Lors du match contre les Sabres de Buffalo, plus tôt cette semaine, la carrière de Craig Anderson fut célébrée dans une cérémonie d’avant-match par les Sénateurs d’Ottawa.
Before he retired last season, goalie Craig Anderson was the oldest player in the NHL. He spent much of his time with the two teams who clashed on Tuesday night in Ottawa – the Buffalo Sabres and the Senators.
At least they made it fun toward the end. Tonight was all about Craig Anderson, as the Sens’ all-time leader in games played, wins, saves and - as they announced it in the arena - shots against, returned to Ottawa to sign a one-day contract and retire as an Ottawa Senator.
Ottawa Senators legendary net minder Craig Anderson has signed a one-day contract to have his retirement as a member of the team. Today we take a look back at the career and statistics of goaltender Craig Anderson as he makes his retirement official.
Goaltender Craig Anderson will sign a one-day contract with Ottawa to retire as a Senator, multiple outlets reported. Nothing official has been announced but reports indicated it could happen before Tuesday's game against Buffalo.
The Ottawa Senators are set to sign franchise legend Craig Anderson to a one-day retirement contract. Anderson holds a slew of netminding records for the organization, including saves, wins and games played.
The Ottawa Senators are expected to sign free agent netminder Craig Anderson to a one-day contract to officially retire as a Sen.
The Ottawa Senators plan to sign goaltender Craig Anderson to a one-day contract so he can retire as a member of his long-time former team.
It appears the Buffalo Sabres will look to get a goaltender during the offseason. Here are some names who could be a target. Last summer, the Buffalo Sabres biggest question mark was goaltending.
The Buffalo Sabres owe Craig Anderson a massive debt after what he did this past season. In a year where goaltending was one of their weakest assets, the 42-year-old goaltender was an absolute rock for them in more ways than one.
With three goaltenders under contract that enjoyed an extended experience at the position in 2022-23, the Buffalo Sabres have a potential logjam. The Buffalo Sabres goaltending was subpar this past season.
Buffalo goaltender Craig Anderson won't be on the ice Friday night when the Sabres conclude their season at Columbus, deciding to retire after 20 seasons, six teams and close to 20,000 saves.
It’s the end of a long career career as Buffalo Sabres goalie Craig Anderson retires after a 20-year career in the NHL. News of Anderson’s retirement came down late Thursday night.
After a big win in their home finale, the Buffalo Sabres look to wrap up the season on a high when they visit the Columbus Blue Jackets on Friday.
After 709 regular-season games over 20 seasons, goaltender Craig Anderson has called it a career at the age of 41.
Here’s a fun fact: the Toronto Maple Leafs have now lost five-straight games to teams using a 40-plus-year-old goaltender. Four of those defeats came at the hands of Craig Anderson.
Craig Anderson made 51 saves to help the Buffalo Sabres post a 3-1 win against the Florida Panthers on Friday in Sunrise, Fla. Jeff Skinner scored twice, Alex Tuch added a goal and Tage Thompson had three assists for the Sabres, who moved into the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.
We have just two games today in the NHL, but there's definite value on the board. Let's keep things rolling here as we hit the second day of the week.
The dubious distinction of being the NHL’s oldest goaltender hasn’t slowed Craig Anderson one bit. Despite turning 41 this past May, he just keeps on going and opened his 20th season with a 36-save performance on Oct.
The 41-year-old could have become an unrestricted free agent on July 13 but instead is set to earn $1.5 million during the 2022-23 season.
Goaltender Craig Anderson is returning to the NHL for a 20th season. Anderson, 41, signed a one-year contract worth $1.5 million to remain with the Buffalo Sabres on Thursday.
The Capitals are now expected to use Ilya Samsonov as their No. 1 goaltender, but they still need a reliable No. 2. With that in mind, Washington signed veteran goaltender Craig Anderson to a professional tryout agreement.
After finishing his two-year, $9.5 million deal with the Senators this season, Anderson now will enter free agency at 39 years old.
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