CAROLINA 3, OTTAWA 2 (OT)
OTTAWA (AP) -- Getting just one point at this time of the season is not
nearly enough for the Ottawa Senators.
Bret Hedican scored with 59.3 seconds remaining in overtime, lifting
the Carolina Hurricanes to a 3-2 victory Saturday night over the
Senators.
Sean Hill and Josef Vasicek also scored for the Hurricanes, and Arturs
Irbe made 29 saves. Carolina rallied from a 2-1 deficit in the third
period to force overtime.
Jason Spezza and Marian Hossa had goals for the Senators, who got 26
saves from Patrick Lalime.
Ottawa finished with the NHL's top record last season, but now the
Senators are in third place in the Northeast Division -- one point
behind Toronto and two behind Boston.
"We didn't start out like we would have liked," Senators forward Mike
Fisher said. "We didn't have much jump and they really outworked us. We
had the lead for most of the game even though we didn't play that
great. (Lalime) kept us in it."
But Ottawa needs victories to stay in the race for the division title.
"It's so close that the one point could determine a lot," Fisher said.
Vasicek tied it when he scored a disputed goal with 8:58 remaining in
regulation, redirecting Hill's point shot in off his skate. After a
video review, the goal stood.
"When you're going into the third with the lead we have to protect it
better," Senators defenseman Zdeno Chara said. "They score and tie it
and then it really opens up the game and changes it."
Without a playoff spot in sight, the Hurricanes have little to play for
but pride and jobs.
"This was a big character builder for us," Hill said. "For us to beat
them at this time of year is a bit of a feather in our cap."
The Senators took a 1-0 lead 14:10 in when Hossa beat Irbe stick side
despite being covered by Hedican.
Ottawa continued to struggle in the faceoff circle and paid the price
at 3:55 of the second period. Rod Brind'Amour won the draw cleanly,
allowing Hill to get a quick shot off that beat Lalime.
The Senators missed an opportunity to take control of the game six
minutes into the period after Hedican was given a double minor for
high-sticking Chris Neil. The Senators recorded just one shot during
the long advantage.
"This was a big game, especially for myself," said Irbe, who spent much
of the season in the minors. "When you play top teams you're going to
face the top players and you have to be able to run with the big dogs.
I'm just glad I was able to do it."
Spezza made up for the lackluster power play at 11:05 when he scored
his 20th of the season, ending a 17-game streak without a goal. Spezza
fired a sharp angle shot from the side of the net, and the puck bounced
in off Irbe's pads to make it 2-1.
"It was frustrating to go that long without (a goal)," Spezza said.
"It's good to get it out of the way."
The Hurricanes lost Erik Cole five minutes into the third period after
the forward collided with Chara. Cole was favoring his left leg and
seemed to be in discomfort.
"I think he might have been dehydrated," Hurricanes coach Peter
Laviolette said. "I'm not really sure what happened."
Game notes
Referee Terry Gregson called his final game in Canada. ... Ottawa RW
Daniel Alfredsson missed his third straight game due to a charley horse.