Islanders Fall to Senators, 6-2

The Ottawa Senators showed patience in waiting for their opportunities and taking advantage of them.

Mark Stone had a goal and two assists, Zack Smith scored twice and the Senators beat the New York Islanders 6-2 Sunday night. Bobby Ryan, Derick Brassard and Tom Pyatt also scored to help Ottawa win for the second time in two nights.

"This is a back-to-back where we traveled, where we get to bed at 3:30 in the morning and we come here and we win," Senators coach Guy Boucher said. "We were playing a very patient game."

Andrew Hammond started and stopped all seven shots he faced before leaving with 3:15 left in the first period due to an apparent injury. Mike Condon replaced him and had 18 saves the rest of the way.

Anders Lee and Anthony Beauvillier scored for New York, which has lost five straight and sits in last place in the Eastern Conference at 11-14-6. Only Colorado (23) and Arizona (27) have fewer points.

"It's a frustrating game," Travis Hamonic said. "It needs to be a better effort through the end of the game. Right there for the taking again."

Jean-Francois Berube made 27 saves in his second straight start for the Islanders. The third-string goalie was victimized by some bad fortune and some defensive breakdowns.

Stone scored the tiebreaking goal to put the Senators up 3-2 with 4:57 left in the second period. It came just 56 seconds after Beauvillier had tied it and was the eighth power-play goal the Islanders have allowed in the last five games.

"When your special teams is at the bottom of the league and your goaltending is not kicking where it was last year, it's a recipe for a losing streak," Islanders coach Jack Capuano said. "Just look at the teams that were high in the standings at the start and look where they are now. It's all correlated. ... We have to fix (those units)."

New York captain John Tavares nearly tied it 4:30 into the third, but his shot hit the crossbar. Initially, the Barclays Center scoreboard reported the goal was good, but a review showed the puck hit the crossbar and did not cross the line.

"We have to continue to keep having a good work ethic, a good attitude and keep believing in ourselves. We have a great group in here," Tavares said. "A lot of it starts with me, being a difference maker. I know for myself, try to be better and raise my game to another level."

Brassard's sixth goal of the year 1:15 later doubled the lead to 4-2. Smith and Pyatt had empty-net goals in the final minutes.

Ottawa opened the scoring 10 1/2 minutes into the game when Kyle Turris' shot ricocheted off of Ryan's elbow and past Berube, who had angled his body to cut off the Ottawa center's shot. Ryan's goal was his sixth of the season and his third in three games.

New York had a chance to tie the game late in the period, as Shane Prince fired a slap shot that caused Hammond to contort his body before diving to knock the puck away. The Ottawa goaltender sustained a leg injury on the play and left the game. He returned to Ottawa's bench early in the second period.

"It's never good to come in especially when a guy gets hurt and when I saw (Hammond) make that move, right away I knew that was something pretty serious," Condon said. "Hopefully he can get back quick."

Smith deflected Stone's point shot to push the lead to 2-0 with 2:40 to go in the opening period.

"That's where I need to go to score, screen and tips, stuff like that," Smith said. "When the team is playing well and the puck is going well, if you're there, you're going to get chances."

New York halved the lead 27 seconds into the second on Lee's 10th goal of the season.

The Islanders had a chance to tie the game five minutes later, but Tavares' backhander was blocked by Cody Ceci while Condon dove to get back into position.

Beauvillier then did tie it with 5:53 remaining in the period. The rookie left wing was sprung for the breakaway by Hamonic's stretch pass, and he fired his third goal of the season low and to the stick side.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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