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Stanley Cup Final: Panthers, Oilers break out into major brawl amid Florida's 6-1 win

Stanley Cup Final: Panthers, Oilers break out into major brawl amid Florida's 6-1 win

Yahoo19 hours ago

The Florida Panthers took a 2-1 series lead with a 6-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday night.
However, the blowout result came with some additional entertainment halfway through the third period when a major brawl broke out between the two teams involving all 10 players on the ice.
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The melee appeared to begin with 9:33 remaining in the third period when Oilers center Trent Frederic cross-checked the Panthers' Sam Bennett, breaking his stick in the process. Florida's A.J. Greer and Edmonton's Mattias Ekholm then mixed it up, followed by the Panthers' Nate Schmidt and Oilers' Connor Brown sparring. Defensemen Dmitry Kulikov and left winger Viktor Arvidsson also joined in fisticuffs.
However, the true standouts of this battle were Panthers winger Jonah Gadjovich and Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse. Neither of these combatants went to the ice as they kept hold of the other's neck and sweater, locked in a violent dance, looking for an opening to land a punch.
Plenty of overhands and uppercuts were landed by each player as the Panthers fans cheered. Yet rather than try to separate Gadjovich and Nurse, officials let the fighters tire each other out until they couldn't manage any more punches.
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After tensions settled and play resumed with a 5-on-4 Florida power play, Gadjovich, Nurse, Greer, Bennett, Ekholm and Frederic were each given 10-minute misconduct penalties, removing them from the remainder of the game. Edmonton's Evander Kane was also issued a 10-minute misconduct for slashing Carter Verhaeghe — after he was slashed by the Oilers' Evan Bouchard.
Yet the fighting wasn't finished. Edmonton's John Klingberg and Florida's Matthew Tkachuk went at it from there, with Jake Walman joining in to help his Oilers teammate. That resulted in Walman drawing roughing and unsportsmanlike conduct penalties, which ended his night and gave Florida a 5-on-3 power play. But not before the Oilers' Kasperi Kapanen and Panthers' Eetu Luostarinen also mixed it up.
The Panthers scored on the 5-on-3 to boost their lead to 6-1.
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If the Oilers were hoping to take out some frustrations on Florida and try to intimidate them for the remainder of the series, that doesn't appear to have worked at all. Edmonton also tried to start a fight at the end of the first period with the Panthers already ahead 2-0.
Again, that tactic accomplished nothing for the Oilers. Trying to out-tough the Panthers failed and made Edmonton looked outmatched.
Brad Marchand, Sam Reinhart, Aaron Ekblad, Evan Rodrigues, Verhaeghe and Bennett scored for Florida. On the Oilers' side, Corey Perry scored the lone goal.
Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final is scheduled for Thursday at 8 p.m. ET. Will there be more fisticuffs or did both teams get all of that fighting out of their systems? Perhaps the Oilers will also remember that they're supposed to be playing for a championship.

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‘A UFC fight': Tensions rise in Stanley Cup Final as the Panthers get the upper hand on the Oilers
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Associated Press FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Things got chippy in the Stanley Cup Final late in Game 3 when the Florida Panthers were well on their way to blowing out the Edmonton Oilers. Brawls ensued, Darnell Nurse and Jonah Gadjovich dropped the gloves, and eight guys got sent to the showers early with misconduct penalties. 'When we get into garbage time, those things happen, and I don't mind when those things happen,' Oilers captain Connor McDavid said. 'It's what good teams do: fight your way out of the rink. I don't mind that in garbage time.' Long before garbage time, Florida took it to Edmonton, with the defending champions dictating their style of play and knocking their opponents off kilter to take a 2-1 series lead with a 6-1 laugher. If more of that continues in Game 4 on Thursday night, it's advantage Panthers because they thrive on making other teams feel uncomfortable. 'We played our game, our style, stuck up for each other when we needed to,' Panthers winger Matthew Tkachuk said. 'If you have to take a punch, take a punch. If you have to take a cross-check, take a cross-check — a spear, a slash, whatever the case is, you've got to take it." It should not be surprising that tensions boiled over given the lopsided score in the 10th game in the Cup final between these two teams over the past year. The Oilers and Panthers have grown a healthy distaste for each other with all that familiarity. With that comes plenty of hits, shoves and jabs that lead to slashes, punches and gear strewn all over the ice. The 140 combined penalty minutes in Game 3 were the most in a final since Game 4 between Montreal and Calgary in 1986. 'The game's over with 11 minutes left,' Oilers star Leon Draisaitl said Tuesday after practice. 'Then all hell breaks loose. It's a UFC fight.' The penalties that mattered to the result came early. The Oilers were not shy about criticizing the officiating and the Panthers for allegedly influencing it. Goaltender Stuart Skinner said, 'Some guys are flaking and going down trying to cause penalties," and Evander Kane questioned some of the calls. "There seems to be a little bit more attention on our group," said Kane, who took two minor penalties in the first period alone. 'They seem to get away with it more than we do. It's tough to find the line." Toeing that line is what the Panthers do best, and it is a recipe that has them in the final for a third consecutive year under coach Paul Maurice, who credited Tkachuk for having 'a little bit more impact on the tenacity of the team than the guy who wears a suit behind the bench and never takes a shift.' Florida's roster is full of truculence with talent to match. Sam Bennett delivered a big, open-ice hit that led to his breakaway and playoff-leading 14th goal, and finishing checks on John Klingberg has hampered the veteran defenseman's play in the series compared to the first three rounds. 'That's part of their DNA, that's what they do,' Draisaitl said. 'It's an emotional time. It's two teams that want to win, two teams of doing it their own way, but I don't think anybody is going crazy here. They're good at what they do.' Maurice did not buy into the idea that Game 3 was the Panthers showing what they can do at their best. The opener went to overtime and Florida needed double OT to win Game 2. 'I think the first two games are indicative of what Game 4 is going to look like," Maurice said. "We're not going to look at (Game 3) and say, 'That's the way it should look if we play our game.'" The Oilers certainly look at it as the opposite, discombobulated and nothing resembling the group that had gone 12-2 since a couple of losses to open the first round. They've dropped two in a row for the first time since. 'We just got to play our game,' Nurse said. 'We got guys that can do all that kind of stuff. But is that our game? So I think we just got to stick to play the way that we play. We're such a good hockey team when we just play hockey, and we just got to do that.' ___ AP NHL playoffs: and recommended

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