Senators Fans Already See One Problem With This Burakovsky Move

Andr Burakovsky may have had a shaky past season, but his playmaking prowess offers the Ottawa Senators a new offensive strategy that could offset some of their current limitations.

The Ottawa Senators have taken a lot of heat for their offseason move to bring in André Burakovsky, but the deal gives them something they were missing: a winger with real puck-moving skill who can change how an attack starts.

Ottawa landed the 31-year-old from the Chicago Blackhawks for a 6th-round pick in 2027, taking on a $5.5 million cap hit for one more season. Burakovsky is coming off a season in which he scored 11 goals and added 22 assists in 75 games, and Chicago was reportedly so unimpressed with his 2025-26 performance that it was buying him out before the trade.

Even with William Eklund arriving after Brady Tkachuk’s departure, general manager Steve Staios was still looking for a top-six winger. Burakovsky doesn’t suddenly solve Ottawa’s lack of a contender-level forward group, and he hasn’t been a true top-six piece since 2022-23 with the Seattle Kraken, when he posted 39 points in 49 games. But that doesn’t mean he can’t matter.

For the first chunk of last season, he absolutely did. Through his first 26 games, Burakovsky piled up 21 points while spending most of his ice time alongside Ryan Greene and Connor Bedard.

That line outscored opponents 13-6 at 5-on-5 and posted a 47.3% expected goals share and a 51.6% Corsi share, according to NaturalStatTrick. For a Blackhawks team that sat 31st and 32nd in those categories overall, that was no small thing.

Then the season turned. Bedard was injured on December 12, and Burakovsky’s game started to slide.

He still managed 8 points in 12 games while Bedard was out, with above-average possession numbers, but the goals against piled up anyway, and he finished that stretch with a 4-13 differential at 5-on-5. Burakovsky had also dealt with a concussion in November, which may have affected him after he returned.

When Bedard came back and Chicago was only three points out of a wild-card spot, Burakovsky’s production cratered. He had just 4 points over the final 37 games and finished with the lowest on-ice goal differential on the team at minus-19.

The odd part is that the decline went both ways. Burakovsky was worse without Bedard, but Bedard’s numbers also slipped away from Burakovsky. That leaves Ottawa with a simple question: can Burakovsky rediscover the version of himself that started last season on a tear, now that he’s on a better team for the first time in four years?

The fit is at least easy to see. Ottawa has three skilled centers in Tim Stützle, Dylan Cozens, and Shane Pinto, and Burakovsky has shown he can work with talent in the middle. His finishing has come and gone, but the cleaner read is that he’s a playmaking winger who helps move the puck through the neutral zone, creates rush chances at 5-on-5, and can also help on the power play from the point.

That’s not just a scouting hunch. Corey Sznajder’s All Three Zones tracking shows Burakovsky’s strength in those areas is topped only by Stützle, Cozens, and Eklund among Ottawa’s forwards. The Comparison Atlas from LB-Hockey paints the same picture: compared with Drake Batherson, Burakovsky is more effective on the rush at both ends, but trails badly in cycle chance generation, suppression, finishing, and checking.

That’s why Staios calling him a “puck transporter” in his post-trade press conference actually fits. Burakovsky isn’t being added to be a bruiser or a forechecking hammer. He’s there to carry the puck, move it quickly, and create offense before the other team can get set.

A lot of his best work starts in his own end. He can take a breakout pass, make a fast decision, and turn a defensive-zone touch into an odd-man rush.

One example from last season had him handling a pass on the boards, chipping it past a pinching defender, and springing Bedard and Tyler Bertuzzi on a 2-on-1. Another had him receiving the breakout pass directly and feeding Bedard before both Anaheim forecheckers could close, again leading to a 2-on-1.

And when the moment calls for it, he can carry the rush himself.

That skill set should matter in Ottawa. Travis Green’s offensive system leans heavily on dump-and-chase and forechecking, and with Trady gone, Burakovsky gives the Senators a different kind of threat. He adds a layer to an offense that needs one.

He also gives Ottawa some balance. The Senators already have players who bring relentless forechecking, a quality shot, or cycle suppression.

Burakovsky doesn’t duplicate all of that, which is part of the point. He can cover different ground and complement the top players around him.

The defense behind him matters too. Ottawa’s fourth-best defenseman, whether that’s Artem Zub or Jordan Spence, is better than everyone in Chicago’s group, including Bowen Byram. With Jake Sanderson or Thomas Chabot on the ice for 75% of the time, Burakovsky should spend less time trapped in the defensive zone and more time attacking off cleaner exits.

From that angle, the move looks less like panic and more like a calculated bet. Staios kept his bigger assets intact, added a veteran with useful tools, and did it on a contract that compares favorably to most of the deals signed on July 1. With Batherson, Zub, and Amadio all set to be key UFAs in 2027, preserving cap space has real value.

The catch is obvious. Burakovsky’s 2025-26 season was all over the map, and the version Ottawa gets could swing the season one way or the other.

In Other News...

Steve Staios Just Faced A Huge Claude Giroux Test

When free agency opened, Steve Staios made it clear he did not want to treat Claude Giroux like just another name on the board. The Senators executive kept a roster spot available for the veteran, a sign Ottawa valued more than production from a player who has become one of the teams most trusted voices and a steadying presence in the room.

The push to keep Giroux around has been going on for months, with the Senators even putting a contract in front of him before the trade deadline. His role has only grown more important as leadership questions have sharpened around the roster, and Giroux has repeatedly sounded comfortable in Ottawas locker room, where he has said he enjoys being around the group. [Read more 🡒]

Wild Quietly Secured Important Right Side Blue Line Depth

Arthur Kaliyevs season in the Senators organization was productive enough to turn heads in the AHL, where he piled up goals and points for Belleville before Ottawa decided not to tender him a qualifying offer. He also barely saw NHL ice with the Senators, which made his situation one of the more notable roster decisions of the summer for a club trying to sort out its depth and decide which players fit into the long-term picture.

Now the next chapter is already drawing interest overseas, with multiple KHL clubs watching the wingers market as he moves into unrestricted free agency. For Ottawa, it is another reminder that a player can be useful at one level and still end up somewhere else entirely when contract decisions have to be made. [Read more 🡒]

Oilers Power Play Could Be Headed For A Risky New Direction

The Senators made sure Claude Giroux isnt going anywhere after all, bringing him back on a one-year deal that keeps a familiar veteran presence in the room as Ottawa continues to build around its young core. Its a move that fits the clubs broader approach: keep enough experience around to steady the lineup while still giving the next wave of players room to grow.

Girouxs return also gives Ottawa a little more certainty in a summer where veteran pieces around the league are still shifting, from coaching changes in Toronto to roster tweaks in Edmonton. For the Senators, the appeal is straightforward enough, but the structure of the contract shows there was more going on behind the scenes than a simple reunion, and the final terms say plenty about how both sides viewed the fit. [Read more 🡒]