The Senators announced they have recalled left-shot defenseman Donovan Sebrango from AHL Belleville. He replaces righty Max Guenette, who was sent to the AHL yesterday in what is now clear was a corresponding move.
Guenette had been scratched for five straight games since being recalled on Jan. 7, not seeing any work in his first recall of the year. The same fate might not befall the 23-year-old Sebrango, who will make his NHL debut tonight against the Capitals if Thomas Chabot can’t play after taking a puck to the face in Tuesday’s shutout win over the Islanders.
A third-round pick for the Red Wings in the 2020 draft, Sebrango appeared in the CHL Top Prospects game in his draft year while a member of the OHL’s Kitchener Rangers and won a silver medal with Canada at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup. The COVID-19 pandemic immediately forced him into the professional ranks in his first post-draft season. He was on loan to Slovakia’s second-tier league and then to Detroit’s AHL affiliate in Grand Rapids. After an additional two seasons where he made negative progress on the Wings’ depth chart, spending a good portion of the 2022-23 campaign down in the ECHL with Toledo, he was shipped to Ottawa in the trade that sent Alex DeBrincat to Hockeytown.
A strong skater with a 6’1″, 220-lb frame, things have finally clicked for Sebrango this season. He’s already recorded three career-best goals, 10 assists, and 13 points in 38 games with Belleville, adding 42 PIMs and a plus-three rating while serving as an alternate captain. That’s a significant improvement over last year with the B-Sens, where the Ottawa native was limited to seven assists in 35 games and had a brief stint in the ECHL again.
Sebrango’s recall won’t result in much playing time, and it likely won’t give him any if Chabot can play. He joins Guenette and Nikolas Matinpalo in the group that’s seen recalls from the minors with injuries to Chabot, Jacob Bernard-Docker, Travis Hamonic, and Artem Zub over the last couple of months. He was already summoned once earlier this season but sat in the press box for a trio of games in November and December before being returned to the minors.
Sebrango is the son of Eduardo Sebrango, a retired Cuban soccer player who is now an MLS coach with CF Montreal. If he debuts, the Canadian national would be only the second player in NHL history with Cuban ethnicity, joining longtime backup netminder Al Montoya.