Another Senators Goalie Project Just Ended In A Painful Way

In a strategic move, Mads Sogaard leaves the Ottawa Senators with hopes of revitalizing his goaltending career under the Tampa Bay Lightning's banner.

Mads Sogaard’s run with the Senators is over.

After seven years in the organization, the 25-year-old goaltender signed a one-year, two-way contract with the Tampa Bay Lightning on Wednesday, officially closing the book on his time in Ottawa.

The move wasn’t a shock. The Senators had already added Samuel Ersson from the Toronto Maple Leafs over the past two weeks and then gave restricted free agent Leevi Merilainen a one-year extension.

With Linus Ullmark locked in as the starter, there was no clear opening left for Sogaard, and he hadn’t done enough to force one. Ottawa also needs to start getting better looks at Jackson Parsons and Kevin Reidler.

For Sogaard, it’s another chapter in what has become a familiar Senators goalie story.

Ottawa was convinced enough in 2019 to trade up and take him 37th overall in the NHL Draft. At 6-foot-7, he stood out immediately as one of the most intriguing goaltending prospects in the game.

His .921 save percentage in his draft year with Medicine Hat in the WHL only added to the appeal. Among goalies in that class, only Spencer Knight went ahead of him.

The hope was obvious: if everything clicked, the Senators might have landed their goalie of the future. But injuries kept knocking him off course. Just when he seemed ready to build momentum, another setback would interrupt the climb.

Because of those injuries, Sogaard has played only 162 professional games in six pro seasons.

Last season was more of the same. He appeared in 27 games for Belleville, going 7-13-4 with a 3.69 goals-against average and an .874 save percentage. He also got into two games with Ottawa.

One of those NHL appearances was a reminder of why the organization once believed so strongly in him. On January 25, Sogaard turned aside 20 of 21 shots in a surprising 7-1 win over the eventual Stanley Cup finalist Vegas Golden Knights.

Afterward, he spoke emotionally about what it took to make it back to the NHL after another injury setback. It looked like the start of something.

Instead, it ended up being one last high point before Ottawa moved on.

Sogaard is now a Group 6 unrestricted free agent, and Tampa Bay will take the next swing at unlocking his NHL potential. He remains tied for the tallest goaltender ever to appear in an NHL game at 6-foot-7, sharing that distinction with, among others, former Lightning star Ben Bishop.

Tampa acquired Bishop from Ottawa in 2013 and got four outstanding seasons out of him. Now the Lightning will see whether they can strike twice.

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