
Olivier and Danforth lead Blue Jackets to 5-2 win over Senators to snap 3-game skid
Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Mathieu Olivier and Justin Danforth each had a goal and an assist, and the Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Ottawa Senators 5-2 on Tuesday night.
Dmitri Voronkov, Sean Monahan and Adam Fantilli also scored for Columbus, and Kent Johnson had two assists. Elvis Merzlikins stopped 33 shots to help the Blue Jackets snap a three-game skid and get their second win in six games.
Thomas Chabot had a goal and an assist, and Fabian Zetterlund also scored for Ottawa, which clinched its first playoff berth since 2017 when Montreal beat Detroit. Anton Forsberg had 30 saves for the Senators, who had won three straight.
Zetterlund pulled the Senators to 2-1 with a power-play goal with 3:42 left in the second period.
However, Olivier restored Columbus' two-goal lead with 22 seconds remaining in the middle period as Danforth's pass in front deflected off his left skate and past Forsberg.
Monahan pushed the lead to 4-1 at 2:37 of the third with a power-play goal. The Blue Jackets came in 3 for 36 with the man-advantage over their previous 12 games and went x for x against the Senators.
Fantilli and Chabot traded goals 3 1/2 minutes apart down the stretch.
Voronkov got the Blue Jackets on the scoreboard 7 minutes into the game as Mathieu Olivier's pass toward the middle from the right side behind the goal line deflected to him in the slot. It was Columbus' first goal in three games.
Danforth made it 2-0 with 3:22 left in the first as he brought the puck across the blue line, skated toward the middle, and beat Forsberg from between the circles. Takeaways
Senators: Ottawa leads Montreal by three points for the first wild card in the Eastern Conference and fell four points behind Forida for third place in the Atlantic Division.
Blue Jackets: Columbus defenseman Erik Gudbranson played in his 800th game Key moment
Ottawa's Drake Batherson skated toward the middle in front of Merzlikins and fired a shot the goalie snared with a Columbus player in front of him to keep the Senators off the scoreboard 5:00 into the second period. Key stat
Voronkov's goal ended Columbus' scoreless streak at 159:04. The Blue Jackets were blanked 5-0 at Toronto on Saturday, and 4-0 at Ottawa on Sunday. Up next
Senators host Montreal on Friday to open a season-ending four-game homestand, and Blue Jackets host Buffalo on Thursday.
___
AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl
recommended
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Abbotsford Canucks Live: Game 6 win will advance Abby to Calder Cup final
The heat is on in Abbotsford. Not only was the mercury expected to climb to 30 degrees Celsius in the Fraser Valley on Sunday, and actually feel like 34, the temperature inside the Abbotsford Centre will also rise. The Abbotsford Canucks hold a 3-2 series lead over the Texas Stars in the AHL best-of-seven Western Conference final and are a victory away from advancing to the Calder Cup championship against the Charlotte Checkers. Game 6 before a raucous sold-out Abbotsford audience goes at 6 p.m., and if a seventh game is necessary, it's slated for Monday at 7 p.m. in the valley. The Canucks obviously don't want to be forced into a do-or-die showdown in Game 7 that could end their remarkable season, or shorten rest and prep time for the AHL final. The Checkers are the Florida Panthers' affiliate and swept the Laval Rocket in the Eastern Conference final. They will host first two games of the AHL title series starting Friday in North Carolina, with the west winner getting Game 3, 4 and 5 home dates, before the series reverts back to Charlotte. As for tonight, the Canucks will look for a hero. Maybe somebody snaps a tight game in the third period, or becomes the latest overtime star. Four series games have been decided by one goal and three required overtime. Stars captain Curtis McKenzie of Golden, B.C., delivered the extra-session dagger Friday in Texas in a 2-1 triumph to force Game 6. It came after winger Danila Klimovich, who had yet to see the ice in the final series, struck in double overtime Wednesday to put the Canucks up 3-1 and on verge of a series-clinching win. You'd like to think Canucks winger Linus Karlsson is going to have a say in the Game 6 outcome. He has two goals in the series by getting to the net, has been a prime playmaker, and is tied for the post-season lead with nine goals. His 17 points are third among playoff scorers and he's second in shots with 49. Maybe Arturs Silovs stretches his post-season shutout string to six. That would be fitting to equal the AHL record established by former Canucks goaltender Mika Noronen, who backstopped the Rochester Americans to the league crown in 2000. Noronen played just four NHL games for Vancouver after being acquired at the 2006 NHL trade deadline. In his first appearance, he was bombed in a 5-0 loss to the Nashville Predators. Noronen then signed in Russia as opposed to serving as backup to workhorse Roberto Luongo. An affiliate of the parent Vancouver Canucks hasn't gone to the big AHL dance since 2015. That's when the Utica Comets, guided by head coach Travis Green, parlayed a 47-20-0-9 regular-season mark into post-season series wins over the Chicago Wolves, Oklahoma City Barons and Grand Rapids Griffins. They then fell to the Manchester Monarchs, affiliated with the Los Angeles Kings, in five games of the best-of-seven championship. Those Comets were led in post-season scoring by Cal O'Reilly with 19 points (2-17) in 23 games and Sven Baetschi, who had 15 points (8-7) in 21 outings. In the regular season, 11 players struck for double digits in goals. Goaltender Jacob Markstrom was also stellar with a 22-7-2 mark, 1.88 GAA, .934 saves percentage and five shutouts. If you aren't able to watch the game in person, scroll down for the play-by-play updates from tonight's game. Be sure to hit the refresh button for the latest update. • Abbotsford Canucks Recap: Texas beats Abby 2-1 in OT goal by B.C. boy Curtis McKenzie • Abbotsford Canucks Recap: Danila Klimovich unlikely hero in double OT, Abby up 3-1 in conference final • There's a buzz around the Abbotsford Canucks like never before Watch this space for game updates when the puck drops around 6 p.m. More to come … bkuzma@ There's a buzz around the Abbotsford Canucks like never before Abbotsford Canucks Recap: Texas beats Abby 2-1 in OT goal by B.C. boy Curtis McKenzie

Miami Herald
5 hours ago
- Miami Herald
After excelling on road all playoffs, it's time for Panthers to produce at home in Cup Final
The Florida Panthers have found a way to thrive on the road during this Stanley Cup playoffs run. It's a major reason why they're back in the Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers, why they're oh so close to repeating as champions. But with their best-of-7 Cup Final series with the Oilers tied 1-1 after opening the series in Edmonton, Florida needs to take advantage of home ice while it has it with the series shifting back to Sunrise for the next two games. Game 3 is at Amerant Bank Arena, with puck drop at 8 p.m. Monday (TNT, truTV, Max). Game 4 is 8 p.m. Thursday. By splitting the first two games in Edmonton — losing 4-3 in overtime in Game 1, winning 5-4 in double overtime in Game 2 — the Panthers can theoretically close out the Cup Final and secure their second consecutive championship by simply winning out on home ice. Florida would also host Game 6 should the series extends that far. 'Our fans buzz at home and we love that,' defenseman Aaron Ekblad said. 'It's really exciting to play in front of them.' But the Panthers haven't done as well on home ice as they have on the road this postseason. Granted, they haven't had as many opportunities to be on home ice either. After finishing third in the Atlantic Division in the regular season, Florida has started all four of its playoff series on the road. The Panthers beat the Tampa Bay Lightning in five games in the opening round, going 3-0 on the road and 1-1 at home. They beat the Toronto Maple Leafs in seven games in the second round, going 2-2 on the road and 2-1 at home. And they beat the Carolina Hurricanes in five games in the Eastern Conference final, going 3-0 on the road and 1-1 at home. Add in the 1-1 start on the road in the Stanley Cup Final, and that's a 9-3 record in road games this postseason for the Panthers compared to a 4-3 mark at home. 'We have no choice,' star Panthers winger Matthew Tkachuk said of playing well on the road. 'We were going to be on the road for the whole [postseason]. I think every team we were going to play this year in playoffs, especially after the first round, we knew we were going to be on the road for the rest of it. We forced ourselves [into] it. We made our bed and had to sleep in it and now we've got to start on the road, take one game and get home ice back. It's that easy.' The Panthers' simple, direct game — be physical, grind out the opponent, let defense drive the offense — plays regardless of the venue. Florida's depth allows it to overcome the matchup battle that can impact road teams with the home team getting the last change before faceoffs. 'We feel comfortable on the road,' Tkachuk said. 'It's a simple game. It's a hard game. It's an adversity type of game, an adversity type of atmosphere. We've said it a bunch. It's that us against the world mindset, but you really feel it especially being down in a series. Your back's not necessarily against the wall, but you treat it as a big-time must win in a hostile environment, and I feel like that's when we're at our best. So, hopefully we can use that to our advantage.' Added Panthers coach Paul Maurice 'The [home-ice] advantage is marginal. It's fair. It's marginal. A lot of it happens probably just on running your bench in terms of minutes that you put on people when you're on the road and you get a D zone draw, especially when you have the players at the top end like Edmonton has. You run your top end of your bench harder than you will at home. So, you get a little bit of a reprieve there with understanding who's coming out first off whistles.' That said, getting some time at home is definitely a luxury the Panthers aren't taking for granted. 'It's never bad being in your own bed, have a nice home cooked meal,' forward Sam Reinhart said. 'I mean, once the puck drops, you might use the crowd a little bit, you might have that little extra energy. But at this time, it's the two best teams that are left standing. Once that puck drops it's going to be a real battle regardless.' And this series has definitely been a battle. Two overtime thrillers between two evenly matched teams have set the stage for an intriguing Stanley Cup Final so far. And neither team is expecting any letup as the series continues. 'The games speak for themselves,' forward Brad Marchand said. 'It's been a battle. Very intense and a lot of fun to be a part of.'


New York Times
7 hours ago
- New York Times
Blue Jackets Sunday Gathering: Changes coming soon, but which UFAs stick around
A collection of notes, insights, ruminations and did-you-knows gathered throughout the week for the Columbus Blue Jackets: Just think, one month from now — after the NHL buyout window opens and closes, the entry draft is held, and the league's free agency bonanza plays out — the Blue Jackets could look significantly different than the club that barely missed the playoffs in April. Advertisement Blue Jackets general manager Don Waddell wants to add a top-six forward. He also wants to upgrade the defense, particularly on the right side. And, though everybody within the organization is playing it coy, there's a sense they want to make sweeping changes in goal, too. Yeah, that's all. However, before Waddell gets to his roster adds, he'll have to make some difficult decisions about who stays and who goes. The Blue Jackets have nine players who are pending unrestricted free agents, meaning they could sign with any team on July 1 unless Columbus re-signs them first. Except for two unrestricted free agents whom Waddell wants to sign, this is a landscape with many moving parts, such that a few veteran UFAs might be exposed to free agency even if there's a chance the Blue Jackets end up retaining them. 'I've talked to some of (the UFAs),' Waddell told The Athletic. 'I haven't talked to all of them. There are some priority guys, but we're going to make some changes.' Here's a breakdown of those players, sorted by the likelihood that they'll be back in a Blue Jackets sweater in 2025-26: Ivan Provorov, D: This one has been simmering for some time. Waddell met with Provorov's agent, Mark Gandler, at the NHL scouting combine in Buffalo last week, but it's unclear if anything has changed. Provorov is 28, which makes it the perfect time for him to land a long-term contract. He could sign for seven years on the open market or eight years with Columbus, but the Blue Jackets have tried to get him under contract with a shorter term. Both sides can justify their positions, and the talks have remained amicable. As unsettled as the Jackets' blue line has been, it would be hard to let the sturdy, reliable Provorov walk. Dante Fabbro, D: Playing next to Zach Werenski is a sweet assignment, but not everybody can keep up. Fabbro, a waiver claim from Nashville early last season, clicked instantly and was a much-needed upgrade on the right side. Fabbro had 9-17-26 and a career-high plus-23 in only 62 games, and there will most definitely be a market for him, especially as a right-shot guy with moderate skill. But if the Jackets keep both Provorov and Fabbro, are they making big changes on the back end? Dante Fabbro gets his first goal as a Blue Jacket!#CBJ — FanDuel Sports Network Columbus (@FanDuelSN_CBUS) November 17, 2024 Justin Danforth, F: Not sure what this means — Danforth declined to elaborate — but the 30-year-old versatile forward switched agents this offseason. Pat Morris now represents him. It appears that Danforth wants to stay with the Blue Jackets, which gave him his NHL opportunity. However, Waddell must be smart and remain flexible. Danforth's ability to take right-side faceoffs is a plus, but the Jackets might seek other options if they can't meet on terms. Advertisement James van Riemsdyk, F: It would be hard to let van Riemsdyk walk after all he meant to the Blue Jackets last season. He scored 16 goals and 36 points in limited minutes. He played up and down the lineup, never looking out of place. He was the immovable, marble statue in front of opposing goalies, which every team needs. Those late-season scratches of van Riemsdyk still don't make any sense, do they? Sean Kuraly, C: This one stings. Kuraly signed four years ago with the Blue Jackets, his hometown team, to help stop the bleeding when it seemed like every significant player was requesting a trade. The four years didn't go as he expected, but this season was certainly a high point. Blue Jackets coach Dean Evason sharply curtailed his playing time and curiously took him off the penalty kill, which is usually a sign of disfavor. Jack Johnson, D: The Jackets used Johnson more than they expected. He played 41 games — exactly half the season — and provided some physicality on the third pair and penalty kill, especially after Erik Gudbranson went down. But, seriously, if the Blue Jackets are going to make changes on defense, they can't all come back. Luke Kunin, F: Waddell parted with a fourth-round pick to acquire Kunin at the trade deadline, but it wasn't a perfect fit. He played 12 games to no great distinction. Christian Fischer, F: A waiver claim by the Blue Jackets at the NHL trade deadline, but Fischer played only one game in the final month of the season. Kevin Labanc, F: Waddell added Labanc off waivers before the start of the season because they were desperate for veteran forwards after a crush of late training camp injuries. He played 34 decent games before a shoulder injury ended his season. The Blue Jackets have had seven first-round draft picks in the last four NHL drafts, four of them in the top 6 and six of them in the top 12 of the draft. The building continues, with Waddell looking to make significant roster upgrades. But the rebuilding is done. Advertisement Waddell heads to this year's draft armed with two first-round draft picks: He has the Blue Jackets' pick at No. 14 overall but also has the Minnesota Wild's first-round pick at No. 20. That was acquired early last season when defenseman David Jiricek was traded to the Wild. Nobody expects Waddell to select a player with both of those picks. He's already dangling one (or both) of them in front of other GMs in an attempt to get immediate roster help. The Athletic asked Waddell this week to put a percentage chance on the likelihood he selects a player with each of his first-round picks. 'I think it's 50-50 (that we take) both,' he said. 'I could move both of them. If we're helping our team immediately, I'm not opposed to that, for sure. Probably, though, I would think we'd keep one of them. But I can't say 100 percent. 'Like I always say, you never know what's going to be presented to you or what you can chase down. You have to keep your options open, that's for sure.' The Blue Jackets have promoted Aron Augustitus to video goal coach, replacing Dan Singleton, who had held the position since the franchise's inception until his contract was not renewed after this season. Augustitus had served as Singleton's assistant for the past four seasons. Waddell said he's 'getting close' on hiring an equipment manager and is beginning the process of finding a strength and conditioning coach. In the meantime, Blue Jackets players are utilizing their off-season conditioning resources under the guidance of Ryan Gadbois, who has served as Kevin Collins' assistant for the past four seasons. Late last month, the Blue Jackets informed team services director Julie Gamble, who started during the inaugural season, that she wouldn't be back with the club for next season. Waddell indicated that a replacement will likely be hired from within the organization. Advertisement • It became clear in recent NHL awards shows that the league needed to change the format to breathe new energy into the proceedings. Part of that involves presenting most of the awards before the show, surprising the award winners in meaningful ways, and capturing the moments on video. None were more meaningful than Meredith Gaudreau showing up at the suburban Toronto home of Blue Jackets center Sean Monahan to present him with the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy. Monahan was surprised, he said. 'I had no idea. I was kind of waiting around all dressed up for a while because I was told we were doing family pictures. My mom was here to help with the little guy (Leo). It was … it caught me off guard. It was presented in a special way. They did a great job to surprise me.' In case you missed the video: • The Masterton Trophy is voted on by members of the Pro Hockey Writers' Association, and 209 members filed ballots this year. Monahan, with 523 points, edged finalists Gabriel Landeskog of Colorado (431) and Marc-Andre Fleury of Minnesota (293) to become the first Blue Jackets player to win the award. Monahan received 75 first-place votes and appeared as a top-three pick on 141 ballots. Other receiving first-place votes: Landeskog (58), Fleury (32), Washington's Alex Ovechkin (16), Vancouver's Dakota Joshua (six), Philadelphia's Ivan Fedotov (five), Tampa Bay's Ryan McDonagh (four), Calgary's Justin Kirkland, Chicago's Pat Maroon, and Utah's Mikhail Sergachev (two), Los Angeles' Drew Doughty, Toronto's John Tavares, St. Louis' Ryan Suter, Carolina's Jordan Staal, San Jose's Marc Edouard Vlasic, Anaheim's John Gibson, Boston's Joonas Korpisalo (one). • Evason finished fifth in voting for the Jack Adams Trophy, awarded late last week to Washington Capitals coach Spencer Carbery. Evason received five second-place votes and 15 third-place votes, finishing behind Carbery, Winnipeg's Scott Arniel, Montreal's Martin St. Louis and St. Louis' Jim Montgomery. Advertisement • After spending four seasons as an assistant coach with the Vegas Golden Knights and the past two in the same capacity with the Dallas Stars, Columbus native Misha Donskov has worked his way to the cusp of getting an NHL head coaching job. Donskov, who went deep in the process with the Boston Bruins and might have interviewed for other openings this off-season, now has an opportunity before him with the Stars. Last week, Dallas fired coach Pete DeBoer, embarking on a coaching search at a point in the off-season when all of the other openings are filled. Donskov, whose family owns Donskov Strength and Conditioning, Inc. in Columbus, was interviewed by the Blue Jackets after leaving Vegas in 2023, but joined the Stars instead. • The Blue Jackets signed center Oiva Keskinen to a three-year, entry-level deal earlier this month after a solid season for Tappara Tampere in Finland's top league. Keskinen, a seventh-round pick (No. 194 overall) in 2023, will attend the development camp, the NHL prospects camp and NHL training camp, Waddell said, but he'll be one to watch as training camp progresses into its final days. There is a stipulation in his contract that allows him to return to Finland for one more season if he doesn't make the Blue Jackets' roster out of camp. • Cayden Lindstrom, the Jackets' No. 4 overall pick last summer, flew home to Vancouver (from Medicine Hat) earlier this week to get a few days around family and friends. But he'll be back in Columbus later this month, arriving the week of the draft and staying through development camp, which he mostly missed last season (back injury). In early July, he'll head to East Lansing, Mich. — he's committed to Michigan State in the fall — to take part in the Spartans' six-week off-season camp. Then, after a 7-to 10-day trip back to Vancouver, he'll return to East Lansing to prepare for the start of the academic school year. He won't be able to attend the annual prospects tournament or NHL training camp because it conflicts with his college schedule. Advertisement • Lindstrom was asked if he had any issues with the knee-on-knee hit he absorbed from Spokane's Saige Weinstein during the Western Hockey League championship series. Lindstrom was not 100 percent the rest of the way, missing the first game of the Memorial Cup. 'Nah, I walked into that one,' Lindstrom said. 'I was rounding (making a sharp turn) and just ran into him. I have no issues with it. I'd try to lay a hit, too, if somebody was rounding behind the net.' • Simon Olivier, father of Blue Jackets forward Mathieu Olivier, was named head coach of the Victoriaville Tigres of the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League. After retiring as a player in 2009, Olivier has coached at several different levels, including four seasons as an assistant coach with Victoriaville. • On Dec. 18, 2020, The Athletic published a lengthy piece on former Columbus Chill player Al Novakowski, who detailed the sexual abuse he said he suffered at the hands of former Ohio State team doctor Richard Strauss. Novakowski's story, along with those of other Strauss victims, is told in a one-hour, 48-minute documentary called 'Surviving Ohio State.' The film, produced by George Clooney and directed by Academy Award winner Eva Orner, makes its debut this weekend at the Tribeca Film Festival, which is underway in New York City. The documentary premieres on HBO on June 17. Here's the trailer: (Photo of Ivan Provorov: Ben Jackson / Getty Images)