Sens take series lead; teams combine for 129 PIMs
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Scoring Summary
1ST PERIOD
5:20 Martin Havlat
Assist: Zdeno Chara
8:40 Wade Redden (power play)
Assist: Daniel Alfredsson, Jason Spezza
12:56 Patrick Eaves
Assist: Daniel Alfredsson
18:38 Martin St. Louis (power
play)
Assist: Pavel Kubina, Brad Richards
2ND PERIOD
2:17 Martin Havlat
Assist: Wade Redden, Peter Schaefer
9:11 Antoine Vermette
Assist: Vaclav Varada, Anton Volchenkov
3RD PERIOD
:20 Paul Ranger (power play
--Unassisted)
Unassisted
6:12 Dany Heatley (power play)
Assist: Jason Spezza, Wade Redden
10:28 Zdeno Chara (power play)
Assist: Jason Spezza, Martin Havlat
11:26 Paul Ranger
Assist: Dan Boyle, Vaclav Prospal
13:25 Pavel Kubina (power play)
Assist: Vincent Lecavalier, Darryl Sydor
16:18 Antoine Vermette
Assist: Dany Heatley, Jason Spezza
Game Information
Arena: St. Pete Times Forum
Location: Tampa, Florida
Referees: Kerry Fraser, Eric Furlatt
Linesmen: Brad Kovachik, Tim Nowak
Attendance: 20,815 (105.3% full)
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Finesse and offensive skill will only carry you so
far in the NHL playoffs. If the Ottawa Senators are going to shake
their reputation as playoff failures, they know they have to be
aggressive on defense, too.
Two nights after a third-period collapse at home revived talk about
past postseason disappointment, the top-seeded team in the Eastern
Conference regained control of its first-round series against the Tampa
Bay Lightning with an impressive 8-4 victory on Tuesday night.
The Senators showed why they were the league's highest-scoring team
this season, but they were also more physical in taking a 2-1 lead in
the best-of-seven matchup. Game 4 is Thursday night in Tampa.
"We said to ourselves we have to play hard and fight for every inch on
the ice," Ottawa defenseman Zdeno Chara said.
Martin Havlat scored his third and fourth goals of the playoffs, and
defenseman Wade Redden had a goal and two assists after missing Game 2
to fly to Saskatchewan to be with family following the death of his
mother.
Antoine Vermette also scored twice for the Senators, who got another
solid performance from goaltender Ray Emery. The rookie stopped 35
shots and again showed why Ottawa is confident it can go deep into the
playoffs, even without injured goalie Dominik Hasek.
"It's a different game being up three goals in the first period. I
thought we were flying out there," Emery said.
"That magic that a lot of these guys have, you could see it in the
first and even in the third. When we got chances, we buried them," he
said.
The Senators have been one of the top two seeds in the East four times
since 1999 but have yet to advance to the Stanley Cup finals. They
entered this series as heavy favorites after sweeping four
regular-season meetings and taking 17 of 20 games from the Lightning
over the past five years.
"We played a little bit nervous and made some mistakes that burned us,"
Tampa Bay's Brad Richards said. "But it's over with. We've had stinkers
before and we'll have them again. It's how you rebound."
Paul Ranger scored twice and Martin St. Louis once for the Lightning,
who trimmed a four-goal deficit to 5-2 on Ranger's unassisted goal just
20 seconds into third period. But any realistic chance to make it
interesting faded when Tampa Bay's Chris Dingman gave the Senators a
seven-minute power play by drawing penalties for instigating and
fighting.
Dany Heatley and Chara scored during the stretch for Ottawa to make it
7-2. Tampa Bay came back with power-play goals by Ranger and Pavel
Kubina, but by that time the game was well out of reach.
Heatley and Chara didn't make it to the end as they were part of a
brawl with 2:17 left.
Heatley squared off in a fight with Nolan Pratt, and Chara locked up
with Vincent Lecavalier. Ottawa's 6-foot-9 defenseman cocked his right
arm and held it menacingly over Lecavalier, who was down on the ice,
but restrained from throwing the big punch.
The melee, sparked by Vaclav Varada's boarding penalty against Tampa
Bay's Ruslan Fedotenko, capped a physical game that featured 129
penalty minutes -- 69 for Tampa Bay -- five fighting majors and seven
misconducts.
"We were more passive in the first two games. We kind of laid back and
allowed a lot of time and space for the skill players on their team to
attack us," Ottawa coach Bryan Murray said. "I thought tonight we were
quicker and tried to challenge more."
Despite winning Game 2 to even the series and end a nine-game losing
streak against the Senators, Lightning coach John Tortorella insisted
earlier Tuesday that the pressure to win the series remains on Ottawa
because of expectations created by a stellar regular season.
The Senators answered questions about how they would respond by scoring
three times in their first 11 shots, with Havlat finding the net for
the third straight game and Redden and Patrick Eaves adding their first
goals of the playoffs.
The Lightning were fortunate to only trail 3-1 after one period.
Tampa Bay has been putrid on the power play in the first three games of
the series, going 4-for-23 with two of the goals coming in
five-on-three situations, including St. Louis' shot that got through
Emery late in the first period.
The Lightning yanked goalie John Grahame after Havlat's second goal
made it 5-1 midway through the second period. Backup Sean Burke yielded
goals to Heatley, Chara and Vermette in the third.
"They came out strong. They didn't seem to sit back and wait and see
what was going to happen," Burke said. "When you play from behind
against that team, it's going to be hard."
Game notes
Ottawa center Jason Spezza had four assists. ... The Lightning were
3-for-11 on the power-play. Ottawa was 3-for-4. ... Redden's three
points were a playoff career high. ... Tampa Bay left winger Vaclav
Prospall, slowed by an upper body injury, was in the lineup. ... Ottawa
center Chris Kelly, who left during the third period of Game 2 with an
upper body injury, was injured again Tuesday. He left with a lower body
injury in the second period and didn't return.