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Derek Roy has three-point night in Sabres 4-2 win over Senators

Ottawa Senators' Jason Spezza (19) scores on Buffalo Sabres goalie Ryan Miller during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Buffalo, N.Y., Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Dean Duprey

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Ottawa Senators' Jason Spezza (19) scores on Buffalo Sabres goalie Ryan Miller during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Buffalo, N.Y., Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Dean Duprey

BUFFALO, N.Y. - Jarkko Ruutu added another chapter to the bitter rivalry between the Ottawa Senators and the Buffalo Sabres.

He bit the gloved thumb of Sabres enforcer Andrew Peters during a first-period altercation Tuesday night, overshadowing Buffalo's 4-2 win. "It's a pretty goofy thing that happened," Peters said. "It's not the injury, it's the incident. Just the fact that that happened it's unfortunate. It's not good for the game of hockey."

Ruutu denied biting Peters, and instead accused the Sabres player of gouging him in the eye.

"Nothing happened there," Ruutu said. "His fingers were by my mouth but I didn't bite him."

With a bandage wrapped around his right thumb following the game, Peters said Ruutu broke his skin while biting him through the glove. Peters started the skirmish by rubbing his glove into Ruutu's face behind the play. Replays then showed Ruutu using his teeth to tear Peters' glove off of his hand.

Peters immediately began shaking his hand and doubled over in pain clutching his thumb before heading to the Buffalo bench where he was attended to by team trainers.

Peters was penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct for sparking the altercation, while Ruutu was not penalized.

NHL officials did not immediately respond to phone and e-mail messages left by The Associated Press.

Derek Roy had a goal and two assists and Ryan Miller stopped 31 shots in helping Buffalo to its third straight victory.

The Sabres and Senators have been involved in plenty of heated games in the past.

Two years ago, Ottawa's Chris Neil sparked a brawl when he blind-sided former Sabres co-captain Chris Drury. In 2006, Buffalo beat Ottawa in a five-game second-round playoff series, and the Senators knocked out the Sabres in five games the following post-season.

Thomas Vanek, with an empty-netter in the final minute, and Drew Stafford had a goal and assist each, while Matt Ellis also scored for the Sabres, who hung on after nearly squandering a 3-0 lead.

Jason Spezza scored both goals for the Senators 32 seconds apart in the second period. Spezza had an opportunity to cap the comeback, but was robbed with 4:25 left when his slapshot from the left circle was snagged by Miller.

The Senators dropped to 1-5-1 during an eight-game road trip that ends at Boston on Thursday. Ottawa also dropped to 1-12-3 in its past 16 games away from home.

"It's tough. We're struggling," said Spezza, who has five goals and five assists in his past eight games. "We're in other teams' buildings and things aren't going our way. ... It hasn't been a fun trip."

Ellis' goal, scored 15 seconds in, certainly didn't help, Senators coach Craig Hartsburg said.

"For a team that's obviously fragile right now, that's not the way to start," Hartsburg said.

Except for the second-period letdown, the Sabres were pleased with how they finished. The win also allowed them to build off a convincing 4-2 win at Boston on Saturday, in which Buffalo snapped the Bruins 10-game win streak.

"Let's hope we can keep stringing these together and getting a good feeling about what it means to play as a team," Miller said.

Miller was relieved after giving up a soft goal to Spezza, who scored his first goal from the right corner by banking in a shot off the goalie's glove. Spezza then cut the lead to 3-2 by beating Miller through the legs on a wide-open breakaway.

Miller made up for it with his glove save in the third period.

"Two's enough for him," Miller said. "It's good to get the win and cap it off with bouncing back after a pretty bad goal."

Notes: Ottawa, which hasn't played at home since a 5-4 win over Dallas on Dec. 20, has been on the road because the team's arena was used for the just-concluded World Junior Hockey Championship. ... Senators are 4-13-3 on the road this season after winning 20 or more in each of their previous five seasons. ... Ellis' goal was the Sabres' fastest to open a game since Vladimir Tsyplakov scored 10 seconds in at Montreal on Nov. 25, 2000.

COMMENTS (5)

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Lamar Posted
(2009-04-30 07:36:47)



More unnecessary drama for an ailing league, thanks to the low rent guys like these two and the likes of Axery, Downey, Hollweg, etc....As a Sabre's fan, I hate Peters, in my opinion he "bites" ! Why didn't he just start punching Ruugoon in the face instead of whining like a B****(female dog). These guys, Buffalo, are very much like the Sens in that they show no passion or effort for 60 minutes and have only one real scoring line and three third lines with a sprinkling of pretenders and the most overpaid goalie in the world. I wish Miller would look at the video of when he came up and played with solid fundamental goaltender skills, instead of being caught out of position constantly. He has the talent to turn it around but these shoddy lapses really make me doubt his thinking process and possibly his commitment.
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Ray Emery Posted
(2009-04-30 07:36:44)



What a bunch of classless losers. Last week Spezza was spearing players, this week Ruutu is biting players. And whats even more ridiculous is Ottawa fans trying to justify Ruutu's actions. I don't expect anything better from this club though. Alfredsson showed the Ottawa way back during their cup run how you take a loss in hockey - by shooting a puck at one of the classiest players in the game with intent to hurt. I fully expect next week I'm going to see Dany Heatley try to knee somebody in the nuts. This team is a joke.
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Olie Posted
(2009-04-30 07:36:44)



Ruutu is sissy girl anyway. Biting someone only confirms it. The league had better impose some stiff penalties for biting. Besides taking away his Barbie dolls or pretty dress-up dresses, he needs to have a penalty that sends a message to prevent further escalation of the violence in the league that is so often discussed and debated.
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Jason "RINGETTE" Spezza Posted
(2009-04-30 07:36:42)



LOVE THOSE BUFFALO WINGS Did Jarkko Ruutu grab Andrew Peter's finger and bite it. Or did Andrew Peters put his finger in Jarkko Ruutu's mouth. When you do something as bush league as face wash someone with a DIRTY glove you deserve to get bitten! http://www.canada.com/topics/sports/story.html?id=9f77f750-44ed-4b4a-bf64-2aefe38ae0e6
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Alexander K Posted
(2009-04-30 07:36:40)



Ruutu deserves a freaking suspension or at the very least a stiff fine. Who the hell bites another player in this league? That's bush league at best, and we don't need any of it in this game.
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“I was coming in to take the boards away and had some good jump. He bobbled the puck at the last second and I don’t think he saw me coming at all. It was a shoulder right in his chest. He’s eight feet tall, so it’s not like you could hit him in the head.”

- Ottawa's Chris Neil about a hit he threw on Tampa's Victor Hedman Thursday night, causing Hedman to leave the game.

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