No paychecks, no problem as Senators rip Rangers
NEW YORK (AP) -- Success is coming so easily to Marian Hossa that he
isn't concerned about when his paycheck will finally arrive.
Hossa scored twice, giving him six goals in three games, and Magnus
Arvedson snapped a third-period tie as the Ottawa Senators beat the New
York Rangers 5-2 Monday night.
The only place things aren't going well for the Senators is in the
bank, where the team was unable to meet payroll last week after a
financing plan fell through.
But Hossa, with 27 goals, brought the NHL's top team into a 1-1 tie in
the first period and then stretched Ottawa's lead to 4-2 at 5:25 of the
third. Hossa is just one goal behind Vancouver's Markus Naslund for the
league lead.
''Everybody seems to be focused on the game. Nobody is focused on the
money issue which is really good,'' said Hossa, who scored four of
Ottawa's eight goals last Wednesday. ''We're going to get our money
back and everything is going to be fine.''
Arvedson's goal came just 2:37 into the final period to help the
Senators jump over Dallas atop the league standings with 56 points.
''So far we're pretty happy with what we've accomplished. But it's
still early,'' Hossa said. ''It's a long way until the end of the year
so we have to make sure we keep going.''
Todd White also scored, and Petr Schastlivy added a power-play goal for
Ottawa, 12-2-1-1 in its past 16 games.
Again the Senators looked every bit like a focused team despite waiting
for paychecks that weren't delivered Jan. 1. A finance plan is expected
to be in place this week that will help the club meet its obligations,
commissioner Gary Bettman said last Friday.
Ottawa improved to 2-0-0-1 in the new year, thanks to a power play that
connected on both chances in the third period.
Arvedson's go-ahead goal and Hossa's second were the products of hard
work and a little luck -- both characteristics of winning clubs.
Arvedson beat New York's Eric Lindros to a rebound to score a
power-play goal just before Hossa sent a shot toward the Rangers net
that hit the right skate of goalie Mike Dunham and redirected in.
''When everything is going your way, you can score from anywhere,''
Hossa said.
Mark Messier and Bobby Holik had goals for the Rangers, the last-place
team in the Atlantic Division who trail Ottawa by 19 points despite a
payroll that exceeds the Senators' by more than $40 million.
''It seems like we wanted it a little more,'' Hossa said. ''We had more
chances and we had lots of power plays.''
Messier gave New York a 1-0 lead 6:20 in with his 13th goal and New
York's ninth on the power play in eight games.
''We have pride. We know what to do,'' Holik said. ''Nobody should feel
down because there's nothing else you can control except the next
game.''
Hossa tied it 3:01 later by wristing a shot in off the right post.
White gave Ottawa a 2-1 advantage at 4:54 of the second when Schastlivy
fended off Messier with one hand and got the puck to White with just
one hand on his stick. White scored his 15th goal this season.
''I thought we had a good second period, and we played really well in
the third,'' said Ottawa's second-leading scorer Daniel Alfredsson.
''Hossa scored one of those nice goals, and the power play was good as
well, which is nice.''
The Rangers tied it with just 1:28 left in the second as Holik drove to
the net, after Matthew Barnaby's rebound, and had the puck go in the
net off his skate.
''It was 2-2 at the beginning of the third and we gave them a rebound
power-play goal,'' said Dunham, who made 31 saves. ''It just kind of
fell apart from there.''
Patrick Lalime faced only 19 shots in earning his 18th victory.
Game notes
Bettman sat in the stands with players' union president Bob Goodenow.
Players and owners have not yet begun negotiations on a new collective
bargaining agreement. The current one expires following next season.
... Lindros, who assisted on both New York goals, played in his 600th
NHL game. Messier, second on the career list with 1,643 games, is third
on the NHL points list with 1,824 (671 goals, 1,153 assists). ...
Ottawa defenseman Zdeno Chara had two assists. ... White, who assisted
on Schastlivy's goal, was the NHL player of the month for December
after he recorded 18 points in 15 games. ... New York left wings Ronald
Petrovicky (ankle sprain) and Gordie Dwyer (hamstring strain) left the
game in the second period.