
Expectations For The Ottawa Senators' Mount Rushmore Of Old Guys
Ottawa Senators GM Steve Staios is betting that the same holds true for his club.
On the one hand, the aging and maturing of his team's youthful core and the experience from their playoff debut will be vital to improvement. But even more literally than that, since the start of last summer, Staios hopes his roster improves with the age and experience that he's pumped into it.
Advertisement
'That's the plan,' he told NHL.com in December, 'to surround them with some veteran guys that have been there and done that before and are going to continue to be a good influence and also good players on the ice obviously. I talked to this group about internal growth and with Travis' help as coach, holding the players accountable and coaching them properly, there has been a great deal of internal growth.'
Not so long ago, in 2012, Staios himself was the older guy in the New York Islanders locker room. At 38, he was older than any current Sens player, and he mentored younger Isles teammates like Travis Hamonic. But he's not seeking age for its own sake: Hamonic, now an older veteran and an unrestricted free agent, was not re‑signed when his deal expired 11 days ago, a sign that Staios wants more from his veterans than just gray hair and wisdom in the room.
Four of his vets will be older than 35 this fall. Here's a look at the veterans Staios has brought on, how they got here, and what we expect from them this season.
Players, (Age on opening night this fall):
Advertisement
Claude Giroux, 37
2024‑25 Stats: 81 GP, 15 G, 35 A, 50 Pts, –8, 138 SOG
Giroux signed on to come home three years ago, and after a long negotiation this summer, gave the Senators one of the great hometown discounts in club history. Giroux decided to forego free agency and sign a one-year deal worth $2 million plus bonuses.
Why He Can Shine Next Season: At 37, Giroux isn't the fastest player, never was, but he still delivers top-tier vision, faceoff dominance (61.5%), and steady scoring. He overhears the discussion about his age and the drop in his speed and stats. Between that and the Sens' below-market offer, he'll have something to prove. With a 72-point career average, he'll be highly motivated to bounce back this season. But it will depend on opportunity, linemates and what Travis Green has up his sleeve. If he's not in the top six, count on 40 points. If he is, and gets reasonable looks on the power play, 60 is a reasonable projection.
Advertisement
David Perron, 37
2024‑25 Stats: 43 GP, 9 G, 7 A, 16 Pts, –7, 71 SOG
Perron signed as a free agent last summer, agreeing to a two-year deal worth $4 million a season.
Why He Can Shine Next Season: Perron remains a smart, competitive, creative player who's not afraid to pay the price of abuse to get to the net or win pucks along the boards. The Sens need more of that, not less. His friendly veteran presence complements the younger forwards beautifully. Like Giroux, he's not the fastest guy, but he also enters a new season feeling inspired. Perron missed half of last season through injury and family issues, and he'd like to show Ottawa that he's well worth the money. Also like Giroux, projecting what Perron will do next season will depend on his usage. The way that Green mixes up his lines, we're betting he runs a time share in the top six. But in a full season, a bounce back to north of 40 points isn't an unreasonable prediction.
Advertisement
Lars Eller, 36
2024‑25 Stats: 80 GP, 10 G, 12A, 22 Pts, -1, 104 SOG
Eller signed on day one of free agency this month, getting a one-year deal worth $1.25 million. He's the new kid in town, but he's old.
Why He Can Shine Next Season: Eller offers two-way stability, strong faceoffs, and versatility. He's likely to be a fourth liner next season, but can move up the lineup if needed, just the way his predecessor, Adam Gaudette, did last season. But Eller is bigger and a better skater than Gaudette. Eller spend most of last season in Washington, where he got just over 12 minutes of ice time per night and put up 15 points in 63 games. That's about the pace and ice time he can expect now in Ottawa, so 22 points and more of the same is a fair outlook.
Advertisement
Nick Jensen, 35
2024-25 Stats: 71 GP, 3 G, 18 A, 21 Pts, +18, 77 SOG
Jensen was acquired last summer, along with a third-round pick, for pending UFA Jakob Chychrun.
Why He Can Shine Next Season: There are reasons why Jensen might not shine next season, and they're strictly medical. Jensen underwent hip surgery after the season, so his 2025-26 outlook entirely depends on a return to full health and his usual speed and mobility. But if he gets to that place, he may be able to build on a quality first year as a Senator. He played through the last 30 games and the playoffs while dealing with pain, and that will take any player down a few notches. With fingers crossed, we think Jensen will get back go his usual 20 minutes, become an even better insulator for the roving Thomas Chabot, and scoring at the same pace as last season (21 points in 71 games) whenever it is he gets back.
Advertisement
So there's the Senators' grey-bearded Mount Rushmore of older dudes, the distinguished gentlemen of the game, brought in to complement the children of the rebuild. The four vets also have the added motivation of playing for their next contracts. All four will be UFAs again next summer.
Age before beauty? In this case, it could be both, because Staios is banking on these vets to be beauties this fall, steady in the room, and shining when it matters most.
By Steve Warne
Sens Nation Hockey
Image credit: Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images
More Sens Headlines:
Key Takeaways From Senators Development Camp
Five Former Senator First-Rounders All Found New NHL Homes
Is Yakemchuk In The Sens' NHL Plans For This Fall?
Steve Staios' Top Five Trades (So Far) As Senators GM
Dissecting The Senators' Intriguing Right-Shot Defensive Depth Chart
Claude Giroux Reveals Why He Signed Back In Ottawa
Sens Nation Podcast: Sens Sign Eller and Kaliyev; Have They Sens Added Enough?

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Minnesota State's Brett Moravec Signs With ECHL's Indy Fuel
The New CBA Could Allow A Canadiens Player To Reach A Big Milestone It came as good news for any hockey fan that the negotiations for the new CBA between the NHL and the NHLPA went so smoothly that they were able to ratify it a year before it even came into force. No strike, no lockout nonsense, just uninterrupted hockey for the next five years (the last year of the current CBA and the four years of the new one). 1:44 Now Playing Paused Ad Playing


New York Times
44 minutes ago
- New York Times
Baseball's most disappointing team is forced to host
The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic's daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox. Good morning! Win at least one game today. Most of Major League Baseball is scrunched together for the break, as the Home Run Derby arrives tomorrow. Only five teams are double-digit games out of a playoff spot. Not everyone's doing well, but most teams can feel decent, and a few have separated from the field. The outlook: In the National League The sixth playoff team in the Senior Circuit could be anyone outside the Rockies, Pirates and the three other East clubs. (More on one of the latter in a moment.) In the American League Barring someone collapsing, who rounds out the AL postseason? The Rays and Mariners? Could the Twins wake up? Maybe the Red Sox, despite trading Rafael Devers and implicitly giving up just a little on 2025? Missing from that big list of teams involved in a pennant race? The Braves, who host the All-Star Game on Tuesday. Atlanta is 42-52 and all but officially out of the postseason hunt before the trade deadline. An 0-7 start meant a big hole to dig out of right away for a team many saw as a World Series contender. Their FanGraphs playoff chances have fallen from 92 percent on Opening Day to 4.6 percent this weekend. Even as Ronald Acuña Jr. has crushed the ball in his return from a second ACL tear and Spencer Schwellenbach has become a front-of-the-rotation starter, so much has gone wrong: The big question, beyond whether the Braves will sell at the trade deadline, is this: Will Atlanta try to deconstruct the team in the coming months, get by with tweaks or do something in between? I asked The Athletic's David O'Brien, a longtime Braves beat man: 💬 Because they have so few players on expiring contracts and so many in-their-prime players signed beyond 2025, the Braves aren't going to do anything severe at the deadline. What we could see them do is trade one or more from the group of DH Marcell Ozuna (though his struggles this season have likely reduced his value) and relievers Pierce Johnson and Raisel Iglesias, each in the final year of his contract. If they could get a controllable reliever, an innings-eating starter to help get through this season or a middle infield prospect back in a deal, they'd likely do it. Brutal year, and there's not that much to do but run it back. Flagg drops 31 in Summer League I'm starting to think this Cooper Flagg kid might be legit. After a somewhat underwhelming showing in his first Summer League game, Flagg dropped 31 points on 10-of-21 shooting last night. Perhaps most impressively, the 18-year-old handled the poise of being the constant center of attention masterfully. The only blemish on his performance? He failed another attempt at a poster slam: Phillies slam MLB over All-Star snubs Brewers rookie pitcher Jacob Misiorowski was named an All-Star replacement Friday after a record-low five MLB games. Phillies players and coaches had already been disappointed that Cristopher Sánchez, Ranger Suárez and Trea Turner were not named All-Stars. That disappointment turned into something much more after Misiorowski's selection. Some scorching comments here (free to read), including Nick Castellanos comparing the selection process to the Savannah Bananas. Advertisement More news: Two less controversial decisions: Paul Skenes and Tarik Skubalwere named the All-Star Game starting pitchers last night. Twins outfielder Byron Buxton hit for the cycle on his bobblehead day, punctuated by a tank to dead center. What a week for Buxton. Browns rookie Quinshon Judkins was arrested yesterday on a domestic violence and battery charge. More here. Make it five straight multi-goal games for Inter Miami's Lionel Messi. The 38-year-old continues to reset the MLS record books. Ndamukong Suh — former standout NFL defensive tackle and current host of The Athletic's 'No Free Lunch' podcast— formally announced his retirement from the NFL yesterday with a heartfelt note to his late father. Amanda Anisimova announced her arrival with a stunning Wimbledon upset over world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka on Thursday. It was the biggest win of the 23-year-old's career. But the American's dream quickly became a nightmare yesterday. Iga Świątek utterly outclassed Anisimova in the Wimbledon final in a 6-0, 6-0 match that lasted less than an hour. It was just the second time that scoreline has happened in a Grand Slam final in the Open Era, and the first since 1988. It was hard to watch. There's really not much else to say about this match. We can only hope today's men's final provides a little more competitive tennis. Lucky for us, this one should not disappoint: 📺 Wimbledon: Men's Singles Final 11 a.m. ET on ESPN Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, again. How lucky are we? Their last Grand Slam final was one of the greatest matches the sport has ever seen. 📺 Scottish Open: Final Round 12 p.m. ET on CBS With earlier coverage on CNBC and Golf Channel. This is a terrific tournament just about every year, a part of the run-up to the Open Championship that very much stands on its own. Moreover, Rory McIlroy ended Saturday tied for the lead at 11-under. 📺 CWC: PSG vs. Chelsea 3 p.m. ET on TNT, truTV or DAZN To anyone out there who turned on the TV looking for this after seeing it listed in yesterday's Pulse, apologies for the production error. Anyway, to repeat: The final of the first edition of this international club football extravaganza features two of Europe's biggest brands. The Club World Cup is not the Champions League, but winning both in one spring and summer would be sweet for PSG. They're the best in the world right now. Get tickets to games like these here. The MLB All-Star break is almost here, and Jayson Stark has midseason awards across the board. Lots of fun debate surrounding the MVP race in both leagues. I was dragging while working late Thursday night and the new Clipse album, 'Let God Sort Em Out,' was the perfect antidote. As a 35-year-old massive hip-hop fan, this is pretty much perfect music. Also, a 13-song album in 2025? Thank you. — Chris Branch Advertisement Been listening to Joe Abercrombie's First Law trilogy audiobooks lately. The writing is good, but the guy who does the audiobook (Steven Pacey) is phenomenal, with one exception: he pronounces 'grimacing' as gri-MAYCE-ing'. If you can get past that, two thumbs up. — Levi Weaver Carlos Alcaraz, Steph Curry and numerous other elite athletes use juggling as a warmup to enhance cognitive function … and, well, have fun. Rustin Dodd tried it himself. Google 'Directive draw' or use Art Hub for your kid as summer drags. Good screen time ✅ — Chris Sprow Lena Dunham's new show on Netflix, 'Too Much.' If you were a fan of 'Girls' or Megan Stalter in 'Hacks,' or you just generally love a smart, hilarious, moving rom-com, get thee to this show! — Hannah Vanbiber Shout out once again to the cover-songs marching band in College Football 26's menus. 'Blinding Lights' might be the winner. — Jason Kirk Ahead of today's MLB Draft (bookmark this page for updates throughout), Cody Stavenhagen penned an awesome story on potential No. 1 pick Ethan Holliday and a baseball family generations in the making. Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: How sports bettors are feeling threatened by Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill.' Most-read on the website yesterday: Stark's midseason MLB awards. Ticketing links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Angels, closer Kenley Jansen on ‘mission' to avoid trade deadline sell-off, but is that prudent?
ANAHEIM, Calif. — When Kenley Jansen signed with the Los Angeles Angels last offseason, he understood the situation he was joining. A franchise 11 years removed from a playoff appearance, coming off a franchise-worst 99-loss season. Jansen — whose teams have finished above .500 in 14 of his 16 career big-league seasons — signed on to a club that was more than just one closer away from turning things around. Advertisement But that's also part of why he signed, in addition to the $10 million contract he was offered for the 2025 season. It was to help be the reason all those failures stopped. 'Not finishing here would be disappointing,' Jansen told The Athletic about the much-speculated possibility of his being traded before the July 31 MLB trade deadline. 'I came here to try to help this team turn it around, to get at least a wild-card spot. 'There's more in the tank of this team, of what we're capable of doing. I feel like we should be at least six games over .500. The next couple weeks are going to be important. I want to do something special and turn this team around.' The Angels have over-performed any reasonable expectations so far this season. Projected to win around 70 games, the team has hovered around .500 much of the season. Good enough, in a very weak American League, to stay in the postseason mix. They are three games out of the final wild-card spot. It's presented the front office with a good problem, and ultimately, a tough decision to make. Has this team earned the right to go all in? The trade deadline is a time when every team takes stock of its direction. They're improved, but are they good enough to justify prioritizing a playoff push over everything else? 'I do,' Angels interim manager Ray Montgomery said when asked whether he believed his team could make the postseason. 'Leaving spring training, I said, 'This is the best group that we've had in terms of the camaraderie, and the way guys interact. And the work that's being done. Preseason projections don't take into account what happens on the field going forward. 'I think they know. They're down here, they see it and they feel it,' Angels star Mike Trout said of the team's front office. 'They know the guys we got in this clubhouse. It's fun to come to the ballpark.' Advertisement To date, the projections still don't like the Angels, with FanGraphs giving them a 5.2 percent chance to make the postseason three games out. There are several reasons for that. Predictive stats tend not to like teams with minus-58 run differentials. There are also nine teams vying for the final two wild-card spots. That makes the next three weeks season-defining for the Angels. For better or worse, this particular front office will look for any justification to go for it. That's its track record. And it's a reflection of its boss, Arte Moreno, who has always prioritized the present over the future. Still, the Angels will need to play well. And do it against the Philadelphia Phillies (54-41), the New York Mets (55-41), the Seattle Mariners (50-45) and the Texas Rangers (47-48), to force the hands of general manager Perry Minasian. 'We've said it since spring training; we're going to shock a lot of people,' shortstop Zach Neto said. 'And that's not for what people think of us. It's just a matter of what we believe in. That we're going to make it to the playoffs.' It's the next three weeks that will determine this team's direction, whether they add, stand pat or sell off. If they choose the latter option, there are some potentially valuable trade chips. Jansen is the most notable potential option, but the Angels also have a surging Luis Rengifo on an expiring contract, as well as Yoan Moncada and Tyler Anderson. If they want to be even more aggressive, they could leverage the elevating value of Reid Detmers and Jo Adell into sizable returns, or trade Taylor Ward, who is having a career season and still has a year-plus of team control. If the Angels remain in the mix, it's hard to envision them parting with any of those players, even with the headwinds of actually getting in the postseason. In fact, they could look to add by trading away talent from their already very weak farm system. Advertisement 'We just don't want to subtract,' veteran starting pitcher Kyle Hendricks said. 'We love everybody in here, and we want to make a run in here with what we got. If they want to add to it, great.' Ultimately, the Angels might end up picking a direction based on vibes and emotion, the context of escaping years of failure. It might not be a prudent way to operate. But there's also a reason the Angels have been as bad as they've been for more than a decade. It's been on the back of many less-than-prudent decisions. Still, there's also something legitimate about going for it when chances to do so have been so scant. 'I came here with one goal,' Jansen said. 'To try to help turn this organization into a successful organization. I believe Mike Trout should play (in the postseason). He deserves that. If some days you feel like you don't want to do it for yourself, do it for Mike, do it for the others. Do it for the fans.' 'My mission,' he added, 'is the Angels.' This team might or might not have earned the right to be a buyer when July 31 rolls around. It's been a lot better, though arguably still not good enough. But if it's in the mix, even just a little bit, this team, and its decision-makers, might be inclined to go for it.