2005–06 Ottawa Senators season

2005–06 Ottawa Senators
Northeast Division Champions
Division 1st Northeast
Conference 1st Eastern
2005–06 record 52–21–9
Home record 29–9–3
Road record 23–12–6
Goals for 314
Goals against 211
Team information
General Manager John Muckler
Coach Bryan Murray
Captain Daniel Alfredsson
Alternate captains Zdeno Chara
Wade Redden
Arena Corel Centre (renamed to Scotiabank Place during season)
Average attendance 19,474 (101.7%)[1]
Team leaders
Goals Dany Heatley (50)
Assists Jason Spezza (71)
Points Daniel Alfredsson and Dany Heatley (103)
Penalties in minutes Chris Neil (204)
Plus/minus Wade Redden (+35)
Wins Dominik Hasek (28)
Goals against average Dominik Hasek (2.09)
<2004–05 2006–07>

The 2005–06 Ottawa Senators season was the 14th NHL season (13th season of play) of the Ottawa Senators. After one of their franchise-best regular seasons, finishing with 113 points, the Senators made it to the Eastern Conference Semi-final, in which the Buffalo Sabres eliminated Ottawa in five games.

Off-season

Changes occurred to the Senators roster before the season. First, Ottawa acquired the playoff-experienced goaltender Dominik Hasek for his Stanley Cup experience. Second, a blockbuster trade on August 23, 2005 involved Marian Hossa and Greg de Vries being sent to the Atlanta Thrashers for Dany Heatley. The trade occurred on the day that Hossa had signed a new contract. The value of Hossa's contract was beyond what General Manager John Muckler felt that Hossa was worth and so he was dealt away. Marian had led the Senators in scoring.

The Senators' arena, Scotiabank Place, its name since January 2006 since signing with Scotiabank for a 25-year, $25 million contract.

Regular season

Dany Heatley, together with Daniel Alfredsson and Jason Spezza, formed one of the NHL's top offensive lines,[2] dubbed the "CASH line" by fans in a contest held by the Ottawa Citizen. The name is made from the initials of C'aptain Alfredsson, Spezza, and Heatley.[3] Cash Line won out over finalists 'Dash Line' and 'Dazzle Line,' which Spezza reputedly despised and wanted to veto.[4] Another nickname the line has picked up is the "Pizza Line", used by the Citizens rival paper, the Ottawa Sun.[5][6] However, during the press conference to introduce the teams for the 2007 Stanley Cup Final, Heatley went on record to say he likes the "CASH line" name.[7]

The Senators team sent nine players to the 2006 Winter Olympics as part of the NHL's commitment. Daniel Alfredsson, Zdeno Chara, Martin Havlat, Dany Heatley, Andrej Meszaros, Wade Redden, Christoph Schubert and Anton Volchenkov all played for their respective country's national teams, while Jason Spezza was named a substitute for Canada. The experience, however, was poor for the Senators: Dominik Hasek was having an impressive season prior to Olympic play, but the team lost him to a hamstring injury he suffered while playing for the Czech Republic. He would not play again for the Senators.

In addition to leading the NHL with most goals for (312, excluding shootout-winning goals), the Senators also led the NHL in shorthanded goals (25), scoring points (840) and shots on goal (2,811).[8][9]

Highlights

The "CASH line" made a dramatic and historic debut, playing in the first game of the 2005–06 season on October 5, 2005, against the Toronto Maple Leafs in Toronto. In the pre-season, right winger Brandon Bochenski had been playing on the line as he had played with Spezza in the American Hockey League (AHL) during the 2004–05 NHL lockout. But with five minutes to go, with the Senators trailing, then Senators' Head Coach Bryan Murray replaced Bochenski with Daniel Alfredsson, who scored a game-tying goal with 62 seconds left. Heatley and Alfredsson would then go on to score the first shootout goals in NHL history to win the game that night.[10]

Other highlights of the Senators' season included an 8–0 road win over their Ontario rivals, the Maple Leafs, on October 29, 2005. Dany Heatley scored four consecutive goals in that game. Just four nights later, the Senators defeated the Buffalo Sabres in Buffalo, 10–4. Martin Havlat and Daniel Alfredsson each scored four goals and Jason Spezza provided four assists. It was the first time that an NHL team had scored ten goals in a regular-season game since January 11, 2003, when the Washington Capitals defeated the Florida Panthers at home by a score of 12–2.[11] It was also the first time that the Senators had scored ten goals in a regular-season game since November 13, 2001, when they defeated the Capitals 11–5 away in Washington, D.C.[12] On November 29, 2005, the Senators defeated the Montreal Canadiens 4–0 and, in doing so, improved to a 19–3–0 record through their first 22 games of the regular season. Over that span, Ottawa outscored its opponents 102–45. Spezza had reached 41 points (11 goals and 30 assists) and Alfredsson had reached 40 points (20 goals and 20 assists) by this point. Heatley recorded a point in every one of these games and had 17 goals and 21 assists for 38 points.

In an 8–2 win over Toronto on December 17, 2005, the Senators set a franchise record for most power play goals scored in one game, with six.[13] On February 2, 2006, the Senators scored three short-handed goals in a 7–2 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins.[14] It was the second time in franchise history that the Senators scored three shorthanded goals in a single game, as the Senators had scored three shorthanded goals in a 5–2 home win over the Florida Panthers on November 18, 2000.[15]

Dany Heatley became the first Senator in franchise history to reach 100 points on April 13, 2006, recording two assists during a 5–4 overtime loss to the Florida Panthers and five days later became the first Senator to score 50 goals in a season. Meanwhile, defenceman Wade Redden became the first Senator to win the NHL Plus/Minus Award, tied with New York Ranger Michal Rozsival, with a +35 rating. Despite missing 14 games, Jason Spezza finished second in the NHL in assists, with 71.

Season standings

Northeast Division
No. CR GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
1 1 Ottawa Senators 82 52 21 9 314 211 113
2 4 Buffalo Sabres 82 52 24 6 281 239 110
3 7 Montreal Canadiens 82 42 31 9 243 247 93
4 9 Toronto Maple Leafs 82 41 33 8 257 270 90
5 13 Boston Bruins 82 29 37 16 230 266 74

[16] Note: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime/Shootout loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points
         Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.

Eastern Conference[17]
R Div GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
1 Z- Ottawa Senators NE 82 52 21 9 314 211 113
2 Y- Carolina Hurricanes SE 82 52 22 8 294 260 112
3 Y - New Jersey Devils AT 82 46 27 8 242 229 101
4 X- Buffalo Sabres NE 82 52 24 6 242 239 110
5 X-Philadelphia Flyers AT 82 45 26 11 267 259 101
6 X– New York Rangers AT 82 44 26 12 257 215 100
7 X-Montreal Canadiens NE 82 42 31 9 243 247 93
8 X- Tampa Bay Lightning SE 82 43 33 6 252 260 92
8.5
9 Toronto Maple Leafs NE 82 41 33 8 257 270 90
10 Atlanta Thrashers SE 82 41 33 8 281 275 90
11 Florida Panthers SE 82 37 34 11 240 257 85
12 New York Islanders AT 82 36 40 6 230 278 78
13 Boston Bruins NE 82 29 37 16 230 266 74
14 Washington Capitals SE 82 29 41 12 237 306 70
15 Pittsburgh Penguins AT 82 22 46 14 244 316 58

Divisions: AT – Atlantic, NE – Northeast, SE – Southeast

Z- Clinched Conference; Y- Clinched Division; X- Clinched Playoff spot

Game log[18]

October

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts
1 October 5 Ottawa 3–2 Toronto Maple Leafs SO Hasek 19,452 1–0–0 2
2 October 8 Buffalo Sabres 0–5 Ottawa Hasek 19,661 2–0–0 4
3 October 10 Toronto Maple Leafs 5–6 Ottawa SO Hasek 18,680 3–0–0 6
4 October 11 Ottawa 4–2 Montreal Canadiens Emery 21,273 4–0–0 8
5 October 15 Boston Bruins 1–5 Ottawa Hasek 19,379 5–0–0 10
6 October 21 Ottawa 4–1 Tampa Bay Lightning Hasek 20,494 6–0–0 12
7 October 24 Ottawa 2–3 Carolina Hurricanes Hasek 12,116 6–1–0 12
8 October 27 Montreal Canadiens 3–4 Ottawa OT Emery 18,840 7–1–0 14
9 October 29 Ottawa 8–0 Toronto Maple Leafs Hasek 19,480 8–1–0 16
10 October 30 Philadelphia Flyers 5–3 Ottawa Hasek 19,335 8–2–0 16

November

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts
11 November 2 Ottawa 10–4 Buffalo Sabres Emery 13,905 9–2–0 18
12 November 3 Tampa Bay Lightning 4–2 Ottawa Hasek 18,604 10–2–0 20
13 November 5 New York Islanders 0-6 Ottawa Hasek 19,776 11–2–0 22
14 November 10 Ottawa 5–2 Boston Bruins Hasek 17,159 12–2–0 24
15 November 12 Buffalo Sabres 1–6 Ottawa Emery 19,414 13–2–0 26
16 November 15 Carolina Hurricanes 2–1 Ottawa Hasek 19,544 13–3–0 26
17 November 17 Florida Panthers 1–4 Ottawa Hasek 18,650 14–3–0 28
18 November 19 New Jersey Devils 4–5 Ottawa Emery 19,534 15–3–0 30
19 November 22 Ottawa 5–3 Carolina Hurricanes Hasek 13,427 16–3–0 32
20 November 25 Ottawa 6–2 New York Islanders Hasek 15,564 17–3–0 35
21 November 26 Boston Bruins 2–4 Ottawa Hasek 19,691 18–3–0 36
22 November 29 Montreal Canadiens 0–4 Ottawa Emery 19,858 19–3–0 38

December

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts
23 December 1 Ottawa 0–3 Boston Bruins Hasek 15,639 19–4–0 38
24 December 2 Los Angeles Kings 1–5 Ottawa Hasek 19,671 20–4–0 40
25 December 5 Ottawa 6–3 Florida Panthers Hasek 10,883 21–4–0 42
26 December 9 Ottawa 2–3 Vancouver Canucks SO Hasek 18,630 21–4–1 44
27 December 10 Ottawa 1–2 Calgary Flames OT Emery 19,289 21–4–2 44
28 December 12 Ottawa 6–2 Colorado Avalanche Hasek 18,007 22–4–2 46
29 December 15 Dallas Stars 2–0 Ottawa Emery 19,598 22–5–2 46
30 December 17 Toronto Maple Leafs 2–8 Ottawa Hasek 19,935 23–5–2 48
31 December 20 Ottawa 3–4 Montreal Canadiens SO Hasek 21,273 23–5–3 49
32 December 22 Ottawa 3–4 Philadelphia Flyers Hasek 19,817 23–6–3 49
33 December 23 Ottawa 4–2 New York Islanders Emery 11,425 24–6–3 51
34 December 26 New York Rangers 2–6 Ottawa Hasek 19,806 25–6–3 53
35 December 28 Carolina Hurricanes 2–6 Ottawa Hasek 20,050 26–6–3 55
36 December 30 New York Islanders 3–4 Ottawa Emery 20,055 27–6–3 57

January

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts
37 January 2 Ottawa 3–8 Atlanta Thrashers Emery 12,536 27–7–3 57
38 January 4 Ottawa 3–1 Washington Capitals Hasek 10,047 28–7–3 59
39 January 5 Ottawa 2–4 Boston Bruins Hasek 15,481 28–8–3 59
40 January 7 Ottawa 1–4 Montreal Canadiens Hasek 21,273 28–9–3 59
41 January 10 Phoenix Coyotes 2–7 Ottawa Hasek 19,773 29–9–3 61
42 January 12 San Jose Sharks 2–0 Ottawa Hasek 19,538 29–10–3 61
43 January 14 Ottawa 5–3 Edmonton Oilers Hasek 16,839 30–10–3 63
44 January 16 Ottawa 6–1 Minnesota Wild Hasek 18,568 31–10–3 65
45 January 19 Anaheim Ducks 4–3 Ottawa SO Hasek 19,387 31–10–4 66
46 January 21 Toronto Maple Leafs 0–7 Ottawa Hasek 20,093 32–10–4 68
47 January 23 Toronto Maple Leafs 3–4 Ottawa Hasek 19,865 33–10–4 70
48 January 26 Montreal Canadiens 0–3 Ottawa Hasek 19,908 34–10–4 72
49 January 30 Boston Bruins 5–0 Ottawa Emery 19,551 34–11–4 72

February

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts
50 February 1 Ottawa 3–5 New Jersey Devils Hasek 10,142 34–12–4 72
51 February 2 Ottawa 7–2 Pittsburgh Penguins Hasek 14,714 35–12–4 74
52 February 4 Ottawa 1–2 Buffalo Sabres SO Hasek 17,451 35–12–5 75
53 February 6 Pittsburgh Penguins 2–5 Ottawa Emery 19,877 36–12–5 77
54 February 8 Ottawa 1–5 New York Rangers Hasek 18,200 36–13–5 77
55 February 9 Atlanta Thrashers 2–1 Ottawa Hasek 19,604 36–14–5 77
56 February 11 Philadelphia Flyers 2–3 Ottawa Hasek 19,834 37–14–5 79

March

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts
57 March 1 Ottawa 4–3 Pittsburgh Penguins Emery 14,026 38–14–5 81
58 March 2 Washington Capitals 1–7 Ottawa Emery 19,346 39–14–5 83
59 March 4 Ottawa 4–2 Toronto Maple Leafs Emery 19,486 40–14–5 85
60 March 6 Ottawa 4–0 Tampa Bay Lightning Emery 19,855 41–14–5 87
61 March 8 Ottawa 2–6 Florida Panthers Emery 15,196 41–15–5 87
62 March 10 Ottawa 3–1 Atlanta Thrashers Emery 15,057 42–15–5 89
63 March 12 Ottawa 5–2 Washington Capitals Emery 15,740 43–15–5 91
64 March 14 Tampa Bay Lightning 3–4 Ottawa Emery 19,810 44–15–5 93
65 March 16 Ottawa 2–3 Boston Bruins SO Emery 15,066 44–15–6 94
66 March 18 Buffalo Sabres 2–4 Ottawa Emery 19,947 45–15–6 96
67 March 19 Ottawa 4–0 New Jersey Devils Emery 14,681 46–15–6 98
68 March 21 Pittsburgh Penguins 2–5 Ottawa Emery 19,360 47–15–6 100
69 March 24 Ottawa 3–1 Buffalo Sabres Emery 18,690 48–15–6 102
70 March 25 Ottawa 3–6 Philadelphia Flyers Emery 19,869 48–16–6 103
71 March 28 New Jersey Devils 3–2 Ottawa SO Emery 18,668 48–16–7 103
72 March 30 New York Rangers 1–4 Ottawa Emery 18,710 49–16–7 105

April

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Record Pts
73 April 1 Washington Capitals 1–0 Ottawa Emery 19,403 49–17–7 105
74 April 3 Atlanta Thrashers 4–6 Ottawa Emery 18,742 50–17–7 107
75 April 5 Ottawa 4–5 Buffalo Sabres OT Emery 17,622 50–17–8 108
76 April 6 Montreal Canadiens 5–2 Ottawa Emery 19,929 50–18–8 108
77 April 8 Buffalo Sabres 6–2 Ottawa Emery 19,575 50–19–8 108
78 April 10 Ottawa 2–3 Montreal Canadiens Emery 21,273 50–20–8 108
79 April 11 Boston Bruins 3–4 Ottawa OT Morrison 18,279 51–20–8 110
80 April 13 Florida Panthers 5–4 Ottawa OT Morrison 19,173 51–20–9 111
81 April 15 Ottawa 1–5 Toronto Maple Leafs Emery 19,410 51–21–9 111
82 April 18 Ottawa 5–1 New York Rangers Emery 18,200 52–21–9 113

Playoffs

The Ottawa Senators ended the 2005–06 regular season as the Eastern Conference's first seed.

Ray Emery took over the starting goaltender duties; he became the first rookie netminder since Philadelphia's Brian Boucher in 2000 to win a playoff series when the Senators defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs, four games to one. The Senators were then defeated by the Buffalo Sabres in the second round, four games to one.

After the playoff loss, Senators Owner Eugene Melnyk comforted fans in an open letter by saying that their team would not only win the Stanley Cup in the future, but, once they had it, they would, he boasted, "hoard" it year after year.[19]

Eastern Conference Quarter-finals: vs. (8) Tampa Bay Lightning

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Series
1 April 21 Tampa Bay 1–4 Ottawa Emery 19,660 1–0
2 April 23 Tampa Bay 4–3 Ottawa Emery 19,745 1–1
3 April 25 Ottawa 8–4 Tampa Bay Emery 20,815 2–1
4 April 27 Ottawa 5–2 Tampa Bay Emery 20,682 3–1
5 April 29 Tampa Bay 3–2 Ottawa Emery 20,004 4–1

Ottawa wins series 4–1.

Eastern Conference Semi-finals: vs. (4) Buffalo Sabres

# Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Series
1 May 5 Buffalo 7–6 Ottawa OT Emery 19,544 0–1
2 May 8 Buffalo 2–1 Ottawa Emery 19,816 0–2
3 May 10 Ottawa 2–3 Buffalo OT Emery 18,690 0–3
4 May 11 Ottawa 2–1 Buffalo Emery 18,690 1–3
5 May 13 Buffalo 3–2 Ottawa OT Emery 20,024 1–4

Buffalo wins series 4–1.

Player statistics

Regular season

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Heatley, DanyDany Heatley LW 82 50 53 103 86292327
Alfredsson, DanielDaniel Alfredsson RW 77 43 60 103 50291658
Spezza, JasonJason Spezza C 68 19 71 90 3323705
Schaefer, PeterPeter Schaefer LW 82 20 30 50 4016442
Redden, WadeWade Redden D 65 10 40 50 6335804
Smolinski, BryanBryan Smolinski C 81 17 31 48 468405
Fisher, MikeMike Fisher C 68 22 22 44 6423243
Chara, ZdenoZdeno Chara D 71 16 27 43 135171013
Meszaros, AndrejAndrej Meszaros D 82 10 29 39 6134502
Pothier, BrianBrian Pothier D 77 5 30 35 5929300
Vermette, AntoineAntoine Vermette C 82 21 12 33 4417164
Neil, ChrisChris Neil RW 79 16 17 33 2049800
Kelly, ChrisChris Kelly C/LW 82 10 20 30 7621102
Eaves, PatrickPatrick Eaves RW 58 20 9 29 227514
Varada, VaclavVaclav Varada RW 76 5 16 21 502100
Phillips, ChrisChris Phillips D 69 1 18 19 9019000
Volchenkov, AntonAnton Volchenkov D 75 4 13 17 5321000
Havlat, MartinMartin Havlat RW 18 9 7 16 46211
Bochenski, BrandonBrandon Bochenski RW 20 6 7 13 147200
Schubert, ChristophChristoph Schubert D 56 4 6 10 484010
McGrattan, BrianBrian McGrattan RW 60 2 3 5 1410000
Arnason, TylerTyler Arnason C 19 0 4 4 4−4000
Martins, SteveSteve Martins C 4 1 1 2 02000
Hamel, DenisDenis Hamel LW 4 1 0 1 01000
Emery, RayRay Emery G 39 0 1 1 20000
Morrison, MikeMike Morrison G 4 0 1 1 00000
Hasek, DominikDominik Hasek G 43 0 0 0 160000
Malec, TomasTomas Malec D 2 0 0 0 24000
Norton, BradBrad Norton D 7 0 0 0 311000
Novak, FilipFilip Novak D 11 0 0 0 4−2000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T/OT GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Hasek, DominikDominik Hasek 2584 43 28 10 4 90 2.09 512021112.925
Emery, RayRay Emery 2168 39 23 11 4 102 2.82 31045943.902
Morrison, MikeMike Morrison 207 4 1 0 1 12 3.48 09684.875
Team: 4959 82 52 21 9 204 2.47 823432139.913

Playoffs

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Spezza, JasonJason Spezza C 10 5 9 14 2−1301
Havlat, MartinMartin Havlat RW 10 7 6 13 40301
Heatley, DanyDany Heatley LW 10 3 9 12 111301
Alfredsson, DanielDaniel Alfredsson RW 10 2 8 10 42100
Redden, WadeWade Redden D 9 2 8 10 10−2201
Schaefer, PeterPeter Schaefer LW 10 2 5 7 142000
Smolinski, BryanBryan Smolinski C 10 3 3 6 23100
Fisher, MikeMike Fisher C 10 2 2 4 121010
Chara, ZdenoZdeno Chara D 10 1 3 4 230100
Volchenkov, AntonAnton Volchenkov D 9 0 4 4 81000
Pothier, BrianBrian Pothier D 8 2 1 3 21000
Phillips, ChrisChris Phillips D 9 2 0 2 6−2000
Vermette, AntoineAntoine Vermette C 10 2 0 2 4−1001
Varada, VaclavVaclav Varada RW 8 0 2 2 12−2000
Eaves, PatrickPatrick Eaves RW 10 1 0 1 10−3000
Meszaros, AndrejAndrej Meszaros D 10 1 0 1 180000
Neil, ChrisChris Neil RW 10 1 0 1 14−1000
Emery, RayRay Emery G 10 0 1 1 00000
Schubert, ChristophChristoph Schubert D 7 0 1 1 43000
Kelly, ChrisChris Kelly C/LW 10 0 0 0 2−4000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Emery, RayRay Emery 604 10 5 5 29 2.88 0289260.900
Team: 604 10 5 5 29 2.88 0289260.900

[20]

Note:

Pos = Position; GPI = Games played in; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes; +/- = Plus/minus; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals
Min, TOI = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T,T/OT = Ties; OTL = Overtime losses; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;

Awards and records

Transactions

Trades

July 30, 2005 To Minnesota Wild
Todd White
To Ottawa Senators
Minnesota's fourth-round pick 2005 Draft (Cody Bass)
August 23, 2005 To Atlanta Thrashers
Marian Hossa
Greg de Vries
To Ottawa Senators
Dany Heatley
October 5, 2005 To Florida Panthers
future considerations (Ottawa's sixth-round pick in 2007 Draft)
To Ottawa Senators
Filip Novak
March 9, 2006 To Chicago Blackhawks
Brandon Bochenski
Ottawa's second-round pick in 2006 Draft
To Ottawa Senators
Tyler Arnason

Received from waivers

Player Former Team
G Mike Morrison Edmonton Oilers

Roster

2005–06 Ottawa Senators
Goaltenders

Defencemen

Wingers

Centres

Sources:

Draft picks

Ottawa's picks at the 2005 NHL Entry Draft in Ottawa, Ontario.

Round # Player Nationality NHL team College/Junior/Club team (League)
1 9 Brian Lee (D) USA Ottawa Senators Moorhead High School (USHS-MN)
3 70 Vitali Anikienko (D)  Russia Ottawa Senators Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (RSL)
4 95 Cody Bass (C)  Canada Ottawa Senators (from Colorado Avalanche) Mississauga IceDogs (OHL)
4 98 Ilya Zubov (C)  Russia Ottawa Senators (from St. Louis) Chelyabinsk (Russia)
4 115 Janne Kolehmainen (LW)  Finland Ottawa Senators SaiPa (SM-liiga)
5 136 Tomas Kudelka (D)  Czech Republic Ottawa Senators HC Zlín Jr. (Czech Jr.)
6 186 Dmitri Megalinsky  Russia Ottawa Senators Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (RSL)
7 204 Colin Greening  Canada Ottawa Senators Upper Canada College (CCL)

Farm teams

See also

References

  1. "NHL Attendance – 2006". ESPN. Retrieved December 1, 2009.
  2. Garrioch, Bruce (October 30, 2007). "Team Reports". The Hockey News.
  3. "The Cash Line easily wins the vote". Ottawa Citizen. November 17, 2005. p. C1.
  4. Brennan, Don (November 13, 2005). "Saturday night's all right". Ottawa Sun/Slam Sports. Retrieved November 29, 2007.
  5. Garrioch, Bruce (October 2, 2007). "Pizza Line Ordered Up". Ottawa Sun.
  6. The name refers to a promotion instituted by a pizza company chain to provide a free slice of pizza to all attending when the Senators scored five goals in a game. The line increased the number of times the Senators scored five per game, and the pizza company had to change its promotion to six goals.
  7. Panzeri, Allen (May 28, 2007). "Sens carry a nation's hopes; Ducks hope playing with less pressure is to their advantage". Calgary Herald. p. D1.
  8. http://www.hockey-reference.com/teams/OTT/2006.html
  9. http://www.hockey-reference.com/leagues/NHL_2006.html
  10. "Sens Edge Leafs in First Shootout". TSN.ca. Canadian Press. October 6, 2005. Archived from the original on February 20, 2006. Retrieved December 1, 2007.
  11. http://www.hockey-reference.com/boxscores/200301110WSH.html
  12. http://www.hockey-reference.com/boxscores/200111130WSH.html
  13. http://www.hockey-reference.com/boxscores/200512170OTT.html
  14. http://www.hockey-reference.com/boxscores/200602020PIT.html
  15. http://www.hockey-reference.com/boxscores/200011180OTT.html
  16. Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2009). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book/2010. Dan Diamond & Associates. p. 162.
  17. "2005–2006 Standings by Conference". National Hockey League. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  18. "Ottawa Senators Schedule". ESPN. Retrieved August 13, 2007.
  19. TSN.ca Staff with CP, Ottawa Senators' files (2006). "Melnyk confident Sens will be a dynasty". TSN.ca. Retrieved August 13, 2007.
  20. "2005-06 Ottawa Senators Statistics - Hockey-Reference.com". hockey-reference.com. Retrieved June 17, 2009.

External links

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