logo
Brady Tkachuk's health under the microscope in Senators win over Devils: 3 takeaways

Brady Tkachuk's health under the microscope in Senators win over Devils: 3 takeaways

New York Times23-03-2025

The play looked harmless, yet revealing.
Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk received a pass at centre ice while being marked by New Jersey Devils defenceman Brett Pesce. As he turned and lost the puck, he leaned forward. As he lifted himself, he put a hand on his left hip before wincing and heading to the bench in pain. Senators fans had every right to feel nervous and wonder when or if the Senators would rest him.
Advertisement
But Tkachuk returned to the Senators bench at the start of the second period. He scored a goal a little over four minutes in and the Senators never trailed in a 3-2 win over the Devils.
That sums up Tkachuk's return since the 4 Nations Face-Off: an integral piece to the Senators' puzzle who is producing while playing through pain.
'He's a competitive guy,' Senators head coach Travis Green said. 'Loves winning, loves competing, loves his teammates. He's everything you want in a young captain.'
Tkachuk's health has been under the microscope since he returned from the 4 Nations break. Tkachuk suffered an injury during Team U.S.A.'s final round-robin game against Team Sweden. Right after the event, he told the Spittin' Chiclets podcast that his 'body's not feeling too great,' before missing his team's first two games out of the break. Weeks later, Tkachuk couldn't finish a March 13 game against the Boston Bruins after he 'tweaked' his hip according to Green. And then, one day after a below-standard performance against the Montreal Canadiens on Tuesday, Tkachuk was asked if he was '100 percent healthy.'
'Yup, I'm good,' Tkachuk replied.
Tkachuk finished the game but only played a season-low 13:23 in the victory with most of his third-period shifts lasting around 30 seconds. Only the fourth-line trio of Adam Gaudette, Matthew Highmore and Michael Amadio played fewer minutes for the Sens. Tkachuk added two hits, three shots and one blocked shot in the victory.
Until the Senators accomplish their season-long goal of making the playoffs, their leader's health — specifically his hip — will be under close watch.
Good things happen when Brady's battling in front of the net 💪#GoSensGo pic.twitter.com/CrXCbXf8AL
— Ottawa Senators (@Senators) March 23, 2025
The Senators finally gave Zetterlund a proper opportunity on their top line on Saturday alongside Tkachuk and Tim Stützle. The Swedish forward was given a quick audition during the Sens' blowout loss to the Avalanche earlier this week. But Green changed his lineup ahead of the matchup, putting Zetterlund up top and moving Claude Giroux down to a third-line role with Shane Pinto and Ridly Greig.
Advertisement
'I think we have a good fit, good chemistry, (we're) strong on pucks all of us,' Zetterlund said ahead of the game against the Devils. 'Tim (Stützle) likes to hold on to it, skate around with it. I've just got to find an open spot.
'We're going to fit each other good, we're going to bring it tonight.'
Zetterlund performed well enough on the top line, firing two shots on net with a 52.63 Corsi rating at five-on-five. He didn't record a point, but he helped create space on Tkachuk's opening goal in the second period and created plays with Stützle. However, the winger hasn't recorded a point in his first seven games with the Senators — his longest points drought of the 2024-25 season.
Those points can still come for Zetterlund, so it's not quite panic time yet. But he should still keep his spot on the top line ahead of the Sens' next game against the Buffalo Sabres on Tuesday. Speaking of Sabres, in this case, former Sabres, Dylan Cozens has seven points in his first eight games with the Senators.
Giroux didn't look out of place on the Senators' new-look third line with Greig and Pinto. They performed the best at five-on-five of all four lines with a 57.14 Corsi rating, Giroux's line also had the best expected goals for rate (0.76) and produced more high-danger chances than any other line.
'We played the way we wanted to, we played to our identity,' Giroux said of his team's performance. 'We had everybody going tonight. It's a good hockey club on the other side. It wasn't our best game, but we played well enough to get the win.
Giroux played the most minutes of any Sens forward (21:32) and chipped in a power-play assist on David Perron's goal. All three Senators' goals were second-period net-front redirects. It made up for a weird first-period miss where Giroux stickhandled around Devils goalie Jake Allen before losing the handle on the puck. Devils forward Curtis Lazar kept the puck out with his stick.
'They get a big goal for us tonight,' Green said. 'You need that.'
It's been a week since Ullmark capped off his star week with a victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. You may remember him shutting down the Detroit Red Wings with 48 saves before making a save-of-the-year candidate at the expense of the Boston Bruins.
But Ullmark looked fallible in his last two starts for the Sens, allowing four goals in each game against Montreal and Colorado, respectively. Green pulled Ullmark against the Avalanche after he allowed four goals on 13 shots in a losing effort. If the Sens were going to stop a losing skid in its track, it meant Ullmark having to step up. He did with a 25-save performance, but he'll likely thank defenceman Artem Zub for making the biggest save in the game's dying seconds.
#NJDevils were *this* close to tying the game in the dying seconds.
Looked like it might have been going in, but it hit Noesen's skate and he couldn't poke it in before Artem Zub cleared it.
When it rains, it pours. pic.twitter.com/Cs0vjowoEK
— Daniel Amoia (@daniel_amoia) March 23, 2025
Ullmark is now 7-4-1 in his last 12 games since returning from the 4 Nations break. His save percentage remains below .900 in that same period (.892 to be exact). But Green praised Ullmark for being 'dialed in.'
'Especially (in) the third,' Green said. 'You know when you're up a couple of goals the other team is going to push and they're going to push hard. And he made some big saves in the third.'
(Photo of Brady Tkachuk celebrating his second-period goal: Ed Mulholland / Imagn Images)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What the fears about the Islanders overpaying Noah Dobson get wrong
What the fears about the Islanders overpaying Noah Dobson get wrong

New York Post

time35 minutes ago

  • New York Post

What the fears about the Islanders overpaying Noah Dobson get wrong

Let's start here with two players who are incredibly polarizing to their respective fan bases. Player A finished this past season with 15 fewer points than the previous season, and 39 of the points he did get this season came on secondary assists. He's often cast as a defensive liability, but plays a heavy minutes workload — more than 23 minutes per game — and his contract expires at the end of this season. Evolving Hockey projects his next contract at eight years with a $10.6 million average annual value. Evolving Hockey clocked his expected goals percentage this season at 57.9 — sixth on his team but below its other stars, and well above his actual goals-for percentage of 52.07. He was left off Team Canada's roster at the 4 Nations. Player B finished this past season with 31 points fewer than the previous season, and 13 of his 39 points this season came on secondary assists. He's also cast as a defensive liability, but plays more than 23 minutes per game. His contract expires at the end of the season. Evolving Hockey projects his next contract at eight years with a $10.1 million average annual value. His expected goals percentage at five-on-five this year was 54.3 — the best on his team of anyone with more than 800 minutes — with his goals-for percentage at 51.53. He also was left off Team Canada's roster at the 4 Nations. Player A is Evan Bouchard.

Healthier Panthers are nearing full strength in the Stanley Cup Final against the Oilers
Healthier Panthers are nearing full strength in the Stanley Cup Final against the Oilers

San Francisco Chronicle​

time13 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Healthier Panthers are nearing full strength in the Stanley Cup Final against the Oilers

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — The bumps and bruises and worse started to pile up midway through the Florida Panthers' third consecutive trip to the Stanley Cup Final. Matthew Tkachuk only returned for the playoff opener after sitting out the final two months of the regular season with the injury he suffered at the 4 Nations Face-Off in February and seems to still be gutting through it. Sam Reinhart and Niko Mikkola each missed time during the Eastern Conference final, and A.J. Greer's injury he tried playing through eventually sidelined him. 'It's very hard to win a Cup with unhealthy bodies,' Greer said. The Panthers found that out the hard way two years ago when they were the skating wounded. Tkachuk had a broken sternum, Aaron Ekblad had a broken foot, two shoulder dislocations and a torn oblique muscle, Radko Gudas had a high ankle sprain and they lost to Vegas in five games in the final. While the Edmonton Oilers looked to be in better shape going into this series with the notable exception of injured forward Zach Hyman, Florida has gotten healthier. Coach Paul Maurice said Reinhart is 'back to full health,' Tkachuk, Mikkola and Greer are making a difference and the defending champions are two wins away from hoisting the Cup for a second year in a row. 'It's always good to have a full team that's healthy," fourth-liner Tomas Nosek said after practice Wednesday. "It's been good so far, and hopefully it stays that way.' The Panthers will have their ideal lineup for Game 4 on Thursday night in Sunrise after that same group waxed Edmonton 6-1 earlier this week to take a 2-1 lead in the final. Other than do-it-all defenseman Seth Jones, no one played more than 23 minutes in Game 3. That balance, after so much overtime hockey early in what looked to be an evenly matched series, combined with an extra day between games, makes them rested and ready. 'We've been, I think, great the whole playoffs," center Anton Lundell said. 'It doesn't really matter when we play. It's always fun to play, so we don't really care. But obviously now we have had a couple days off, so it's fun to get the energy back and prepare." Reinhart scoring Monday night was his first goal since being out for two games in the Eastern Conference final, ending a drought that dated to the second round against Toronto. He had six shots in Game 2 and has been steadily progressing. 'I'm not worried about him,' Maurice said. 'I think his game is getting stronger — quite a bit stronger.' So is Tkachuk's, even if it's clear the tough winger is not moving as well as he does when 100%. But he had an assist and was noticeably better in Game 3, which Maurice called Tkachuk's best of the playoffs. 'It took him a while to build out,' Maurice said. 'The speed of the Carolina series was probably a really, really good thing. Some of these injuries I'm sure they're dealing with it, you can't condition them and rehab them at the same time. They need some time. And he was out for such a very long time that I would say the last month, but certainly the last three weeks, he's back to form now.' That spells trouble for the Oilers, playing without Hyman and with top-line forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins dealing with an undisclosed injury that has him relegated him to game-time-decision uncertainty. Their longest-tenured player not being 100% is a major blow after Nugent-Hopkins, Connor McDavid and Hyman were such an effective trio getting to this point. Coach Kris Knoblauch foreshadowed a lineup change that may or may not be injury related. Either way, his team's depth is being tested. The same has been the case for the Panthers, who have used 22 skaters in the playoffs following 30 during the season. They've grown accustomed to shuffling players in and out and chugging along like some of the NHL's best teams have to do. 'With our depth this year, even when guys are injured or guys are out of the lineup, there's just so much depth on our team that guys can fill in seamlessly and it doesn't change our lineup that much,' Bennett said. "That's definitely a huge factor for us.' ___

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store