National Hockey League
Ottawa 4, San Jose 3
When: 10:30 PM ET, Monday, January 18, 2016
Where: SAP Center at San Jose, San Jose, California
Referees: Trevor Hanson, Kevin Pollock
Linesmen: Don Henderson, Vaughan Rody
Attendance: 16619

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Given the struggles the Ottawa Senators endured lately on the road, they will take a win any way they can get it.

On Monday night against the San Jose Sharks, that meant scoring on a controversial penalty shot late in regulation, killing a penalty in overtime and scoring the only goal in a shootout.

Center Mika Zibanejad converted in the tiebreaking competition while goalie Craig Anderson denied three San Jose shooters, and Ottawa beat the Sharks 4-3 at SAP Center.

"A big two points, that's what it's about this time of year," Ottawa coach Dave Cameron said. "It's finding ways to get points."

Anderson denied center Joe Pavelski, right winger Joonas Donskoi and center Logan Couture in the shootout.

"We had plenty of opportunities to win that game at different points," Sharks coach Peter DeBoer said. "Have to give their goalie credit. He came in here and was the first star."

The downside to the Senators' night was losing their leading goal-scorer early in the second period when left winger Mike Hoffman crashed into the San Jose Sharks' goal.

Hoffman slowly skated off and into the locker room after getting shoved by San Jose defenseman Justin Braun into the left post at 5:40 of the middle period. It appeared Hoffman struck the post head-first between his neck and right shoulder.

Hoffman, who has 20 goals and 36 points in 42 games this season, did not return.

The key moment in terms of the result occurred late in the third while the Sharks were on their only power play of regulation after center Logan Couture and left winger Matt Nieto struck earlier in the period to give the hosts a 3-2 lead. Defenseman Brent Burns tripped a breaking Zack Smith, and the Ottawa center was awarded a penalty shot that he converted to tie the game at 14:29.

"We had a grade-A chance right down the pipe, missed the net, it was a 50-50 puck," DeBoer said. "We probably should have had some other people working back. It was a group thing."

Smith's ninth goal of the season withstood a lengthy video review to determine if he stopped moving the puck during the penalty shot.

"I didn't feel like deking was in my repertoire," Smith said. "I had that planned. I thought it was good. There was never any doubt until they said they were going to review it."

In overtime, Ottawa right winger Bobby Ryan tripped Burns at 3:08 to give the hosts just their second power play of the game, but the Sharks failed to score despite putting four shots on net.

"I can't fault our effort, I thought we showed up ready to play and earned two points," DeBoer said. "We did a lot of things right. I think nine times out of 10 you win that game when you play that game."

Couture's second goal of the season at 2:47 of the third, on a shot across his body from the slot, and Nieto's nifty backhander at 7:54 off a great feed by Donskoi erased a 2-1 deficit after 40 minutes.

"We took it to them, spent most of the period in their end, and that's why it's so frustrating," Couture said. "We were in complete control of the game."

Nieto added, "We established our game and played the way we wanted to. That's hockey. We've been playing great hockey lately. We'll take the point and move on."

The teams traded goals scored only eight seconds apart in the second period.

The Senators jumped out to a 2-0 lead at 4:08 when it took Ryan only 11 seconds to convert the only power play through the first 40 minutes. Ryan's wrist shot tipped off the blade of Burns' stick past San Jose goalie Alex Stalock.

The hosts struck back in quick fashion, however. After winning the draw at center to restart play, Burns dished to center Joe Thornton, who in turn spotted left winger Tomas Hertl charging to the net on the weakside. Hertl redirected Thornton's perfect feed past Anderson at 4:16.

Ottawa scored the only goal of the opening period thanks to an over-aggressive move by Stalock, who charged from his net to try and poke check Max McCormick. The Senators left winger punched a shot between Stalock's pads at 11:12.

"We had some momentum and got the lead and then in the third they stepped it up a notch," Anderson said. "They took momentum from us and they were playing with some good pace. Luckily our (penalty-kill) was working hard and able to generate a scoring chance which generated the penalty shot."

NOTES: With 14 assists in his past 15 games, Sharks C Joe Thornton passed Stan Makita (926) for 17th place on the all-time assists list. Larry Murphy is 16th with 929. ... Ottawa D Chris Phillips (back) and LW Clark MacArthur (concussion) remain out. A lower-body injury prevented Senators D Marc Methot from playing Monday. ... San Jose LW Dainius Zubrus continues to battle an upper-body injury, while RW Raffi Torres remains with San Jose's AHL affiliate on a conditioning assignment. ... Ottawa completes a five-game road trip Thursday at New Jersey. ... San Jose next plays at Arizona on Thursday. ... C Ben Smith and D Matt Tennyson were San Jose's healthy scratches, while D Jared Cowen and LW Shane Prince did not dress for Ottawa.
Top Game Performances
 
Ottawa   San Jose
Max McCormick 1 Points Logan Couture 1
Max McCormick 1 Goals Logan Couture 1
Cody Ceci 1 Assists Brent Burns 1
Bobby Ryan 1 Power Play Goals N/A
Zack Smith 1 Short Handed Goals N/A
Craig Anderson .914 Save Percentage Alex Stalock .824
Craig Anderson 32 Saves Alex Stalock 14
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Shots Goals Power Play Penalty Kill Penalty Mins Face Offs Won
Ottawa 17 4 1-1 2-2 4 24
San Jose 35 3 0-2 0-1 2 31
Upcoming Games
  • San Jose will play their next game on the road against Arizona. The Sharks have a W/L % of .565 after a win and .476 after a loss.
  • Ottawa will play their next game on the road against New Jersey. The Senators have a W/L % of .409 after a win and .542 after a loss.