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How to Watch Tonight's Stanley Cup Finals Edmonton Oilers vs. Florida Panthers Game 2

How to Watch Tonight's Stanley Cup Finals Edmonton Oilers vs. Florida Panthers Game 2

CNET14 hours ago

The Edmonton Oilers beat the Florida Panthers in Game 1 of the 2025 Stanley Cup finals, 4-3. They'll face off again tonight at 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. PT) at Rodgers Place in Edmonton, Alberta.
The Oilers' Leon Draisaitl scored in overtime with seconds remaining, which helped the team take the lead in the game after trailing behind the Panthers going into the second half. Draisaitl also scored a goal just over one minute into the game. But both teams still have a long way to go to the Stanley Cup.
Game 2 will broadcast on TNT and truTV tonight. Here are the streaming services showing tonight's game and the Stanley Cup finals schedule.
When is Game 2 of the 2025 Stanley Cup Finals?
Game 2 between the Oilers and Panthers of the Stanley Cup Finals will be played at Rodgers Place in Edmonton, Alberta. It will air on June 6 at 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. PT) on TNT and truTV. It's also available to stream on HBO Max, Sling TV, DirectTV and YouTubeTV.
How to stream the Oilers vs. Panthers Finals Game 1
You can watch tonight's game if you have a live streaming subscription. Max will also make each game of the Stanley Cup Finals available at a cheaper price than cable.
Max
You'll need the $17 a month Standard plan or the $21 a month Premium plan to watch the Stanley Cup finals.
Read our Max review.
Details See at Max
The 2025 Stanley Cup Finals schedule
The Oilers and Panthers will play at 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. PT) every game night on TNT and truTV. Here's the 2025 Stanley Cup schedule for the rest of the games.

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Oilers won't dwell on missed chances after close Game 2: ‘What's it going to do?'
Oilers won't dwell on missed chances after close Game 2: ‘What's it going to do?'

New York Times

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Oilers won't dwell on missed chances after close Game 2: ‘What's it going to do?'

EDMONTON – Should-haves, could-haves, an almost or two and some what-ifs. The Edmonton Oilers were so close to winning their second consecutive game at home to start the Stanley Cup Final. That would have put them in control against the Florida Panthers as the series shifts to the other side of the continent. Advertisement Instead, Panthers winger Brad Marchand scored the decisive goal on a breakaway at 8:05 of double overtime of Game 2 to hand the Oilers a 5-4 loss on Friday night and even the matchup. The goal came after Oilers defenseman Mattias Ekholm missed the net on a one-timer from the top of the circle to facilitate the clear-cut chance. It also came after Leon Draisaitl backchecked vigorously to obstruct Marchand's stick, which, despite his best efforts, might have inadvertently contributed to the puck squeaking through goalie Stuart Skinner's legs. 'It's a tough one to swallow, but it's not supposed to be easy,' veteran Oilers winger Corey Perry said. 'They played hard tonight. They got their chances, and they capitalized on that one. That's the difference.' Shots favored Edmonton 46-42 in a game that lasted nearly four and a half periods. It was evenly played, with Natural Stat Trick tracking the high-danger chances at five-on-five at 16-15 in favor the Oilers. Kasperi Kapanen had the Oilers' best chance in extra time. The Oilers would have been in a much more jovial mood if his tip of a Viktor Arvidsson pass had beaten Sergei Bobrovsky in the second overtime, 55 seconds before Marchand's winner. 'The chances missed, you can think about it, dwell on it. But what's it going to do?' Perry said. 'It's not going to do anything for you now.' Perry's goal with 17.8 seconds left in the third period put the Oilers into next-goal-wins territory. He outmuscled the Panthers' Eetu Luostarinen to get to a rebound and beat Bobrovsky to get the latest game-tying goal in Stanley Cup Final history. He also gave the Oilers a chance at their eighth third-period comeback in the playoffs, which could have matched an NHL single-year record. An eighth comeback victory would have equaled the franchise playoff marks set in 1987 and 1991. Advertisement Instead, the Oilers lost their first overtime contest this spring after claiming the first four — on three goals from Draisaitl and another from Kapanen. It was also the first time they've ever lost an extra-time game in the Cup Final. They'd previously won all four of their attempts, with Jari Kurri (1987), Petr Klima (1990), Fernando Pisani (2006) and Draisaitl (Game 1 this year) netting the pivotal goals. 'There's going to be some disappointment,' Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said. 'But we've had the mentality, no matter what happens — bad game, close game, overtime, heartbreaking, easy, whatever it is – we put it behind us and we get ready for the next one. 'You learn in the playoffs, things don't always go your way. Sometimes it works in your favor, sometimes it doesn't.' Friday night provided a contrast to Game 1, when the Oilers overcame a two-goal deficit, tied the score in the third and got a goal from Draisaitl on a power play in the last minute of the first overtime period. 'Each game could've went either way,' Knoblauch said. 'When you win the first one, you're disappointed you don't follow up and win the second one. But we're going there with a split and that's fine with us.' They're fine with it, but they're not thrilled with it. Aside from the missed chances, there were other factors the Oilers will want to address. The power play was 1-for-6 and allowed a Panthers goal when Marchand, the overtime hero, scored on another breakaway, which gave the Panthers a 4-3 lead in the second period. They'll also have to improve when it comes to dealing with pesky Panthers forwards around their net. In Game 1, Sam Bennett fell into Skinner after some contact from defenseman Brett Kulak, and a shot hit him and went in. The Oilers challenged for goaltender interference and were unsuccessful, and the Panthers scored on the subsequent power play. Advertisement In Game 2, Bennett was in Skinner's kitchen again, toppling into him midway through the first period after a nudge from Ekholm. This time, Bennett was penalized as Skinner remained down and needed some attention from Oilers head athletic therapist T.D. Forss. Then, in the second period, longtime nemesis Matthew Tkachuk was guided into Skinner as a point shot from former Oiler Dmitry Kulikov headed toward the net. The puck beat Skinner, and the Oilers opted not to challenge. 'We know they have players that want to drive the net,' Oilers defenseman John Klingberg said. 'It comes to us trying to box out earlier. But we're trying to drive the net, too. 'They're a high-shooting volume team and, if you are that, they're bringing people to the net as well.' There are things to clean up. Things that could have been better. Factors that might have led to a better result. 'It's very close out there. It's not a lot of room and ice out there,' Klingberg said. 'But we battled back, scoring that goal got some momentum, had some good chances in overtime as well as them. It's a bounce here and there.' The Oilers easily could have improved to 14-2 in their last 16 games and taken a stranglehold on this series. Instead, they'll have to take solace in a split. 'At this time of year, you've got to move on,' Draisaitl said. 'There's no time (spent) thinking about it too long. It stings right now, but we have to move on.'

Panthers embrace identity as NHL's ultimate road warriors: ‘Us against the world'
Panthers embrace identity as NHL's ultimate road warriors: ‘Us against the world'

New York Times

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Panthers embrace identity as NHL's ultimate road warriors: ‘Us against the world'

EDMONTON — A couple of years ago at an NHL GMs meeting, Ken Holland brought up a rather interesting idea. He wondered about giving the higher seed the option to open a playoff series on the road. In that scenario, the higher seed would play on the road in Games 1-2 and 6, and be at home in Games 3-4-5 and 7. Advertisement The Florida Panthers would probably support it if the league ever put it up for a vote. They love opening series on the road, and that would guarantee it for them either way, as a top seed or lower seed. How could they not embrace it? Their thrilling 5-4 win in double overtime Friday night at Rogers Place improved their playoff road record to 24-11 since the start of the 2023 playoffs. I mean, seriously. They have been the ultimate playoff road warriors, going 8-4 in '23, 7-4 in '24 and now 9-3 so far in the '25 playoffs, one shy of the all-time NHL record for road wins in a playoff year, handing the Oilers only their second home loss of the playoffs. It's what the Panthers do. 'Our game travels,'' Panthers blueliner Seth Jones said after playing a team-high 34:35 Friday night. 'We don't change our game based off where we're playing. Obviously it's great to play at home in front of our fans and feel that energy and feel that momentum at times. We play the same way in front of them (as on the road). 'We want to play a simple game, (a) north-south game. And just try to make their life difficult.'' They went 3-0 in Tampa in the opening round, 2-2 in Toronto in the second round, including twin 6-1 routs at Scotiabank Arena in Games 5 and 7, and of course went 3-0 in Carolina in the Eastern Conference final. So if you think for a moment that not having home-ice advantage in the Stanley Cup final against the Oilers concerned the defending champs one bit, get real. And if you think they were rattled after coughing up a 3-1 lead in Game 1 and losing, think again. These guys arrived at the rink on Friday fully convinced and confident they would tie the series 1-1. They did, but it sure wasn't without drama. Corey Perry scored with 17.8 seconds left in the third period, forcing overtime, and Rogers Place erupted. It was the kind of stunning moment that could deflate and derail many teams on this stage. Advertisement Not the Panthers. They re-grouped. They found a way in overtime. 'To get this point, you have to be resilient, and be able to bounce back, and both these teams do that,'' double-OT hero Marchand said postgame. And again, they found a way on the road. 'We've been great on the road all playoffs long,'' Conn Smythe Trophy candidate Sam Bennett said postgame. 'We're a confident group on the road. We enjoy being on the road, we enjoy being together, you get to spend more time together, dinners together, in the lounge together all night. And it really just brings our group together. 'And I think that's part of the reason we're having so much success on the road.'' Consider other road warrior facts: • The Panthers are the first team in NHL history to eclipse 50 goals in a single playoff season. • Bennett scored his 12th road goal of these playoffs Friday night, breaking the Stanley Cup playoff record for most road goals in one playoff year, previously held by Mark Scheifele in 2018. • The Panthers have a league-best 41 percent success rate on the road for their power play, 14 for 34 after Friday night with the man advantage, opening the scoring in Game 2 with a power-play goal from Bennett. They love the road. 'We have no choice,'' said Panthers star winger Matthew Tkachuk, pointing to the fact they've started every series on the road in these playoffs as the lower seed. 'We knew we were going to be on the road for the rest of it. We forced ourselves (into) it. … We feel comfortable on the road. It's a simple game. It's a hard game. It's an adversity-type of game, an adversity-type of atmosphere. We've said it a bunch. It's that us against the world mindset, but you really feel it especially being down in a series. Your back's not necessarily against the wall, but you treat it as a big-time must-win in a hostile environment, and I feel like that's when we're at our best. So, hopefully we can use that to our advantage.' Advertisement Of course, Holland's idea wouldn't have helped the Panthers this year, because as Tkachuk pointed out, they've opened all four playoff series on the road already as underdogs. But perhaps it's Florida's opponents during this three-year run that might have taken the option as per Holland's format tweak just to take away Florida's ability to steal early series momentum as they now have against Tampa Bay, Carolina and perhaps against Edmonton after getting the split and heading home for Games 3-4 of the Cup final. What is it about the makeup of the Panthers that makes them so comfortable on the road? I asked Panthers head coach Paul Maurice that question earlier in these playoffs. 'We are not a team that is a heavy match team,'' he said. 'It has a lot to do with it. We don't have to come out of our rhythm of the game when we go on the road. I don't pull lines off the ice. We have a general thing we want with our forward matchup and a more specific D match. That would be true of most teams, I think. 'There is not a big change for us in what we do,'' he continued. 'We haven't, in the past, relied on feeling good to win. We don't have to snap it around. We will talk about our execution twice a year. We don't need it to be pretty or beautiful on the road. Our style suits that kind of game.'' They're a physical, abrasive team that is scared of no one. That game travels well on the road. That's the on-ice part. But as Bennett said earlier, the off-ice part explains just as much, too. The Panthers are as tight-knit as any team in the league. That's actually one of the most difficult challenges of modern-day NHL teams: organically seeing players wanting to hang out as a group. These aren't the old days where team bonding means going on a bender on an off-night. But every story I hear is how the Panthers love hanging out together, and it happens more naturally on the road. That's no small thing. There's a real brotherhood on the defending champs. And I think it also helps explain their road prowess over the last three years. They'll probably need that again to win another Cup. This series is going long. No one's running the table here. If this goes the max, Florida will need to find their ultimate road game come June 20.

Why the NHL's Stanley Cup is the most authentically human trophy in major sports
Why the NHL's Stanley Cup is the most authentically human trophy in major sports

Fast Company

time43 minutes ago

  • Fast Company

Why the NHL's Stanley Cup is the most authentically human trophy in major sports

The NHL's Stanley Cup is arguably the most iconic championship trophy in sports. Legends like Wayne Gretzky have sipped champagne from it. A Kentucky Derby-winning horse once ate oats out of it. Children have been baptized in it. Just as you can bank on the champions hoisting the Cup each June, you can also bet that some crazy stories will follow. But the Stanley Cup's lore is no accident. It's the result of a masterclass in brand-building by the NHL that turned a $50 silver cup into marketing gold. Here's how they did it. Scarcity: There's only one Stanley Cup Unlike other major sports that create new championship trophies each year, there is only one Stanley Cup. Winners don't get to keep it—they borrow it, adding their names before passing it to the next year's champion. The NHL understands the power of scarcity: When something cannot be possessed permanently, its perceived value increases dramatically. This exclusivity creates a unique reverence for the trophy. The Cup becomes an aspirational symbol rather than an achievement to be stashed in a trophy case. Players won't touch the Cup before winning it, often refusing to even look at it during the playoffs. Such superstitions further mythologize the Cup, creating traditions that sports journalists write about each year, adding to the Cup's lore while generating millions of impressions in free media coverage. Physical permanence in a digital age In an era of fleeting digital experiences, the NHL has leaned into the physical permanence of the Stanley Cup. The Cup carries the engraved names of past champions, creating a physical connection to the sport's history. When a ring on the trophy fills up, the NHL doesn't discard it, rather it preserves it in the Hockey Hall of Fame and adds a new band to the bottom on which to etch the next wave of champions. This engraving practice builds legacy and authenticity that all brands covet. The winning team doesn't just get the same trophy as Gretzky. Each player lifts the exact cup Gretzky held. Their names are etched alongside his, along with the hallowed names of Mark Messier, Sidney Crosby, Alex Ovechkin, Gordie Howe, Bobby Orr, Henri Richard, and dozens of other legends immortalized on the Cup. It's a traveling record book. It's the league's ultimate brand symbol and carries the NHL's history everywhere it goes. And go it does—to the farthest flung corners of the earth. The power of storytelling Perhaps the NHL's most genius Stanley Cup marketing move—and the one that lends itself best to the digital age—came in 1995, when it began giving each member of the championship team a personal day with the Cup. This decision created an organic content machine that churns out authentic moments that spread across newspapers, websites, and social platforms without the NHL spending a dime on placement. When Mario Lemieux takes the Cup swimming, Alex Ovechkin snuggles up with it in his bed, or Patrick Maroon's mom chugs beer from the Cup, viral moments are created that connect emotionally with fans in ways traditional marketing simply cannot replicate. While marketing departments globally brainstorm how to create viral campaigns, the Stanley Cup's summer tour provides an incubator in which viral moments inevitably occur. Phil Pritchard, the 'Keeper of the Cup,' travels over 150,000 miles annually shepherding the trophy from beaches to mountaintops with players who win it, fueling a content goldmine that modern brands can only dream about. All publicity is good publicity Over the years, the Cup has traveled the world. It's climbed mountains, been to the Hollywood sign, and visited troops in an Afghan combat zone. But its escapades haven't always been pretty. Remember when Tom Brady got heat for tossing the Lombardi Trophy from one boat to another at the Buccaneers' Super Bowl boat parade in 2021? That's just another day in the life for the Stanley Cup. The Cup has been dropped, dented, lost, and stolen. It's been kicked into a canal and strapped into a roller coaster—and that's just the stuff we know about. In an increasingly damage-control, image-conscious world, most of these mishaps would be PR nightmares for a brand trying to protect the prize that's an enduring symbol of its business. But the NHL leans into these stories, turning misadventures into viral content. Writers recounting tales of the time the Montreal Canadiens left the Cup on the roadside during a tire change in 1924, or when the Cup was stolen from the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1970, are traditions as annalized as hoisting the cup itself. And each year brings an opportunity for a new story to add to the Cup's mythology and expand its cultural footprint. The most precious asset: emotional equity The Stanley Cup was first purchased in 1892 by Lord Frederick Arthur Stanley for $50. It stands 35.25 inches tall and weighs roughly 35 pounds—'until you lift it,' the traditional saying goes. 'Then it weighs nothing.' With leaguewide revenue hitting $6.3 billion in last season—an 8.6% increase over the previous year—the NHL is flourishing. The Stanley Cup is the centerpiece, proving that organic storytelling and emotional connection transform ordinary objects into brand powerhouses and that value comes not from an object's monetary worth but from the stories, traditions, and emotional resonance it carries. The Florida Panthers are defending the Cup this week in a rematch of last year's Final against the Edmonton Oilers. The Oilers took game one 4-3 in overtime, and nobody yet knows whether they will become the first Canadian squad to claim the Cup since the Canadiens topped the Kings in 1993. But one thing is for sure: whichever team earns the right to hoist the trophy will also add another handful of stories to the Stanley Cup's lore.

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