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Leon Draisaitl scores in overtime, Oilers beat the Panthers in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final

Leon Draisaitl scores in overtime, Oilers beat the Panthers in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final

Boston Globea day ago

Edmonton's Kris Knoblauch unsuccessfully challenged for goaltender interference, with the NHL's situation room ruling that his own player, Jake Walman, tripped Bennett into Skinner. The resulting penalty paved the way for Florida's Brad Marchand to score the go-ahead goal on the power play.
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Bennett scoring his second of the night early in the second period put the Panthers up 3-1. They entered 31-0 over the past three playoffs since coach Paul Maurice took over when leading at the first or second intermission.
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GAME 1 BELONGS TO THE OILERS 🗣️🗣️🗣️
Leon Draisaitl scores the Subway Canada OT winner to give the Oilers the 1-0 series lead in the
— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet)
With Connor McDavid leading the way, the Oilers rallied. Fourth-liner Viktor Arvidsson brought the crowd back to life early in the second, and fellow Swede Mattias Ekholm — playing just his second game back from an extended injury absence — tied it with 13:27 remaining in regulation off a perfect pass from McDavid.
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At the other end, Skinner made a handful of saves that were vital to keeping the Panthers from extending their lead or tying it late in the third. Florida counterpart Sergei Bobrovsky did the same, in between derisive chants of 'Sergei! Sergei!' that followed goals he allowed.
Skinner was greeted with friendlier chants of 'Stuuuu' after saves, including one in the first minute of overtime on a quality scoring chance. Bobrovsky stone-cold robbed Trent Frederic nine minutes in but eventually cracked.
Game 2 is Friday night in Edmonton before the series shifts to Sunrise, Fla., for Games 3 and 4.

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Storylines to follow during June's second huge visit weekend
Storylines to follow during June's second huge visit weekend

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Storylines to follow during June's second huge visit weekend

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Advertisement Five-star safety Jireh Edwards was at Auburn last weekend but the chatter is that Alabama is out front in his recruitment. Former USC four-star linebacker commit Xavier Griffin, an Alabama legacy, will also be there. He's coming off a phenomenal Ohio State trip but the Crimson Tide have the edge there, too. Four-star QB Matt Ponatoski, who wants to play baseball and football in college, is visiting as Alabama, Oregon and others are involved. SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH ALABAMA FANS AT CAN AUBURN SHOCK WITH FIVE-STAR QB? Auburn has another big weekend as coach Hugh Freeze has the recruiting train rolling strong on The Plains but the biggest outcome of this entire week could be the Tigers making a serious move with 2027 five-star quarterback Elijah Haven. Advertisement The Baton Rouge (La.) Dunham standout made his first visit to Auburn this week and already said he plans to be back because he loves coach Freeze and position coach Kent Austin. LSU is considered the front-runner and could be tough to beat but Haven has some thinking to do now. SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH LSU FANS AT FLIP WATCH AND MORE AT FLORIDA Auburn defensive end commit Hezekiah Harris is coming to Gainesville as he's more seriously looking at some others. Michigan defensive back pledge Brody Jennings and Florida State receiver commit Darryon Williams will be there, too. On top of some major flip candidates, Florida will also have four-star edge rusher Jake Kreul there and while Oklahoma might have the edge and Ohio State blew him away last weekend, the Gators are making a serious move for him. High three-star offensive lineman Chancellor Campbell is coming, too, as Florida and Georgia are engaged in a major battle. Five-star receiver Cederian Morgan is expected and while Florida is a long shot, it gets its chance this weekend. Advertisement SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH FLORIDA FANS AT 1ST AND TEN FLORIDA DL WATCH AT GEORGIA Vodney Cleveland. Dre Quinn. Kendall Guervil. PJ Dean. Ebenezer Ewetade. It's a loaded defensive line list coming to Athens this weekend and it wouldn't be a shock at all to see coach Kirby Smart and his staff close on some of those big names down the stretch. There are some others that Georgia has some work on. Four-star running back Savion Hiter is expected as Ohio State, Tennessee and others are involved there. Four-star, long, athletic defensive back Tamarion Watkins is also expected in Athens as South Carolina could have the edge there. Smart is the best recruiter in college football, though, so another big weekend awaits in Athens. Advertisement SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH GEORGIA FANS AT FAHEY GOES TO BLOOMINGTON One of the last uncommitted quarterbacks in the class is Luke Fahey as Stanford and Indiana are the two front-runners pending a visit to Ohio State later this month. 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How Edmonton Oilers' depth is already a factor in Stanley Cup Final
How Edmonton Oilers' depth is already a factor in Stanley Cup Final

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

How Edmonton Oilers' depth is already a factor in Stanley Cup Final

As the Edmonton Oilers entered the Stanley Cup Final against the Florida Panthers this week, one important piece to the team's formidable attack was unavailable. Zach Hyman is the team's top right winger. He's a goal scorer, aggressive checker, owns the high-danger chance column annually and hits anything that moves. It's not hyperbole to suggest Hyman is the best NHL free-agent signing in Oilers team history. How would the organization survive without him? Well, in Game 1 against the Panthers, the right wingers performed well. All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick Kasperi Kapanen was claimed on waivers from the St. Louis Blues in November and did enough to stay on the roster as a part-time solution over the rest of the season. In the first game of the final, coach Kris Knoblauch played Kapanen with centres Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (8:15, Evander Kane on the other wing) and Leon Draisaitl (6:31, again with Kane on left wing and a 1-0 goal edge). Advertisement Kapanen gives Knoblauch a speedy winger with offensive flair. With the game on the line on Wednesday, Kapanen split the seam between Florida defencemen and almost scored. He was also in on two goals (both assists) in Game 1. In the games since Hyman left the lineup, Kapanen has been useful at five-on-five, and is chipping in more offence playing higher in the lineup: All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick These are small samples (Hyman played all but the last two Oilers playoff games), but Kapanen has received a significant jump in playing time. His four-minute increase in five-on-five represents about the same increase as Corey Perry, and more of a push than Viktor Arvidsson (about two additional minutes). Connor Brown saw minutes increase from 12:26 to 17:01, although he has played in just one of the two games since Hyman's injury. Arvidsson was signed last summer to play on Draisaitl's line, but did not fit the role. He entered the postseason as a fringe player in need of an opportunity. Arvidsson scored an important goal in Game 1 against the Panthers. Relegated to a part-time role, even when he's in the lineup, the goal may spark opportunity and a move up the depth chart. Both men have been roster afterthoughts at times this season. Their performance in Game 1 of the final reflects a terrific depth chart for the organization this spring. It also shows the kind of depth required to win a championship. As the depth right wingers emerge as solutions to the issue of Hyman's absence, the defensive alignment is returning to normal due to the return of stalwart veteran Mattias Ekholm. The coaching staff relied on, and received, strong work from depth defenders Ty Emberson (nine games), Troy Stecher (six games) and Josh Brown (one game) leading up to the return of Ekholm. In the two games since the Oilers have been running the optimal pairings, results have been mixed: All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick In a small sample (two games), there are no warning signs that are actionable. Overall, Edmonton is winning the five-on-five share 7-4 in the last two games; that's a fantastic result against two elite teams. There is danger here, though, both at home and on the road in Sunrise, Fla. Advertisement The Darnell Nurse and Brett Kulak tandem had a difficult night against the Panthers. In 20 minutes together at five-on-five, Florida outshot Edmonton 10-4, won the Corsi (31-14), Fenwick (23-6) and expected goal (87 percent) metrics. Knoblauch was able to feed the Aleksander Barkov line a steady diet of the Evan Bouchard pairing. The Oilers won the day in the head-to-head matchup, scoring 1-0 goals with a 65 percent expected share. On the road, Florida coach Paul Maurice will have the last change, and the Nurse-Kulak tandem could be the target. Both men are veterans, but are left-handed defenders, making outlet passes on the backhand the only option at times. Those backhand passes could result in turnovers and Florida goals. The suffocating Panthers forecheck took some advantage of it in Game 4, but Barkov versus Nurse head-to-head accounted for just 36 percent of the total time on ice. Knoblauch deployed the Bouchard pairing for 54 percent of the Barkov minutes, fading the Nurse and Kulak and Jake Walman and John Klingberg duos. Maurice is likely to alter the playing time his top line sees against Ekholm-Bouchard. The depth player who has enjoyed success with Nurse is Stecher. During the postseason, the two men have combined for 2-0 goals at five-on-five (in 74 minutes) with a 53 percent expected goal share. Nurse is a lefty, Stecher is right-handed and an effective (if undersized) option. For the Oilers, who are facing a team that exacts a physical toll on opponents, the Nurse-Stecher tandem may be necessary due to injury. When the Stanley Cup Final moves to Florida, it's possible the Oilers dress seven defencemen, so the option of inserting Stecher into the lineup is possible in-game. Those quick outlets, tape to tape, are that important. The list of names who have contributed to the Oilers through three rounds (and Game 1 against Florida) is long and has delivered impressive results. The injury to Hyman wasn't anticipated, and the club misses the wide range of skills the veteran delivered all season. Advertisement Since his absence, Edmonton has won both games. Kapanen is the most prominent fringe player on the Oilers today, but there's a good chance another member of the 'healthy scratch' group will emerge as the series moves deeper. Stan Bowman added some valuable pieces after being named general manager last summer. Some of those names stayed in the lineup, while others emerged and became possible options. When Klingberg was signed, and through his early games with the club, no one could have guessed he would be playing a prominent role in the final while Stecher and Emberson were in the press box. The strong play of Klingberg forced the issue, and in doing so, increased overall depth at the position. The Oilers' depth is already a factor in this series. Expect injury, and replacements who can handle the load when placed in the role. Kapanen is proof that this version of the Oilers has learned from past experience when it comes to having enough depth in every position. (Photo of Viktor Arvidsson and Mattias Ekholm: Codie McLachlan / Getty Images)

‘I live and breathe for the Florida Panthers': Pending UFA Aaron Ekblad hopes to re-sign
‘I live and breathe for the Florida Panthers': Pending UFA Aaron Ekblad hopes to re-sign

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

‘I live and breathe for the Florida Panthers': Pending UFA Aaron Ekblad hopes to re-sign

EDMONTON — Aaron Ekblad was born in 1996 — the same year the Florida Panthers won three playoff rounds. In 2022, the Panthers finally won their first playoff round since — Ekblad's eighth with the Panthers. It feels like the once-No. 1 pick in the draft has played forever. At 29, this is already Ekblad's 11th and what he sure hopes isn't his final season with Florida. Advertisement He has seen a lot of bad in South Florida. And he has lately seen a ton of good as the big, rugged, hard-shooting defenseman plays in his third consecutive Stanley Cup Final and for his second Stanley Cup. With a maximum of six games left in his season after the Edmonton Oilers took a 1-0 series lead Wednesday night with a 4-3 overtime win, Ekblad admits he's trying not to think this could be the end of his line. 'It'll have to be after the season,' the pending free agent said when asked if he worries that this could be it. 'Obviously a thought one way or another has obviously come into my mind. But at the end of the day, we'll see the way it plays out. Everybody knows where I stand.' If you don't, let him tell you when I asked him earlier this week how stressful this situation has become. 'I live and breathe for the Florida Panthers. I bleed for the Florida Panthers,' he said. 'I've given my body and everything to this team, and I want to keep doing it … forever, for as long as they'll let me come to the rink.' Aaron Ekblad has been a part of the long journey to another #StanleyCup Final.@EJHradek_NHL talks with @FlaPanthers former first-overall pick about the road back to the Finals. #TimeToHunt — NHL Network (@NHLNetwork) June 3, 2025 Some fans can be cynical when a millionaire athlete talks about giving his body to a franchise. But if you don't think so, just look at this Panthers' core's first run to the Stanley Cup Final in 2023. The difference between them now and then is health. When coach Paul Maurice read off the Florida injuries in his postgame news conference when his team was eliminated in Las Vegas two years ago, the list was endless — especially Ekblad's. He broke his foot in the Boston first-round series, yet didn't miss a game. He tore his oblique in the Carolina third-round series yet didn't miss a game then or in the Stanley Cup Final. Advertisement What's more, 'My shoulder kept coming out three or four times in the playoffs. I feel as good as I've ever felt now. Two years ago was awful. Could barely get out of bed.' After the final round, Ekblad recalled that Brandon Montour 'got surgery on a Friday and I was on a Monday.' 'Both shoulders,' Ekblad said. But, as Ekblad quickly noted, everybody goes through stuff like this when you're a professional hockey player and it's the price of being part of an organization turning into a perennial contender. Ekblad has been a mainstay in the Panthers' lineup since 2014. This year has been a roller coaster of a season. He produced early and finished with 33 points in 56 games. He got hurt in January. And then says he was blindsided when he tested positive late in the season for a banned performance-enhancing substance that he says was unknowingly in something he was taking to help him recover from injuries. He was suspended for the final 18 games of the regular season and the first two games of the playoffs. He was not allowed inside the Panthers' facilities whenever the team was there. He says he drew up his own on-ice programs and skated with buddies like former Panthers defenseman Keith Yandle. And he'd watch defense partner Gustav Forsling's every move during games. 'I'd see something Forzy would do and I tried to mimic it in practice the next day,' he said. 'It was a good lesson in being my own coach for a little bit.' He blamed himself for not checking with the Panthers' docs and trainers to ensure he could take whatever it was he was taking. He said the hardest lesson was his integrity being called into question: 'There's so many ways you look at it — respect and integrity and character, family, name, my teammates, fans.' 'It's been a bit of a roller coaster for myself, and I'm happy to be in this situation now,' he said before hinting at free agency again. 'You're playing for your life, right, in a sense. So it's been a fun experience playing in a contract year, and I'm happy with the way things have gone.' Advertisement For Ekblad, it's gratifying that he has seen this organization go from one spectrum to the other. And he credits everybody but himself. 'We've always had Sasha Barkov, so there's always hope,' he said. 'Especially in those down years, we always had Barky leading the way. It was tough, right? It was tough times, and it was never easy. But we were never that far out of it, but we couldn't get that push. And the way that the organization's turned things around, from top to bottom, GM, ownership, buying in and giving us the opportunities and giving us this beautiful (practice) rink (in Ft. Lauderdale) and all the things that we need to succeed, everyone has really done a fantastic job all the way through.' Ekblad has had a strong postseason (11 points in 14 games) alongside Forsling, but Game 1 didn't go as planned. Florida's top defense pair, in nearly 24 minutes, was on the ice for 1.79 expected goals against at five-on-five, two goals against, 29 shot attempts against, 16 shots on goal against and a minus-1.43 expected goals differential. He had several run-ins with Evander Kane starting early in the game. Kane hammered Ekblad behind the Florida net#LetsGoOilers | #TimeToHunt — Hockey Daily 365 l NHL Highlights & News (@HockeyDaily365) June 5, 2025 But the franchise's all-time leader in virtually every category for defensemen is hungry for another Stanley Cup. 'I truly believe that after you win one, you want it that much more,' he said. 'And that's the kind of attitude that I think that all the returning players have. The amount of fun and the excitement that you get from it is incredible, and it makes you want it again that much more. So that's where I pull my energy from.' And then he'll worry about the future. His eight-year, $60 million contract is expiring. The Panthers, with only $19 million in cap space, have a number of free agents to sort through, including Sam Bennett and Brad Marchand. At 29, he'd be coveted by several teams, including Utah and Dallas, in need of solid right-shot defensemen. Advertisement 'I've given everything I can and will continue to give everything that I can to this team,' Ekblad said. 'All the way from the very, very top, they've done such a great job of taking care of us, making Florida such a destination franchise, a place where guys want to come. And it starts with a guy like Sasha Barkov. It's easy to want to play with Aleksander Barkov. It's easy to want to come play with (Sergei Bobrovsky and Matthew Tkachuk). 'And there's been some tough decisions made by management along the way, and all for the betterment of the team.' He just hopes he's not the next tough decision because, as the Panthers lifer said, he hopes to stay 'forever.'

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