challenge the Senators are facing.

Coming off a 7-0 loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins Sunday to fall behind 3-2 in the Eastern Conference final, the Senators held a rare 25-minute practice at the Canadian Tire Centre — what could be their final one this season if they can’t force a Game 7 — as they try to stave off eliminatio­n in a must-win Game 6 Tuesday night.

Captain Erik Karlsson along with defenceman Cody Ceci and centre Derick Brassard, who all left the loss early for precaution­ary reasons, weren’t on the ice, but they’re all expected to suit up while the possibilit­y exists defenceman Mark Borowiecki could play for the first time since Game 2 against the Boston Bruins in Round 1.

Before they skated, Ottawa coach Guy Boucher and his staff went over the tape of the ugly loss. The advice he gave was simple: This is no time to sulk or feel sorry for yourselves because the only option now is get back to playing the kind of hockey that has moved them to within two wins of a trip to the final.

“Today’s a new day and we wanted to make sure we knew what we need to focus on and reload mentally, physically, emotionall­y and move on,” Boucher said Monday. “We can’t be sitting in our mud puddle, we’ve got to get up and go.

“That’s been what we’ve done all year and through the playoffs so (Tuesday) we’re coming in fresh and ready to go.”

The Senators believe they faced similar adversity when they lost two straight to the New York Rangers in Round 2, allowing them to tie the semifinal at 2-2 before Ottawa closed it out with a 4-2 series victory. But that wasn’t nearly as dire as the situation the club is facing because Ottawa’s season was never on the line.

Yes, the Rangers were talented, but the Penguins are the defending Stanley Cup champs, and despite Boucher’s argument to the contrary, Pittsburgh is getting better after posting two straight wins while the Senators are coming apart at the seams. They need to find their game or the season is curtains.

“I don’t see a trend,” said Boucher. “I see one bad game.”

OK, however, it’s hard to argue with the fact the Penguins have made adjustment­s and they shredded the Senators defensivel­y on Sunday. Plus goaltender Matt Murray has allowed only two goals in the nearly nine periods he’s played since taking over for Marc-Andre Fleury in Game 3.

The Senators would prefer to look forward and not back at their shockingly bad effort in a game that meant so much.

“We talked about it right after the last game: A loss is a loss,” said forward Zack Smith. “It doesn’t change the fact that the guys are embarrasse­d the way it ended, but you’ve got to erase that right away.

“We kind of thought we had that put behind us, then we come out here to do media, and you guys remind us of exactly everything that happened and how bad and how terrible we were. But we’ve been putting it behind us since the end of the game. It doesn’t do us any good to dwell on it.

“It’s something for you guys to write stories about, but in our minds and in the room, we’ve put that behind us and we’re focused on tomorrow.”

Boucher said the Senators have to start by playing the right way and he’s hoping the way they lost Sunday will serve as a wake-up call.

“If we stay away from our strengths, there’s no chance. We have to put our strengths on the ice,” said Boucher. “We went in last game trying to run and gun it with the best offensive team in the league, and that’s the result we got.

“That’s the result we’re going to get if we run and gun it. We’re aware of that. We got slapped, and hard enough. So the reality sets back in, and we know how we have to play to give ourselves a chance.”

The challenge now is to keep the season alive.

“We’ve got to stay in the moment. I know it’s hard when you’re so close to going to a Cup final,” said winger Viktor Stalberg. “That’s all we can do. We have to find a way to win tomorrow. That’s all we can control.

“This is the game that matters. We can’t look further than that. (Tuesday) night is what matters. We’ve got to come and give all we’ve got. We’ve to stick with our systems, play our systems better than we did the last five periods. We know we can frustrate them and we’ve played with them in this series.

“We’re still confident in our ability. It’s do or die and everybody is going to come to put everything on the line tomorrow night.”

The Senators need a win or tomorrow will never come for this team.

We went in last game trying to run and gun it with the best offensive team in the league, and that’s the result we got.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Pittsburgh’s Phil Kessel scores during Sunday’s 7-0 rout. The Senators say they’ve already put the blowout loss behind them.
GETTY IMAGES Pittsburgh’s Phil Kessel scores during Sunday’s 7-0 rout. The Senators say they’ve already put the blowout loss behind them.
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