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Montreal Canadiens
vs
Ottawa Senators
Today's Featured Sports Pick

Game Date:
10/15/2016
7:05pm EST

Lines:
Montreal +1.5
Ottawa -1.5

Total:
Over 5.5 (+102)
Under 5.5 (-113)

Community Picks: Montreal Canadiens 0% vs Ottawa Senators 0%

Montreal Canadiens and Ottawa Senators Thread

Team Tweets & News Articles
Ottawa Senators
If there’s anyone who understands the scrutiny of playing for the Maple Leafs in a hockey mad city like Toronto as a teenager, it’s Wendel Clark. Prior to last June’s NHL entry draft, Clark had been the only other first-overall pick made by the franchise. The former Leafs captain was selected as an 18-year-old out of the Western Hockey League in 1985 before becoming one of Toronto’s most beloved players. Now, of course, there’s Auston Matthews, 19, the Leafs newest wunderkind who was taken first this summer and announced his arrival in Ottawa Wednesday night with four goals - an NHL record debut. “The easiest place to come and play when you’re 18 is Toronto,” said Clark on Friday, at the unveiling of the Leafs’ top 100 players of all-time. “People think it’s hard, but it’s actually easier because he’s learning the game at the most popular place to learn it. So if he was coming here as a 26-year-old and played somewhere else and then came here? It’s harder because you get comfortable in a quiet town. Here he’s learning it right from the get-go. “This is how it is every day. It’s not a surprise, this is how it is and you accept it.” When the native of Scottsdale, Arizona, made his Leafs debut on Wednesday night against the Ottawa Senators the expectations were already high given that draft. And in the first 40 minutes of his NHL career, he’d already scored those four goals -- despite the overtime loss, this was truly something for the Leafs’ long-suffering fan base to grab on to. “My first game I got my centreman traded – Billy Derlago – he got traded after the game for Tom Fergus,” said Clark, ranked No. 15 on the Leafs’ all-time list unveiled Friday. “And Auston got four goals, so it’s a bit of a change. “It’s the good and bad. The bad of finishing 30 th and the good of getting a player like Auston, so you get a chance to build with the best player at that level.” Clark said he was able to see a lot of Matthews’ personality just from his scoring celebrations - from the exuberance of his first goal to the low-key humility shown after scoring his fourth. It was a jaw-dropping debut, especially for a team like Toronto, which has had a long history of draft disappointment. There are signs, however, that the new Leafs regime under team president Brendan Shanahan might finally be getting the house in order. In only his first game, Matthews has been able to at least show fans that the pains of last year’s 29-42-11 season were worth it. Even Shanahan, a veteran of 21 NHL seasons, was excited by what he saw from Matthews against Ottawa. “It was pretty impressive,” said Shanahan, who scored all of seven goals in his own rookie season. “We were all impressed. Forget about the fact that we’re with Toronto – if you’re just a fan of hockey and you see a young person do that, you know I think it was impressive. But at the end of the day, what impressed me most was how he took responsibility at the end of the game for a mistake that he made. “But this isn’t about one player and he knows it.” Leading up to Saturday night’s home opener against Boston, the excitement could be found in and around the ACC. On Thursday, the Real Sports Apparel store had Matthew’s jerseys – selling for $204.99 each - prominently on display on the wall next to that of his fellow teenaged teammate Mitch Marner. A CP24 camera crew shot video backdropped by Matthews' No. 34 sweater as fans were interviewed about the Leafs’ potential. On Friday, Matthews was a hot topic among the assembled Toronto alumni, including former captain Darryl Sittler who said Matthews’ four-goal performance was a great way to start the franchise’s centenary celebration. “How many guys score four goals (in a game) for one and then how many do it in your first game as a rookie?” said Sittler, No. 4 in the Leafs' top 100. “Phenomenal. I was so happy for him.” As the 18-year-old’s NHL debut was unfolding, Sittler – who still holds the NHL’s single-game scoring record with 10 points - said he started receiving text messages from friends fearing his milestone might be in jeopardy as Matthews continued putting the puck in the net. “If he did it in a Leafs uniform as a rookie, that would have been remarkable,” said Sittler. The fact that the team is celebrating its 100 th anniversary only adds to the fervor to make the post-season, having missed the playoffs three straight years. The pressure is on to try to reclaim some of the glory of the Leafs past and that seems to suit Shanahan fine. “Look, my feeling is that if a successful history is too much of a burden for you as an athlete you really aren’t going to be a successful athlete anywhere, whether it’s Toronto or in a market where no one watches the games.”     Continue to Article
October 15, 2016 10:06:am EST
Montreal Canadiens
It’s going to take some time to get used to P.K. Subban wearing a bright yellow Nashville Predators jersey. Against the Chicago Blackhawks on Friday night, Subban tied the game in the first period with a blast from the blue line on the power play, for his first goal as a Predator. Subban was acquired from the Montreal Canadiens in exchange for defenseman Shea Weber during the offseason. Continue to Article
October 14, 2016 9:13:pm EST
Montreal Canadiens
OTTAWA -- - Under new coach Guy Boucher, the Ottawa Senators are determined to tighten up defensively this season. The Senators, who allowed a league high 32.8 shots per game during the 2015-16 campaign, scored a 5-4 overtime victory over the Leafs despite being outshot 38-30. Goalie Craig Anderson was unbeatable to everyone except center Auston Matthews, who became the first player in NHL history to score four times in his debut. Continue to Article
October 14, 2016 7:59:pm EST
Ottawa Senators
When Bob Cole gets the cue to go live on Saturday night as the Ottawa Senators visit the Montreal Canadiens, it will mark the start of his 48 th season broadcasting hockey. Cole’s voice is synonymous with Hockey Night in Canada , and at age 83 he has no plans on retiring from the job he loves and in large part defines him. Meanwhile, he’s had something of a career renaissance in recent years. There’s a Bob Cole mobile app. He trends on Twitter during games, and people still clamour to get their picture taken with him much in the same way they did with his mentor Foster Hewitt. It was just under a decade ago that he was shuffled out of the No. 1 role at HNIC and while his successors have answered the bell, many Canadians feel there’s still no one able to capture the feel and flow of hockey like Bob Cole. A private man, Cole wasn’t interested in writing a book but with a little help from acclaimed author and Sportsnet colleague Stephen Brunt and perhaps some encouragement by his family, he tells his story in Now I’m Catching On, released on Oct. 4. Yahoo Canada Sports had a chance to speak with Bob Cole and Stephen Brunt separately. The interviews have been combined and edited for this Q & A. ===================================================================================== Yahoo Canada Sports: Mr. Cole, are you surprised that people are interested in your story? Bob Cole: I’m very surprised. I reluctantly decided that I would go ahead and try this. I said, “Who would want to read a book about me? Why?”   I’ve been doing this job for 48 years now, but it all came together I guess. Now I find myself saying, “I wonder why I didn’t think of that (story) and throwing that in (the book). YCS: Stephen, from what I understand the process relied heavily on two guys fly-fishing, was there a tape recorder in the boat? How did it unfold? Stephen Brunt: We did fish a little bit out on the river. Bob loves to fish and I love to fish, we did do that. Bob likes to drive though too, drive and talk. So there was a lot of him driving around St. John’s showing me places and also just driving and me with the tape recorder going beside him. It was kind of a long conversation. Part of the reason I wanted to do the book is because I’ve got a real attachment to Newfoundland, I spend a lot of time out here. The context is really important when your writing about people from Newfoundland, in terms of Bob’s career the context is really important. The notion that you didn’t have access to the NHL, it was thousands of miles away, you were living in a different country literally when Bob was growing up, that’s a long trek from the stadium in St. John’s to Maple Leaf Gardens. It’s different than if you grew up in Peterborough or even in Winnipeg, literally and figuratively it is way further away in the mind. YCS: Did you find the fact that Bob still critiques his own work surprising? Brunt: Absolutely, he still soundchecks games. You get to a point if you have done anything for a long period of time like a sports column, it’s not like you go back over every one and re-read it 20 times and say, “My God, what could I have done better?” You talk about his professionalism, for him it is about the performance, the way he sounds and being true to the flow of the game. Feel and flow is his mantra. I like the fact he could articulate that rather than saying, “I do it the way I do it.” He can actually articulate how you call a hockey game or the way he calls a hockey game. One of my favourite conversations with him was when I asked, “How do you call a hockey game?” over lunch and it was like a master class. YCS: Mr. Cole, what I took away from the book is that you look at your commentary as a performance. Would you agree with that assessment? Cole: I like to pay attention to my work and kind of make sure that I am up to par to what I want to do and what I want to present to the viewers. I keep tabs on myself in other words a fair bit, not as much as I used to but I still do, yep. I sit back once in a while and say, “Well, that sounds pretty good. I’ll hang around for a while.” YCS: There is a line in the book where you say, “Hockey is exciting. Don’t get in the way of it.” Can you expand on that? Cole: I need to be careful, I don’t want to criticize how somebody else would feel about broadcasting a hockey game because everybody has their own way of doing things and I’m not saying mine is the right way. What I try to do is what has been impressed upon me ever since I began thinking about maybe doing this someday when I was very young. Not getting in the way, to my mind, is bothering the viewer with words that do not follow the flow of the game. I think Foster (Hewitt) taught me that at the beginning, don’t overdo your description, when TV comes in you going to have to allow it to get to the viewer, but you can aid and abet their enjoyment of the game. I think that’s what I would suggest to somebody coming into the business. You aid and abet the viewer’s enjoyment of the hockey game – don’t get in the way though, don’t do too much. Try and figure out the best way to say what you want to say.   There are times when a little pause is nice, a little breathing room is delightful and then pick it up when the game picks up. I try to tell myself that – don’t get in the way. YCS: You recently received the Order of Canada, how would you describe receiving that honour? Cole: It took place Sept. 23. It was a wonderful experience, my family was there and everybody enjoyed it immensely. You go through something like that and see the organization of it all and you feel good about Canada, it’s hard to explain. I walked away on cloud nine, it was a great day. YCS: Initially you were doing colour commentary on CBC Radio Sunday Night Hockey in 1968 and for your first game paired with Foster Hewitt. Knowing that he mentored you many years earlier, do you recall how it felt to be calling a game with him? Cole: That was a very nervous time, I can tell you. It was a great thrill for me to work alongside Foster Hewitt, we did a game in Boston on a Sunday night, the Leafs and Bruins. You talk about sitting back and not getting in the way of the listener, that was what I did. I sat in the booth with Foster Hewitt and introduced him, he did the game and I did very, very little. I loved every second of it, sitting alongside Foster and listening to his voice. It’s goosebumps, his voice was hockey. The moment he said, “Hello Canada” - it was shivering, it was mind-boggling for me, I was very, very fortunate. I knew that and I paid attention to everything he said and did. I was just getting ready to someday get a shot myself and it happened the next year I guess. YCS: What has your role on Hockey Night in Canada mean to you, what has it meant to you that people associate your voice so closely with this iconic Canadian broadcast? Cole: I don’t know if they even say that. Like we talked about, there are lots of announcers are doing hockey now. I don’t think (people) think of me (specifically). I don’t know, I have no idea. I am just delighted to hear when they tell me in the third period of a game that somebody in the truck just called to say you are trending. I had no idea what they were talking about, well, I do now but I didn’t at first but it happens, so that’s great. Keep it up guys and gals, I like it! YCS: Stephen, in the book you write about revisiting Mr. Cole’s Game 7 call of the 1993 Campbell Conference Final between the LA Kings and Maple Leafs, is that what stands out for you in terms of Bob’s best work? Brunt: I love that one because I was at that game and I actually didn’t hear him call the game until I was doing (research) for Gretzky’s Tears . I remember what it felt like in the building that night, the kind of beautiful agony as all of those hopes slipped away and it was Gretzky. I still think emotionally his call captured everything that was going on in that room which is almost impossible. You couldn’t script it better than he pulled it out of his head. I’m partial to that one because I spent a lot of time transcribing it and thinking about it and lining it up with my own experience of that game and I think it’s perfect. It’s a perfect call. YCS: Mr. Cole, anything you would like to add? Cole: I am just rolling along and minding my own business and hope I can do the job they want me to do and I don’t see any reason why they wouldn’t. I haven’t changed and I haven’t changed a thing. I have been very fortunate with my voice holding up and I am still interested and still love what I do but I’m not calling the shots, somebody else is. Now I’m Catching On: My Life On and Off the Air is published by Penguin Random House. Follow Neil Acharya on Twitter: @Neil_Acharya     Continue to Article
October 14, 2016 11:29:am EST
Montreal Canadiens
It was also a big night for Marc-Andre Fleury. Continue to Article
October 14, 2016 12:32:am EST
 
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