Panthers Fall to Senators 4-0

Cats can't score in Ottawa

This was exactly what the Ottawa Senators had in mind when they acquired Kyle Turris.
 
The 22-year-old center scored twice Monday night as the Senators shut out the Florida Panthers 4-0 in their home opener.
 
Turris, who also scored in Saturday's season opener on the road against the Winnipeg Jets, was obtained in a trade with Phoenix last season in hopes he could provide some scoring punch to Ottawa's second line. He has done that in the early going of the abbreviated season as Ottawa improved to 2-0-0 for the first time since 2007-08, when the club started 13-1-0.
 
"I feel pretty good," said Turris, who stayed in Ottawa to train this past summer before playing some games in Europe during the lockout. "I feel like I have a lot of energy and good jump and just want to keep it going."
 
The Senators also got an outstanding performance from Craig Anderson, who made 31 saves for his 20th career shutout. Jim O'Brien and Jakob Silfverberg, with his first NHL goal, also scored for the Senators.
 
Jose Theodore was strong in defeat for the Panthers, finishing with 33 stops.
 
Ottawa opened the scoring with a power-play goal midway through the first as rookie defenseman Patrick Wiercioch showed some patience before finding Turris, who beat Theodore with a quick one-timer down low.
 
Wiercioch and Turris are childhood friends and the goal is one the two will remember.
 
"That was pretty special, really neat," Turris said. "That's the kind of stuff we did in junior hockey. We laughed about it when we got back in the room after the first intermission."
 
Turris gave the Senators a 2-0 lead at the 12-minute mark of the second on a great pass from Guillaume Latendresse. Turris skated across center and fed the puck to Latendresse at the blue line. He waited just long enough to find Turris right in front of Theodore's crease.
 
The Panthers struggled to create much of anything offensively and Anderson, who is showing no signs of post-lockout rust, easily handled what few chances they did have. The Senators goalie was at his best in the third as the Panthers outshot Ottawa 15-11.
 
"Our guys did a great job allowing me to see the puck and finding rebounds and just doing the little things that count," said Anderson, who also got the start in Winnipeg over the weekend.
 
Panthers coach Kevin Dineen felt his team earned their fate with the effort they put forth.
 
"We were sloppy and just didn't play a good game," Dineen said. "We haven't had good success in this building for whatever reason. This has not been a good place for us and (Monday) was certainly right up there in the ugly ones."
 
With just over 2 minutes remaining in the third, O'Brien broke through two Panthers and beat Theodore through the five-hole to put the game out of reach. Silfverberg then took a pass from Jason Spezza to pick up his first NHL goal just over a minute later to round out the scoring.
 
"It's always nice to score goals and to score your first NHL goal is a pretty big thing," Silfverberg said. "I'm very happy about that, so now I just have to keep going and hopefully there's more to come."
 
Monday's game marked the return of former Senators Filip Kuba and Alex Kovalev. Kovalev failed to meet expectations during his two years in Ottawa and fans welcomed him back of boos every time he touched the puck.
 
"It's great to get recognition," said Kovalev with a smile. "It means they still remember me."

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