logo
Stanley Cup Final: Florida Panthers, Matthew Tkachuk can repeat with 1 more win vs. Edmonton

Stanley Cup Final: Florida Panthers, Matthew Tkachuk can repeat with 1 more win vs. Edmonton

Yahoo2 days ago

FORT LAUDERDALE — The playoffs were about to begin, and among the many reasons Paul Maurice had to feel good about his Florida Panthers was the one variable coaches can't control.
'We were healthy,' Maurice said.
Advertisement
Check that.
'Matthew was the only question mark,' he said.
Forward Matthew Tkachuk, it turns out, was a bigger question mark than some thought. He suffered a groin injury in the Four Nations Face-Off that ended his regular season in February — but revealed on the eve of Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final against the visiting Edmonton Oilers just how close he came to not being available at least when the playoffs began.
'I did not think I was going to be playing,' Tkachuk said before correcting himself. 'I shouldn't say that. I thought there was maybe a 50 percent chance I wouldn't be playing as close to about a week or five days before the playoffs.'
Matthew Tkachuk on hot line with Sam Bennett and Evan Rodrigues
Jun 12, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk (19) celebrates scoring during the first period against the Edmonton Oilers in game four of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final at Amerant Bank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images
If the Panthers clinch their second consecutive Stanley Cup with a victory, it would not be because Tkachuk played a minor role. Tkachuk has two goals and three assists in the past three games, playing on a red-hot line with Sam Bennett, who leads the NHL in playoff goals with 15, and Evan Rodrigues (15 points). Tkachuk and Bennett are tied for fourth in postseason scoring with 22 points in 22 games.
Advertisement
Of course with Tkachuk it's more than statistics. He's a big part of the heart and soul of the Panthers. He gets under opponents' skin with his spunk.
Spunk is what it took for Tkachuk to get back to form. He was limited to less than 12 minutes in his first game back, in the playoffs vs. Tampa Bay.
'Nowhere close to what I expected out of myself,' Tkachuk said.
'Because he played the game with a broken collarbone,' Maurice said.
Although Tkachuk had two goals and one assist in that 6-2 victory, Maurice figures it wasn't until the second and third rounds, against Toronto and Carolina, that Tkachuk was Tkachuk.
Advertisement
'He had come to full health but there's still the mental part about how far do you want to stress that, taking hits and giving hits and things like that,' Maurice said.
Panthers have had mixed luck with close-out games
Close-out games like this haven't been kind to the Panthers. They lost three straight close-out opportunities against the Oilers in last year's Cup Final before closing the deal at home. This year, they needed two tries to finish off the Maple Leafs and Hurricanes, losing the first close-out game at home before winning both Game 7s on the road.
'When you're playing a team that their backs are against the wall, it's important to come out with a good start both sides,' Tkachuk said. ' … They're in a different situation right now. I think this is their first elimination game of the playoffs. So that's a different wrinkle for things. And for us, we've played one Game 7. So maybe we have a tiny advantage with knowing the desperation that they're going to come out with. But we have to match that desperation.'
Advertisement
Maurice sounds understanding as to why Florida needed multiple tries to close out those series, although he could do without flying back to Edmonton for another Game 7 on June 20.
'So you've played well and you've put yourself in a position to eliminate the other team,' Maurice said. 'It's not guaranteed, because the other team is pretty darn good. So there's nothing learned where you'd say, 'OK, now we've figured it out,' because if you figure that out, you'd win next year — you'd win 16 straight, right? It doesn't work like that.'
Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch has pushed every button in this series, flip-flopping goaltenders Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard and mixing up his lines. Some of it worked. Some.
Oilers star Conner McDavid has played 12 playoff games against the Panthers these past two seasons. He has scored in only three of them, a total of four goals. He has one goal and six assists in this series.
Advertisement
'He's probably the best player of our generation,' Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov said. 'So you have to be aware of him every single time he's on the ice and you have to try and take the space away from him.'
But even when McDavid isn't scoring, the Panthers see the Oilers as a threat. Florida took a quick 3-0 lead at home in Game 4 but ended up losing 5-4 in overtime on a goal by Leon Draisaitl, who joins him atop the NHL postseason scoring list with 33 points.
Maurice called the Oilers 'the most dangerous team in the National Hockey League' under normal conditions. So if they should find themselves trailing in what could be the final game of the Stanley Cup Final?
'Their risk profile changes,' Maurice said. 'When they're down a goal or two, they are incredibly hard to handle.'
Advertisement
One more victory would give Tkachuk the option of repeating one of the more unique Stanley Cup celebrations. Last year he took the trophy for a swim off Fort Lauderdale Beach.
'There's no secret the Cup's in the building,' Tkachuk said. 'It's going to be the toughest test, the biggest game.'
Florida Panthers just one win away from repeating as champs after Game 5 win: Recap
How does Brad Marchand's Stanley Cup Final performance stack up with other Miami stars?
This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Stanley Cup Final: Matthew Tkachuk, Florida Panthers can finish Oilers at home

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches a new level
The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches a new level

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches a new level

For one day only: The Brad Blizzard, available at Dairy Queen. The snack story of the Stanley Cup playoffs — did Brad Marchand eat a Blizzard between periods of a playoff game or not? — reached its celebratory peak Friday. A Dairy Queen in Sunrise, Florida, where the Panthers play their home games, renamed the treat for the day in honor of the now two-time Stanley Cup winner. The Brad Blizzard was one of his favorites: the chocolate chip cookie dough flavor, though on Friday, the primary ingredient wasn't called chocolate chips but rather chocolate 'chirps' — a nod to the verbal jabs that hockey players give one another on the ice. 'I love seeing the excitement from everyone,' Marchand said while 'working' at the DQ for a little while, actually making the treats and handing them out to customers both inside the store and at the drive-thru window. 'These are moments that you love to appreciate.' Marchand was not having a Blizzard between periods of that game in the Eastern Conference final against Carolina — it was honey, but cameras captured Marchand enjoying something off a spoon and the story just took off from there — but Blizzardmania was born. Marchand and several of his teammates went to DQ on off days for the treats, including on the night before ending the Stanley Cup Final against Edmonton in Game 6. Marchand said they went before Game 6 for good luck. The Panthers won 5-1 a day later to take the Cup. 'It's incredible the moments that you look back on and at the time you don't really appreciate what they could mean at the end of the day,' Marchand told reporters Friday. 'The first time we kind of went as a group to Dairy Queen, we were just going for a walk. We wanted to walk off our dinner and have Dairy Queen for dessert and it became this huge organic moment in the playoffs. ... Those are the things you look back on and you have fun with.' It has been a nonstop party for the Panthers since winning the Cup, with trips to the famed Elbo Room bar to interact with fans, a team dinner at a Miami restaurant on Thursday night — one where tennis great Martina Navratilova, who just happened to be having dinner in the same spot, got to sip from the Cup — and a slew of other appearances. Marchand had 10 goals and 10 assists in the playoff run for the Panthers, who won the Cup for the second straight season. He was acquired at the trade deadline by Florida general manager and hockey operations president Bill Zito from rival Boston, and the tale of how Marchand — who was far from a fan favorite in Florida before the trade — became beloved by Panthers fans was one of the compelling stories of the postseason. Marchand and the Panthers will have their championship parade on Fort Lauderdale Beach on Sunday, and then free agency starts July 1. Marchand is a free agent, though he has indicated a willingness to remain in Florida and had a message for the Panthers during his DQ shift. 'Give me a contract,' he said.

The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches new level
The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches new level

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches new level

For one day only: The Brad Blizzard, available at Dairy Queen. The snack story of the Stanley Cup playoffs — did Brad Marchand eat a Blizzard between periods of a playoff game or not? — reached its celebratory peak Friday. A Dairy Queen in Sunrise, Fla., where the Panthers play their home games, renamed the treat for the day in honour of the now two-time Stanley Cup winner. The Brad Blizzard was one of his favourites: the chocolate chip cookie dough flavour, though on Friday, the primary ingredient wasn't called chocolate chips but rather chocolate 'chirps' — a nod to the verbal jabs that hockey players give one another on the ice. 'I love seeing the excitement from everyone,' Marchand said while 'working' at the DQ for a little while, actually making the treats and handing them out to customers both inside the store and at the drive-thru window. 'These are moments that you love to appreciate.' Marchand was not having a Blizzard between periods of that game in the Eastern Conference final against Carolina — it was honey, but cameras captured Marchand enjoying something off a spoon and the story just took off from there — but Blizzardmania was born. Marchand and several of his teammates went to DQ on off days for the treats, including on the night before ending the Stanley Cup Final against Edmonton in Game 6. Marchand said they went before Game 6 for 'good luck.' The Panthers won 5-1 a day later to take the Cup. 'It's incredible the moments that you look back on and at the time you don't really appreciate what they could mean at the end of the day,' Marchand told reporters Friday. 'The first time we kind of went as a group to Dairy Queen, we were just going for a walk. We wanted to walk off our dinner and have Dairy Queen for dessert and it became this huge organic moment in the playoffs. … Those are the things you look back on and you have fun with.' It has been a non-stop party for the Panthers since winning the Cup, with trips to the famed Elbo Room bar to interact with fans, a team dinner at a Miami restaurant on Thursday night — one where tennis great Martina Navratilova, who just happened to be having dinner in the same spot, got to sip from the Cup — and a slew of other appearances. Marchand had 10 goals and 10 assists in the playoff run for the Panthers, who won the Cup for the second straight season. He was acquired at the trade deadline by Florida general manager and hockey operations president Bill Zito from rival Boston, and the tale of how Marchand — who was far from a fan favourite in Florida before the trade — became beloved by Panthers fans was one of the compelling stories of the post-season. Marchand and the Panthers will have their championship parade on Fort Lauderdale Beach on Sunday, and then free agency starts July 1. Marchand is a free agent, though he has indicated a willingness to remain in Florida and had a message for the Panthers during his DQ shift. 'Give me a contract,' he said. ___ AP NHL playoffs: and

The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches a new level
The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches a new level

Associated Press

time2 hours ago

  • Associated Press

The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches a new level

For one day only: The Brad Blizzard, available at Dairy Queen. The snack story of the Stanley Cup playoffs — did Brad Marchand eat a Blizzard between periods of a playoff game or not? — reached its celebratory peak Friday. A Dairy Queen in Sunrise, Florida, where the Panthers play their home games, renamed the treat for the day in honor of the now two-time Stanley Cup winner. The Brad Blizzard was one of his favorites: the chocolate chip cookie dough flavor, though on Friday, the primary ingredient wasn't called chocolate chips but rather chocolate 'chirps' — a nod to the verbal jabs that hockey players give one another on the ice. 'I love seeing the excitement from everyone,' Marchand said while 'working' at the DQ for a little while, actually making the treats and handing them out to customers both inside the store and at the drive-thru window. 'These are moments that you love to appreciate.' Marchand was not having a Blizzard between periods of that game in the Eastern Conference final against Carolina — it was honey, but cameras captured Marchand enjoying something off a spoon and the story just took off from there — but Blizzardmania was born. Marchand and several of his teammates went to DQ on off days for the treats, including on the night before ending the Stanley Cup Final against Edmonton in Game 6. Marchand said they went before Game 6 for good luck. The Panthers won 5-1 a day later to take the Cup. 'It's incredible the moments that you look back on and at the time you don't really appreciate what they could mean at the end of the day,' Marchand told reporters Friday. 'The first time we kind of went as a group to Dairy Queen, we were just going for a walk. We wanted to walk off our dinner and have Dairy Queen for dessert and it became this huge organic moment in the playoffs. ... Those are the things you look back on and you have fun with.' It has been a nonstop party for the Panthers since winning the Cup, with trips to the famed Elbo Room bar to interact with fans, a team dinner at a Miami restaurant on Thursday night — one where tennis great Martina Navratilova, who just happened to be having dinner in the same spot, got to sip from the Cup — and a slew of other appearances. Marchand had 10 goals and 10 assists in the playoff run for the Panthers, who won the Cup for the second straight season. He was acquired at the trade deadline by Florida general manager and hockey operations president Bill Zito from rival Boston, and the tale of how Marchand — who was far from a fan favorite in Florida before the trade — became beloved by Panthers fans was one of the compelling stories of the postseason. Marchand and the Panthers will have their championship parade on Fort Lauderdale Beach on Sunday, and then free agency starts July 1. Marchand is a free agent, though he has indicated a willingness to remain in Florida and had a message for the Panthers during his DQ shift. 'Give me a contract,' he said. ___ AP NHL playoffs: and

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store