Latest news with #FloridaPanthers'
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Brady Tkachuk Hopes Senators Can Emulate Panthers' Blueprint: 'If That's The Team That We Can Be In Ottawa, That Would Be A Pretty Good Team'
Standing on the confetti-covered ice in a pair of jeans and a baseball hat, the guy posing for photos next to the Stanley Cup looked like just another family member who wanted to get in on the celebrations following the Florida Panthers' championship win on Tuesday. Except this wasn't just another family member. Advertisement It was Brady Tkachuk, whose day job is captaining the Ottawa Senators. However, on this night, he was Brady Tkachuk, the unofficial captain of the Matthew Tkachuk fan club. 'It's really cool. It's a dream come true. I'm just so happy for him,' Brady Tkachuk told The Hockey News. 'At the end of the day, he's worked so hard to get to this point, not just last year, but this year too, so it's perseverance. I'm just really and truly so happy for him and the ride he's been on.' The ride that Matthew Tkachuk has been on is one that Brady Tkachuk has had a front-seat for. The younger Tkachuk has been there since the beginning, whether it was shotgunning bears with fans inside Calgary's Saddledome when Matthew was playing for the Flames or helping him get dressed for games when a broken collarbone nearly kept him out of the 2023 Stanley Cup final. Advertisement Last year, the Tkachuks finally got to celebrate a championship together. And this year, they did it again. For Brady Tkachuk, it's been a bitter-sweet experience. Obviously, he's extremely happy for his brother's accomplishments. But a part of him also had to be wondering when — or if — his time would ever come. TikTok · Spittin Chiclets TikTok · Spittin Chiclets 11K likes, 49 comments. 'Brady Tkachuk is slowly becoming the most important member of the Calgary Flames.' Forget winning a championship. For the first six years of Brady Tkachuk's NHL career, he didn't even qualify for the playoffs. That drought finally came to an end this season, when the Ottawa Senators faced the Toronto Maple Leafs in the first-round of the playoffs. Tkachuk led the Sens with four goals and seven points, but the Senators ended up losing the hard-fought series in six games. Advertisement It was a small step and a small taste of what Matthew Tkachuk has gone through, having now played in 12 rounds and 67 games in the past three years. 'I mean, definitely. I think it's a longtime grind,' said Brady Tkachuk. 'The team that takes care of themselves, the team that at the end of the day is the hardest on teams and is the hardest to play against ends up winning. They did a great job. I'm just happy for his perseverance through his injury and his ability to show up in big moments.' Tkachuk Reacts To McDavid Losing In Another Stanley Cup Final: 'He's Going To Win One Day — Wherever It Is' Tkachuk Reacts To McDavid Losing In Another Stanley Cup Final: 'He's Going To Win One Day — Wherever It Is' Cue the Connor McDavid free agency rumors. Advertisement When asked if there was something he could learn from his brother's success over the years, Tkachuk said it was Matthew's approach to the playoffs. Two years ago, his brother played through a broken collarbone. This year, Matthew Tkachuk suffered an adductor muscle tear that was so severe that the muscle was practically torn off the bone. And yet, you wouldn't have known it based on his performance. Matthew Tkachuk finished the playoffs with eight goals and 23 points in 23 games. During the final, he had three goals and seven points in six games. 'To be honest with you, just being around him — the only time I've been around him is when we were leaving the house today — I saw him and his demeanour was cool, calm and collected,' said Tkachuk, who earlier this week was named to the U.S. Olympic Team, where he'll once again team up with his brother. 'He knew the series was going to be ended tonight. He played great. And I just learned a lot from the 4 Nations, to be honest with you. He's just a great guy to learn from.' Rats Reign Again: Florida Panthers Repeat As Stanley Cup Champs After Beating Edmonton Oilers Rats Reign Again: Florida Panthers Repeat As Stanley Cup Champs After Beating Edmonton Oilers SUNRISE, FLA. - The Cats came back, the very next year. Advertisement The Panthers, who have now won back-to-back championships and reached the final in each of the past three years, have also set an example for how Brady Tkachuk wants the Senators to play. 'I definitely think there were some things that we tried to emulate,' said Tkachuk. 'They're such a beast of a team. The way they play, I think every team is going to try to model themselves after that, because they play such a hard way and are hard to play against. 'If that's the team that we can be in Ottawa, that would be a pretty good team.' The Wraparound: Can The Panthers Keep Bennett And Marchand? The Wraparound: Can The Panthers Keep Bennett And Marchand? Welcome to the off-season. The Wraparound is here to discuss the NHL and more in rapid-fire topics. Featured Image: © Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images


Toronto Sun
a day ago
- Sport
- Toronto Sun
Stanley Cup is no stranger to damage or rough and tumble adventures
The top prize in hockey has sustained its fair share or dings and dents over the years. Get the latest from Lance Hornby straight to your inbox Florida Panthers' Matthew Tkachuk holds up the Stanley Cup during the team's celebration, Wednesday, June 18, 2025, at the Elbo Room in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The dent on the cup is clearly visible near his left hand. South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP The Florida Panthers are hardly the first team to play rough with the Stanley Cup. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account A team fights that long and that hard to win it, you deserve a chance to celebrate and though it's made of malleable material (a silver-nickel alloy that can usually be re-shaped) its custodians prefer it be returned in one piece. Donated by Lord Stanley of Preston in 1888, some of our favourite tales of when the Cup was runneth over: CUP GETS ITS KICKS The 6,400 kilometres the Dawson City Nuggets travelled from the Yukon to Ottawa to challenge for the title in January of 1905 was Cup-worthy in itself, though the Ottawa Silver Seven blew out the weary travelers in a best-of-three series. After a 23-2 one-sided clincher, the gracious Seven held a banquet for the visitors, with the victorious Bytowners later staggering into the street with their prize. Bets were placed whether one of them could boot the bowl across the Rideau Canal — thankfully frozen over at that time of year — but when it only landed halfway, none of the merrymakers thought to retrieve it. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Next morning, a player was grateful to find it still there. FORGETTING SOMETHING? In 1924, the Cup was abandoned again. The winning Montreal Canadiens went off to owner Leo Dandurand's home, but the car carrying the trophy had a flat tire. After getting out to fix it, they forgot they had put the trophy at the side of the road. HOT STUFF Twice the Cup has been allegedly burned, once when the 1940 champion New York Rangers ceremoniously set fire to the paid-off mortgage of original Madison Square Garden and during one of Toronto's championships in the '60s during a team bonfire party. It has been established that the bowl can hold 14 bottles of beer. But in 1957, Habs legend Maurice 'Rocket' Richard chipped both of his front teeth while taking an enthusiastic swig. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Other players have been at a loss for words when asked to describe the taste of beer, champagne and alloy after it's constantly refilled. CUP-NAPPED A Montreal fan didn't take it well when his team failed to win the Cup in 1962. As it sat in a glass case in the lobby of old Chicago Stadium during the '62 playoffs, won the previous year by the Blackhawks, Ken Kilander deftly opened the door, put the Cup on his shoulder and was marching out when arrested. He later told the judge: 'Your Honour, I was simply bringing the Cup back to Montreal where it belongs.' KID STUFF One of the oldest Cup traditions is a player's young child posed in the bowl — but accidents do happen. When the Leafs won their third straight title in '64, team exec Harold Ballard brought the Cup to Red Kelly's Toronto home as the star split his time as an elected Toronto MP and been called to Ottawa right after beating Detroit. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Conn Kelly, then just a few months old, was positioned in the bowl for a photo and wound up relieving himself, a story Red laughed about for years whenever he saw someone drink from the trophy. In 2008, Kris Draper's infant daughter also soiled herself, but the unfazed forward gave the Cup a thorough cleaning and drank from it the same day. But rest assured of the Cup's purification: Colorado's Sylvain Lefebvre was the first of four players to use it as a baptismal font. POOL PARTY Silver and chlorine might not be a good mix, but more than once, a Cup handoff at a backyard pool was fumbled. It rested at the bottom of Mario Lemieux's pond during a Pittsburgh Penguins party. 'The Cup does not float,' teammate Phil Bourque confirmed. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The first time Florida won it last year, it went to sea on a fishing trip and was used to hold live bait This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. There was new meaning given to the term 'hoisting the Cup' in 1988. Edmonton car mechanic Al Braun looked up from a fender repair job to see a sheepish looking Oilers official holding the badly dented Cup. With the team picture to be taken that day, Braun was asked to put the trophy back into recognizable shape. Braun and two pals put the Cup on a hoist, re-attached the broken base, straightened the bumps and shined it up — for no charge. RANGER DANGER In 1994, the NHL was not pleased to put the Cup on display for the draft in Hartford with a decided tilt to one side, the result of late-night carousing by the champion Rangers. 'It looked like someone sat on it,' complained a Hall of Fame official, who re-possessed it from the team until it could be repaired. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'It was dropped multiple times,' former Ranger-turned-Sportsnet Nick Kypreos co-host recalled to us on Wednesday. 'We got in trouble with the older person from (the league office in Montreal) for letting people grab it by the neck.' Before accepting an invite from the Mayor's office to bring it to his house, the team entrusted Kypreos and goalie Glenn Healy with the Cup for a couple of hours. In a police squad car escort, they brought it to Manhattan's oldest bar, McSorley's Ale House, a movie locale for Gangs of New York . 'The place went absolute bananas,' Kypreos said in his book, Undrafted. 'We barely got through the door before the Cup was taken from our hands and passed through the crowd. Total mayhem.' HOCKEY TALKY SHOW David Letterman procured the Cup one year the New York Islanders won it, walking it out for Late Night 's opening. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. On Jimmy Kimmel Live , the host and sidekick Guillermo Rodriguez went much further by mixing a giant margarita in the bowl — salt, lime and all — with the help of the Los Angeles Kings' Conn Smythe Trophy winner Justin Williams and defenceman Alec Martinez. The foursome then sipped the concoction under the watchful eye of the Hall of Fame's white-gloved Cup custodian Phil Pritchard. Read More AVS CUP NICKED The Cup was damaged on live TV in Colorado's 2022 celly. Players were assembled for the traditional centre-ice photo and called Nicolas Aube-Kubel to come over with it, but in his rush, the forward stumbled and dropped it. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'I guess it's a new record today, five minutes into the presentation,' Pritchard quipped at the time. Traditionalists often are shocked and dismayed by the trophy's treatment but, after all, it is known as 'the people's Cup.' The current Lord Edward Stanley, who visited the Hall of Fame for the first time last year, told Postmedia he has no issue with how the winners party with his great-great-great grandfather's donation to the sport. 'I think it's very cool. I really enjoyed hearing the stories,' he said. 'The love is in the heritage' lhornby@ X: @sunhornby World NHL Toronto & GTA MMA Editorial Cartoons


NBC Sports
a day ago
- Sport
- NBC Sports
Stanley Cup damaged as the Florida Panthers celebrate a second straight championship
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The Stanley Cup is a little banged up, thanks to the Florida Panthers' celebration of back-to-back titles. The bowl of the famous trophy is cracked and the bottom is dented. Not for the first time and likely not the last. The Panthers won their second consecutive championship on home ice, beating Edmonton in six games. The team, following decades of tradition, partied with the Cup into the wee hours and kept the revelry going in Fort Lauderdale well into the afternoon. A spokesperson for the Hockey Hall of Fame said the keepers of the Cup are taking the appropriate steps and plan to have it repaired by the celebration parade. Made of silver and a nickel alloy, the 37-pound Cup is relatively malleable. Damage is nothing new for the 131-year-old silver chalice that has been submerged in pools and the Atlantic Ocean and mishandled by players, coaches and staff for more than a century. Just this decade alone, the Tampa Bay Lightning dropped the Cup during their boat parade in 2021 and the Colorado Avalanche dented it on the ice the night they won the following year.


Fox Sports
a day ago
- Sport
- Fox Sports
Stanley Cup Damaged as Florida Panthers Celebrate a Second Straight Championship
The Stanley Cup is a little banged up, thanks to the Florida Panthers' celebration of back-to-back titles. The bowl of the famous trophy is cracked, and the bottom is dented. Not for the first time and likely not the last. The Panthers won their second consecutive championship on home ice on Tuesday night, beating Edmonton in six games. The team, following decades of tradition, partied with the Cup into the wee hours and kept the revelry going in Fort Lauderdale well into Wednesday afternoon. A spokesperson for the Hockey Hall of Fame said the keepers of the Cup are taking the appropriate steps and plan to have it repaired by the celebration parade on Sunday. Made of silver and a nickel alloy, the 37-pound Cup is relatively malleable. Damage is nothing new for the 131-year-old silver chalice that has been submerged in pools and the Atlantic Ocean and mishandled by players, coaches and staff for more than a century. Just this decade alone, the Tampa Bay Lightning dropped the Cup during their boat parade in 2021 and the Colorado Avalanche dented it on the ice the night they won the following year. Reporting by The Associated Press. Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! FOLLOW Follow your favorites to personalize your FOX Sports experience National Hockey League Florida Panthers recommended Get more from National Hockey League Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more in this topic


NBC News
a day ago
- Sport
- NBC News
The Stanley Cup was damaged during Florida Panthers' celebrating their title
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The Stanley Cup is a little banged up, thanks to the Florida Panthers' celebration of back-to-back titles. The bowl of the famous trophy is cracked and the bottom is dented. Not for the first time and likely not the last. The Panthers won their second consecutive championship on home ice Tuesday night, beating Edmonton in six games. The team, following decades of tradition, partied with the Cup into the wee hours and kept the revelry going in Fort Lauderdale well into Wednesday afternoon. A spokesperson for the Hockey Hall of Fame said the keepers of the Cup are taking the appropriate steps and plan to have it repaired by the celebration parade on Sunday. Made of silver and a nickel alloy, the 37-pound Cup is relatively malleable. Damage is nothing new for the 131-year-old silver chalice that has been submerged in pools and the Atlantic Ocean and mishandled by players, coaches and staff for more than a century. Just this decade alone, the Tampa Bay Lightning dropped the Cup during their boat parade in 2021 and the Colorado Avalanche dented it on the ice the night they won the following year.