Uninspired Senators demolished by Arvidsson-led Kings
Batherson, Chabot each score power-play goals for Ottawa in 5-2 home loss
Brady Tkachuk is as competitive as they come and he could hardly stomach the lacklustre effort his Ottawa Senators put together Tuesday night in a 5-2 loss to the visiting Los Angeles Kings.
"There's no explanation, there's no excuses," said the visibly frustrated Senators captain. "It's unacceptable and it's on us. We just weren't ready. For us to come out that flat and screw [goalie Cam Talbot] like that is just unacceptable. That's not good."
The Senators (10-14-1) were coming off two impressive wins and had victories in four of their last five outings.
The Kings (14-10-4) were led by Viktor Arvidsson who had two goals.
Matt Roy, Mikey Anderson and Kevin Fiala also had goals, and Anze Kopitar registered three assists for the Kings, who kicked off a six-game road trip.
WATCH l Arvidsson's pair lifts Kings past Senators:
Pheonix Copley made 31 saves in his first appearance for L.A.
The 30-year-old goalie has made just 26 starts but collected his third career win over the Senators Tuesday.
"I felt good" said Copley. "It was nice. The guys played well in front of me. It's great to be in the win column.
"I thought [the team] played great, defensively. There were a lot of clears, a lot of blocked shots. If I left rebounds, they were taking care of them."
Talbot got chased midway through the second period after allowing five goals on 14 shots. Anton Forsberg stopped all 13 shots he faced in relief.
The Senators were down 2-0 by the two-minute mark of the first. Roy scored off a rebound, while Anderson scored from a sharp angle.
The Senators called a timeout and were able to cut the lead in half by the five-minute mark when Batherson roofed a Tim Stutzle rebound on the power play.
The Kings came right back and scored twice more before the end of the period to take a 4-1 lead.
Arvidsson scored his first of the night off a cross-crease pass from Trevor Moore on the power play and picked up his second just past the halfway mark of the period, beating Talbot with a wrister from the circle.
"I thought it was a complete game by everybody," said Kings coach Todd McLellan. "We didn't have to rely on just one or two people, starting with the goaltender. I thought he played really well and gave us some confidence."
"Every night we know the way we can play and have success and that's what we have to do."<br><br>Thomas Chabot on the team not being too concerned from one game <a href="https://t.co/4uQEeHtzxe">pic.twitter.com/4uQEeHtzxe</a>
—@Senators
Senators coach D.J. Smith took full responsibility when asked why his team started so poorly.
"Just flat," said Smith. "Gave up way too many chances, didn't check hard enough. You know, that's on me. Our preparation to start the game starts with me as the coach and that's certainly unacceptable, but my job is to make sure these guys are ready to play."
Batherson felt his coach was letting the team off the hook.
"It's not on him," Batherson said. "The game plan was there and we as a group as players just weren't ready to go. It has nothing to do with the coaches. They had the game plan all set for us, we just didn't execute it well."
Ottawa fails to pick up pace in 2nd period
The second wasn't much better for the Senators as they failed to show any real urgency despite trailing 4-1.
Chabot picked up his second power-play goal in as many games midway through the third period. But the accomplishment was overshadowed by his team's play.
"Everybody knows we weren't ready to play and that's something as a group that can't happen," said Chabot. "Every night we know the way we can play and have success and that's what we have to do."
The Senators are heading out for the annual father's trip where they will face Dallas and Nashville. The dad's were on hand for Tuesday's game and Tkachuk anticipated a quiet ride home with his father by his side.