The Province

UH-OH FOR TWO

Duchene, Ryan leave with injuries as Senators limp to another loss vs. Canadiens ... Ottawa’s own Byron nets two goals for visitors

- KEN WARREN kwarren@postmedia.com @Citizenkwa­rren

Just the other day, Ottawa Senators coach Guy Boucher was talking about the surprising run of good injury luck among his group of forwards.

He should have knocked on a piece of wood as he said those words.

The Senators dropped a 5-2 decision to the Montreal Canadiens on Thursday, with Ottawa boy Paul Byron scoring a pair of goals, allowing them to sweep the homeand-home series.

The bigger, perhaps devastatin­g news, was the loss of both Matt Duchene and

Bobby Ryan to injuries. Duchene left the game in the second period, grabbing his leg as he skated off the ice. The Senators described it as a “lower body” injury, but there was no immediate word on the severity of the damage.

Duchene leads the Senators in scoring, with 12 goals and 22 assists and he had netted eight goals and 14 assists in his previous 14 games.

Ryan left the game late in the first period with what was described as an “upper body” injury — possibly a concussion — following a collision with Canadiens defenceman Brett Kulak.

As for the defeat, it was an all too familiar story for the Senators.

The Senators were determined to start faster and to not let the game get away from them, as they did in Tuesday’s 5-2 loss in Montreal.

For all that, the second period Thursday looked like deja-vu all over again.

The Canadiens dominated in the middle frame, forcing the Senators’ young defence into mistake after mistake, turning a 1-1 game into a 3-1 advantage.

It was a particular­ly tough night for Thomas Chabot, but he was hardly alone. Senators goaltender Craig

Anderson held the fort for the longest time, but he couldn’t do much to stop the 2-on-1 breaks that allowed the Canadiens to jump ahead.

First, it was Byron, who finished off a Phillip Danault pass for his first of the night.

Then there was an Andrew

Shaw goal, which came after he was fed a cross-crease pass from Jonathan Drouin.

Not all was lost just yet. As they’ve done many times earlier this season, the Senators hung around. At least for a while.

Colin White pounced on a fat Price rebound to score a power-play goal with 1:10 remaining in the second, giving the Senators some confidence heading into the third.

Yet the the hopes of the Senators coming all the way back ended with Brendan

Gallagher’s goal early in the third. Byron put the punctuatio­n mark on the victory, scoring into an empty net.

The game was deadlocked 1-1 after the first, after Mark

Stone and the Canadiens’

Nicolas Deslaurier

exchanged goals only 20 seconds apart.

If the opening few moments were all about Price’s outstandin­g work in the Canadiens net, the second half of the period was all about Anderson keeping the game tied.

Price’s highlights included stoning Magnus Paajarvi twice around the four-minute mark and making a fantastic trapper save off Brady Tkachuk.

Only seconds after the Tkachuk save, however, Stone caught the top of the net after White cleanly won a faceoff against Danault.

On the ensuing shift, though, Deslaurier­s’ floater from the blue line sailed over Anderson’s trapper, tying the game and leaving Anderson shaking his head.

From there, Anderson owned the remainder of the first as the Canadiens picked up their pace.

He earned a few “And-ee, And-ee” chants from the crowd after making a pair of superb stops off Brendan Gallagher twice within 30 seconds.

But the fans left the rink wondering just how long the Senators could be without Duchene and Ryan.

LIVING THE LIFE

The “hockey life”, as Luke Richardson refers to his gig as a behind-the-scenes assistant coach, continues.

After spending last year with the New York

Islanders, Richardson — the former Senators defenceman and former head coach of the Senators AHL’s franchise —has adjusted seamlessly into his new role as Claude Julien’s assistant with the Montreal Canadiens.

“Another move this summer for (wife) Steph and I, but that’s the hockey life, we’re used to it. It’s been good. We’re really enjoying Montreal.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? The Montreal Canadiens celebrate a goal by Jeff Petry (No. 26) during last night’s win over the Senators.
— GETTY IMAGES The Montreal Canadiens celebrate a goal by Jeff Petry (No. 26) during last night’s win over the Senators.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada