
Prowling Panthers looking to even Stanley Cup Final
Trailing the Stanley Cup Final after losing the opener in overtime, defending champions the Florida Panthers are looking to even things up in Game 2 at the Edmonton Oilers.
Winning on the road has not been a problem for them so far, going 8-3 away from home, the third loss coming on Wednesday on Leon Draisatl's power-play goal following a puck-over-the-glass penalty on Tomas Nosek.
The task of going into a packed, loud arena in Edmonton on Friday night (Saturday AEST) is just another challenge the Panthers are embracing.
"It's that 'us against the world' mindset, but you really feel it especially being down in a series," winger Matthew Tkachuk said.
"Us against the 20-plus guys you're playing against, the 20,000 that are in the rink, the 20,000 that are outside the rink ... it's just us against everybody. That's what makes playing on the road so fun and rewarding when you can get a win."
If they do, it will wrestle home-ice advantage away from the Oilers, with play shifting to Sunrise for Games 3 and 4 next week.
One of the toughest parts of being on the road is trying to defend Draisaitl and Connor McDavid when they're on the ice together.
Coach Kris Knoblauch did that some late in Game 1, and it's difficult for Paul Maurice to counter without the last-line change to control match-ups.
"When they play together, they're obviously very creative players and they'll make everyone around them better," Florida defenceman Seth Jones said.
"They like to look for each other, especially when they play together, little give-and-goes, things like that, and then they're dangerous off the rush, too. Whether they're playing together or apart, it's a five-man unit defending."
The Oilers remain without Zach Hyman, out for the rest of the play-offs after his right wrist was dislocated on a hit during the last round.
The Panthers could be close to full-strength if AJ Greer can return, and Maurice said fourth-liner Jonah Gadjovich is good to go after missing part of Game 1.

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Seth Jones scored into a wide-open net after some spectacular tic-tac-toe passing, and fellow defenceman Dmitry Kulikov tied it with a shot through traffic that Stuart Skinner almost certainly didn't see. Kulikov's goal came after Florida controlled play for several minutes in the second, hemming Edmonton in their zone shift after shift and piling up a 34-13 advantage in shot attempts during the period. Marchand's OT goal was his 10th career goal in the final to lead all active players. Game 3 is on Monday night as the teams traverse the continent and play shifts to Sunrise. The Panthers wrested home-ice advantage away from the Oilers by splitting the first two, rebounding from a Game 1 overtime loss and asserting they won't go quietly against Draisaitl and Connor McDavid looking like they'll do everything in their power to hoist the Cup for the first time. Of course, those stars had their moments. 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Each of the first two games this final have gone to overtime, for the first time since 2014 and just the sixth in NHL history. Much like last year and the playoff run to this point, Sergei Bobrovsky was dialled in when he was needed the most, making some unreal saves while stopping 42 of the 46 shots he faced. His teammates provided the necessary goal support. Along with Marchand, Sam Bennett scored his postseason-leading 13th goal and NHL record 12th on the road. Seth Jones scored into a wide-open net after some spectacular tic-tac-toe passing, and fellow defenceman Dmitry Kulikov tied it with a shot through traffic that Stuart Skinner almost certainly didn't see. Kulikov's goal came after Florida controlled play for several minutes in the second, hemming Edmonton in their zone shift after shift and piling up a 34-13 advantage in shot attempts during the period. Marchand's OT goal was his 10th career goal in the final to lead all active players. Game 3 is on Monday night as the teams traverse the continent and play shifts to Sunrise. The Panthers wrested home-ice advantage away from the Oilers by splitting the first two, rebounding from a Game 1 overtime loss and asserting they won't go quietly against Draisaitl and Connor McDavid looking like they'll do everything in their power to hoist the Cup for the first time. Of course, those stars had their moments. They assisted on Evan Bouchard's goal when coach Kris Knoblauch put them on the ice together, and McDavid stickhandled through multiple defenders in highlight-reel fashion to set up Draisaitl scoring on the power play. There were a lot of those - 10 in total - after officials whistled 14 penalties, including three in the first four minutes. Each team had a few calls they were not happy with, though most of that evened out over the course of the game.