Dayton Daily News

Senators seek first victory in a Game 7

Experience favors Penguins with spot in Final on the line.

- By Will Graves Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — Craig Anderson is a realist, the byproduct of 15 years playing the most demanding position in the NHL.

The Ottawa goaltender would like to chalk his 45-save masterpiec­e in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals against Pittsburgh up to his own brilliance. He knows that’s not exactly the case.

“I think you need to be a little bit lucky to be good at times,” Anderson said of the 2-1 victory.

Ottawa has relied on a bit of both during its deepest playoff run in a decade, and Anderson helped force Game 7 tonight. Yet here the Senators are, alive and still skating with a chance to eliminate the deeper, more experience­d and more explosive Stanley Cup champions.

So much for the series being over after the Penguins destroyed Ottawa 7-0 in Game 5.

“I think, if you believe you’re beaten, you’re done already,” Anderson said. “If you believe that you can win, there’s always a chance.”

All the Senators have to do to reach the Stanley Cup Final for just the second time in franchise history is take down one of the league’s marquee franchises on the road in a building where they were beaten by a touchdown last time out.

No pressure or anything. Really. The Senators weren’t supposed to be here. Then again, in a way neither were the Penguins. No team has repeated in nearly two decades and at times during the season and even during the playoffs this group was too beat up. Too tired from last spring’s Cup run. The bullseye on their backs too big.

Yet they’ve survived behind the brilliance of stars Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, coach Mike Sullivan’s impeccable decisions and a resiliency that has them one game from being the first Cup champion to return to the finals since Detroit in 2009.

Those Red Wings, by the way, fell to the Penguins in seven games. There have been several Game 7s for Pittsburgh in the interim on both sides of the ledger, though the Penguins are 2-0 in Game 7s under Sullivan. They edged Tampa Bay in Game 7 of last year’s East finals and disposed of Presidents’ Trophy winner Washington in Game 7 of the second round.

“It’s not something that’s new to them,” Sullivan said. “These guys have been involved in these experience­s on a number of occasions, and they have those experience­s to draw on.”

The Senators are 0-5 in Game 7s, the last setback coming in the first round to the New York Rangers in 2012. That was five years ago, a lifetime in the NHL.

Ottawa rebuilt itself on the fly this season in coach Guy Boucher’s first year. Boucher favors discipline over daring, and while the stat sheet looked awfully one-sided in Game 6, the scoreboard did not.

 ?? JANA CHTILOVA / GETTY IMAGES ?? Ottawa’s Craig Anderson stopped 45 shots in the Senators’ 2-1 win over the Penguins that sent the Eastern Conference finals to a Game 7.
JANA CHTILOVA / GETTY IMAGES Ottawa’s Craig Anderson stopped 45 shots in the Senators’ 2-1 win over the Penguins that sent the Eastern Conference finals to a Game 7.

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