Hockey

Senators ride 3 power-play goals to rout of Ducks

Derick Brassard and Mathieu Joseph each had a goal and two assists, and the Ottawa Senators beat the Ducks 5-1 on Friday in Anaheim.

Brassard, Joseph each collect a goal, 2 assists to help Ottawa snap 3-game losing skid

Senators forward Brady Tkachuk, second from right, celebrates after scoring against Ducks goalie Anthony Stolarz during the first period of a 5-1 win on Friday at Honda Center in Anaheim. (Ringo H.W. Chiu/The Associated Press)

Derick Brassard and Mathieu Joseph each had a goal and two assists, and the Ottawa Senators beat the Ducks 5-1 on Friday in Anaheim.

Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stutzle each had a power-play goal, helping the Senators stop a three-game losing streak. Artem Zub also scored, Drake Batherson had two assists and Cam Talbot made 31 saves.

"We had a really good effort today," Tkachuk said. "Special teams came up big, PK was great tonight, and power play, you know, showed up when we needed to. So, overall, it was a really fun experience tonight."

Max Jones scored for Anaheim in the third period, and Anthony Stolarz made 28 saves. The Ducks followed their first regulation win of the season on Wednesday with an undisciplined effort, yielding eight power plays.

"You don't want to take a penalty unless you're going to save a goal," Ducks coach Dallas Eakins said. "In the end, that game come down to special teams. ... Their power play got it done. Ours didn't. Their penalty kill got it done. Ours didn't."

Ottawa took charge late in the first period.

Tkachuk opened the scoring on the power play, tucking his one-timer under the crossbar from the slot with 3:36 remaining. Brassard then made it 2-0 with 1:41 to go.

WATCH | Brassard shines as Sens cruise past Ducks:

Sens snap 3-game losing skid with big win over Ducks

2 years ago
Duration 0:40
Derick Brassard's three point game included the winner as Ottawa defeated Anaheim 5-1.

"From then on, it just felt like we played a really solid game, really mature game, and just followed the game plan to a 'T.' So we have to build off that," Tkachuk said.

Ottawa needed just 14 seconds on the power play to take a 3-0 lead midway through the second. Stutzle got his eighth goal of the season on a powerful wrist shot from the high slot.

Joseph got in on the fun with Ottawa's third power-play goal on a chip over Stolarz while falling down at 6:49 of the third, but coach D.J. Smith was even more excited by the defensive performance. The Senators had allowed at least four goals 10 times during a 2-10-1 slump coming into the matinee.

"Yeah, we scored on them, but you're not going to score your way out of trouble," Smith said. "You're going to have to check your way out of trouble, and I thought we checked really hard tonight."

Jones ruined what would have been Talbot's fourth career shutout against the Ducks by scoring with 2:50 remaining. While Talbot could not complete his first shutout of the season, he did run his record against the Ducks to 15-7-2 in 24 career games.

"Talbot was good wire to wire," Smith said. "It's unfortunate the shutout's not his. He certainly deserved it."

Chabot returns to lineup

Defenceman Thomas Chabot had the secondary assist on Tkachuk's goal in his return after missing five games because of a concussion. Chabot was hurt when he was checked into the boards from behind by Philadelphia's Travis Konecny on Nov. 12.

Paired with Zub, who picked up the Senators' fourth goal on a a shot from the left circle through traffic with 5:06 left in the second, it was the first time in nearly a month Ottawa had its top defencemen on the ice together.

"Chabby has been a top defenceman in this league for, I don't know how many years now, ever since I've been here. So to get him back, it definitely created a spark and energy for us," Tkachuk said.

Ottawa will next face the Kings in Los Angeles on Sunday night.

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.