Murray Talks Stanley Cup, Does Not Use Word "Hoard"

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Yesterday afternoon the GM spoke to an assembled audience at the Kanata Sports Club, the transcript of which we don't have, but there is this one solitary tweet to build a post around!

Now assuming this paraphrase is accurate...

Some will question the hubris of a statement like this, especially coming from an organization that hasn't won a playoff round in five plus years.

On the other hand, opposite Gene's infamous treatise, it looks downright sensible:

"To a fan, hockey is a great but sometimes brutal game - and only one of 30 cities is going to be feeling great by this time next month. But while you're barbecuing this summer and speculating on next season, I want you to thnk about this:

I firmly believe the Ottawa Senators will not only win the Stanley Cup, but we will build a team with the talent and drive to hoard that Cup year after year in the playoffs. I guarantee that you have never seen the level of determination that is about to go into putting together our 2006-07 season. And I guarantee that I will not rest until Ottawa becomes the hockey Mecca of the NHL."

Still holds up.

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Scoring Chances: Game 30 @ New York Islanders

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Senators Ink Andrew Hammond to a 2-year ELC

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On March 18th, Jean Gabriel Pageau tipped off the masses that the Senators had (likely) made a collegiate free agent signing by retweeting the above and today, the organization formally announced the signing of Andrew Hammond to a two-year entry level contract.

Via the press release:

The Ottawa Senators announced today the club has signed free agent goaltender Andrew Hammond to a two-year entry-level contract. Hammond recently completed his senior collegiate season when his Bowling Green Falcons fell to Notre Dame in the second round of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association playoffs. Hammond has signed an amateur tryout agreement and will report to the club’s American Hockey League affiliate, the Binghamton Senators.

Hammond, 25, posted a 10-15-3 record with a 2.47 goals-against average and a .917 save percentage in 29 games with the Falcons this past season. He was the recipient of the team’s Jim Sears Award (most valuable player) and Jim Ruehl Award (best defensive player) after both the 2010-11 and 2011-12 seasons.

A native of Surrey, B.C., Hammond earned a record of 30-68-13 in 111 games over four seasons at Bowling Green and attended the Chicago Blackhawks’ prospect camp in 2012.

Hammond is listed at 6’3” and 190 lbs on his Bowling Green player profile page and at 25 years of age, one has to wonder how much of a prospect he actually is. Given some of Ottawa’s previous forays into the collegiate market, coupled with the fact that every NHL team is seemingly scouring the collegiate market for inexpensive players that can add some organizational depth, my expectations for Hammond actually developing into a productive player are low.

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Goodbye Crazy Plan

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So that happened.

8 years, 69 million.

The dream of many a Sens fan that Perry could land in Ottawa July 1st dashed. There was a sliver of reason to think it was possible too, what with Bryan and Tim drafting Corey in 2003, the whispers about Perry wanting to move "closer to home", a true number one playmaking center to line up alongside, and enough capspace to accommodate a contract sure to explode Ottawa's salary structure.

Of course that optimism easily brushed aside the franchises history of free agent signings, an inauspicious list headlined by a then 36-year-old Sergei Gonchar. The Hasek signing is up there too, even if it ended terribly. And the rest Kovalev, Gerber, Corvo, you get the idea.

Ottawa's really only had the means to target players in free agency for 10 years (ie. the Melnyk era), and in that span I'd argue they've never really been close on signing a premier player in or around their prime. If you believe Gene, the Sens had a "presentation" all made up for Parise, but the organization never made an offer once they saw the kind of term and dollars it was going to take (not that I blame them on that front).

So even though it'd be nice at this stage to add some elite talent to the team for nothing but money, chances are it's not going to happen. Talent in Ottawa arrives in two ways - through the draft and via trade. Maybe that fact changes sometime in future, but to this point that's been the history.

Hell with Perry struck from the list, there isn't much available this summer I'd want to commit to anyway.

During the depths of the lockout Elliotte Friedman appeared on the podcast and had this to say:

"Ultimately I think the biggest question the Senators are going to have going forward is, how are they going to replace Daniel Alfredsson when the time comes?"

It remains a question today, and I'm not sure it's even a fair question to ask. The organization might have that player in the system, or maybe it's years before they see another two-way winger with his skills. The blueprint Chicago laid down of augmenting their young core with Hossa is desirable, but those signings are so few and far between - you can't bank on them, especially in Ottawa.

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Scoping it Out – Michalek Goes Under the Knife

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Weeks after tweaking his knee in the February 13th pregame skate in Pittsburgh, Milan Michalek has finally elected to undergo arthroscopic surgery on his right knee.

According to the organization, Michalek is having the procedure to remove bone chips from the same knee that forced him to miss 46 games during the 2003/04 season (torn ligament).

Michalek, who led the Senators with 35 goals last season, opted originally to wait and see if the injured knee would respond to time and rest; preferring to play through the injury and postpone surgery until the offseason. Although he eventually wound up playing in two consecutive games on March 6th and 8th, registering an assist in each, it came to a point where he and the organization decided that getting corrective surgery now was the best option.

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Scoring Chances: Game 29 vs. Winnipeg

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That Was Quite The Season For The 67's

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-706 in shots, -114 in goals.

I'd say they earned that #1 pick.

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Scoring Chances: Game 28 @ Buffalo

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Goin' Cheese

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Friday News & Notes

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As was telegraphed by Bob McKenzie and Seth Jones earlier in the week, came this news yesterday...

"The Ottawa Senators announced today the club has signed free agent defenceman Troy Rutkowski to a three-year entry-level contract. Rutkowski is currently playing in his fifth season with the Portland Winterhawks, the Western Hockey League’s top-ranked team."

Rutkowski is an interesting case, drafted by Colorado 137th overall in 2010, the Avalanche chose not to sign him and relinquished his rights. He re-entered the draft last year, and was passed over, making him a free agent at the age of 20.

So what kind of player is Ottawa getting here? Well he's 6'2, 199, a right shot, a team captain, and a consistent offensive performer:

SEASON TEAM GP G A PTS
2009/10 Portland 71 12 31 43
2010/11 Portland 72 10 37 47
2011/12 Portland 72 13 32 45
2012/13 Portland 69 69 41 61

Though it should be said that Portland has been stacked with talent over this span so he isn't exactly playing with nobodies here. The concerns with his game seem to hinge on his ability to skate:

At the least this acquisition brings talent to the organization that only costs money, which should be applauded. The Winterhawks are up there among Memorial Cup favourites so it's somewhat doubtful we'll see Troy in Binghamton anytime soon.

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