The Province

Sens’ Ryan knows the time is now

PRESSURE: The closest thing Ottawa has to a sniper realizes how much his team needs him in this series

- WAYNE SCANLAN

OTTAWA — As head coach Dave Cameron says, the Senators don’t have a player he’d describe as a “pure goal scorer.”

There is no Steven Stamkos, no Alex Ovechkin in the lineup.

There is, however, a winger named Bobby Ryan, a four-time 30-goal scorer with the Anaheim Ducks.

Since coming over in a trade in the summer of 2013, the 28-year-old New Jersey native is the closest thing Ottawa has to a pure goal scorer.

Ryan’s frustratio­n with failing to score a point in a quarter-final series the Senators trail 3-0 to the Montreal Canadiens, combined with entering the playoffs on a 12-game goal scoring drought, is palpable.

His body language and tone are dripping with anguish.

“Mentally exhausting is a good way to put it,” Ryan says of his experience in this series. “I think I’ve watched every game four or five times, ad nauseam, looking for opportunit­ies and holes in their game, and where I can generate more. Dave and Walmer (Senators goaltendin­g coach Rick Wamsley) have been great for me. We all recognize it’s right there, they’re not dropping. There’s not a lot of time left for it to turn, so you hope it starts (Wednesday) and continues.”

Ottawa’s Canadian Tire Centre will be the scene of Game 4 on Wednesday, as the Senators look to comeback from a 3-0 series deficit for the first time in franchise history. A goal from Ryan would give this team a huge lift, not to mention what it would do for the psyche of No. 6.

“If you’re a top line forward and a guy that’s relied upon to score, when you don’t score, the pressure mounts and adds up,” Ryan says.

He thought he had one in Game 3, so close to scoring he started to raise his stick in celebratio­n as the puck veered over the net.

“I don’t know if he (Habs goaltender Carey Price) got a piece of it or what,” said Ryan, admitting that when a player is in a slump as deep as his, the close calls are especially “dishearten­ing.”

Ryan did have a couple of shots on Price in Game 3, a 2-1 loss. And his line, with centre Mika Zibanejad and winger Milan Michalek, had their best game of the series.

“I think we did a better job in that triangle offence,” Ryan says. “There were opportunit­ies. I didn’t know I had 10 feet around me in front of the net on one, Milo had a breakaway. We were there. Gripping the stick a little tight, it’s hard to generate through skill — you have to do it through hard work.”

Despite his late-season slump, Ryan was a big part of Ottawa’s storybook drive to a playoff position.

He played hurt, through a broken finger, and logged important minutes. It could be that he is exhausted from all the heavy lifting, although Ryan makes no excuses.

It doesn’t help that one of the players who went to Anaheim in the Ryan trade, winger Jakob Silfverber­g, has his playoffs off and running for the Ducks. The energetic Silfverber­g had a goal and two assists in Anaheim’s 5-4 victory in Winnipeg on Monday and is second in team scoring with two goals and two assists in three games. Ryan’s luck is bound to change, though as he says while facing eliminatio­n, the time is now.

It might also be unfair to expect an 18-goal scorer during the regular season to lead the charge. The Senators had five 20-goal scorers and strangely, Ryan and Clarke MacArthur (who played just 62 games) were not among them. This is a team that scores by committee, much like the Canadiens once you get past star forward Max Pacioretty.

One of the difference­s in the series has been the production of Montreal’s fourth line of Brandon Prust, Torrey Mitchell and Brian Flynn, the Game 1 heroes at the Bell Centre. Ottawa will look for a spark from its third and fourth lines Wednesday.

 ?? — WAYNE CUDDINGTON/OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? Senators, from left, Cody Ceci, Mika Zibanejad, J.G. Pageau, Clarke MacArthur and David Legwand head into the rink for practice Tuesday.
— WAYNE CUDDINGTON/OTTAWA CITIZEN Senators, from left, Cody Ceci, Mika Zibanejad, J.G. Pageau, Clarke MacArthur and David Legwand head into the rink for practice Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada