2010–11 Ottawa Senators
Division5th Northeast
Conference13th Eastern
2010–11 record32–40–10
Home record16–20–5
Road record16–20–5
Goals for192
Goals against250
Team information
General managerBryan Murray
CoachCory Clouston
CaptainDaniel Alfredsson
Alternate captainsMike Fisher (Oct.–Feb.)
Chris Phillips
Rotating (Feb.–Apr.)
ArenaScotiabank Place
Average attendance18,379 (95.9%)
Team leaders
Goals(21) Jason Spezza
Assists(36) Jason Spezza
Points(57) Jason Spezza
Penalty minutes(210) Chris Neil
Plus/minus(+7) David Hale
Wins(13) Brian Elliott
Goals against average(2.05) Craig Anderson

The 2010–11 Ottawa Senators season was the team's 19th season of operation in the National Hockey League (NHL).[1] The Senators posted a regular season record of 32 wins, 40 losses and 10 overtime/shootout losses for 74 points, failing to qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the second time in three seasons. After falling to last place in the Eastern Conference by the end of January, the Senators started a rebuild, trading away several veterans for draft choices. Head coach Cory Clouston was fired at the end of the season.

Off-season

Early in the off-season, the Senators signed several players including summer development camp attendee Colin Greening on April 28 and Binghamton Senators forward Ryan Keller on May 19, as well as goaltender Mike Brodeur on May 26. After some media speculation, the Senators also bought-out Jonathan Cheechoo's contract on June 29 after he cleared waivers, making Cheechoo a free agent.[2]

At the Entry Draft, the Senators traded their first-round pick to the St. Louis Blues for defenceman David Rundblad, who had been the Blues' first-round pick (17th overall) in the 2009 Draft. Having now previously traded their first, second- and fifth-round picks, the Senators picked Jakub Culek in the third round (76th overall), Marcus Sorensen in the fourth round (106th overall), Mark Stone in the sixth round (178th overall) and Bryce Aneloski in the seventh round (196th overall).

Throughout July, the Senators made various signings. On July 13, they signed Swiss forward and 2004 Senator draft pick Roman Wick to a one-year, entry-level contract, and re-signed Derek Smith to a one-year contract. On July 22, they re-signed forward Cody Bass to a one-year, two-way contract and forward Mike Hoffman to a one-year, entry-level contract.

Having fired Goaltending Coach Eli Wilson in January, the Senators signed former goaltender Rick Wamsley as goaltending coach on July 27. His most recent job was interim head coach of the St. Louis Blues' American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Peoria Rivermen. He had at one time been Pascal Leclaire's goaltending coach with the Columbus Blue Jackets.[3]

On August 5, the Senators re-signed Binghamton defenceman Geoff Kinrade to a one-year, two-way contract as well as signing forward and local prospect Corey Cowick to an entry-level contract. Cowick was an assistant captain with Ottawa's Ontario Hockey League (OHL) team, the Ottawa 67's, and was the Senators' sixth-round pick at the 2009 Draft.

Free agents

The Senators entered the off-season with four restricted free agents (RFAs): Chris Campoli, Nick Foligno, Peter Regin and Jesse Winchester. The team also had six unrestricted free agents (UFAs): Matt Cullen and Andy Sutton acquired via late 2009–10 season trades; Shean Donovan and Anton Volchenkov, as well as Binghamton players Martin St. Pierre and Josh Hennessy.[4]

Of the four RFAs, all re-signed with the Senators. Winchester and Foligno each signed two-year deals on July 1 and July 21, respectively. Campoli and Regin both filed for arbitration, however they each re-signed before it reached that point. Regin signed a two-year deal on July 29, while Campoli signed a one-year deal on July 30.

Of the six UFAs, none re-signed with the Senators. On July 1, the first day of free agency, Volchenkov signed with the New Jersey Devils while Cullen signed a three-year deal with the Minnesota Wild.[5] On August 2, Sutton signed with the Anaheim Ducks in a two-year deal.[6] Donovan did not sign with any NHL team. St. Pierre and Hennessy both signed with teams overseas.

In terms of acquisitions, the Senators made a notable move in signing former Pittsburgh Penguins defenceman Sergei Gonchar to a three-year deal in the first hours after the July 1 free agency deadline. Other free agency acquisitions include forward Corey Locke, defenceman and enforcer Francis Lessard, defenceman David Hale and defenceman Andre Benoit.

Spezza trade speculation

In early June, an Ottawa Sun article reported that star centre Jason Spezza was "unhappy" and that there were "indications [he] may have asked for a trade."[7] Though purely speculation, the article prompted various other Ottawa sports media sources to issue their own perspectives. Theories ranged from conjuring up various trade rumours, noting the similarity to the previous year's Dany Heatley trade demand, or to suggesting that it was just "lazy rumor mongering."[8][9] Meanwhile, the Sun received criticism for its journalistic integrity to the point where they had to defend accusations that they were "anti-Spezza"[10][11] This did not stop speculation, however, which was emboldened by silence both from Spezza and general manager Bryan Murray.

Spezza finally broke the silence during his annual Celebrity Classic golf tournament on July 20:

I just want to clear up a lot of the talk going on, at no point did I ever demand a trade to Bryan Murray. At the end of the year, I was pretty emotional and upset. I was upset at losing, I was upset at the response I got. I talked to Bryan about it, I see it in the newspapers every year, they talk about me, and I said, if you want to move me, you can move me. I wanna be here, but if he thinks it's best for the team and the city, then he can move me. He told me he wasn't going to move me. To be honest I was happy about it, cause I like being here in Ottawa. It seems like every year it's been talk of "should I get traded, should I not get traded?" My priorities are here in Ottawa, I want to win in Ottawa. It was just a whole lot of hearsay that was going on. I had prior conversations with Bryan, I talked to [head coach] Cory [Clouston], we were all clear on what was going on.

Jason Spezza, [12]

Further, he expressed regret that the issue had become public at all. "Me and Bryan have talked since then and probably our conversation should have stayed between us", he said. "We probably wouldn't even be talking here today. But it happened and it's a reality." His statement largely settled the rumour, apart from some minor speculation (again by Ottawa Sun columnists) that Spezza had in fact demanded a trade similar to Heatley.[13] However, sources confirmed with Spezza's team members that the situation was "not even close to the Dany situation."[14]

Pre-season

On June 18, the Senators announced that they would play eight pre-season games, which includes three home games, four road games and one neutral site game. The Senators faced the Toronto Maple Leafs three times, and had home-and-home sets against the Montreal Canadiens and New York Rangers.[15] The Senators also played in the 2010 Kraft Hockeyville game in Dundas, Ontario, against the Buffalo Sabres. The game was played on September 28, 2010, at the J.L. Grightmire Market Street Arena.[16]

Regular season

The Senators' regular season schedule was announced on June 22, 2010. The Senators opened the season at home against the Buffalo Sabres on October 8, 2010. The Senators end the season on the road against the Boston Bruins on April 9, 2011.[17]

The Senators' goal for the season was to return to the playoffs for the 13th time in 14 seasons. Media predictions were mostly negative. The Hockey News predicted in their 2010–11 Yearbook that the Senators will finish tenth in the Eastern Conference, thereby missing the playoffs.[18] The Hockey News writer Adam Proteau predicted the Senators will finish ninth in the Conference.[19] The Las Vegas Hilton SportsBook set the odds at 40–1 that the Senators will win the Stanley Cup.[20]

Within a few days of each other, two of the Senators celebrated milestones in wins. On October 22, Daniel Alfredsson scored a hat trick to reach 1,000 points in his career in a win against the Buffalo Sabres. On October 26, Sergei Gonchar played in his 1,000th game in his career. The game saw the Senators set a new team record for fastest two goals. Erik Karlsson and Alexei Kovalev scored only nine seconds apart, breaking the record of ten seconds set in 1995. The Senators defeated the Phoenix Coyotes 5–2.[21]

On November 13, 2010, the 14-year-old daughter of Assistant Coach Luke Richardson died. The team, on a four-game road trip, returned to Ottawa for a "celebration of life" memorial service held at Scotiabank Place on November 17. Five-thousand and six-hundred mourners attended the service, including former NHL players Paul Coffey, Wendel Clark, Doug Gilmour and Tie Domi.[22] The team flew out after the ceremony for a game against the Carolina Hurricanes that night. Richardson took a personal leave from the club. He returned to his duties with the Senators in January.[23]

Another player reached the 1,000-point plateau on November 22 when Alexei Kovalev scored at the 10:00-minute mark of the first period. He became the third Russian player to reach the mark. Kovalev later assisted on the game-winning goal as the Senators prevailed over the Los Angeles Kings at home, 3–2.[24]

The Senators set a new modern franchise record starting in the first period of a game of November 29 against the Edmonton Oilers through the game of December 5 against the New York Rangers. The team went through a scoring drought that lasted 202 minutes and 57 seconds without a goal. The Senators were shut out by the San Jose Sharks and Buffalo Sabres before Chris Kelly broke the streak in the second period of a game against the Rangers.[25]

The Senators' poor performances led to constant rumours of a shakeup right through until December. The rumours were heightened in January after the team went on a lengthy losing streak. Owner Eugene Melnyk, who had remained silent during much of the streak, finally broke his silence in an exclusive interview with the Ottawa Sun.[26] He made it clear that, despite rumours in the media to the contrary, general manager Bryan Murray and Head Coach Cory Clouston would be allowed to finish out their contracts and would not be replaced mid-season.[27] Melnyk also assured the team's fanbase that a "plan [was] now in motion" to return the Senators to the status of Stanley Cup contenders, and that "difficult decisions" would be made in the coming months.[28]

Those "difficult decisions" began on February 10, 2011, when the club traded long-time centre and fan favourite Mike Fisher to the Nashville Predators for a first-round and a conditional draft pick.[29] The trade was met with mixed reaction from the Senators' fanbase. Some viewed it as an important step in the team's rebuilding process, while others were outraged at the loss of a player who was adored within the community. That outrage was most palpable when a local Ottawa radio station suggested that Fisher's new wife Carrie Underwood was largely responsible for his move to Nashville, and subsequently banned the play of her music. Underwood is a country music singer who is based in Nashville, where Fisher had recently begun living during the off-season.

Following the Fisher trade, the Senators traded another lifetime Senator, forward Chris Kelly, to the Boston Bruins in another move which was met with mixed reaction.[30] The team shed salary by trading Jarkko Ruutu and the under-achieving Alexei Kovalev, both of whom were to become unrestricted free agent at season's end, to playoff contenders Anaheim Ducks and Pittsburgh Penguins, respectively.[31]

Struggling goaltender Brian Elliott, a pending restricted free agent, was sent to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for goalie Craig Anderson, who had also been struggling through an inconsistent season.[32] Anderson, scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent at the end of the season, was auditioned for a possible contract extension by the organization.[33] Ottawa later acquired goaltender Curtis McElhinney on waivers on February 28. With Pascal Leclaire's injury status unknown and future with the team in doubt, the Senators finished their schedule with a vastly different goal-tending tandem than they had begun the season with.

Following speculation that longtime Senators defenceman and looming unrestricted free agent Chris Phillips would be dealt as part of the rebuilding process, the club instead signed him to a three-year extension on February 27, the day before the trade deadline. With a group of inexperienced young defencemen expected to stock the Senators' blueline in 2011–12, Phillips' experience was deemed an important asset. Defenceman Chris Campoli was traded on deadline day to the Chicago Blackhawks for forward Ryan Potulny and a conditional second-round draft pick, as Ottawa's rebuilding process continued.

For the rest of the season, the Senators rotated call-ups from Binghamton. On March 21, after 11 games with Ottawa, Craig Anderson was signed to a four-year extension by GM Murray. After media speculation on the future of Murray within the organization, Murray re-signed as general manager on April 8 to a three-year extension.[34] After the final game of the season on April 9, Murray dismissed Cory Clouston and his assistant coaches.[35]

Standings

Northeast Division[36]
GP W L OTL ROW GF GA Pts
1 y – Boston Bruins8246251144246195103
2 Montreal Canadiens82443084121620996
3 Buffalo Sabres824329103824522996
4 Toronto Maple Leafs823734113221825185
5 Ottawa Senators823240103019225074
Eastern Conference
R Div GP W L OTL ROW GF GA Pts
1 z – Washington CapitalsSE8248231143224197107
2 y – Philadelphia FlyersAT8247231244259223106
3 y – Boston BruinsNE8246251144246195103
4 Pittsburgh PenguinsAT824925839238199106
5 Tampa Bay LightningSE8246251140247240103
6 Montreal CanadiensNE82443084121620996
7 Buffalo SabresNE824329103824522996
8 New York RangersAT82443353523319893
8.5
9 Carolina HurricanesSE824031113523623991
10 Toronto Maple LeafsNE823734113221825185
11 New Jersey DevilsAT82383953517420981
12 Atlanta ThrashersSE823436122922326980
13 Ottawa SenatorsNE823240103019225074
14 New York IslandersAT823039132622926473
15 Florida PanthersSE823040122619522972

bold – qualified for playoffs; y – Won division; z – Placed first in conference (and division)
AT – Atlantic Division, NE – Northeast Division, SE – Southeast Division

Schedule and results

Pre-season

2010 Pre-season
#DateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionRecord
1September 21Ottawa Senators5–0Toronto Maple LeafsLehner1–0–0
2September 22Ottawa Senators1–4Toronto Maple LeafsElliott1–1–0
3September 24Ottawa Senators2–4Montreal CanadiensLeclaire1–2–0
4September 25Montreal Canadiens2–6Ottawa SenatorsElliott2–2–0
5September 28
(in Dundas, Ontario)
Buffalo Sabres2–1Ottawa SenatorsLehner2–3–0
6September 29Toronto Maple Leafs4–3Ottawa SenatorsLeclaire2–4–0
7October 1Ottawa Senators4–5New York RangersSOElliott2–4–1
8October 2New York Rangers5-8Ottawa SenatorsLeclaire3–4–1

Regular season

2010–11 season
October: (11) (home: 6; road: 5) (record: 4–6–1; home: 3–3–0; road: 1–3–1)
GameOctoberOpponentScoreLocation (attendance)RecordDecisionPointsRecap
18Buffalo Sabres1 – 2Scotiabank Place (19,350)0–1–0Leclaire0[37]
29@ Toronto Maple Leafs1 – 5Air Canada Centre (19,157)0–2–0Leclaire0[38]
311@ Washington Capitals2 – 3 (OT)Verizon Center (18,398)0–2–1Leclaire1[39]
414Carolina Hurricanes3 – 2Scotiabank Place (16,270)1–2–1Elliott3[40]
516@ Montreal Canadiens3 – 4Bell Centre (21,273)1–3–1Elliott3[41]
618@ Pittsburgh Penguins2 – 5Consol Energy Center (18,101)1–4–1Elliott3[42]
722@ Buffalo Sabres4 – 2HSBC Arena (18,009)2–4–1Elliott5[43]
823Montreal Canadiens0 – 3Scotiabank Place (20,301)2–5–1Elliott5[44]
926Phoenix Coyotes5 – 2Scotiabank Place (16,686)3–5–1Elliott7[45]
1028Florida Panthers5 – 3Scotiabank Place (16,294)4–5–1Elliott9[46]
1130Boston Bruins0 – 3Scotiabank Place (18,959)4–6–1Elliott9[47]
November: (14) (home: 7; road: 7) (record: 7–7–0; home: 4–3–0; road: 3–4–0)
GameNovemberOpponentScoreLocation/attendanceRecordDecisionPointsRecap
122@ Toronto Maple Leafs3 – 2Air Canada Centre (19,409)5–6–1Elliott11[48]
134New York Islanders4 – 1Scotiabank Place (17,752)6–6–1Elliott13[49]
146@ Montreal Canadiens3 – 2Bell Centre (21,273)7–6–1Elliott15[50]
159Atlanta Thrashers5 – 2Scotiabank Place (16,583)8–6–1Elliott17[51]
1611Vancouver Canucks2 – 6Scotiabank Place (19,191)8–7–1Leclaire17[52]
1713@ Boston Bruins2 – 0TD Garden (17,565)9–7–1Elliott19[53]
1815@ Philadelphia Flyers1 – 5Wells Fargo Center (19,256)9–8–1Elliott19[54]
1917@ Carolina Hurricanes1 – 7RBC Center (12,938)9–9–1Elliott19[55]
2019@ St. Louis Blues2 – 5Scottrade Center (19,150)9-10-1Elliott19[56]
2122Los Angeles Kings3 – 2Scotiabank Place (18,315)10-10-1Leclaire21[57]
2224Dallas Stars1 – 2Scotiabank Place (16,281)10–11–1Leclaire21[58]
2326@ Pittsburgh Penguins1 – 2Consol Energy Center (18,299)10–12–1Leclaire21[59]
2427Toronto Maple Leafs3 – 0Scotiabank Place (20,275)11–12–1Elliott23[60]
2529Edmonton Oilers1 – 4Scotiabank Place (17,002)11–13–1Elliott23[61]
December: (14) (home: 8; road: 6) (record: 5–5–4; home: 2–4–2; road: 3–1–2)
GameDecemberOpponentScoreLocation/attendanceRecordDecisionPointsRecap
262San Jose Sharks0 – 4Scotiabank Place (18,017)11–14–1Leclaire23[62]
274Buffalo Sabres0 – 1 (SO)Scotiabank Place (16,364)11–14–2Elliott24[63]
285@ New York Rangers3 – 1Madison Square Garden (18,200)12–14–2Leclaire26[64]
297@ Montreal Canadiens1 – 4Bell Centre (21,273)12–15–2Leclaire26[65]
309New York Rangers3 – 5Scotiabank Place (16,324)12–16–2Elliott26[66]
3110New Jersey Devils3 – 2Scotiabank Place (16,471)13–16–2Leclaire28[67]
3213Atlanta Thrashers3 – 4 (OT)Scotiabank Place (18,184)13–16–3Elliott29[68]
3316@ Minnesota Wild3 – 1Xcel Energy Center (17,366)14–16–3Leclaire31[69]
3417@ Colorado Avalanche5 – 6 (OT)Pepsi Center (15,113)14–16–4Elliott32[70]
3519Washington Capitals2 – 3Scotiabank Place (19,516)14–17–4Elliott32[71]
3623@ Nashville Predators2 – 1Bridgestone Arena ( 17,113)15–17–4Elliott34[72]
3726Pittsburgh Penguins3 – 1Scotiabank Place (20,146)16–17–4Elliott36[73]
3829Carolina Hurricanes0 – 4Scotiabank Place (20,221)16–18–4Elliott36[74]
3931@ Columbus Blue Jackets3 – 4 (OT)Nationwide Arena (17,652)16–18–5Elliott37[75]
January: (11) (home: 7; road: 4) (record: 1–7–3; home: 0–4–2; road: 1–3–1)
GameJanuaryOpponentScoreLocation/attendanceRecordDecisionPointsRecap
401Toronto Maple Leafs1 – 5Scotiabank Place (20,027)16–19–5Elliott37[76]
417@ Chicago Blackhawks2 – 3 (SO)United Center (21,657)16–19–6Elliott38[77]
428Tampa Bay Lightning1 – 2Scotiabank Place (19,698)16–20–6Elliott38[78]
4311Boston Bruins0 – 6TD Garden (17,565)16–21–6Elliott38[79]
4413@ New York Islanders6 – 4Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum (8,670)17–21–6Lehner40[80]
4514Calgary Flames2 – 3Scotiabank Place (19,984)17–22–6Elliott40[81]
4616@ Washington Capitals1 – 3Verizon Center (18,398)17–23–6Elliott40[82]
4718Anaheim Ducks1 – 2 (SO)Scotiabank Place (19,515)17–23–7Elliott41[83]
4820@ Philadelphia Flyers2 – 6Wells Fargo Center (19,721)17–24–7Elliott41[84]
4921Montreal Canadiens1 – 7Scotiabank Place (20,337)17–25–7Brodeur41[85]
5025Buffalo Sabres2 – 3 (OT)Scotiabank Place (18,990)17–25–8Elliott42[86]
February: (12) (home: 5; road: 7) (record: 4-7-1; home: 2-2-1; road: 2-5-0)
GameFebruaryOpponentScoreLocation/attendanceRecordDecisionPointsRecap
511@ New Jersey Devils1 – 2Prudential Center (7,218)17–26–8Lehner42[87]
522Detroit Red Wings5 – 7Scotiabank Place (18,011)17–27–8Elliott42[88]
535@ New York Islanders3 – 5Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum (10,415)17–28–8Lehner42[89]
547@ Vancouver Canucks2 – 4Rogers Arena (18,860)17–29–8Elliott42[90]
559@ Calgary Flames2 – 5Pengrowth Saddledome (19,289)17–30–8Lehner42[91]
5612@ Edmonton Oilers5 – 3Rexall Place (16,839)18-30-8Elliott44[92]
5715New York Islanders3 – 4 (SO)Scotiabank Place (17,565)18-30-9Elliott45[93]
5818Boston Bruins2 – 4Scotiabank Place (18,521)18-31-9Lehner45[94]
5919@ Toronto Maple Leafs1 – 0 (SO)Air Canada Centre (19,460)19-31-9Anderson47[95]
6023Florida Panthers5 – 1Scotiabank Place (16,520)20–31–9Anderson49[96]
6125@ Buffalo Sabres2 – 4HSBC Arena (18,690)20–32–9Anderson49[97]
6226Philadelphia Flyers4 – 1Scotiabank Place (19,934)21–32–9Anderson51[98]
March: (16) (home: 6; road: 10) (record: 9–6–1; home: 3–3–0; road: 6–3–1)
GameMarchOpponentScoreLocation/attendanceRecordDecisionPointsRecap
631Boston Bruins0 – 1Scotiabank Place (16,826)21–33–9Anderson51[99]
643@ Atlanta Thrashers3 – 1Philips Arena (10,461)22–33–9Anderson53[100]
654New York Rangers1 – 4Scotiabank Place (17,497)22–34–9Anderson53[101]
668@ New Jersey Devils2 – 1Prudential Center (15,978)23–34–9Anderson55[102]
6710@ Florida Panthers2 – 1BankAtlantic Center (12,310)24–34–9Anderson57[103]
6811@ Tampa Bay Lightning2 – 1St. Pete Times Forum (18,777)25–34–9McElhinney59[104]
6913@ Buffalo Sabres3 – 6HSBC Arena (18,690)25–35–9Anderson59[105]
7015Pittsburgh Penguins1 – 5Scotiabank Place (19,249)25–36–9Anderson59[106]
7117New Jersey Devils3 – 1Scotiabank Place (17,758)26–36–9McElhinney61[107]
7219Tampa Bay Lightning3 – 2 (OT)Scotiabank Place (18,883)27–36–9McElhinney63[108]
7322@ Carolina Hurricanes3 – 4RBC Centre (16,189)27–37–9McElhinney63[109]
7424@ New York Rangers2 – 1 (SO)Madison Square Garden (18,200)28–37–9Anderson65[110]
7525Washington Capitals2 – 0Scotiabank Place (18,329)29–37–9Anderson67[111]
7627@ Atlanta Thrashers4 – 5 (SO)Philips Arena (16,392)29–37–10Anderson68[112]
7729@ Tampa Bay Lightning2 – 5St. Pete Times Forum (16,626)29–38–10McElhinney68[113]
7831@ Florida Panthers4 – 1BankAtlantic Center (15,672)30–38–10Anderson70[114]
April: (4) (home: 3; road: 1)
GameAprilOpponentScoreLocation/attendanceRecordDecisionPointsRecap
792Toronto Maple Leafs2 – 4Scotiabank Place (19,243)30–39–10Anderson70[115]
805Philadelphia Flyers5 – 2Scotiabank Place (18,397)31–39–10Anderson72[116]
817Montreal Canadiens3 – 2 (OT)Scotiabank Place (19,809)32–39–10Anderson74[117]
829@ Boston Bruins1 – 3Boston Garden (17,565)32–40–10McElhinney74[118]
Source: Ottawa Senators[119]
Legend:

  Win (2 points)   Loss (0 points)   Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)

Player statistics

Skaters

Goaltenders

Regular season
Player GP Min W L OTL GA GAA SA Sv% SO G A PIM
Brian Elliott432293131981223.191147.8943000
Craig Anderson1810551151362.05589.9392000
Pascal Leclaire14763471362.83391.9080000
Curtis McElhinney7399340172.56205.9170000
Robin Lehner8341140203.52178.8880002
Mike Brodeur49701074.3342.8330000

Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Senators. Stats reflect time with Senators only.
Traded mid-season.

Note:
Pos = Position; GPI = Games played in; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes; +/- = Plus/minus; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals
Min, TOI = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T,T/OT = Ties; OTL = Overtime losses; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;

Awards/Milestones

Milestones
Regular season
Player Achievement Date
Robin Lehner1st NHL gameOctober 16, 2010
Daniel Alfredsson1,000th NHL pointOctober 23, 2010
Sergei Gonchar1,000th NHL gameOctober 26, 2010
Jarkko Ruutu1,000th NHL PIMOctober 28, 2010
Brian Elliott50th NHL winOctober 28, 2010
Sergei Gonchar1st goal w/ OttawaNovember 2, 2010
Nick Foligno200th NHL gameNovember 4, 2010
David Hale1st goal w/ OttawaNovember 4, 2010
Peter Regin100th NHL gameNovember 6, 2010
Matt Carkner
Brian Elliott
100th NHL GameNovember 13, 2010
Ryan Shannon200th NHL gameNovember 19, 2010
Alexei Kovalev1,000th NHL pointNovember 22, 2010
Milan Michalek400th NHL gameNovember 22, 2010
Chris Neil600th NHL gameNovember 22, 2010
Jarkko Ruutu600th NHL gameNovember 22, 2010
Chris Kelly1st NHL hat-trickDecember 5, 2010
Jason Spezza1st NHL penalty shot goalDecember 13, 2010
Sergei Gonchar700th NHL pointDecember 16, 2010
Chris Phillips900th NHL gameDecember 26, 2010
Jim O'Brien1st NHL gameDecember 31, 2010
Erik Karlsson100th NHL gameJanuary 8, 2011
Corey Locke1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
January 13, 2011
Robin Lehner1st NHL start
1st NHL win
January 13, 2011
Brian Lee100th NHL gameJanuary 21, 2011
Colin Greening1st NHL gameFebruary 1, 2011
Chris Kelly100th NHL assistFebruary 5, 2011
Bobby Butler1st NHL goal
1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
February 12, 2011
Jason Spezza500th NHL gameFebruary 12, 2011
Erik Condra1st NHL game
1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
February 15, 2011
Jason Spezza500th NHL pointFebruary 15, 2011
Andre Benoit1st NHL gameFebruary 18, 2011
Craig Anderson1st win w/ Ottawa
1st shutout w/ Ottawa
February 19, 2011
Colin Greening1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
February 23, 2011
Roman Wick1st NHL gameFebruary 25, 2011
Erik Condra1st NHL goalFebruary 26, 2011
Filip Kuba700th NHL gameMarch 1, 2011
Colin Greening1st NHL goalMarch 3, 2011
Derek Smith1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
March 3, 2011
Francis Lessard100th NHL gameMarch 8, 2011
Sergei Gonchar500th NHL assistMarch 10, 2011
Patrick Wiercioch1st NHL GameMarch 22, 2011
Marek Svatos1st Goal w/OttawaMarch 22, 2011
Marek Svatos100th NHL goalMarch 27, 2011
Patrick Wiercioch1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
March 27, 2011
Nick Foligno100th NHL pointMarch 31, 2011
Andre Benoit1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
April 2, 2011
Stephane Da Costa1st NHL gameApril 2, 2011
Jesse Winchester200th NHL gameApril 7, 2011
Regular season
Team Achievement Date
Ottawa Senators4,000th franchise goalNovember 9, 2010

Transactions

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