Have Senators Finally Found The Coach Who Can Steady Everything

Travis Green's strategic acumen and compassionate leadership have positioned him as a strong contender for the Jack Adams Award as he navigates the Ottawa Senators through challenges and opportunities.

Travis Green has put himself in position to chase the Jack Adams again, and the case for him is built on more than just a strong record. For the second straight year, Green finished sixth in Jack Adams voting, and Ottawa’s season gave him plenty of ammunition.

The Senators were battered by injuries all year, with 10 key players missing more than five games. That pressure only intensified in the final playoff push, when most of the starting defence was sidelined and Green had to lean on rookies making their NHL debuts while the club fought for a postseason spot. Even with that chaos, Ottawa stayed together and played cohesive hockey down the stretch to grab the final Eastern Conference Wild Card berth.

One of the clearest examples of Green’s value came in the way he handled Linus Ullmark’s situation. The source material calls that approach a model for how to coach a player dealing with vulnerability and a mental health crisis, and it credits Green with helping reset Ullmark’s season through steady support. Rather than showing frustration over shaky goaltending, Green stayed calm, caring and publicly confident, repeatedly backing Ullmark as the team’s starter.

That support mattered in a season where the Senators often struggled to get routine saves. Green was under real scrutiny, but he responded by leading with compassion.

In the source’s words, “One's true character is shown through how they treat others during a crisis, and Green was certainly under the microscope when this situation unfolded. He chose to lead with compassion.

That is the mark of a true leader.”

The numbers back up the broader picture, too. Ottawa finished 13th in the league in goals against for the second straight season, and the source argues the ranking would have been even better with steadier goaltending.

The team controlled play for long stretches, leaned on sustained offensive-zone pressure and kept its defensive structure intact. Ottawa was second in the NHL in 5-on-5 expected goals against per 60 minutes, third in Corsi For percentage and third in shots against per game.

The offence made a real jump as well. Ottawa finished eighth in total goals and eighth in power-play efficiency, scoring 275 goals and converting at a 24% clip with the man advantage. The club averaged 3.35 goals per game without giving up its defensive identity, which is the clearest sign of how much better the team became.

Looking ahead, the source sees Green continuing to drive that success even with Brady Tkachuk departing and William Eklund arriving. Eklund is described as the stronger defensive player and the better play-driver, which should fit Green’s system well.

The expectation is that Eklund will slot alongside Tim Stützle, benefit from Green’s structure and see his offensive production rise. There’s also interest in how Green handles Carter Yakemchuk, especially in teaching the young defenceman to improve his own-zone play, positioning and decisions against opposing forwards.

With two years left on his contract, Green is being framed as the kind of coach Ottawa has been searching for: one who gets buy-in, gets results and gives the team a real chance to contend. The source closes with a simple idea that sums up the whole case: the Senators are in good hands with a coach who likes their game and cares about the people playing it.