The Ottawa Senators have had a slow offseason, and that’s putting it kindly. Outside of the Brady Tkachuk trade and the quick pivot to William Eklund, the list of notable additions has been thin: Samuel Ersson, Sammy Blais, Philip Tomasino and Andre Burakovsky. They also kept Claude Giroux and Nick Cousins, and extended Jordan Spence, but for a fan base watching the rest of the division make moves, the frustration is easy to understand.
Still, Burakovsky is the one signing that seems to have really set people off, and that reaction may be a little over the top. Ottawa landed the 31-year-old winger from the Chicago Blackhawks for a 2027 sixth-round pick, took on his full $5.5 million cap hit, and gave up almost nothing of real consequence in return. That’s not the kind of move that should be judged only by the name on the back of the jersey.
Burakovsky has never been a headline-grabbing scorer, but he has long had tools that matter in the right spot. His hands are slick, his passing is clean, his release is quick, and he still has the straight-line speed that lets him create in transition and hold onto pucks under pressure. He’s also got a résumé that carries weight: two Stanley Cups, one with the Washington Capitals in 2017-18 and another with the Colorado Avalanche four years later.
His best season came in 2021-22, when he put up 22 goals, 61 points and played 80 games, then added eight points in Colorado’s 12-game playoff run. The bigger picture is solid too: 420 points in 771 career games. That’s the kind of veteran track record a team can use, especially one trying to take the next step.
The real question is where he fits. Burakovsky makes the most sense as a secondary scorer, and that lines up neatly with what Ottawa needs in its bottom six.
The Senators have had decent depth over the past couple of seasons, but nobody on their fourth line averaged 25-plus points last season, even though Cousins finished with 23. Burakovsky’s puck skill and shot could give that group a little more bite, whether he’s skating with Cousins, Stephen Halliday or another option Travis Green chooses.
He doesn’t look like a natural fit for every middle-six role, though. He isn’t a shutdown winger, so the third line doesn’t really suit him if Ottawa wants that unit to lean defensive with Michael Amadio or Shane Pinto. He also isn’t the kind of physical presence that would make him an obvious match with Ridly Greig or Dylan Cozens on the second line.
There’s even a case that he could get a look with Eklund and Tim Stutzle, but that line already has enough offense to go around. Warren Foegle is the more obvious type to help in that spot because of the net-front work he can do. Drake Batherson could also slide into the mix, but if Burakovsky gets regular top-six time, Batherson’s role would shrink.
That leaves the fourth line as the cleanest landing spot. And there’s a case that the pieces there could help each other. Burakovsky and Cousins can help bring Halliday along, while Halliday and Cousins can work the dirty areas, free up pucks and cover for Burakovsky defensively.
Even with that in mind, Ottawa should not treat this as a finished offseason. Burakovsky and Eklund can help with scoring, and both are more disciplined than Tkachuk, but neither replaces the physical edge he brought. The Senators still need a top-line power forward type to play with Stutzle and Eklund, someone who can dig pucks loose and make life miserable around the net.
Ideally, that player would be affordable and able to play right wing. That’s easier said than done. A trade for Matthew Knies of the Toronto Maple Leafs would take a massive haul, while Jake DeBrusk of the Vancouver Canucks, a player the Senators have formally been linked to, would cost less but would still be something of a gamble despite carrying five years left at $5.5 million.
Fabian Zetterlund’s $4.275 million AAV would also have to be moved in any trade if Ottawa wants to stay cap-compliant. The free-agent market is thin now, but Michael Bunting remains a name to consider. He isn’t huge, but he can still deliver 30-40 points a year and bring the kind of grit and edge that plays like a power forward.
So no, the Senators aren’t done. They still have work to do if they want to keep pace in the Atlantic Division.
But Burakovsky alone is not the disaster some fans are making it out to be. Ottawa still has just under $4.2 million in cap space, plus a few trade assets, and time to add another weapon before training camp opens in September.
In Other News...
Shane Pinto Sends A Calming Message Senators Fans Needed
Shane Pinto did not pretend the Brady Tkachuk trade was easy to digest. He said his first reaction was shock, which is hardly surprising given what Tkachuk meant to the Senators, but Pinto also made it clear he did not want the moment to linger any longer than it had to. For Ottawa, the message matters because the season does not pause for emotion, and the players left behind have to keep the focus on the group still in the room.
Pinto framed the next step as a matter of accepting what happened and protecting the dressing room culture that has to carry the team forward. He pointed to the current core and the importance of keeping the atmosphere positive, while also stressing that his relationship with Tkachuk remains rooted in friendship and respect. In a tense moment for Senators fans, that kind of steady tone is the sort of thing a locker room usually needs most. [Read more 🡒]
NHL Just Handed The Senators A Brutal Built In Disadvantage
The NHLs new schedule gave Ottawa another reminder that the margins in the Atlantic Division can be brutal before a puck is even dropped. While every team has to live with the quirks of the calendar, the Senators drew one of the tougher ones, with a heavy dose of back-to-backs and a slate that often asks them to keep pace with opponents coming in fresher. Montreal, meanwhile, landed on the favorable side of the rest equation, which only sharpens the imbalance inside the division.
For Ottawa, the burden does not stop at travel and turnaround. The Senators also have a pile of Thursday night home dates at the Canadian Tire Centre because of their arena sharing arrangement with the Ottawa Charge, another layer that can make the season feel compressed in spots. It is the kind of built-in disadvantage teams notice quickly once the grind begins, and it could shape how Ottawa has to manage its lineup, its energy and its points chase all year. [Read more 🡒]
Rebecca Leslie Now Carries A Huge Question For Ottawas Offense
Rebecca Leslies 2025-26 season gave Ottawa a much-needed jolt, especially for a club trying to replace the production and presence of departing forwards. The Ottawa-born winger finished with 23 points in 30 games, a major leap from her previous seasons and a sign that the Charge may have found a more reliable piece in their forward group. Her scoring touch also sharpened in a noticeable way, with a better finish around the net helping turn chances into goals at a far higher rate than before.
The bigger question now is whether that version of Leslie is sustainable when the lineup shifts around her. Ottawa has reason to believe in the local product after protecting her in the expansion draft, but the next step is proving she can keep driving offense even if the circumstances that helped fuel her breakout are no longer as favorable. For a team looking to stay competitive while reworking its attack, that answer could matter just as much as the points she already put on the board. [Read more 🡒]
