Ottawa Citizen

Inconsiste­nt goaltendin­g continues to plague Senators

- BRUCE GARRIOCH bgarrioch@postmedia.com

Goaltendin­g was supposed to be the least of the Ottawa Senators' worries this season.

It was viewed as a position of strength in camp with the Senators hoping to make the playoffs for the first time in seven years.

Fifty-six games into the season and 16 points out of the final wild-card spot in the East, the Senators were reminded — again — in their 6-3 loss to the Washington Capitals on Monday night that Anton Forsberg and Joonas Korpisalo are still searching for that elusive consistenc­y.

With the NHL trade deadline approachin­g March 8 at 3 p.m., it's an area the Senators are likely taking a serious look at as they study the options to try to strengthen the roster.

Forsberg picked up his fourth straight win with 26 stops in a 4-3 victory over Vegas on Saturday, but as has been the case too many times he couldn't carry over the performanc­e and was pulled after allowing four goals on 10 shots against the Caps.

To make matters worse, Korpisalo allowed two goals on 10 shots during his 40 minutes against the Caps. You're just not going to have a chance if you give up six goals on 20 shots, and it didn't help that the club also made several defensive miscues.

The Senators went into Tuesday night's game against the Nashville Predators at Bridgeston­e Arena ranked No. 32 in the league with an .881 save percentage. The combined 3.52 goals-against average had Ottawa sitting at No. 29 in the NHL.

Before coach D.J. Smith was fired Dec. 18, many experts made the point that it wasn't goaltendin­g that was the biggest issue for the Senators, it was the way the club played in front of them.

Fair enough. It's not all on the goaltender­s because they're only one piece of the machinery. But if you don't get the saves, then it's costly and after battling back from a 2-0 deficit in the first against the Caps, the Senators found themselves down 4-2 after 20 minutes.

The situation didn't improve much early in interim coach Jacques Martin's return, so goalie coach Zac Bierk was fired and Justin Peters was promoted Jan. 15 from the club's American Hockey League affiliate in Belleville to work with the Ottawa netminders.

General manager Steve Staios was hoping a new voice would help Korpisalo and Forsberg, who was out for a month with groin injury when the change was made.

In the 18 games the Senators had played with Peters in his new role before facing the Predators, the club had posted a 10-5-3 record with a 3.28 GAA. That had Ottawa ranked No. 22 and it should be noted there have been nights where both goalies have passed the eye test. But Monday wasn't one of those and that kind of goaltendin­g can suck the life out of a team.

When the Senators signed Korpisalo to a five-year, Us$20-million deal on July 1, he was supposed to form a strong tandem with Forsberg. It just hasn't worked out that way and it's a mystery because Korpisalo was strong down the stretch for the Kings last season.

Korpisalo has posted a 13-18-3 record in 38 appearance­s this season with a 3.39 GAA and an .887 save percentage. Forsberg, who is making $2.75 million on a deal that runs through next season, has been a bit better with an 11-9-0 record, a 3.25 GAA and an .889 save percentage.

The Senators were linked to Nashville goalie Juuse Saros last week and they've likely kicked tires there. The 28-year-old

Saros hasn't been at best this year, but has a 23-21-2 record with a .904 save percentage and 2.95 GAA.

Saros has only one year left on his deal at $5 million and Nashville GM Barry Trotz has publicly dismissed the possibilit­y of making a deal. That hasn't stopped teams from calling the Predators, but it would be a tall task for the Senators to make that happen.

The asking price would be high and the Sens would also have to find somebody willing to take Korpisalo's contract.

Somebody speculated recently that the best bet for the Senators is to buy out the final four years of Korpisalo's contract. A check of the calculator on capfriendl­y. com says it will cost $10.6 million to buy out the $16 million remaining on Korpisalo's deal after this season.

Not only is that a lot to pay a guy not to play, it would also mean the organizati­on will carry a cap hit for the next eight years.

It might make sense for the club to revisit this in the off-season.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Senators goaltender Anton Forsberg couldn't followup a strong performanc­e in a win over Vegas on Saturday in a game against the Capitals on Monday. Forsberg was pulled after allowing four goals on 10 shots in a loss against the Capitals.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Senators goaltender Anton Forsberg couldn't followup a strong performanc­e in a win over Vegas on Saturday in a game against the Capitals on Monday. Forsberg was pulled after allowing four goals on 10 shots in a loss against the Capitals.
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