Devils don?t mind starting playoffs on the road

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The Devils will have to wait until Saturday evening to find where they will open the playoffs.

All they know now is that it will be in either Florida or Washington on Wednesday or Thursday. Regardless, they will start the playoffs on the road for the first time since 2004 and that?s fine with them.

Although earning home-ice advantage would have been nice, the Devils never seemed to stress trying to get it down the stretch. After missing the playoffs last season, their focus was more on just getting in.

?I think what we went through last year puts a lot of stuff in perspective,? goaltender Martin Brodeur said today. ?To get into the playoffs was our goal. It was key to us and we?re glad that we?re back in it now.?

The Devils don?t even seem to mind that they won?t have home-ice advantage despite having at least six points more than their first-round opponent. The division winners get the top three seeds in each conference and the Devils happen to be in a division in which they?re in fourth place with 100 points.

That leaves them as the sixth seed in the East while their opponent, the Southeast Division winner, will be the third seed.

?That?s what it is and you can?t do anything about it,? Ilya Kovalchuk said.

The Devils were also a 100-point team and a sixth seed in 2004. They lost in five games to Philadelphia that season, so that is not something they would like to repeat.

In fact, they have not won a first-round playoff series in which they opened on the road since 1995. It worked out well that year, though, as the Devils started on the road in all four rounds on their way to their first Stanley Cup.

Plus, starting on the road might be a nice change. The Devils have lost their last three first-round series and had home-ice advantage in all of them.

?The last time I played in the playoffs (in 2010) against Philadelphia we started at home and we lost one game and you?re kind of rattled a little bit and you try too much,? Kovalchuk said. ?But when you start on the road, it?s two chances to get a game and then you?ve got the home-ice advantage. So, it?s nice. We?ll go there ? wherever we go, Washington or Florida ? and spend quite a few days together again and it?s always nice.?

The Devils have been solid on the road all season. Their 50 road points equal their home total and rank fifth in the NHL.

?I don?t think that bothers our group,? Devils coach Pete DeBoer said of playing the road. ?I think we feel comfortable on the road. We?ve played well on the road all year and I think that home ice isn?t an issue for us.?

?When you start on the road, it?s a bonding, knowing it?s you against the world right from the get-go and you can build good momentum,? Brodeur said. ?It?s important to play well, but I think early on the series it can go both ways. That home team gets that jolt, but if you?re able to surpass that, you can get a lot momentum coming home after.?
***

The Devils will be the lower seed and won?t have home-ice advantage, but will have more points than their first-round opponent. So, who will be the favorite?

?I?m not a big guy on playing the favorite/underdog game,? DeBoer said. ?For me, the group is the 16 that are left standing at the end of 82 games and really from there on I think you throw everything out and everybody has a chance. The history of the playoffs has proven that out. So, starting at home, starting on the road, underdog, favorite, point totals, they don?t mean anything to me. They really don?t.?

***

DeBoer often coached in the playoffs at the junior level in the OHL, but this will be his first time in the NHL playoffs.

He doesn?t believe coaching in the playoffs is a lot different than coaching in the regular season, though.

?I think the key is that you don?t make it different, that it?s business as usual,? he said. ?Obviously, the intensity ramps up, the stakes are obviously greater, but I think a coach?s job at this point of the year is just consistency in message and consistency in how we?re doing things. I don?t think they?re looking for dramatic changes on my end and I?m not looking to make any. That?s my feeling on it.?
 

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The Senators are indifferent.

Okay, they?re actually in New Jersey.

But they?d rather be in New York or Boston.

Either would be fine.

Their only real preference is to arrive at the first-round playoff destination relatively unscathed.

To do that, first they have to tiptoe around the Devils.

Should the Senators manage to take a single point from their regular-season finale, they will secure seventh place and a best-of-seven with the Bruins that unofficially starts Thursday in Beantown.

If they lose to New Jersey in regulation and Washington defeats the Rangers and Florida earns at least a point in its game with Carolina, Ottawa would land in eighth and begin the playoffs in Manhattan.

Got that?

The Devils, who have won five in a row, are locked in sixth place.

?I think both teams want to do that,? Daniel Alfredsson said on the subject of avoiding injury at the Prudential Center. ?I don?t think it will be an overly physical affair.?

Intensity has been missing in each of the Senators? last two outings, a 3-1 loss to the Bruins and a 2-1 loss to the Hurricanes. Almost like they?ve been indifferent.

?I think this part of it has more to do with clinching the playoff spot (last Sunday),? said coach Paul MacLean. ?As much as we?d like to say we?re going to keep playing hard to the end, human nature, I think, has kicked in a little. Everyone wants to make sure everything is good, that they play a little bit careful.?

Hence, the lack of offence. Jason Spezza has scored the only two goals since his teammates erupted for five with him and Alfredsson out of the lineup Sunday.

He confirmed the letdown.

?You can?t manufacture real emotion and real desperation,? said Spezza, who tied a career high with his 34th against Boston. ?You try to as a player, and this time of year can be a little bit different. You see two teams go to war, and play a game that?s not as intense as you thought it was going to be, like maybe (Thursday) night physical-wise. We?ll play them next week and it will be two totally different hockey clubs.?

If they draw the Bruins, that is.

This season, the Senators went 1-5 against Boston and 3-1 vs. the Rangers. So they want New York, right? Except that if they face the Blueshirts, they will be dragging with them a three-game losing streak.

Better to beat the Devils and go into Boston on a winning note, right?

?You?d rather be winning, but it?s more important to be prepared for that day,? MacLean said of the playoff opener. ?One thing I?ve learned over the years is that once Game 83 comes, it?s a whole new season. Doesn?t matter what you did before you get there.

?I think it?s two different seasons. Once it starts, momentum is going to go one way or the other. It?s whoever handles the momentum swings the best usually ends up winning.?

Craig Anderson will start in goal for the Senators, while Martin Brodeur is schedule to work the pipes for the Devils.


?We just try to work on things,? said Alfredsson. ?Go in there, have good habits, and feel good about ourselves heading into next week.?
 

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Not a good Friday for Neil




The last practice of the regular season was nearly over when Senators started lining up on the Bell Sensplex surface for a shootout drill.



Taking his turn, Chris Neil tried to pull the puck inside on a deke. Turned out to be a bad move. It looked like Neil tripped over goalie Ben Bishop?s pad ? although Bishop would say later he didn?t know if that was the case ? for a spill that saw him crash into the boards, head- and shoulder-first.

The bang was loud. Soon to be followed by complete silence.

?Everybody was laughing when it happened,? said Daniel Alfredsson. ?And then right after, we saw he was down.?

Training staff went to Neil. Coaches skated over. And then a dozen or so teammates surrounded him. Probably, they were trying to keep TV cameras from focusing in on the injury. It is playoff time, after all. But there was also concern for the 10-year veteran.

?He did crash a little harder than guys normally do in practice,? said Jason Spezza, who along with Zack Smith eventually helped Neil off the ice. ?There was definitely that quick gasp of air, and it looks like it?s not too bad. Hopefully, we?re fortunate.?

Nobody knew for sure when the team was leaving the rink, heading to a charter plane aimed at New Jersey. All they knew is that Neil, who was scheduled to be a passenger, wouldn?t be going with them.

Asked what he saw of the incident from where he stood, Paul MacLean?s response suggested the injury wasn?t too serious.

?I didn?t see Pavel Datsyuk,? joked the coach, referring to the Red Wing considered one of the best on shootouts in the league.

?We would certainly miss him, but we?re not going to speculate on that right now,? added MacLean. ?We don?t need to do that. We don?t really know anything to speculate on. We know he?s an important player.?

One of the Senators? most important in a playoff series, it could be argued.

Neil, who has played in 74 playoff games, might be the most physical forward in the league. Against either the Bruins or Rangers, he would be a key player.

Along with constantly giving opponents something to think about, Neil has chipped in offensively. His 13 goals are tied for the second-most he?s had in a season, as are the 28 points.

?He?s a guy that puts his body on the line each and every night,? said Nick Foligno. ?And he?s come up big for us, scored some big goals. He?s definitely been one of the leaders on the team.?

Either Zenon Konopka, Kaspars Daugavins or Bobby Butler will replace Neil in the lineup Saturday. After that, well, his absence would leave a big hole.


============

THIS AND THAT

Ottawa?s four-man management team of Bryan Murray, Tim Murray, Randy Lee and Pierre Dorion might be the smallest in the league. Lee, the director of player development and hockey administration, is an unsung hero in the organization. He?s an Ottawa guy who has been with the company for the last 17 years, but just three in his current role. ?In those development camps, he looks at guys and sees their work ethic and character, and if they?re a smart player,? said W Erik Condra. ?And he goes to bat for those guys. I?m sure he?s done it for a few guys in this room.? Condra is a member of the minority as a seventh-round pick who made it to the NHL, and he thanked Lee when he did ... The Senators signed D Ben Blood to a two-year entry level deal Friday. Blood, a fourth-round pick in the 2007 draft, is a 6-foot-3, 210-pounder who just finished his fourth year at the University of North Dakota. He made his pro debut in Binghamton Friday night ... Rookies Colin Greening and Jared Cowen, along with Foligno, are set to become the three Senators to play in all 82 games this season.
 
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