logo
How Adam Gaudette became the Ottawa Senators unlikely playoff standout

How Adam Gaudette became the Ottawa Senators unlikely playoff standout

Calgary Herald01-05-2025
Article content
If there's one player on the Ottawa Senators who isn't taking this shot at playoff redemption against the Toronto Maple Leafs for granted, it's Adam Gaudette.
Article content
Article content
One year ago, the 28-year-old forward was coming off a one-year deal with the Vancouver Canucks in which he had played just two NHL games.
Article content
After seven years of bouncing between NHL organizations and toggling between the big leagues and minors, Gaudette seemed a far cry from the Hobey Baker-winning star at Northeastern University, where he once led the U.S. in scoring.
Article content
Article content
The fact that he is where he is today — playing a crucial role in the Senators' attempt to complete a reverse sweep, with a goal and two assists in five playoff games — is a testament to his willingness to get back to the basics of hockey.
Article content
Spending two years in the AHL between the Toronto Marlies and Springfield Thunderbirds, Gaudette gained a new appreciation for what it takes to be a pro.
Article content
Article content
'Everything started to click a little more in Toronto, I felt like every week, every month, I got better,' he told the Postmedia in November. 'Last year, I felt the best I ever have. It wasn't just because I was scoring a lot of goals, it was because I was doing a lot of the right things on the ice.'
Article content
That shift in focus — from big-shot scorer to a more complete player away from the puck — coincided with a breakout AHL campaign. Gaudette finished third in AHL scoring last season with 44 goals and 71 points in 67 games. All he has done this year is follow it up in the NHL with a career-high 19 goals. He was even trusted with power-play time, scoring three goals with the man advantage.
Article content
Article content
'He's having a fantastic season,' head coach Travis Green said. 'I think maturity is a big part of why he's in the NHL again.'
Article content
Article content
Green, who also coached Gaudette in Vancouver, noted how the forward has acclimated himself to the defensive side of the puck in a way that he hadn't earlier in his career. He also has become more disciplined: His 12 penalty minutes tied with Jake Sanderson for the least among Senators who have played at least 80 games this season.
Article content
'Players, when they first come in, compared to years four, five, six, it's a big difference,' Green said. 'I think he's just really learned the game itself, the important areas of the game and he's applying it.'
Article content
That growth has become increasingly evident after the team's shaky start to the series, where their lack of maturity was apparent. In Game 1, Ottawa kicked off a parade to the penalty box, ultimately handing Toronto the game on a silver platter through their 38 penalty minutes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Big name Toronto winger makes sense to take Corey Perry's old job on Oilers
Big name Toronto winger makes sense to take Corey Perry's old job on Oilers

Edmonton Journal

time3 hours ago

  • Edmonton Journal

Big name Toronto winger makes sense to take Corey Perry's old job on Oilers

Article content All of the top NHL unrestricted free agents have already signed contracts, but there's one big name player still available that makes good sense for the Edmonton Oilers to pursue. Article content This doesn't mean this veteran NHL forward will sign with the Oilers. But his skillset — think Corey Perry, only far more physical — fits with what Edmonton needs and would provide said free agrent forward, Matt Pacioretty, with a solid chance of winning his first Stanley Cup. Article content Article content Indications are that Pacioretty will sign elsewhere if he decides to play one more NHL season at age 37. I'm not an insider telling you the Oilers are keen on him or he's keen on the Oilers. But in looking at what Edmonton now needs, having lost power forwards Evander Kane and Dylan Holloway in the past two years, as well as aggressive forwards Warren Foegele, Corey Perry, Connor Brown and Viktor Arvidsson — Pacioretty would might well be an excellent fit here, especially come playoff time. Article content Article content Pacioretty started out ranked 16h on The Daily Faceoff's Matt Larkin's Top 75 NHL free agents on July 1. He's now the third highest ranked player left unsigned, behind only Jack Roslovic and Matt Grzelcyk. Article content Pacioretty has played 939 NHL games with 336 goals and 681 points, along with 58 points in 89 playoff games. Article content Of course, he's slowing down. He had just five goals this past regular season in 37 games for Toronto, that after four goals in 47 games for Washington in 2023-24. But in small doses, Pacioretty still brings it as a power forward. Article content Article content In the last two playoffs season, if we rank NHL forwards giving equal weight two categories, points per 60 minutes of even strength play and hits per 60 even strength, Pacioretty ranks second overall of all NHL forwards, with 21.9 hits per 60 and 1.77 points per 60. Article content Top of the list is Vasily Podkolzin of the Oilers, with Edmonton's Zach Hyman ranking sixth and former Oiler Evander Kane ranking 15th. Article content Article content If we use the same hits and points per 60 markers for the 2024-25 regular season at even strength, Pacioretty also comes out well, ranking 10th overall for all NHL forwards for the season, just behind Washington's Tom Wilson and ahead of Dallas Stars beast Jame Benn.

SIMMONS SAYS: Blue Jays' LaMacchia hit a home run with Clancy
SIMMONS SAYS: Blue Jays' LaMacchia hit a home run with Clancy

Toronto Sun

time20 hours ago

  • Toronto Sun

SIMMONS SAYS: Blue Jays' LaMacchia hit a home run with Clancy

When the Blue Jays hired scout Al LaMacchia, one year before the team played its very first game, they didn't realize what a bonus it was that he happened to live in San Antonio, Texas. And it was during the expansion draft of 1976 that LaMacchia highly recommended a 20-year-old Texas League pitcher with a 6.77 earned run average for the San Antonio Brewers. The pitcher's name: Jim Clancy. 'If it wasn't for Al, I don't think we pick Clancy,' Pat Gillick said on the phone the other day. 'Al lived in San Antonio and he got a chance to see Clancy a lot. He really liked what he saw. He believed in him.' This doesn't happen often from any expansion draft in any sport: Clancy, chosen in the third round of the two-team draft, went on to pitch 12 seasons for the Blue Jays. He started 345 games in all, completed 73 of them, threw 2,204 innings as a stalwart of those early Jays teams. By today's standards of babying pitchers, those numbers are simply astounding. Roy Halladay went on to pitch 12 seasons for the Jays, as well, as a first-round draft pick, throwing fewer innings than Clancy, completing fewer games, making fewer starts. Halladay went on to the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame for Clancy is found in the hearts of those who fell in love with the Blue Jays and baseball when they first began in Toronto. Those original players — Ernie Whitt, Otto Velez, Alvis Woods, Doug Ault, Jerry Garvin, all of them from the expansion draft — they're not just a part of history, they're a part of us. They were around when we were just learning the game, grasping it, experiencing it for the first time live, being so much a part of the early years of Major League Baseball in Toronto. The super-sleuth LaMacchia, who played more-than-important roles in the scouting of George Bell, Cito Gaston, Dave Stieb and David Wells with the Jays, went on to become vice-president of the club. He was in that position when the Jays won their World Series in 1992 and 1993. LaMacchia passed away in 2010. The kid with the guitar from San Antonio, Clancy, passed away at the age of 69 earlier this week. 'They both did great jobs for us,' said the legendary Gillick, who knew a little something about doing just that. THIS AND THAT This didn't have to be complicated — the return of Mitch Marner to Toronto for a game against the Maple Leafs. But the NHL made it that way. The game is scheduled for Friday, Jan. 23. It should have been played on a Hockey Night In Canada Saturday. And because Vegas plays the previous night in Boston, the Golden Knights won't skate at Scotiabank Arena on Friday morning, which means there will be no Marner game-day interviews. The NHL is in the entertainment business. There are only a handful of games to be concerned about schedule-wise when a new season is beginning. You don't take a big story and make it small, even accidentally. The Marner Leafs-Vegas scheduling is a failure by the NHL … The Leafs could have a third line this season with 6-foot-4 Nic Roy playing alongside 6-foot-3 Dakota Joshua and 6-foot-2 Bobby McMann. Average weight of the line: 210. That's a Craig Berube-Brad Treliving kind of line, if it ends up that way. The other inspiring part of the trio is that all three are capable of moving up in the lineup if need be … In their best playoff seasons, Joshua scored four goals for Vancouver while Roy had four for Vegas. In the past six playoff seasons, Marner scored eight goals in total, more than two just once. He's listed as six-feet tall and 180 pounds but wouldn't measure quite that … A young hockey writer asked me to compare Marner's time with the Leafs to the career of Mats Sundin. At first, I laughed at the question. But Marner did score at a 92-point pace in his time with the Leafs, 10 more points than Sundin. Here's the major difference though between the two: Sundin was 6-foot-5, 230 pounds, and he never had an Auston Matthews or a John Tavares on his line. Where Sundin shone brightest was on the world stage. He was the dominant player in the 2002 Winter Olympics, then he dominated again in 2006 when Sweden won gold at Turino. When it was best-on-best, he was at or near the top. Marner has yet to demonstrate that kind of presence when lights are the brightest. Until he does, he will rank well behind Sundin as an all-time player … The new Leafs winger, Joshua, has been a pro hockey player for six years. He's had one impactful season in Vancouver. The Leafs are gambling that there is more of that in the 29-year-old winger from Michigan … Coach Rod Brind'Amour is the 55th leading scorer in NHL history with 1,184 points. The next 10 scorers who directly follow him on the list: Sergei Fedorov, Bobby Hull, Daniel Alfredsson, Michel Goulet, Nick Lidstrom, Marian Hossa, Bernie Federko, Mike Bossy, Joe Nieuwendyk and Darryl Sittler are all in the Hall of Fame, many of the them being first ballot no-brainers. Brind'Amour, the player, remains on the outside looking in. HEAR AND THERE Barring collapse, the Blue Jays will make the playoffs in the American League, which is a tribute to the kind of season they're having, but also an analysis of how weak the American League and the AL East happen to be. The Yankees, with a thin roster, are a fundamental mess. The Red Sox are winning and looking like trade sellers at the deadline. Tampa Bay had a moment in time and Baltimore is too far back to matter … The emergence of Addison Barger means the need for the Jays to pick up a bat at the deadline is not as absolutely necessary as it might have been. If somehow Anthony Santander can come back from injury and contribute something that gives the Jays a batting order that includes George Springer, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Bo Bichette, Barger, Alejandro Kirk and possibly Daulton Varsho, plus Santander, that's the strongest everyday lineup in the AL East … The Jays could use another closer and a front-end starter, neither of which will come cheap. They have a difficulty with trading. They don't have a roster player they can afford to give up who has much trade value. And they don't have a deep pool of prospects that would enable them to nab what they need come playoff time. I'd like to see the Jays go back to their friends in Cleveland and come away with closer Emmanuel Clase … The starter who might fit the Jays best: Mitch Keller in Pittsburgh … The real challenge for the Jays: Finding a pitcher better than Kevin Gausman, Jose Berrios or Chris Bassitt, which might be impossible … If I owned the Pittsburgh Pirates, I'd be in buying mode. If I had Paul Skenes pitching and the monster Oneil Cruz hitting, I'd want to build around power hitting and power pitching for as long as they're around … What's the best Jays outfield ever? Lloyd Moseby between Jesse Barfield and George Bell or Devon White in centre with Joe Carter in right, Rickey Henderson or Candy Maldonado in left … The group trying to get Stieb a second look at the Baseball Hall of Fame have at least one thing they can't do anything about: Stieb pitched fewer innings — in some cases significantly fewer — than Tommy John, Luis Tiant, Orel Hershiser, Curt Schilling and Fernando Valenzuela — all of whom have Hall of Fame-like numbers. Stieb pitched 2,895 major-league innings. John pitched 4,710 with a lower career earned run average. SCENE AND HEARD I was really hoping that Shawn Lemon, soon eligible to play again in the CFL after his suspension for gambling, would sign with Hamilton or Winnipeg. Lemon has already played for Edmonton, Calgary, B.C., Toronto, Ottawa, Saskatchewan and Montreal. If he winds up with Hamilton and eventually Winnipeg, I believe that would make him the first player in CFL history to play for all nine teams. Sadly, for me anyhow, Lemon signed on in Montreal … What happened to the $9-million offer sheets Sabres defenceman Bowen Byram was supposed to get? He wound up re-signing in Buffalo for just more than $6 million. Put me down on the short list of those who can see the Sabres challenging for a playoff spot in the East next season after 14 straight seasons of missing out … I must be the wrong age to appreciate Pat McAfee screaming WWE-like introductions for batters in the Home Run Derby, but it sure didn't sound like baseball to me … The Gillick credo used to be: Believe nothing you see in spring training and September. That reminds me of the NBA Summer League, which tells you more about who can't play than who can. Very early, the Raptors' first-round pick, Collin Murray-Boyles, looks like he can play a little … And every time I see his name, I think of the comedy actor Brian Doyle-Murray, brother of Bill Murray … The best part of baseball's all-star game: The Hank Aaron tribute … My television squawks of late: How do they put on the ESPY Awards, and do the memorial section on who passed away in the past year, and forget (or choose not) to font the names of the photos of those who died. It was easy to recognize Henderson or Pete Rose. Not so easy for most of the others …. The bad on TV: How is it possible that Sportsnet ran a tribute to Clancy on television and ran a photo of the late Mike Flanagan instead? How do you get the wrong guy on a 12-year Blue Jay? The good: Sportsnet was quick on the apology. AND ANOTHER THING If I'm Sportsnet, the rest of my summer would be spent trying to hire Bryan Hayes as the next host of Hockey Night in Canada . And if you can get his teammates from Overdrive, well, I'd do that, too … If you love football in any way at all, you have to love the Luke Willson instructional video following CFL games … Without quarterbacking, Calgary Stampeders won just five games last season. With Vernon Adams Jr., under centre this year, the Stamps are 5-1, with two wins over Winnipeg. Dave Dickenson is a much smarter coach when he has a quarterback almost as good as Dave Dickenson … Football has been very good to the Watt brothers of Pewaukee, Wisc.: T.J. Watt just signed for $123 million in Pittsburgh to add to the $121 million he's already made. Older brother J.J. Watt made $129 million in his brilliant NFL career. So when they go for lunch, who pays? … I've watched all four seasons of the excellent television series, The Bear. I still don't understand how the Emmy Awards categorize this as a comedy. It's a well-scripted, well-acted program. But funny, it isn't … If you remove the statistics from Vladdy's 2021 season — played in mostly minor-league ballparks, with 48 home runs — he is basically averaging 26 homers per year. He had 12 as of Saturday afternoon. Finishing with 26 is not out of the question …. This is the Blue Jays season in a nutshell. They won 4-0 Friday night against the Giants. The runs were knocked in by Will Wagner (2), Joey Loperfido and Nathan Lukes … Carl Yastrzemski, baseball's Triple Crown winner in 1967, a three-time batting champion and four-time OPS leader, retired after the 1983 major-league season. Seven years later, his grandson, Mike Yastrzemski, was born. Mike has spent the past six years with the San Francisco Giants … If you didn't love Scottie Scheffler before he won all his tournaments or dominated The Open as he has done the past three days, you had to embrace him for his honest and personal words about family meaning more than tournament victories. Few have so eloquently balanced the thoughts between winning and succeeding and doing what matters most to any of us. I've heard similar refrains from coaches over the years who talk about how fleeting winning is — and how losses, as difficult as they may be, gnaw away at you forever … Happy birthday to Ilie Nastase (79), Peter Forsberg (52), Pavel Datsyuk (47), Terry Murray (75), Ray Allen (50), Dwight Powell (34), Tony Oliva (87), Stephen Strasburg (37), Ian Beckles (58) and Zack Werenski (28) … And, hey, whatever became of Rob Niedermayer?

He isn't bionic, but this Edmonton Oiler may still become The Six-Million-Dollar-Man: 9 Things
He isn't bionic, but this Edmonton Oiler may still become The Six-Million-Dollar-Man: 9 Things

Edmonton Journal

timea day ago

  • Edmonton Journal

He isn't bionic, but this Edmonton Oiler may still become The Six-Million-Dollar-Man: 9 Things

Article content The best thing that could happen for the Edmonton Oilers this season would be for their home-grown goaltender to develop into a true, consistent, reliable '1-A'. Article content If the Oilers can rebuild him, make him better than he was. Better, stronger, faster… Article content Article content Would Stuart Skinner then become the Oilers Six-Million Dollar Man? Article content Article content 9 Things Article content Article content 9. The Edmonton Oilers Leon Draisaitl has won the 2025 ESPY for Best NHL Player. The ESPYS celebrate excellence and achievements in sport. Too bad those judges did not also vote for the Hart Trophy. Article content 8. As we near the dog days of August, it is worth watching whether a PTO or three are secured in Edmonton. Sometimes, useful players just can not find the contract they are hoping for but are willing to work for one. Maybe a winger with some grit (Brett Leason, Klim Kostin) or an organizational LHS D-man (Jon Merrill)? 7. The Oilers dealt 2021 first rounder Xavier Bourgault to Ottawa last summer. This week, Bourgault inked a two-way, at the NHL minimum $775k with the Senators. The return for him was winger Roby Jarventie who played but two games in Bakersfield last season due to a knee injury. Jarventie has also signed a 1-year at the same AAV, reversing his original plans to go to Europe. Article content Article content 6. Scanning the Oilers 2025-26 NHL Regular Season Schedule, what Rogers Placer games leap out as must-sees from a fan standpoint? There is the home opener against Calgary October 8, the battle of Alberta can always be fun. It is always an event when the Leafs come to town, too, this year on February 3. Then, the Stanley Cup Finalists rematch March 19 (although Edmonton is in Sunrise November 22). Article content 5. He does not get much ink. But I think a dark horse player worth watching for the Edmonton Oilers this season is D-man Alec Regula. Claimed from the Boston Bruins on waivers, Regula did not play a game in 2024-25 due to structural knee damage. But he is healthy now, and originally a Stan Bowman draft pick. His 6'4 frame, right shot, hockey sense and offensive upside could challenge for a spot…especially if there is an injury. Article content 4. Speaking of guys 'bubbling under', watching F David Tomasek this fall should be interesting. He has spent the off-season in Prague rehabbing from an injury that prevented him from playing at World's. Tomasek will try to crack the Oilers lineup on a one-way deal in camp. He is a good faceoff man but I think it's more likely he plays wing in the NHL. Then there is the Olympics where Tomasek is a lock to play for the Czech squad. Tomasek nearly signed in Edmonton last year but ended up back in Sweden.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store