Ottawa Senators coach Jacques Martin tries to keep his cool during ...

2 Mar 2024

Published Mar 01, 2024  •  Last updated 3 hours ago  •  4 minute read

Ottawa Senators interim head coach Jacques Martin and Senators left wing Brady Tkachuk (7) look on during a break in the play during first period NHL hockey action against the Pittsburgh Penguins in Ottawa, on Saturday, Dec. 23, 2023. Photo by Justin Tang /The Canadian Press

Every now and then, you hear a story about a pissed-off coach who loses his temper in the dressing room – screaming out enough blistering F-bombs to peel the paint off the walls, tossing a phone, kicking a garbage can, throwing chairs – trying to get a message across to the team’s players.

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Photo Ottawa Sun

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The Ottawa Senators have given coach Jacques Martin plenty of reason to be angry.

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Bad teams, you can deal with, maybe you understand and expectations aren’t high. But when a team underachieves, like the Senators have too often this season, that can be the tipping point for a coach.

“There are definitely frustrations that build,” said Martin Friday morning, in advance of his team’s home game against the Arizona Coyotes. “But you have to manage that, you have to adjust to your team. As a coach, you’re going to lose it sometimes. But it can’t be a common thing.

Ottawa Senators - Figure 2
Photo Ottawa Sun

“I’m pretty mild outside, but I can be emotional and different inside with the group. I’ve always prided myself on resolving issues within the dressing room.  Sometimes, you have to read your group. You have to know their limitations.

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“I don’t think I’ve changed that much. I’ve got more experience now. But I’ve always been fairly patient. In some cases, when I look back, I’ve been too patient with certain players at times.”

Friday’s game didn’t go well. The Senators fell behind 3-0 in the first period, battled back to tie it, then allowed two third-period goals, including one into an empty net, in a 5-3 loss to the Coyotes.

It was another very disappointing loss for the Senators, ending a horrific, near-historic skid by the Coyotes.

The Coyotes didn’t win a game all of February and went into Friday night’s game 0-12-2 in their past 14 games; they hadn’t won since Jan. 22 (5-2 over Pittsburgh). For context on how historically bad the Coyotes had been, they were tied for the second-worst winless streak in the NHL’s salary cap era (the 2020-21 Buffalo Sabres went 18 games between victories). The 1980-81 Winnipeg Jets hold the all-time record, with 30 games without a win.

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Asked if he’s blown up at this team, Martin said: “I did in my early days. That doesn’t work anymore. That doesn’t mean you can’t be hard on people. I’ll give you the perfect example: (Florida Panthers head coach) Paul Maurice, last year. His team was coming, coming after Christmas. He blew a gasket in a game (in late March) in Toronto, he lost it on the bench. That was probably the final step in getting his team ready for the playoffs.”

Martin’s days with the Senators go back to 1996, when he was hired as the team’s third head coach. Gone from Ottawa after the 2003-04 season, he went on to head coaching roles with the Florida Panthers and Montreal Canadiens.

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Photo Ottawa Sun

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Martin took over head coaching duties from D.J. Smith in mid-December; his first game was in Arizona.

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Asked about where this team has to go in order to step ahead, Martin said: “This team is a lot better than the team I took when I got here the first time. You have to establish a work ethic that gives you a chance to compete every night and you have to establish a structure that gives you that chance.

“I’ve really put the focus on short term, one game at a time. “We’ve evolved quite a bit; our mindset has changed quite a bit. We play more of a 60-minute game. I’m realistic. I know how difficult it is to make points in the National Hockey League. You can have a great 10-game segment and sometimes you only make up one or two points, especially when you have a lot of teams ahead of you.”

TATTOO TALK

Defenceman Jakob Chychrun, who was with the Coyotes from 2016-23, was asked about the tattoo of a cactus he got on a finger while he played in Arizona. Said Chychrun:”One of my best buddies was visiting me. He wanted to get a tattoo with me. I’m not a huge tattoo guy. Christmas is my favourite time of year, they would light up the big cactus in my front yard. I always thought that looked really cool and I had a picture on my phone. I thought I could get the outline of the cactus (as a tattoo). (My friend) went first. He got a big one on his leg, I got a little one on my finger.”

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The odds of the Senators winning the Stanley Cup, which started the year at 40/1 on BetOnline, have sunk to 250/1; that seems generous. The Montreal Canadiens are at 500/1, while the Anaheim Ducks, Chicago Blackhawks, Columbus Blue Jackets and San Jose Sharks have been taken off the board … Defenceman Artem Zub, who missed three games with a “lower-body” injury, returned to the Senators’ lineup Friday … Centre Tim Stutzle and defenceman Thomas Chabot, who didn’t practise Thursday, were also back … There was no further update in the status of Josh Norris, who left Tuesday’s 4-1 loss in Nashville with an “upper-body” injury. Norris was knocked into the net on a hit by Cole Smith and appeared to be favouring his left shoulder, which he had surgery on a year ago. Martin said only the centre would be out for “an extended period of time.” … Goalie Joonas Korpisalo, who was supposed to start Friday’s game for Ottawa, was a late scratch because of an “illness.” Anton Forsberg got the start, with 25 minutes notice.

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