https://www.sportsnet.ca/nhl/article/senators-intend-empower-chabots-offensive-dynamism-season/

Many of his fans imagined Thomas Chabot developing into one of the best all-around defencemen in the game.

In the mould of a Victor Hedman, if not quite to that level or the Swede’s six-foot-six size and reach.

Perhaps Chabot was destined to become a Nick Lidstrom-lite.

Lidstrom, like Chabot, had an effortless manner about him when he patrolled the blueline for the Detroit Red Wings.

Unlike Chabot, whose defensive game still needs work, Lidstrom was almost the perfect defenceman — he could do anything and do it smoothly, as evidenced by his seven Norris Trophies as top NHL defenceman between 2001-2011.

Chabot may still become a Norris Trophy candidate — he is still just 24.

And yet, the latest development concerning Chabot’s deployment with the Ottawa Senators is intriguing, if not stunning. Rather than make the focus his defensive side, the area where he needs the most work, Chabot is being turned loose. With an eye locked toward the far zone, Chabot is being paired with Artem Zub, a 25-year-old Russian who emerged from the KHL last season to become the Senators’ most pleasant surprise, and arguably their top defender.

Along with the message to Chabot to pump up his offensive game — he was fifth in team scoring last season with six goals, 31 points in 49 games, comes an even more shocking arrangement: Michael Del Zotto and Nikita Zaitsev have been assigned the role of “shutdown pair.”

How long that lasts remains to be seen. The six-foot, 194-pound Del Zotto, 31, has been many things over his long NHL career — versatile, useful, a well-travelled journeyman (Ottawa is his 9th NHL stop). But a shutdown D is not exactly the first thing that comes to mind.

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As Alex Metzger noted in a story for Last Word On Hockey, Del Zotto was ranked 161st (out of 175) in even strength defence for D-men who played at least 2000 minutes over the past three years. The eye test would confirm that Del Zotto has his defensive shortcomings.

And while Zaitsev is certainly willing and has carried a heavy defensive load since coming here from Toronto, he can have a terrible time getting the puck out of the zone.

Let’s see how this plays out. Head coach D.J. Smith knows he needs more goal-scoring, and he views a more rested Chabot bringing a high-octane, offensive thrust to the forwards, at even strength and on the power play.

“My plan is to have the Zaitsev, Del Zotto, Nick Holden and Josh Browns of the world take the majority of the defensive stuff,” Smith said, in the early days of training camp. “And have Chabby put in offensive situations more often. I think, unfairly to him, because he was our best player and our best all-around defenceman, he’s constantly challenged with playing against the other team’s best players and trying to provide offence. It’s not fair to him.”

In the view of Smith, and others in the organization, Chabot is getting worn down by trying to be Mr. Everything. His average ice time per game of 26:17 last season was second only to Drew Doughty of the Los Angeles Kings.

While Chabot didn’t do a ton of penalty killing, he will presumably do even less. And will no longer match up against the opponents’ top line.

“I think this opportunity here is going to allow him to get a lot more offensive zone starts, a lot more time spent with the top six forwards, I would say,” Smith said. “And that really is his skill set. I mean, his defending is so much better than it was. He’s facing the puck, boxing out and all those things, and we know he can play against the best in the world but it helps us when he’s providing offence.”

Chabot, who never complained about his heavy load, seems quite agreeable to slightly less ice time while priming his offensive game, as Zub does the heavy lifting at the back end.

“I think Zuby is such a strong guy in his own zone, and obviously that is something I always try to bring in my game, but to have him being so solid defensively, so strong in battles and corners that I think that is definitely going to help us as a pairing,” Chabot says.

“You guys have seen him, just the way he’s able to skate and make passes and plays in the O-zone . . . to play with him, I think we can really feed off each other and get involved in the O-zone and make more plays. Really, just as a team to just hold onto the puck a bit longer in the offensive zone.”

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While I understand the reasoning, part of me is wistful for the idea of Chabot as an ultimate, all-around defenceman. In time, I hope he gets that opportunity again.

If Chabot can pump up his offensive numbers, that will garner more attention around the league even if he is not on the ice in the final minute defending a one-goal lead.

Suffice to say, Ottawa’s defence will be a work in progress again this season.

In front of goaltender Matt Murray, looking to have a rebound season, Chabot and Zub will need time to develop chemistry. While Zub’s English is not great, Chabot says they communicate just fine using the language of hockey.

Exactly how newcomers Del Zotto and Nick Holden are used, could be very fluid.

Smith calls Holden, “a big, smart player who can do a bit of everything.”

Perhaps Holden, a steady presence on the left side, could move in alongside Zaitsev while Del Zotto drops back to join Victor Mete or Josh Brown in a third pairing. That adds up to 7D. (Sorry, all you Erik Brannstrom fans, but the tea leaves would suggest that barring an injury, the Branny train will check in at the Belleville station, with young Jacob Bernard-Docker riding shotgun with Brannstrom). Bernard-Docker will benefit from some AHL time while Brannstrom, 22, will again have to bide his time and hope for an opportunity. Brannstrom can move up and down without waivers. Mete requires waivers.

Pinto, Greig leave marks in Jets game

Pre-season hockey can be as deceiving as fool’s gold, but the Senators had lots to be excited about after their 3-2 overtime and shootout victory in Winnipeg Sunday. The shootout was pre-arranged, regardless of the outcome of the score in regulation. But just for fun, rookie centre Shane Pinto scored the overtime game-winner with a brilliant solo effort in the Jets’ zone, and then Brannstrom scored the shootout “winner.” Two victories in one night. Can’t beat that for fun.

Afterward, Smith said that Pinto was “as good as anyone on the ice for us” before going on to rave about energy forward Parker Kelly.

But it was centre Ridly Greig who was being talked about Sunday night and Monday morning, when he received news that he was going to be the subject of a hearing later Monday with the NHL department of safety for his stick to the mouth of Pierre-Luc Dubois. That resulted in a 15-stitch cut. Dubois generously said later he didn’t think Greig was trying to hit him in the face, but the Sens forward does have a history of stick infractions in the WHL with Brandon.

Greig received a five-minute major and game misconduct for getting his stick up on Dubois, but it was his earlier goal, in a four-on-four situation, that first lit up social media. Greig backhanded the puck through his own legs to get around 20-year-old Jets prospect Ville Heinola, before lifting a backhand up and over the glove hand of goalie Eric Comrie.

It was the kind of goal that makes TV highlight show hosts happy.

“For your first game, you score a goal, you get involved,” Smith said of Greig. “The future is bright for him, he can skate, make plays, he’s a competitive kid, so it looks like we’ve got ourselves a really good player.”

The Senators like Greig’s edge, but he will have to rein in the stick work a bit.

Zach Sanford helps depth on wing

The Senators had long awaited the emergence of big centre Logan Brown, their 11th overall draft pick of 2016. They will wait no more. On Saturday, Brown was sent to the St. Louis Blues, who play in Brown’s hometown, along with a conditional fourth-round pick, in exchange for winger Zach Sanford. Sanford, 26, who scored ten goals for the Blues last season and 16 in 2019-20, will add some scoring and experience to Ottawa’s forward group.

Sanford, 6-4, 207 pounds, was a second-round pick of the Washington Capitals in 2013. He appeared in eight playoff games with the Blues during their Cup run of 2019, with one goal and three assists.

St. Louis will get a fourth round pick from Ottawa in 2022 if Brown does not appear in 30 NHL games with the Blues this season.

That would be something if he does. Brown, who has suffered a range of injuries and could never earn a spot out of training camp, has played just one NHL game in three professional seasons. His best year was 2018-19 when he scored 14 goals and 42 points in 56 games for AHL Belleville. Brown hasn’t had a whiff of playoff action since the spring of 2018 with the OHL Kitchener Rangers.

This is one of those trades you hope works out for both teams and both players. Brown has been frustrated trying to gain traction in Ottawa and the frustration was not his alone.

https://www.sportsnet.ca/nhl/article/jets-prospect-perfetti-turns-heads-ice-smarts-dynamic-shootout-moves/

WINNIPEG — Never mind the highlight-reel goal in the shootout that didn’t really count.

This isn’t to diminish the fact Winnipeg Jets top forward prospect Cole Perfetti pulled off the same shifty move against his Vezina Trophy-winning teammate on the opening day of training camp, but the slippery forward-backhand-delay-forehand finish was equally impressive when he beat Filip Gustavsson in a 3-2 overtime loss to the Ottawa Senators on Sunday night.

Given the exhibition rules, this was just a dress rehearsal to help teams for down the road when the extra point really matters, but for the time being that impressive show of skill is merely stored for safe-keeping by the Jets’ coaching staff and won’t really factor into his battle to try and nail down a job in the opening-day lineup against the Anaheim Ducks on Oct. 13.

Of course it won’t hurt Perfetti’s cause. But if he’s able to stick around and avoid being sent to the minors, it will be because of his ability to process the game both with and without the puck.

“You know what, he’s a really smart player,” said Jets head coach Paul Maurice. “He’s got a killer move on the shootout and he would be a guy, this is just about time and reps for him. He’s got to get in, get a feel for the speed of the game. There were two or three just positioning clips in the offensive zone, he didn’t have the puck, where he did it perfectly. It was just right on. The angle was right. He stayed in the right spot. So I know he’s a very, very smart guy. So he’s got really good hands. He’s got really good vision.”

That remarkable vision was on display when he nearly connected with Luke Johnson.

Perfetti showed his spatial awareness to create a passing lane by buying himself some extra time and made a nice effort to get the puck through to Johnson, even if the pass was not quite on the mark.

“He’s going to get used to the timing and speed of the pro game,” said Maurice. “And all of those other things, what you like the most of was his adherence with what he was supposed to be doing without the puck. So he values it.

“He’s not sharking around the game trying to figure out where he can break it loose to show you what kind of hands he’s (got). He’s doing all the right things, which tells you at some point you’re going to be able to put him on the ice, even if he’s not scoring. That’s the key piece for the skill guy. What do you do without the puck?”

Just last week, Jets general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff left a small trail of breadcrumbs for reporters when asked a question about what it means for the organization to have the option to send Perfetti to the AHL instead of the Ontario Hockey League.

“He’s not there yet,” said Cheveldayoff.

While he wasn’t making a declaration Perfetti was a lock to secure a spot, this was a simple acknowledgement that the Jets’ 2020 first-rounder has lofty goals in mind — goals the 10th overall pick openly shared on the first day of the pro mini camp that preceded his first taste of an actual NHL training camp.

And with Mark Scheifele forced to sit out the opener as he serves the final game of his suspension, a player like Perfetti could keep himself in the equation a bit longer than usual.

How he performs in the coming weeks will ultimately dictate what the next step for Perfetti will be, but he definitely helped his cause on Sunday night.

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Dubois needs stitches

Being able to play in front of what was close to a full building for the first time since March of 2020 made Pierre-Luc Dubois happy, even if the 15 stitches to his face after taking a cross-check from Ridly Greig made it difficult for him to smile.

Dubois was going to finish a check on Greig in the offensive zone at 10:31 of the second period, but the Senators’ 2020 first-rounder got his stick up in the grill of the Jets’ centre.

The call on the ice was a double-minor for high-sticking, but after reviewing the play on the iPad during the stoppage in play, the call was upgraded to a cross-checking major and game misconduct for the Brandon Wheat Kings star. The NHL’s department of player safety has since said it Greig would have a hearing for the incident.

“I don’t think he did it on purpose. I don’t really know him, but I know he’s a good player, scored a nice goal in the first,” said Dubois. “I think he just got scared, threw his stick up. He saw me coming and threw his stick up to defend himself, which is obviously against the rules for an obvious reason. It is what it is.”

Dubois didn’t play for the rest of the second period as he received repairs that were evident during his post-game session with reporters, but he returned for the third period, finishing with 18 shifts for 16 minutes and 34 seconds of ice time.

“I felt good leading up to the crosscheck,” said Dubois. “It was tough to get back in the game (after that). But I felt good leading up to that, (in terms of) execution and stuff like that. You’ll never start the preseason feeling 100 per cent. Sometimes it’s the legs, sometimes it’s the mind. It’s (about) putting it together piece by piece.”

Dubois scored a power-play marker, while CJ Suess had the other goal for the Jets, who finished the game 1-for-5 with the man-advantage.

Winnipeg Jets’ Pierre-Luc Dubois (80) carries the puck around Ottawa Senators’ Lassi Thomson (60) and Erik Brannstrom (26) during third period NHL preseason action in Winnipeg, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021. (Fred Greenslade/CP)


 

The departure of Dubois for half a period wasn’t the only time Maurice was forced to hold his breath as Nikolaj Ehlers left the game for several minutes after he got tangled up with a Senators player in the neutral zone. Ehlers was actually called for tripping on the play but didn’t serve the penalty as he received some medical attention before returning to action.

“That is probably the biggest challenge for those guys in exhibition hockey. You can’t play-fight in hockey and be good,” said Maurice. “Everyone is still trying to get their timing, trying to get their hands, trying to get good. The game is still physical, full contact, with lots of chaos. So you hope everyone gets through it healthy. Both of them are.

“Pierre-Luc had a whole bunch of stitches and he had the option of not coming back based on it, but he wanted to come back out and play so good on him for that. (Ehlers) is always a more effective player when he’s in some scrums and some battles, so we’ve come to expect that.”

Maurice isn’t going to over analyze this opening game, whether a player turned heads or had a few issues to overcome.

“You have a huge spectrum of people coming to the rink,” said Maurice. “Some guys, this could be their one game to make their impression. Other guys are wondering ‘How many games is the coach going to make me play?’ There is a big difference for each player coming to the rink. It’s almost all positive at this stage.

“If you’ve had either good camps or you’ve been a good player and you had a terrible night I won’t think twice about it. If you’re somebody that you don’t know and you’ve had a good night today, that’s a positive.

“I don’t think anybody is going to lose anything if they had a tough night. It won’t change what we think of them.”

One of those players who caught the attention of Maurice was defenceman Johnathan Kovacevic, who is coming off a strong season with the Moose and is trying to improve his standing.

Kovacevic took 22 shifts for 17 minutes and 24 seconds of ice time, finishing with one shot on goal and one takeaway.

“You think about the strides that he’s made over the last couple of years,” said Maurice. “He looked composed with the puck. His reads were really good, he had some good box outs, some good physicality. He made some plays, some smart plays with the puck. That would have been one of the new faces for me. I didn’t get to see him play at all last year. He was good.”

Jeff Marek and Elliotte Friedman talk to a lot of people around the hockey world, and then they tell listeners all about what they’ve heard and what they think about it.

Fourth line seeks identity

Thanks to the departures of Nate Thompson, Trevor Lewis and Mathieu Perreault in free agency, one of the more hotly-contested battles will be for fourth-line roles.

The Jets will be looking to the fourth line to consistently provide close to double digits in ice time this season, but is unlikely to be anchored by veteran players the way it has been the past several campaigns.

But exactly what it’s going to look like remains very much a work in progress.

“That will really depend on the identity they create,” said Maurice. “That identity is built by the structure of it. I’m not demanding that we have a certain identity and try to make players play a game that they can’t. If it’s a bit more skilled, then we are going to want to see them do some things with the pucks.

“But there is that base level, and a lot of times (the question is) ‘can you do that against the other teams’ fourth line?’ If you can do it, if their fourth line is heavy and physical and you can be a more skilled line, then that can be a great advantage for you. But you’ve got to make sure you can do the right things against those lines.”

Riley Nash has taken the majority of the reps at centre during the first four days of training camp and the opening exhibition game and looks like the front-runner for that job — though he has the versatility to be able to be used as a right-winger as well.

How long does Nash think it takes for that identity to start taking shape?

“That’s a good question. I think it depends a lot on the other lines as well, where guys are going, where we’re shaking out,” said Nash. “It’s just getting all those guys on the same page and making sure we’re as responsible as possible and they can trust us (for) D-zone faceoffs and d-zone hits against their top lines. It definitely takes time and it’s definitely on all the players on the fourth line.”

The loss of Thompson and Lewis, coupled with Mason Appleton joining the Seattle Kraken in the expansion draft means the Jets are going to need several players to step into penalty killing roles this season.

Having the ability to play on special teams has been one of the pre-requisites for the fourth line under Maurice.

In Sunday’s game, Jansen Harkins and Kristian Vesalainen were both given the chance to take turns on the penalty kill — along with work on the power play.

The Senators finished zero-for-four on the power play, while Harkins drew the primary assist on the Dubois goal, so it was a strong start for him in the battle to move up the pecking order on the forward depth chart.

Winnipeg Jets’ goaltender Eric Comrie (1) makes a save on Ottawa Senators’ Tyler Ennis (63) as Andrew Copp (9) defends during first period NHL preseason action in Winnipeg, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021. (Fred Greenslade/CP)


 

Comrie shakes off rust

Jets goalie Eric Comrie gave up three goals on 27 shots in just over 60 minutes of work on Sunday in what was his first NHL action since Feb. 22 — when he propelled the New Jersey Devils to a 5-3 win over the Buffalo Sabres.

This was the first step in Comrie’s quest to nail down the backup job behind Connor Hellebuyck and he’s scheduled to get at least one more exhibition appearance – likely next weekend against either the Edmonton Oilers or Vancouver Canucks.

Comrie gave up a backhand goal to Greig in the first period, then settled into a nice groove before giving up the equalizer to Alex Formenton on a shot from the middle of the circle that went off the far post and in.

Shane Pinto delivered the overtime winner on a perfect shot that beat Comrie high to the blocker side just 25 seconds into the three-on-three session.

Despite being limited to only one shot on goal in the second period, Comrie didn’t think the lack of action impacted his performance.

“No, I don’t think so. That’s a goalie’s job,” said Comrie. “I mean, we get paid to stay in the moment, stay in focus, and I think it was fine. I had a couple of shots early in the third period that got me right back into it. Even throughout, there was still some movement in our zone. I know there wasn’t a ton of action but still, it’s mostly the movement stuff that keeps you in the zone more than anything else.”

Comrie vowed to scour through the videotape for ways he could have played the shots differently, but he remained upbeat.

“I thought there (were) lots of things I liked,” said Comrie. “I felt pretty solid. I felt rebound control was pretty solid in the first period and throughout the first bit there. I made a couple good down low saves, a couple good saves through traffic. So I think that was nice for me to be able to go out there and do that and see through some screens and just react. Just play hockey again and have some fun.

“I haven’t played a ton of games in a long time here. It feels nice to get back out there and get a little rust off and just build off that.”

https://www.sportsnet.ca/nba/video/raptors-achiuwa-impressed-torontos-diversity-food-culture/

https://www.sportsnet.ca/nfl/article/chiefs-coach-andy-reid-released-hospital-plans-return-soon/

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chiefs coach Andy Reid was released from the hospital Monday after he felt ill and was taken by ambulance to be treated for dehydration following their 30-24 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers.

Chiefs spokesman Ted Crews said that Reid was “in great spirits” and that he planned to visit the practice facility later in the day or Tuesday. In the meantime, Chiefs coordinators Steve Spagnuolo and Eric Bieniemy ran the Monday film reviews.

Reid coached the duration of the game on Sunday, which was played in unseasonably warm temperatures that topped 90 degrees. He also addressed the team in the locker room afterward, then was examined by the Chiefs medical staff before the decision was made to send him to The University of Kansas Hospital for testing and observation.

The 63-year-old Reid is expected to coach Sunday when the Chiefs visit Philadelphia.

https://www.sportsnet.ca/nfl/video/bledsoes-injury-started-bradys-legacy/