2002–03 Ottawa Senators season

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2002–03 Ottawa Senators
Northeast Division champions
Division1st Northeast
Conference1st Eastern
2002–03 record52–21–8–1
Home record28–10–3–1
Road record24–12–5–0
Goals for263
Goals against182
Team information
General managerJohn Muckler
CoachJacques Martin
CaptainDaniel Alfredsson
Alternate captainsZdeno Chara
Curtis Leschyshyn
Wade Redden
ArenaCorel Centre
Average attendance17,198 (89.9%)
Team leaders
GoalsMarian Hossa (45)
AssistsDaniel Alfredsson (51)
PointsMarian Hossa (80)
Penalty minutesChris Neil (147)
Plus/minusZdeno Chara (+29)
WinsPatrick Lalime (39)
Goals against averagePatrick Lalime (2.16)
Banner at Scotiabank Place

The 2002–03 Ottawa Senators season was the 11th season of the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). This season saw the Senators reach the highest point in the playoffs until the 2006–07 season. They were eliminated by the New Jersey Devils, the eventual Stanley Cup winning team in the Eastern Conference final. On top of their larger success, with their total 113 points they won the Presidents' Trophy, the Northeast Division title and the Eastern Conference title.

After their long history of debt problems, the Senators filed for bankruptcy on January 9, 2003. They continued regular season play after receiving emergency financing from the NHL. Despite the off-ice problems, they had a successful year, compared to their early day woes. The Presidents' Trophy awarded to the Senators made them the first Canadian team to win it since the Calgary Flames in their championship season of 1989, and the first Eastern Conference team to win it since the New York Rangers' title in the 1994 Stanley Cup Finals. In the playoffs, they defeated their former teammate Alexei Yashin and his New York Islanders, then the Philadelphia Flyers before coming within one game of making it into the Finals, falling to the New Jersey Devils.

Regular season[]

Right winger Marian Hossa led Ottawa in scoring, just eclipsing Yashin's previous record of 44 goals. Without the goaltending issues that had plagued Senators teams of the past, Patrick Lalime showed one of his best seasons, with career bests in goals against average (GAA) and wins.

After a slow start to the season after an even .500 ratio, the Senators turned around their game with a ten-game unbeaten streak. Fans were concerned whether their start was due to off-ice problems. These worries, however, were soon irrelevant to fans when the Senators again clinched a playoff berth. Before the playoffs, the Senators addressed toughness concerns through separate trades to the Buffalo Sabres for grinders Vaclav Varada and Rob Ray respectively, plus two-way forward Bryan Smolinski from the Los Angeles Kings.

Division standings[]

Northeast Division
No. CR GP W L T OTL GF GA Pts
1 1 Ottawa Senators 82 52 21 8 1 263 182 113
2 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 82 44 28 7 3 236 208 98
3 7 Boston Bruins 82 36 31 11 4 245 237 87
4 10 Montreal Canadiens 82 30 35 8 9 206 234 77
5 12 Buffalo Sabres 82 27 37 10 8 190 219 72

[1]

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

Eastern Conference[2]
R Div GP W L T OTL GF GA Pts
1 P- Ottawa Senators NE 82 52 21 8 1 263 182 113
2 Y- New Jersey Devils AT 82 46 20 10 6 216 166 108
3 Y- Tampa Bay Lightning SE 82 36 25 16 5 219 210 93
4 X- Philadelphia Flyers AT 82 45 20 13 4 211 166 107
5 X- Toronto Maple Leafs NE 82 44 28 7 3 236 208 98
6 X- Washington Capitals SE 82 39 29 8 6 224 220 92
7 X- Boston Bruins NE 82 36 31 11 4 245 237 87
8 X- New York Islanders AT 82 35 34 11 2 224 231 83
8.5
9 New York Rangers AT 82 32 36 10 4 210 231 78
10 Montreal Canadiens NE 82 30 35 8 9 206 234 77
11 Atlanta Thrashers SE 82 31 39 7 5 226 284 74
12 Buffalo Sabres NE 82 27 37 10 8 190 219 72
13 Florida Panthers SE 82 24 36 13 9 176 237 70
14 Pittsburgh Penguins AT 82 27 44 6 5 189 255 65
15 Carolina Hurricanes SE 82 22 43 11 6 171 240 61

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

P – Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y – Clinched Division; X – Clinched Playoff spot


Schedule and results[]

Regular season schedule
No. R Date Score Opponent Record Attendance
1 L October 10, 2002 1–2 New Jersey Devils (2002–03) 0–1–0–0 16,865
2 W October 12, 2002 2–1 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (2002–03) 1–1–0–0 19,198
3 W October 15, 2002 2–1 Phoenix Coyotes (2002–03) 2–1–0–0 13,816
4 W October 23, 2002 4–1 Carolina Hurricanes (2002–03) 3–1–0–0 14,847
5 T October 24, 2002 2–2 OT @ Boston Bruins (2002–03) 3–1–1–0 17,565
6 L October 26, 2002 3–5 @ Montreal Canadiens (2002–03) 3–2–1–0 20,812
7 L October 29, 2002 1–2 @ Philadelphia Flyers (2002–03) 3–3–1–0 19,077
8 L October 30, 2002 1–4 Pittsburgh Penguins (2002–03) 3–4–1–0 17,987
9 W November 2, 2002 5–2 Detroit Red Wings (2002–03) 4–4–1–0 18,210
10 W November 6, 2002 5–2 @ Colorado Avalanche (2002–03) 5–4–1–0 18,007
11 L November 8, 2002 2–3 Los Angeles Kings (2002–03) 5–5–1–0 16,926
12 L November 9, 2002 1–7 @ Boston Bruins (2002–03) 5–6–1–0 13,954
13 W November 12, 2002 5–3 @ New York Islanders (2002–03) 6–6–1–0 12,659
14 W November 14, 2002 3–2 OT Florida Panthers (2002–03) 7–6–1–0 13,323
15 W November 16, 2002 4–1 Buffalo Sabres (2002–03) 8–6–1–0 15,298
16 T November 19, 2002 4–4 OT @ Carolina Hurricanes (2002–03) 8–6–2–0 11,044
17 W November 21, 2002 3–2 Montreal Canadiens (2002–03) 9–6–2–0 16,010
18 W November 23, 2002 5–2 Columbus Blue Jackets (2002–03) 10–6–2–0 15,684
19 W November 25, 2002 2–0 Toronto Maple Leafs (2002–03) 11–6–2–0 18,035
20 T November 27, 2002 2–2 OT @ New York Islanders (2002–03) 11–6–3–0 14,887
21 W November 29, 2002 6–2 @ Washington Capitals (2002–03) 12–6–3–0 15,822
22 W November 30, 2002 4–2 New York Islanders (2002–03) 13–6–3–0 15,121
23 L December 4, 2002 0–1 @ Chicago Blackhawks (2002–03) 13–7–3–0 12,137
24 T December 5, 2002 2–2 OT @ St. Louis Blues (2002–03) 13–7–4–0 17,189
25 W December 7, 2002 5–2 Carolina Hurricanes (2002–03) 14–7–4–0 15,328
26 W December 10, 2002 4–2 @ Buffalo Sabres (2002–03) 15–7–4–0 9,966
27 W December 12, 2002 5–2 @ Boston Bruins (2002–03) 16–7–4–0 11,893
28 W December 14, 2002 4–3 OT New Jersey Devils (2002–03) 17–7–4–0 17,284
29 L December 16, 2002 2–3 Montreal Canadiens (2002–03) 17–8–4–0 16,807
30 W December 18, 2002 3–0 @ New Jersey Devils (2002–03) 18–8–4–0 11,876
31 W December 19, 2002 9–3 San Jose Sharks (2002–03) 19–8–4–0 14,848
32 W December 21, 2002 3–1 @ Philadelphia Flyers (2002–03) 20–8–4–0 19,543
33 T December 23, 2002 2–2 OT Philadelphia Flyers (2002–03) 20–8–5–0 17,787
34 W December 26, 2002 3–2 @ Buffalo Sabres (2002–03) 21–8–5–0 12,677
35 W December 27, 2002 3–2 OT Montreal Canadiens (2002–03) 22–8–5–0 18,500
36 L December 30, 2002 2–3 @ Nashville Predators (2002–03) 22–9–5–0 11,584
37 W December 31, 2002 6–3 @ Tampa Bay Lightning (2002–03) 23–9–5–0 14,452
38 W January 2, 2003 8–1 Atlanta Thrashers (2002–03) 24–9–5–0 18,026
39 OTL January 4, 2003 1–2 OT Buffalo Sabres (2002–03) 24–9–5–1 16,406
40 W January 6, 2003 5–2 @ New York Rangers (2002–03) 25–9–5–1 18,200
41 L January 8, 2003 4–6 @ Vancouver Canucks (2002–03) 25–10–5–1 18,422
42 W January 9, 2003 1–0 @ Calgary Flames (2002–03) 26–10–5–1 16,058
43 W January 11, 2003 2–0 @ Edmonton Oilers (2002–03) 27–10–5–1 16,839
44 W January 14, 2003 7–0 Tampa Bay Lightning (2002–03) 28–10–5–1 18,500
45 W January 16, 2003 3–1 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (2002–03) 29–10–5–1 18,034
46 W January 18, 2003 5–2 Washington Capitals (2002–03) 30–10–5–1 18,500
47 L January 20, 2003 2–6 @ Tampa Bay Lightning (2002–03) 30–11–5–1 12,022
48 W January 22, 2003 2–1 @ Florida Panthers (2002–03) 31–11–5–1 13,944
49 T January 23, 2003 3–3 OT @ Atlanta Thrashers (2002–03) 31–11–6–1 10,805
50 W January 25, 2003 4–3 OT Buffalo Sabres (2002–03) 32–11–6–1 18,241
51 L January 27, 2003 3–5 @ Dallas Stars (2002–03) 32–12–6–1 18,532
52 L January 29, 2003 2–3 @ Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (2002–03) 32–13–6–1 13,230
53 L January 30, 2003 0–3 @ Los Angeles Kings (2002–03) 32–14–6–1 16,518
54 W February 5, 2003 5–3 @ New York Rangers (2002–03) 33–14–6–1 18,200
55 T February 6, 2003 2–2 OT Philadelphia Flyers (2002–03) 33–14–7–1 16,599
56 W February 8, 2003 3–1 Atlanta Thrashers (2002–03) 34–14–7–1 18,371
57 W February 12, 2003 3–0 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (2002–03) 35–14–7–1 14,197
58 W February 13, 2003 2–0 Edmonton Oilers (2002–03) 36–14–7–1 18,115
59 L February 15, 2003 1–2 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (2002–03) 36–15–7–1 19,415
60 W February 17, 2003 3–2 New York Rangers (2002–03) 37–15–7–1 18,094
61 W February 19, 2003 5–3 @ New Jersey Devils (2002–03) 38–15–7–1 12,298
62 L February 20, 2003 3–4 Florida Panthers (2002–03) 38–16–7–1 15,250
63 W February 22, 2003 4–0 Nashville Predators (2002–03) 39–16–7–1 17,971
64 L February 25, 2003 0–3 Minnesota Wild (2002–03) 39–17–7–1 17,371
65 W February 27, 2003 3–2 OT Dallas Stars (2002–03) 40–17–7–1 18,500
66 L March 1, 2003 1–2 Tampa Bay Lightning (2002–03) 40–18–7–1 18,033
67 W March 4, 2003 4–1 Toronto Maple Leafs (2002–03) 41–18–7–1 18,500
68 W March 8, 2003 5–1 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (2002–03) 42–18–7–1 14,354
69 W March 9, 2003 4–2 Pittsburgh Penguins (2002–03) 43–18–7–1 18,500
70 W March 11, 2003 4–3 OT Boston Bruins (2002–03) 44–18–7–1 18,230
71 W March 13, 2003 3–2 OT New York Rangers (2002–03) 45–18–7–1 18,011
72 L March 15, 2003 2–5 New York Islanders (2002–03) 45–19–7–1 18,349
73 L March 16, 2003 2–6 @ Detroit Red Wings (2002–03) 45–20–7–1 20,058
74 W March 18, 2003 6–5 @ Carolina Hurricanes (2002–03) 46–20–7–1 16,531
75 W March 21, 2003 5–1 @ Atlanta Thrashers (2002–03) 47–20–7–1 16,114
76 W March 22, 2003 3–1 @ Florida Panthers (2002–03) 48–20–7–1 18,613
77 T March 25, 2003 2–2 OT Colorado Avalanche (2002–03) 48–20–8–1 18,036
78 L March 28, 2003 2–3 Washington Capitals (2002–03) 48–21–8–1 18,311
79 W March 29, 2003 3–1 @ Montreal Canadiens (2002–03) 49–21–8–1 21,273
80 W April 1, 2003 3–2 Boston Bruins (2002–03) 50–21–8–1 18,500
81 W April 3, 2003 5–1 @ Washington Capitals (2002–03) 51–21–8–1 15,784
82 W April 5, 2003 3–1 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (2002–03) 52–21–8–1 19,445

[3]

Playoffs[]

In the first round of the playoffs, the team played the New York Islanders, facing former team captain Alexei Yashin for the first time in the playoffs. Yashin played well in the first game and the Islanders won the first game at the Corel Centre 3–0. The loss by the Senators was attributed to paying too much attention to stopping Yashin and not enough on the rest of the Islanders. The Senators adjusted their play for the next game winning it and the next three games in a row to win the series 4–1.

In the second round, the team faced the Philadelphia Flyers who had defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs in the first round. The Senators won the series on the basis of their strong defence, holding the Flyers to only ten goals in the six games, advancing to the Eastern Conference final series against the New Jersey Devils to decide the Prince of Wales Trophy.

The first two games of the series were in Ottawa and the wins were split between the Senators and Devils. In New Jersey, the Devils won both games to put the Senators at the brink of elimination. However, the Senators came back, winning the fifth game at home and the sixth game in New Jersey to force a seventh and deciding game at home.

In the seventh game, Ottawa got out to a 1-0 lead on a goal by Magnus Arvedson. The Devils would score the next two on goals in the second period by Jamie Langenbrunner. Going into the third down 2-1 the Sens tied it on a goal by Radek Bonk and dominated play in the third, when with two minutes remaining, Devils' forward Jeff Friesen deked out Patrick Lalime and shot over his leg pad, into the net, to score the series-winning goal.[4]

Conference Quarter-final

Date Visiting Team Score Home Team Score Notes Attendance
April 9 NY Islanders 3 Ottawa 0 18,273
April 12 NY Islanders 0 Ottawa 3 18,500
April 14 Ottawa 3 NY Islanders 2 2:25 OT 16,234
April 16 Ottawa 3 NY Islanders 1 16,234
April 17 NY Islanders 1 Ottawa 4 18,500

Ottawa Senators win series 4 games to 1

Eastern Conference Semi-final

Date Visiting Team Score Home Team Score Notes Attendance
April 25 Philadelphia 2 Ottawa 4 18,197
April 27 Philadelphia 2 Ottawa 0 18,500
April 29 Ottawa 3 Philadelphia 2 6:43 OT 19,680
May 1 Ottawa 0 Philadelphia 1 19,842
May 3 Philadelphia 2 Ottawa 5 18,500
May 5 Ottawa 5 Philadelphia 1 19,454

Ottawa Senators win series 4 games to 2

Eastern Conference Final

Date Visiting Team Score Home Team Score Notes Attendance
May 10 New Jersey 2 Ottawa 3 3:08 OT 18,500
May 13 New Jersey 4 Ottawa 1 18,500
May 15 Ottawa 0 New Jersey 1 19,040
May 17 Ottawa 2 New Jersey 5 19,040
May 19 New Jersey 1 Ottawa 3 18,500
May 21 Ottawa 2 New Jersey 1 15:51 OT 19,040
May 23 New Jersey 3 Ottawa 2 18,500

New Jersey Devils win series 4 games to 3

Player statistics[]

Regular season[]

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Marian Hossa RW 80 45 35 80 34 8 14 0 10
Daniel Alfredsson RW 78 27 51 78 42 15 9 0 6
Todd White C 80 25 35 60 28 19 8 1 5
Martin Havlat RW 67 24 35 59 30 20 9 0 4
Radek Bonk C 70 22 32 54 36 6 11 0 4
Wade Redden D 76 10 35 45 70 23 4 0 3
Zdeno Chara D 74 9 30 39 116 29 3 0 2
Mike Fisher C 74 18 20 38 54 13 5 1 3
Magnus Arvedson LW 80 16 21 37 48 13 2 0 4
Shaun Van Allen C 78 12 20 32 66 17 2 2 3
Karel Rachunek D 58 4 25 29 30 23 3 0 1
Peter Schaefer LW 75 6 17 23 32 11 0 0 1
Jason Spezza C 33 7 14 21 8 -3 3 0 0
Petr Schastlivy LW 33 9 10 19 4 3 5 0 2
Chris Phillips D 78 3 16 19 71 7 2 0 1
Anton Volchenkov D 57 3 13 16 40 -4 0 0 0
Jody Hull RW 70 3 8 11 14 -3 0 0 1
Chris Neil RW 68 6 4 10 147 8 0 0 0
Bryan Smolinski C 10 3 5 8 2 1 0 0 0
Vaclav Varada RW 11 2 6 8 8 3 1 0 0
Shane Hnidy D 67 0 8 8 130 -1 0 0 0
Curtis Leschyshyn D 54 1 6 7 18 11 0 0 0
Brian Pothier D 14 2 4 6 6 11 0 0 1
Steve Martins C 14 2 3 5 10 3 0 0 0
Brad Smyth RW 12 3 1 4 15 -2 2 0 0
Joel Kwiatkowski D 20 0 2 2 6 2 0 0 0
Toni Dahlman RW 12 1 0 1 0 -1 0 0 1
Patrick Lalime G 67 0 1 1 6 0 0 0 0
Josh Langfeld RW 12 0 1 1 4 2 0 0 0
Dennis Bonvie RW 12 0 0 0 29 -1 0 0 0
Ray Emery G 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Martin Prusek G 18 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Rob Ray RW 5 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0
Joey Tetarenko RW 2 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T/OT GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Patrick Lalime 3943 67 39 20 7 142 2.16 8 1591 1449 .911
Martin Prusek 935 18 12 2 1 37 2.37 0 415 378 .911
Ray Emery 85 3 1 0 0 2 1.41 0 26 24 .923
Team: 4963 82 52 22 8 181 2.19 8 2032 1851 .911

Playoffs[]

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Marian Hossa RW 18 5 11 16 6 -1 3 0 1
Radek Bonk C 18 6 5 11 10 2 2 0 0
Martin Havlat RW 18 5 6 11 14 4 1 0 2
Bryan Smolinski C 18 2 7 9 6 4 0 0 0
Wade Redden D 18 1 8 9 10 1 0 0 1
Daniel Alfredsson RW 18 4 4 8 12 -3 4 0 1
Zdeno Chara D 18 1 6 7 14 3 0 0 0
Todd White C 18 5 1 6 6 -1 1 1 2
Chris Phillips D 18 2 4 6 12 3 0 0 1
Vaclav Varada RW 18 2 4 6 18 4 0 0 0
Magnus Arvedson LW 18 1 5 6 16 -4 0 0 0
Peter Schaefer LW 16 2 3 5 6 3 0 1 0
Mike Fisher C 18 2 2 4 16 -1 0 1 1
Karel Rachunek D 17 1 3 4 14 -5 0 0 0
Jason Spezza C 3 1 1 2 0 1 1 0 0
Shaun Van Allen C 18 1 1 2 12 -1 0 0 1
Anton Volchenkov D 17 1 1 2 4 3 0 0 1
Chris Neil RW 15 1 0 1 24 1 0 0 0
Curtis Leschyshyn D 18 0 1 1 10 0 0 0 0
Shane Hnidy D 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jody Hull RW 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Patrick Lalime G 18 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Brian Pothier D 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Patrick Lalime 1122 18 11 7 34 1.82 1 449 415 .924
Team: 1122 18 11 7 34 1.82 1 449 415 .924

[5]

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[]

June 23, 2002 To Tampa Bay Lightning
Seventh-round pick in 2002 draft
To Ottawa Senators
Josef Boumedienne
June 29, 2002 To Atlanta Thrashers
Shawn McEachern
Sixth-round pick in 2004 draft
To Ottawa Senators
Brian Pothier
September 21, 2002 To Vancouver Canucks
Sami Salo
To Ottawa Senators
Peter Schaefer
October 1, 2002 To Florida Panthers
Jani Hurme
To Ottawa Senators
,
Billy Thompson
December 16, 2002 To Washington Capitals
Josef Boumedienne
To Ottawa Senators
Dean Melanson
January 15, 2003 To Washington Capitals
Joel Kwiatkowski
To Ottawa Senators
Ninth-round pick in 2003 draft.
This pick returned to Washington for future considerations.
February 25, 2003 To Buffalo Sabres
Jakub Klepis
To Ottawa Senators
Vaclav Varada
Fifth-round pick in 2003 NHL Entry Draft ()
March 4, 2003 To Florida Panthers
Simon Lajeunesse
To Ottawa Senators
Joey Tetarenko
March 10, 2003 To Buffalo Sabres
future considerations
To Ottawa Senators
Rob Ray
March 10, 2003 To Nashville Predators
future considerations
To Ottawa Senators
Bob Wren
March 11, 2003 To Los Angeles Kings
Tim Gleason
Future considerations
To Ottawa Senators
Bryan Smolinski

Waivers[]

January 15, 2003 To St. Louis Blues
Steve Martins

Source: Ottawa Senators 2007–08 Media Guide. Ottawa Senators. 2007. p. 185.

Roster[]

2002-03 Ottawa Senators
Goaltenders

Defencemen

Wingers

Centres

Sources:

Draft picks[]

Ottawa's draft picks from the 2002 NHL Entry Draft held on June 22 and June 23, 2002 at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario.

Round # Player Nationality College/Junior/Club Team (League)
1 16 Jakub Klepis  Czech Republic Portland Winter Hawks (WHL)
2 47 Alexei Kaigorodov  Russia Metallurg Magnitogorsk (RSL)
3 75 Arttu Luttinen  Finland HIFK (SM-liiga)
4 113 Scott Dobben  Canada Erie Otters (OHL)
4 125 Johan Bjork  Sweden Malmö IF (Elitserien)
5 150 Brock Hooton  Canada Quesnel Millionaires (BCHL)
8 246 Josef Vavra  Czech Republic HC Vsetín (Czech Extraliga)
9 276 Vitaly Atyushov  Russia Molot-Prikamye Perm (RSL)

Farm teams[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2009). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book/2010. Dan Diamond & Associates. p. 163.
  2. ^ "2002–2003 Standings by Conference". National Hockey League. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  3. ^ "2002–03 Ottawa Senators Games". Hockey-reference.com. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
  4. ^ "Ottawa Senators". Chris Robinson. pp. 74–91.
  5. ^ "2002-03 Ottawa Senators Statistics - Hockey-Reference.com". hockey-reference.com. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
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