The Daily Courier

Senators force Game 7 in Eastern final series against Penguins

Mike Hoffman scores winner as Ottawa bounces back for 2-1 victory in Game 6

- By The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — Guy Boucher said the Ottawa Senators could choose to approach Game 6 in one of two ways: eliminatio­n game or opportunit­y. They chose the latter.

Mike Hoffman scored the eventual game-winner 94 seconds into the third period and Craig Anderson stopped 45 shots as the Sens staved off eliminatio­n and forced Game 7 of the Eastern Conference final with a 2-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday night.

It was quite a response from the group that was shellacked 7-0 in Pittsburgh two days earlier.

“I think the biggest message for us was if somebody told us back in training camp in September that we’d have an opportunit­y to win Game 6 in the Eastern Conference final at home in front of our fans we would’ve taken it,” said Bobby Ryan, who scored a rare powerplay goal for the Sens.

“So let’s not dwell, let’s not kick ourselves and put our heads down. Let’s embrace this opportunit­y to extend this for two more days together and go from there.” Key, too, was a better start. While it was the Penguins that grabbed the first lead on a bit of brilliance from Evgeni Malkin in the second, the Sens didn’t buckle.

Much of that was owed to Anderson, who made 34 saves over the first 40 minutes amid constant pressure from the Pens.

“He had our backs all night,” Sens forward Zack Smith said.

The 36-year-old Anderson was coming off a pair of rough outings, including Sunday when he was pulled after yielding four goals in the blowout loss. Boucher made the move to protect Anderson when the game was out of reach.

It was at that point that the Illinois native turned the page and started to look ahead. He credited work with a sports psychologi­st early in his career for helping him manage the mental side of the game — along with the occasional motivation­al book.

“You can’t change what happens in the past,” Anderson said. “From that moment on you have to look forward and get ready for the next one.”

Anderson’s performanc­e was a reminder for Boucher of why he took the head coaching job with Ottawa in the first place last May.

“I’ll be honest with you, if I didn’t have a No. 1 goalie, I didn’t want the job,” Boucher said. “I’ve lived it for quite a few years, and it’s hell when you don’t have it because everything you do turns to darkness, and there’s nothing that really matters when you don’t have a real No. 1 goaltender.”

Boucher reached the conference final with Tampa in his first season behind an NHL bench. The Lightning, with Mathieu Garon and Dwayne Roloson splitting the net warily, missed the playoffs the next season and Boucher was fired the year after that.

“It’s like a quarterbac­k in football and a pitcher in baseball, and we have it,” Boucher said.

Anderson would not let another shot past after Hoffman pulled the Sens in front with a wicked blast. The Sens were looking for a more structured defensive effort after the weekend debacle and while it came early on, eventually it was the goaltender who needed to come up large.

Also helpful to the Sens cause in edging past the defending Stanley Cup champs in Game 6 were functionin­g special teams.

Ryan broke an 0-for-29 drought on the power play when he tied the game at 1-1 with a one-time shot that beat Matt Murray shortside. It was the first power-play goal for the club since Game 1 of a second round series against New York (April 27).

The Sens have beaten the odds at every point so far, blowing past any and all expectatio­ns with their deep run this spring. They’ll get one more chance to extend that run and book a long-awaited trip back to the Stanley Cup final with a win in Game 7.

“We bought ourselves two more days together and this team just wants to be around each other,” Ryan said. “It’s exciting.”

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 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Ottawa Senators defenceman Marc Methot takes down Pittsburgh Penguins centre Sidney Crosby during the third period of Game 6 of the NHL Eastern Conference final in Ottawa on Tuesday. Ottawa won 2-1.
The Canadian Press Ottawa Senators defenceman Marc Methot takes down Pittsburgh Penguins centre Sidney Crosby during the third period of Game 6 of the NHL Eastern Conference final in Ottawa on Tuesday. Ottawa won 2-1.

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