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Panthers' Aleksander Barkov wakes up neighbors at 5 a.m. with raucous Stanley Cup celebration

Panthers' Aleksander Barkov wakes up neighbors at 5 a.m. with raucous Stanley Cup celebration

New York Post5 days ago

Aleksander Barkov gave his Florida neighbors a surprise wake-up call after winning the Stanley Cup.
The Panthers' captain showed Lord Stanley's Cup to his neighbors around 5 a.m. Wednesday morning, as Ring camera footage from Barkov's housing development captured him going house to house to show off his team's prized possession.
The footage posted to social media showed Barkov alongside several teammates walking up to a neighbor with the Cup on hand.
'I have the ring camera of Barkov knocking on my door,' neighbor Roger Rojas — @Rogerrojas_ — posted to X.
Panthers general manager Bill Zito said on the 'Pat McAfee Show' that Barkov had returned home momentarily from their rendezvous before continuing their big night on the town winning their second straight title, both against the Oilers.
'Apparently, he went home at like five in the morning to change and clean up before they kept going,' Zito said on the show Wednesday. 'And walked around his neighborhood and banged on everyone's front door. 'Hey, you want coffee with the Cup?''
3 Florida Panthers celebrate with the Stanley Cup by waking up neighbors to show it off.
X, @Rogerrojas_
The Cup isn't just for having a bit of champagne or a drink, but each player and coach gets a day with it before the start of the next season.
And the Panthers already dented the hardware in their raucous celebrations.
3 Barkov knocks on a neighbor's door.
X, @Rogerrojas_
The back-to-back Stanley Cup winners smashed the Oilers by the end of the series, including a 5-1 win in the decisive Game 6.
While Sam Bennett won the Conn Smythe Trophy for postseason MVP, Barkov may have spurred the turnaround that helped the Panthers win it all.
3 The Florida Panthers celebrate with the Stanley Cup.
AP
Barkov ended the series on an impressive streak, tallying five assists in the last three games.
Florida will again be formidable next season, as Barkov returns alongside goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky and forwards Sam Reinhart and Matthew Tkachuk as their core remains intact.

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2025 NFL Draft demonstrated growth of Miami Palmetto's football program
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2025 NFL Draft demonstrated growth of Miami Palmetto's football program

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Which NHL teams need upgrades at wing? Ranking all 32 by current quality
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New York Times

timean hour ago

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Which NHL teams need upgrades at wing? Ranking all 32 by current quality

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Current quality: 93rd percentile Looking for: None There are two primary reasons that the Blues shopping Jordan Kyrou, unlikely as it may be after the best all-around season of his career, can't be immediately dismissed. The first: His no-movement clause kicks in on July 1, so if Doug Armstrong (entering his last season as Blues GM) would ever want to move him, the time would be now. The second: He's the Blues' best winger, but they have plenty of talent behind him. Pavel Buchnevich remains a solid first-liner. Holloway looked like a two-way star before his season ended in April. Jimmy Snuggerud, at 21, scored twice in his first seven NHL games after a great career at Minnesota. Zack Bolduc took off in his first full NHL season, scoring 19 goals in 56 games after Jim Montgomery took over as coach. Assuming Kyrou stays atop the heap, St. Louis projects to have one of the very best groups in the NHL. 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Current quality: 55th percentile Looking for: Top-line winger, middle-six winger One of the Senators' primary concerns should be finding a long(ish)-term fit with Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stützle on the top line. Is Fabian Zetterlund the guy? The three-year, $4.275 AAV contract he just signed suggests he could get a chance. Five points in 26 games after arriving via trade with San Jose is rough, but Zetterlund has gotten off to slow starts elsewhere. Ottawa also needs a middle-six capable left winger to play with Drake Batherson. David Perron, at this stage of his career, isn't the guy, and Ridly Greig projects as a bottom-sixer. Claude Giroux, obviously, would add something to the entire mix, but his return isn't guaranteed. The Sens have talent. They've also got needs. Current quality: 54th percentile Looking for: Top-line winger Filip Forsberg is on an island at the top of the lineup. Not only does Nashville not have a top-line center for Forsberg to play with, the Predators also don't have a top-line-caliber winger either. Neither Steven Stamkos or Jonathan Marchessault will likely fit that bill next season. That trio is solid enough, and the Predators have decent bottom-six depth. But the team's lack of high-end talent is glaring. Forsberg can't do it alone. Current quality: 53rd percentile Looking for: Top-six winger The Jets were powered last season in part by a group of productive and/or useful wingers, and most are returning to the fold. Leading the way are Kyle Connor, an elite sniper and legit first-liner, and Gabe Vilardi, projected to add more value than players like Kevin Fiala and Martin Necas. That makes the Jets' task for the summer easy to understand but a little more difficult to execute: they need to either re-sign Nikolaj Ehlers or replace him. Advertisement Winnipeg's center depth chart, even with Jonathan Toews, makes that even more crucial — their offense needs to come from somewhere. Ehlers, a reliable 20-goal scorer and play-driver on the top six, would be one of the best UFAs to hit the market on July 1. The Athletic's Murat Ates reported Friday that the expectation is for Ehlers to find a fit elsewhere, but the door back to Winnipeg is not shut. Current quality: 48th percentile Looking for: High-end winger, depth winger The Capitals have the NHL's all-time leading goal-scorer on their first line. That certainly still counts for something, but Alex Ovechkin's overall game has dipped, leaving them with a fairly glaring hole at the top of their winger group. They've got plenty of valuable players there, but not the sort of truly high-end pieces you'd expect from a legit contender, especially if Connor McMichael shifts to center. A repeat performance from Tom Wilson, though, could help solve that problem. Wilson, two years removed from ACL surgery, is coming off the best season of his career (65 points in 81 games). More of that would help raise Washington's offensive ceiling. Washington could also use another depth winger, especially if Andrew Mangiapane signs elsewhere. Current quality: 53rd percentile Looking for: High-end winger, top-nine winger Philadelphia's only real need here is to subtract Nicolas Deslauriers, who is probably no longer NHL-caliber, and find someone to solidify the top nine. As is, the Flyers actually have a pretty strong stable of wingers, an organizational strength led by Matvei Michkov and Travis Konecny. But even Tyson Foerster and Owen Tippett look like solid top-six guys, too. As good as it is, there's still the question of whether it's enough at the top. Konecny and Michkov are great players, but they're not quite elite. Konecny's play-driving metrics have taken a step back, while Michkov's defensive game is still a work in progress. Advertisement The skill is there for those two to be the bedrock of Philadelphia's forward group, but the team does still need both to take another step forward next season and beyond. Current quality: 48th percentile Looking for: Top-six wingers It's a bit odd that the Oilers decided to invest so much money and term into Trent Frederic, especially as the team's first priority this offseason. He's a guy who is probably going to be a decent third-liner at best — and a fourth-liner at worst if he can't recover from an ankle injury. That's not a need that Edmonton had. The Oilers need more wingers for Leon Draisaitl, not Adam Henrique. Two of them, to be frank. Viktor Arvidsson and Jeff Skinner were supposed to be that, and neither worked as expected. Evander Kane feels iffy in that role, and that's if they even decide to keep him. All three (with Skinner likely walking as a UFA) are third-line caliber. It would be a lot more helpful if Draisaitl had some players to actually work with and not more third-line grinders. Especially if they cost $4 million for the next eight years. Given Edmonton's cap crunch, it's hard to see how the team will fill those holes. Current quality: 39th percentile Looking for: Top-six winger, top-nine winger For posterity's sake, adding a player such as Mitch Marner — not necessarily him, just one identical to him — would take Vegas' winger group to the cusp of the top five. That's worth noting. In the meantime, for a contender, we're talking about a fairly thin group. Mark Stone remains a legit first-liner, Pavel Dorofeyev's 35-goal breakout was a necessary bit of good fortune and Ivan Barbashev works as a running mate for Jack Eichel, but the Golden Knights will need to add if they want to stay at the top of the Western Conference conversation. Advertisement Current quality: 36th percentile Looking for: Top six-winger, top-nine winger Jesper Bratt and Timo Meier are both top-line caliber. Each of them stepped up from a production standpoint after Jack Hughes' injury, and they give New Jersey a strong foundation along the top six. Still, another piece or two seems like a necessity. Stefen Noesen and Dawson Mercer are useful enough (though the latter is coming off a brutal 2024-25) but playing both on the top six isn't ideal. Also, Ondrej Palat is carrying a fourth-line projection into the season. For a 34-year-old with a $6 million AAV through 2027, that's a bad sign. Another is the continued presence of Kurtis MacDermid. The Devils are a lot closer to average with just an average fourth-liner in his place. Current quality: 38th percentile Looking for: Top-six winger, top-nine winger Even with Mika Zibanejad shifting to wing, the Rangers are still one top-six winger short of what's needed to get back to the playoffs. It's possible Zibanejad bounces back, Alexis Lafrenière finally proves himself and Will Cuylle takes a step forward, but it would be better to add to that rather than hope for it. As-is, the team's top six needs some help. On top of that, it's the same usual problem for the Rangers: the bottom six also needs some help. Depth has long been a struggle for the Rangers as the team continues to trot out ineffective players lower in the lineup. It's possible some internal pieces can shore things up, but it's imperative that the Rangers not enter the season with two fourth lines. Again. Current quality: 37th percentile Looking for: Top-line wingers You can basically cut and paste what we said about Seattle's situation at center. It'd all make more sense if you shifted everyone down a line. These aren't necessarily ineffective players we're talking about — they're overextended players. And having that many guys in over their heads is not any sort of recipe for success. Advertisement Mason Marchment, acquired from Dallas, gives them a solid second-line option and should add some punch down the lineup. Overall, though, moving out of mediocrity takes a certain amount of scoring, and it's still too difficult to find that in the Kraken lineup. Current quality: 36th percentile Looking for: High-end winger, top-six winger The Canadiens have the pieces necessary. Now we wait. Between Cole Caufield, Juraj Slafkovsky and Ivan Demidov, Montreal looks to have a promising future on the wing. But that still means realizing potential, and for now the trio is lacking next to playoff teams with a longer resume. Ideally, all three of those wingers turn into top-line talents to give Montreal the kind of advantage contenders enjoy. But even just two would suffice as long as one becomes a true star. Until that happens, the Canadiens will likely still struggle a bit. On top of that, it would also be helpful for Montreal to add one more piece to the top six to support that group. Patrik Laine is fine, but is probably closer to a sheltered scorer on a contender. A solid play-driver would really help round things out and push Montreal closer to the top of this list. Current quality: 33rd percentile Looking for: Top-six wingers, top-nine winger The Red Wings are pretty set at the top of the lineup with Lucas Raymond and Alex DeBrincat, both true top-line talents. Raymond especially took a big step last season and looks like the kind of star a team needs to make some noise in the playoffs. It's after those two where there are concerns. Detroit is an entire second line short on wingers and arguably one top-nine winger short on top of that. Even if Vladimir Tarasenko and Michael Rasmussen were the team's third-line options, the team would still probably want an upgrade on that. Right now, they're in the team's top six. Detroit badly needs an upgrade here. Will it come internally as some prospects graduate, or will the Red Wings need to dip into free agency once again to solve their problems? Current quality: 25th percentile Looking for: Top-line winger, top-six winger, top-nine winger Without Mitch Marner, the Maple Leafs have only half of a top nine. William Nylander is a star player, Matthew Knies is a low-end first-line talent and Bobby McMann is a solid third-line winger. Everyone else on the roster does not fill well into the top nine. Maybe Nick Robertson can finally become that and maybe Easton Cowan can surprise as a rookie. But the larger likelihood is that the Leafs need a lot of help on the wing with one of everything. Advertisement Marner's likely departure arguably makes that a blessing in disguise. Because even with Marner, the Leafs would not have a complete top nine. They'd still be missing a top-six and top-nine winger, and Marner's new salary would make it very difficult to fill those holes. With just Marner, the Leafs would only move up to the 72nd percentile on this list (though the presence of Ryan Reaves is partly to blame for that as well). As long as the Leafs do it right, there's a path to be better by being deeper. With the prices going around for free agents, however, that may be much easier said than done. Current quality: 27th percentile Looking for: Top-line winger, top-nine wingers For the Bruins, everything starts with David Pastrnak. Among wingers, only Kucherov and Kaprizov are projected to add more value to their teams than him (plus-19.6), and fourth place isn't particularly close. He's a superstar and a franchise guy. Unfortunately for Boston, as far as high-end pieces are concerned, everything ends with Pastrnak, too. So it goes when you decide to send out Brad Marchand. If the Bruins want to move back up the table, they're going to have to find some way to replace a chunk of his contributions. Beyond that, Morgan Geekie and Pavel Zacha are top-nine players. Then things get dodgy in a hurry. Generally, the Bruins could use some more capable third-liners, or some in-house options establishing themselves as legit options. If none of that happens, they could be in for another long season. Current quality: 35th percentile Looking for: High-end winger, top-line winger The Flames, like Seattle, basically need an entire top line. We talked about it in the center rankings, and we're talking about it again. Jonathan Huberdeau, Matthew Coronato, Blake Coleman and Connor Zary are all useful players, but none of them project as anywhere close to a first-liner. Huberdeau comes closest, but even he'd slot best as a No. 3 option — think Mats Zucarello. Without a relatively major addition to the forward group (or three), Calgary will almost certainly struggle to stay in the wild-card conversation. Advertisement Current quality: 25th percentile Looking for: High-end winger, top-six wingers The Penguins' problems at wing are twofold. Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell are still plenty solid, and Rakell is coming off the best season of his career. Neither are true first-liners, though. Contenders, or even fringe playoff teams, have more talent at the top of their lineup. The bigger issue, though, is that Pittsburgh has nothing in the way of proven talent behind them. Tommy Novak is as close as they've got, and in terms of projected value, he's a fourth-liner. The Penguins have high hopes for prospects Rutger McGroary and Ville Koivunen, but neither has any sort of track record. It might be time for Pittsburgh to figure out what they can do. For that matter, it might be time to shop Rust and Rakell, too. Current quality: 23rd percentile Looking for: Top-line wingers What you're about to see from the next group of teams is a similar problem: They have a good enough group of bottom-nine wingers, but they don't have legit stars to place them in the appropriate role. The Canucks are at the top of that pecking order, mainly due to the strength of Conor Garland and Jake DeBrusk, both stronger options than the top wingers from the Kraken, Islanders, Ducks and Blackhawks. That being the company the Canucks share, though, is a bad omen. While part of that is the team likely losing Brock Boeser to free agency, he's closer to Garland and DeBrusk anyway than to what the Canucks actually need. That he's asking to be paid like a star only makes it an easier decision to say no, even if it means some real short-term pain on the flanks. Current quality: 15th percentile Looking for: Top-line wingers The best teams are generally built down the middle, making it logical to shift Mathew Barzal back there forming a strong 1-2 punch with Bo Horvat. That decision, though, would also leave the Islanders fairly barren on the wings. Anders Lee and Kyle Palmieri are good second-liners, while Simon Holmstrom and Maxim Tsyplakov work in the top nine. But it's clear the team needs two guys above that group to make the team's forward group competitive. As it currently stands, everyone is over-slotted. Advertisement Current quality: 14th percentile Looking for: Top-line wingers Anaheim deserves some amount of credit for convincing Chris Kreider to join up. Even if he doesn't bounce all the way back to his pre-2024 form, he'll add production and professionalism to a young core. The issue, though, is that the Ducks are still way short on top-line talent. Cutter Gauthier clearly has potential, but even with strides from him, more decent second-line play from Troy Terry and whatever Kreider can bring, the Ducks' problem won't change. There are too many low-ceiling players in their group to predict any sort of major move up the standings. Current quality: 8th percentile Looking for: Top-line wingers It's nice that Ryan Donato decided to re-sign with the Blackhawks, because otherwise the team would've had only one actual top-six winger: Teuvo Teräväinen. Even then, both players are merely on the cusp. Chicago is lacking a serious amount of high-end talent and fall two top-line wingers short here. Without them, players such as Tyler Bertuzzi and Ilya Mikheyev will likely be slotted one spot too high on the depth chart. This team needs a lot of help. Current quality: 1st percentile Looking for: Top-line wingers, top-nine wingers There's a reason San Jose seems destined to take Michael Misa with the No. 2 pick. For all their talent at center (Macklin Celebrini, presumably Will Smith) and the presence of two solid second-line wingers in William Eklund (who still has room for growth) and Tyler Toffoli, the top-nine depth chart is ugly. Adding a prime prospect such as Misa would help solve the problem, at least in the long term. That part of Mike Grier's plan is coming to fruition. In the meantime, San Jose could meaningfully improve simply by adding some stock third-liners to the mix. That's the benefit of starting from the bottom. (Top photo of Clayton Keller and Matt Boldy: Matt Krohn / Imagn Images)

Panthers QB Bryce Young learned a hard lesson about NFL fandom last season
Panthers QB Bryce Young learned a hard lesson about NFL fandom last season

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Panthers QB Bryce Young learned a hard lesson about NFL fandom last season

NFL fandom knows no bounds, even when it comes to friends and family. Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young learned that lesson during the 2024 season, and detailed his surreal experience at this past weekend's Fanatics Fest. While sharing a panel with fellow passers Peyton and Eli Manning, CJ Stroud and Caleb Williams, Young told the tale of when he played against his family's beloved Philadelphia Eagles in Week 14 . . . Young, who was born in nearby Wynnewood, Pa., nearly marched his Panthers to an upset of the host Eagles back in December. In fact, had wide receiver Xavier Legette not dropped the would-be go-ahead 32-yard touchdown pass from Young in the final minute of the fourth quarter, then Carolina probably would've pulled off the most stunning result of the entire campaign. Philly, however, held on for a tight 22-16 win—much to the delight of many of the Youngs on that day who were not named "Bryce." Follow @ThePanthersWire on Twitter/X for more Panthers content.

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