Ottawa Senators
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Steve Warne·Sep 27, 2024·Partner

Tyler Boucher, Angus Crookshank, Stephen Halliday and Max Guenette Among 20 Ottawa Senator Cuts on Friday

Senators head coach Travis Green wanted to get the camp roster down to a workable number before the club heads for Sudbury and the Kraft Hockeyville game on Sunday.

Sept 12, 2024: Ottawa Senators prospect Tyler Boucher meets the media. (Image credit: The Hockey News) - Tyler Boucher, Angus Crookshank, Stephen Halliday and Max Guenette Among 20 Ottawa Senator Cuts on FridaySept 12, 2024: Ottawa Senators prospect Tyler Boucher meets the media. (Image credit: The Hockey News) - Tyler Boucher, Angus Crookshank, Stephen Halliday and Max Guenette Among 20 Ottawa Senator Cuts on Friday

It was a tough day for 20 Ottawa Senator hopefuls as head coach Travis Green cut deeply into his training camp roster.

Players assigned to Belleville Senators AHL camp on Friday include notables like Angus Crookshank, Stephen Halliday, and former first-rounder Tyler Boucher. Boucher got through camp in one piece and now goes to work in the AHL on a development that's been stunted by injuries.

They're joined by the likes of Wyatt Bongiovanni, Xavier Bourgault, Jake Chiasson, Phillippe Daoust, Jorian Donovan, Tomas Hamara, Oskar Pettersson, Michael Simpson and Djibril Toure. Bourgault is also a former first-rounder, who came from Edmonton in the Roby Jarventie deal. Jarventie still hasn't recovered fully from February knee surgery.

Players placed on waivers include AHL all-star Max Guenette, along with Jeremy Davies, Nikolas Matinpalo, Garrett Pilon, Jamieson Rees, Cole Reinhardt and Hayden Hodgson. If they clear waivers, they'll be assigned to Belleville camp. Keean Washkurak has been released from his PTO contract and will be assigned to Belleville camp.

So let's divide what's left of the Senators main camp roster into four groups: The absolute 100% locks to make the team, the probables, the possibles, and the others.

* indicates an injury concern

Locks

The Possibles

The Long Shots

That's still a lot of bodies for very few openings in Ottawa. Head coach Travis Green reminded the players that call ups happen all the time.

"If you look around the NHL, sometimes players just get a bounce and maybe someone gets hurt or someone doesn't play well and you get called up," Green told the media. "That's how a lot of guys end up playing in the NHL, because training camp is short. You don't get a lot of looks at a player and the games are all different in their own way with lineups that you have.

"So it's a fine line between playing in the NHL and not."