{{pageModel.leagueAbbr}} {{pageModel.subtitle}} | Las Vegas Review-Journal
National Hockey League
New Jersey 5, Ottawa 4
When: 7:30 PM ET, Thursday, October 22, 2015
Where: Canadian Tire Centre, Ottawa, Ontario
Referees: Tom Kowal, Brian Pochmara
Linesmen: Lonnie Cameron, Derek Nansen
Attendance: 16578

OTTAWA -- First Lee Stempniak prolonged the night, then he ended it.

The New Jersey Devils winger scored with 31.4 seconds left in regulation and then added the decisive goal in a 5-4, four-round shootout victory over the Ottawa Senators on Thursday night at Canadian Tire Centre.

After losing their first three games, the Devils have now played four straight overtimes, winning their last three.

"We've gotten better every game and almost every day since the start of training camp," said Stempniak, who has two game winners during the streak. "Each practice, each pre-season game we got better and better. There's a lot of people with stuff to prove, new coaches, new players. (former GM) Lou (Lamoniello) is gone so there's a new page being turned."

Until Stempniak's heroics, Senators winger Chris Neil was lining up as the hero, as he celebrated the 900th game of his career with his first goal, his first assist and his first fight of the season -- completing what is affectionately known as a Gordie Howe hat trick.

"Obviously it would have been nice to get the two points. That's the biggest thing you want," said Neil. "You want your team to do well. Individual success doesn't win you championships.

"For me, it's a game I'll never forget."

Centers Travis Zajac and Adam Henrique, and winger Jordin Tootoo also scored for the Devils.

Centers Mika Zibanejad and Zack Smith, and winger Mike Hoffman had the other Senators goals.

Hoffman left the game late in the third period with a lower-body injury, but no further details were released.

Devils goalie Cory Schneider, who made 35 stops, picked up the 100th victory of his career in what was New Jersey's fourth consecutive venture beyond 60 minutes..

"I don't know if we would have won these ones in the past couple of years," said Schneider. "That's something we've been missing a little bit is the ... I don't know what you call it ... that magic, the overtime winner, the two goals late to tie it and then win the game and not lose it. It's been a little absent in our game the last few years.

"I don't know if you can define it or quantify it, but so far we have that good feeling that we're never out of any game."

Making his first start of the season, Senators goalie Andrew Hammond registered 28 saves in the loss.

"He battled. We let him down a little bit with our sloppy play," said Senators coach Dave Cameron. "We weren't real sharp. There was too many opportunities given up on unforced turnovers.

"That changed the momentum for a while early on and caught up to us at the end."

The Senators have now dropped three in a row, although they have escaped the last two with a point.

After falling behind 2-1 in the first, they scored the only goal in the second and added two more before the third was seven minutes old.

The 4-2 lead started collapsing when Henrique scored off a turnover with 5:50 left.

"We handed them that third goal," said Cameron. "You can't give teams a freebie."

One of the most penalized teams in the league to this point, the Senators allowed New Jersey two power-play goals on four chances while scoring on just one of their five -- a spearing major taken by Devils winger Stephen Gionta late in the second period.

As it turned out, it was all just a warmup for what would be another Devils overtime.

"We've played well with it and our goaltenders have made some big stops," Devils coach John Hynes said of OT. "The guys feel comfortable with it. You have to credit the players. They've done a good job. They're smart in the 3-on-3 and we've found ways to score when we've had opportunities."

Schneider also said the Devils are "smart" in OT.

"I don't think we maybe have necessarily the high end skill and talent other teams do, but we make good defensive plays and sometimes when you break up an odd-man rush, or get a save everybody is swinging by the net and take off the other way," he said. "We pick our spots well."

NOTES: Senators G Andrew Hammond made his first start of the season. Hammond, who was sidelined for two weeks after suffering a groin injury during training camp, was the hero of last spring's playoff run with a 20-1-2 record, a 1.74 goals-against average and a .942 save percentage. ... Devils D Jon Merrill, who missed two games with the flu, took part in pregame warmups but wound up a healthy scratch. ... Devils LW Tuomo Ruutu missed his third game with a lower-body injury but is now listed as day-to-day. ... Senators LW Clarke MacArthur missed his third game with a concussion and will be out indefinitely. ... Senators D Marc Methot missed his second game with a concussion, but barring a setback is expected to return Saturday against the Arizona Coyotes.
Top Game Performances
 
New Jersey   Ottawa
Michael Cammalleri 3 Points Chris Neil 2
Adam Henrique 1 Goals Chris Neil 1
Michael Cammalleri 3 Assists Shane Prince 2
Jordin Tootoo 1 Power Play Goals Mike Hoffman 1
N/A Short Handed Goals Mika Zibanejad 1
Cory Schneider .897 Save Percentage Andrew Hammond .875
Cory Schneider 35 Saves Andrew Hammond 28
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Shots Goals Power Play Penalty Kill Penalty Mins Face Offs Won
New Jersey 32 5 2-4 4-5 28 27
Ottawa 39 4 1-5 2-4 15 25
Upcoming Games
  • Ottawa will play their next game at home against Arizona. The Senators have a W/L % of .500 after a win and .333 after a loss.
  • New Jersey will play their next game on the road against Buffalo. The Devils have a W/L % of .667 after a win and .250 after a loss.