Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Desperate Senators try to avoid eliminatio­n by Pens

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OTTAWA, ONTARIO >> Guy Boucher has typically kept his team off the ice on off-days during the postseason. Not Monday.

The Ottawa coach opted for a half-hour practice ahead of Game 6 on Tuesday night to help his team “refresh” and “reload” after a 7-0 beating by Pittsburgh, one of the worst losses in team playoff history. Players thought the practice, as well as an encouragin­g chat beforehand, helped wipe the slate clean as they prepare for an eliminatio­n game. The Penguins lead the Eastern Conference final 3-2 and can return to the Stanley Cup Final with a win.

“We can’t be sitting in our mud puddle,” Boucher told The Canadian Press after practice. “We’ve got to get up and go.”

Reloading against an opponent vying for back-to-back Stanley Cups means reverting back to strengths of the club. In Sunday’s blowout loss, Boucher said, he thought his team tried to trade goals with the high-scoring Penguins — an odd choice for a Senators team that thrives on shutting down opponents.

“If we stay away from our strengths there’s no chance,” Boucher said on Monday. “We’re aware of that. We got slapped — hard enough. The reality sets back in.”

Veteran Marc Methot said the team needs to stay tight on defense “because any opportunit­y where there’s a lapse in judgment or a mistake on the ice there’s a good chance one of those top two lines will capitalize on you.”

The Penguins suddenly have three lines operating at full power once more with Sidney Crosby returning to form (two goals, two assists in his last two games), Evgeni Malkin and Phil Kessel firing effectivel­y in tandem and the just-united trio of Nick Bonino, Carter Rowney and Bryan Rust spurring three goals in Game 5.

“I think we’ve done a better job of playing on our toes and managing the puck” Crosby said Monday. “Probably our forecheck creates a lot more. Rather than spending time in our end, we’ve created more opportunit­ies, and we’ve played a little bit faster and gotten some momentum.”

As for the 7-0 win, Crosby shrugged it off: “I think it’s about how you play the next game, and I think we expect a pretty desperate group. You don’t get to the Eastern Conference Finals without having that ability to bounce back. We know that tomorrow night’s going to be their best game, and it’s going to be our best as well.”

Ottawa forward Zack Smith said the Senators have been giving the Penguins a lot more room to operate, putting them on the defensive. The Senators managed just 51 shots over two games against Matt Murray, scoring twice.

Central to their woes is a power play that is 0-29 over the last 10 games. Ottawa last scored a power-play goal in Game 1 of a second round series against the New York Rangers.

“If we had an answer we would’ve done it already,” Ottawa winger Mark Stone said.

Former All-Star White dies at 77

CHICAGO >> Bill White, a former Chicago Blackhawks all-star defenseman and a member of Canada’s 1972 Summit Series team, has died. He was 77.

The Blackhawks announced death Monday.

White, a Toronto native, started his career with the Los Angeles Kings in 1967 before being traded to Chicago during the 1969-70 season. He formed an imposing tandem on the Blackhawks’ blue line with Pat Stapleton and helped the team reach the playoffs in all seven of his seasons in Chicago.

He appeared in six consecutiv­e All-Star games between 1969 and 1974 and briefly served as head coach of the Blackhawks for the final 46 games of the 1976-77 season. White’s

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ottawa goalie Craig Anderson (41) sits on the bench after being pulled during the first period of Game 5 of the Eastern Conference final in Pittsburgh on Sunday.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ottawa goalie Craig Anderson (41) sits on the bench after being pulled during the first period of Game 5 of the Eastern Conference final in Pittsburgh on Sunday.

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