
For Florida Panthers, wrapping up 3rd consecutive trip to the Stanley Cup Final didn't lead to celebrating
Bill Zito didn't do any significant celebrating after the Florida Panthers wrapped up their third straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final. He got some food and went back to work.
At this point, no one around the team would expect anything different.
The franchise that could not win a playoff series for a quarter-century now is in the midst of a back-to-back-to-back run to the NHL's championship round. Florida won 25 playoff games in its first 28 seasons combined; the Panthers have won 41 playoff games — and counting — in their most recent three seasons.
The novelty of winning at this time of year hasn't worn off, but the Panthers have simply become used to it now. The main thing — the Cup — is the main thing. That's why after the most recent win, beating Carolina on Wednesday night to finish off the Eastern Conference title in five games, there were no helmets being thrown in the air, no raucous beer-spraying locker room scene, no thick wafts of cigar smoke. A few handshakes, something to eat, and that was it. He looked at potential travel scenarios to Edmonton, where Games 1 and 2 of the Stanley Cup Final — a title-series rematch from last year — will be played next week.
"I think everybody likes it right when people are kind to you and say things that are nice," Zito, the team's hockey operations president and general manager, said before the Panthers flew home from Carolina on Thursday. "But we learned. The journey isn't over and there's work to do and we have to be focused on that and keep your eye on the goal. Don't let success get in your way."
To be fair, for the Panthers, this is unprecedented levels of success.
The Florida Panthers pose with the Prince of Wales trophy after defeating the Carolina Hurricanes to advance to the finals at the end of Game 5 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Eastern Conference finals Wednesday, May 28, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C.
Chris Seward / AP
They have now played 11 playoff series since the start of the 2023 postseason — their first one with Matthew Tkachuk in a Florida sweater. They have won 10 of those series, only falling in the 2023 final to Vegas. They're 41-21 in playoff games under coach Paul Maurice and actually have a better road record in those games (23-10) than they do at home (18-11).
"I didn't even think about it," Tkachuk said after the Carolina series ended. "Just reacted how I reacted. I mean, I think it was different a few years ago. I remember a few years ago it felt like such an accomplishment from where we were at one point. I know we talked about it last year. It's part of the journey. And same way with this year. It's all business, and we've got a bigger goal in mind."
So, of course, do the Oilers. And both teams surely expect the rematch to be a classic.
"They're a heck of a team," Edmonton star Connor McDavid said in the on-ice televised ESPN interview Thursday night when asked about the Panthers. "Obviously, it's their third finals. They're a special group. We're a special group. It's going to be fun. Couldn't ask for a better opportunity than to go up against the team that beat us last year. Really excited about it."
The mind games are already underway. Florida touched the Prince of Wales Trophy after winning the East in 2023 and lost the final; the Panthers didn't touch the conference trophy in 2024 and won the Cup, and didn't touch it on Wednesday either to preserve that tradition. In turn, the Oilers didn't touch the West trophy last year — but McDavid grabbed it this year, trying to change up the Cup luck.
When the East title series ended, Carolina coach Rod Brind'Amour paid the Panthers — who won their first Cup last season — the ultimate compliment.
"They're the standard now," Brind'Amour said.
It has been a long time since the league has seen a run like this.
Tampa Bay made three straight finals from 2020 through 2022 (with two of those seasons shortened by COVID), but no team — until now — has navigated three consecutive full regular seasons and gotten to the Stanley Cup Final in each of those years since Edmonton from 1983 through 1985. By the time this year's title series is over, the Panthers will have played more games in a three-year span than any team in NHL history.
It's an accomplishment, for certain. Zito wasn't thinking about any of that after the Carolina series. There were travel plans to put together, reports to look at, somewhere between four and seven more games left in this season to think about.
"I don't think that the elation or the appreciation for the moment diminishes," Zito said. "I think perhaps the way it manifests itself, it's just channeled differently. ... That level of respect and appreciation for where you are, in tandem with the hunger, you want to do it again. You want to do it again. What can we start doing now? Don't stop. Don't get content. And those guys, they woke up with 100 texts each from everyone telling them how great they are. Everyone did. And it's not over."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
34 minutes ago
- New York Times
Astros takeaways: Yordan Alvarez fallout continues, Jake Meyers adjusts swing and more
HOUSTON — Fallout from a dysfunctional Saturday spilled into Sunday at Daikin Park, where prior to the finale of a 10-game homestand, the Houston Astros honored Dr. Thomas Mehlhoff for 35 years of service to the organization with an on-field ceremony and framed jersey. Alex Bregman, George Springer and Jeff Bagwell all sent taped remarks praising Mehlhoff: one of the team's physicians who, according to an in-stadium announcement, handles most of the Astros' hand and wrist injuries. Advertisement Ironic isn't strong enough to describe the scene — a coincidental confluence of events that epitomized a whirlwind weekend in Houston. The team completed a 10-game homestand 7-3 and split four games with the Tampa Bay Rays, but both accomplishments seemed secondary to the saga of a slugger's right hand that — after a month — is now known to be fractured. Many questions remain about the Astros' handling of Yordan Alvarez's situation. Those with the medical expertise to answer them won't be made available any time soon, leaving baseball men to double as orthopedic specialists. General manager Dana Brown did his best during the team's pregame radio show, when play-by-play man Robert Ford asked whether, in hindsight, the organization wished it had done anything different during Alvarez's recovery. 'When he had the first injury, in terms of the muscle strain in the hand, maybe we shouldn't have let him fight through that,' Brown said. 'He said it wasn't the normal pain that he usually gets in his hand, so he thought maybe he could grind through it and it was just soreness. 'Maybe at that point we probably should have shut him down, maybe for a week, giving it a chance to heal and not let him try to fight through it and potentially cause more damage.' Brown's candor again calls into question every aspect of the team's return-to-play procedure. His predecessor, James Click, panned it before his dismissal in 2022. Now, Brown must decide what, if anything, to do about it. At the end of last season, Troy Snitker sent a list of goals to Jake Meyers, a defensive wizard with decreasing offensive production. Some suggested mechanical tweaks. Others offered advice for extending at-bats. Meyers carried his hitting coach's counsel into a pivotal winter. He slashed .190/.256/.307 across his final 362 plate appearances of 2024. Brown barely mentioned Meyers throughout a transformative offseason spent searching for an outfielder. Advertisement Instead, Brown has found the best version of Meyers, a soft-spoken Midwesterner morphing into a lineup mainstay. Only two qualified Astros have a higher OPS than Meyers' .753 mark. Just Jeremy Peña has a higher batting average than Meyers' .292 clip. Meyers raised it by 42 points across 109 prolific May plate appearances. According to FanGraphs, only four American League outfielders were worth more wins above replacement than Meyers last month: Aaron Judge, Ryan O'Hearn, Addison Barger and Cody Bellinger. Contact is allowing Meyers to keep that company. Pitchers are throwing him more strikes than any season of his major-league career and Meyers is making contact on 86.9 percent of the swings he takes against them. His career average is 82 percent. Much of the improvement can be traced to a swing adjustment listed as part of Snitker's offseason goals. Meyers corrected a career-long tendency to initiate a swing with his top hand, which created a steep entrance into the strike zone. An inconsistent bat path and poor plate coverage ensued. Meyers chased outside the zone at a 31.2 percent rate last season. He whiffed 27 percent of the time, too — the fourth straight season in which he posted at least a 27 percent whiff rate. 'I learned how to initiate the bat with my hands and, because I'm athletic and strong, I can still get the bat to the ball,' Meyers said. 'You get to the big leagues and they're throwing a bunch of different pitches moving a bunch of different ways, it makes it extremely hard to do that and redirect where you're going.' This winter, Meyers focused on a more efficient way to start his swing. He took one-handed swings using his top hand, trying to stay level while his barrel entered the strike zone. Gradually, after getting comfortable, he introduced a second hand and saw a swing he didn't need to initiate. Advertisement 'He's quieted that down to get into some better positions, but he's coming out of those positions cleaner as well,' Snitker said. 'The sequence is better. The way he's rotating, first, and then the path that follows that is cleaner.' Meyers is whiffing 21.3 percent of the time this season and chasing outside the strike zone at just a 22.9 percent clip. His aggression remains — Meyers is seeing just 3.59 pitches per plate appearance and has absurd numbers against the first pitch of a plate appearance — but has cut down on chasing in the middle of at-bats, allowing for some longer battles. Whether Meyers can continue this surge will be fascinating. Meyers also had a magnificent first two months last season, slashing .289/.360/.489 in his first 151 plate appearances. The freefall that followed won't be repeated, Meyers believes. 'The way I've gone about these first two months is very different than last year and the years before,' Meyers said. 'It will be sustainable because of the things I'm focusing on and the things I've set in the offseason and spring training and through these couple months, I know I can be confident it will work.' During pregame stretch on Saturday night in Albuquerque, Jacob Melton saw something peculiar. Teammate Tommy Sacco Jr. walked toward the group with his glove. Manager Mickey Storey followed. Melton knew Sacco wasn't in Triple-A Sugar Land's starting lineup. That he came to work out with those who were could mean only one thing. That Storey joined him only confirmed Melton's suspicion that he could be headed to the show. 'Before (Storey) even said anything, I kind of had a feeling this is what it was,' Melton said with a smile. 'It was surreal. I don't think I really have the words to describe how I felt in that moment.' Melton made his major-league debut during Sunday's 1-0 win against the Rays, starting in center field and finishing 1-for-3 from the eighth spot in Houston's batting order. Melton's role moving forward will evolve, though it's difficult to envision him getting everyday at-bats. Brown intimated as much prior to Sunday's game, acknowledging the myriad health issues that have plagued Melton this season — first a back problem that started in spring training and then a groin issue that affected him in April. Advertisement 'We're taking it a little slow with the groin. We were playing him four days a week in the minor leagues and it kind of fits here,' Brown told the team's pregame radio show. 'He's probably going to come up here and face right-handers, gives us that left-hand bat we've been looking for. We don't have to play him here every day, but we're gradually going to break him in and see what he can do.' Production can alter any plans of a semi-platoon. Melton could mash his way into more regular at-bats, but as it stands, he isn't a better option than any of the Astros' three everyday outfielders: Meyers, Jose Altuve and Cam Smith. Melton is a natural center fielder, but the team is more than comfortable playing him in either corner. Being without both Alvarez and Zach Dezenzo does open more designated hitter at-bats, which will benefit Melton in the short term. That he hits left-handed will benefit an entire ballclub that lacks any semblance of balance. No team in baseball entered Sunday with fewer plate appearances from a left-handed hitter than the Astros. Manager Joe Espada has given a major-league low 21 pinch-hit plate appearances all season, a byproduct of having an all-right-handed bench that can't be used to create any platoon advantage. Melton's mere presence can change that. Having him on the roster will lessen Houston's need to play switch-hitting backup catcher Victor Caratini every day just for balance and deploy him more in late-game, pinch-hit situations. Bear in mind, Caratini went 8-for-19 in pinch-hit at-bats last season. Finding Alvarez's hand fracture — and realizing he'll be sidelined for longer — 'nudged' the Astros to promote Melton, Brown said. It stands to reason that the lack of external left-handed bats available did, too. Prior to the season, The Athletic's Keith Law ranked Melton as the organization's second-best prospect behind Smith, who has since exceeded prospect status. In 2023, Brown fought to keep Melton out of the Justin Verlander trade, instead parting with fellow outfielders Drew Gilbert and Ryan Clifford. (Top photo of Yordan Alvarez: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)


News24
35 minutes ago
- News24
Momentum flags solid operational performance despite a tough SA economy
Be among those who shape the future with knowledge. Uncover exclusive stories that captivate your mind and heart with our FREE 14-day subscription trial. Dive into a world of inspiration, learning, and empowerment. You can only trial once.


New York Times
35 minutes ago
- New York Times
The Panthers, the Lightning and the ‘blueprint' behind Florida becoming the new State of Hockey
Mike Rupp wishes he had a time machine. The former NHL player and Stanley Cup champion would love to see how the Tampa Bay Lightning's championship teams from 2020 to '22 would do against this current run of the Florida Panthers. The Panthers are in their third straight Stanley Cup Final, starting Wednesday, following three in a row by Tampa Bay, which won the title twice. Advertisement Who would win? 'I have no idea,' Rupp said, 'It's that close.' 'It would go seven games and probably into OT,' said former NHL coach Rick Bowness. 'Tough to call,' Nashville Predators general manager Barry Trotz said. 'It would be nasty, though.' Part of what makes imagining it so fun is that there's a similar feel to the dominant runs made by the Lightning and Panthers. Minnesota has called itself the 'State of Hockey' since the Wild trademarked the phrase soon after their 2000 inception. But let's be honest: When it comes to NHL playoff success, the actual 'State of Hockey' has become Florida, with no signs of that slowing down. The Panthers and Lightning have won three Stanley Cups in the past five years and 22 playoff rounds in the past six. Since the start of the 2020 playoffs, Tampa Bay (52) and Florida (48) own the first- and second-most playoff wins in the NHL. And for the 'they don't care about hockey in Florida' crowd, both teams played at virtually 100 percent capacity this regular season, and the state of Florida saw a 73 percent increase in youth hockey participation from 2012 to '24, according to USA Hockey. From the star power to goaltending to difference-making third lines, the Lightning and Panthers Cup teams can be seen as mirror images. And that was by design. 'I had the benefit of those Tampa teams existing when we got here,' said Panthers general manager Bill Zito, hired in 2020 after being the Columbus Blue Jackets' assistant GM. 'I watched how Julien BriseBois did it. Winning against them when I was in Columbus (in 2019). Losing to them when I was in Columbus in the (2020) bubble, I got to watch a lot of their team and how it was assembled. There was almost like a blueprint, and by the way, they're right down the road.' Zito said BriseBois, was extremely 'gracious' with his time and offered guidance after he landed the job on the other side of the state, and he used how the Lightning were built as a 'model.' Advertisement 'It would probably be a little pretentious of me to sit here and say they followed our blueprint,' coach Jon Cooper said. 'But yes, there are parallels.' Whether the Panthers can match the Lightning's title count remains to be seen. If they do, it'd put them in similar rare air to Cooper's group. 'Tampa, for me, surpassed Chicago, Pittsburgh, L.A., as far as being like the modern-day dynasty,' Rupp said. 'I don't know if I used that word too lightly or loosely, but I think what we're seeing from Florida right now, they're on the precipice of potentially taking that over.' Now, Florida takes no state income taxes out of paychecks — a huge talking point when it comes to the Lightning and Panthers' runs. The Vegas Golden Knights, Dallas Stars, Nashville Predators and Seattle Kraken also play in no-state-income-tax states, which many point to as an unfair advantage especially in Canada and high-tax states like California, New York/New Jersey and Minnesota. (According to league sources, in the new collective bargaining agreement that's close to being agreed upon, there won't be any new provisions addressing the situation.) There are other benefits to playing in Florida, too, from living on the water and driving to practice in golf carts, but that's been the same since each team entered the league. 'The majority of players in any era would want to be here regardless — taking the lifestyle out of it, taking the tax breaks out of it — but especially now in the run that they've each had,' TNT analyst Ed Olczyk said. 'You want to make as much money as you can as a player, but mostly, you want to win. 'This is a destination now because they win. Each of these teams is a place you'd look to go because they're going to do whatever it takes to win.' So how did they create that winning culture? Advertisement Whatever advantages they have, for much of their histories, these teams have struggled — with the Panthers going from 1997 to 2022 without winning a playoff round. What was the 'blueprint' for going from doormats to borderline dynasties? The systems aren't necessarily identical, and that doesn't really matter. Trotz said the Panthers are a 'true forecheck team,' and while those Lightning teams did damage on the forecheck, 'they were still a very good rush team.' What stands out as comparable is their versatility and relentlessness. Bowness was a long-time Lightning assistant but got a whole new appreciation after losing to them with the Stars in the 2020 Cup Final. 'Both teams can play any style you want,' Bowness said. 'You want to play physical? We'll play physical. You want to play fast? We can play fast. You want to play high-skilled? We can play high-skilled. Those are the ingredients to be able to win games, too. You can play any style you want. They got some nasty players on both of those teams. That's how you win in the playoffs.' Brian Boucher, an analyst for TNT, said Florida's style is more 'smashmouth hockey.' 'Tampa wasn't like that,' Boucher said. 'Tampa had the skill but had an identity line, and they played the game differently. These guys, though, they play the game old-school. … For a lack of a better term, they're bullies. They're bullies, but with skill.' The most important similarity between the two teams, according to former GM Craig Button, is their 'identity' third lines. The Barclay Goodrow-Yanni Gourde-Blake Coleman line was the X-factor for Tampa Bay's back-to-back Cup wins, providing defense and clutch scoring. The same holds true for this year's Panthers, with Brad Marchand-Anton Lundell-Eetu Luostarinen. Advertisement 'They're more skilled than you realize,' Bowness said. 'They (don't) just score, but they're also agitators. They get in your face, they don't back off, they don't get looked off on the forecheck. … They're fast, and they're just very hard to play against because you don't get a lot of time. You know you're going to get hit.' The lines also both came together on the fly. The Gourde line wasn't put together right away after Goodrow and Coleman were acquired in 2020. Marchand was added at this past year's deadline. 'I'd love to see the Gourde-Coleman-Goodrow line versus the Marchand line,' Rupp said. 'Oh my god, I'd pay money for that. That's crazy because they're so alike.' It starts with the captains and two of the game's consummate pros: Steven Stamkos and Aleksander Barkov. 'I say to my son, 'I hope you can be as good a guy as Sasha,'' Zito said. 'He makes you want to be a better person, a better teammate, the kindness that he shows, the way he treats every single person he comes across.' Paul Maurice is Aleksander Barkov's number one fan. 😻 #StanleyCup 📺: @Canes vs. @FlaPanthers Game 4 TONIGHT at 8p ET on @NHL_On_TNT, @SportsonMax, @Sportsnet, and @TVASports — NHL (@NHL) May 26, 2025 Stamkos, the 2008 No. 1 pick, took the hard road to finally lifting the Cup and is regarded as one of the best captains in league history. Tampa Bay also doesn't win the two titles without Nikita Kucherov's ascent and dominant runs in 2020 and 2021. Brayden Point was a Conn Smythe contender both years after being a middle-round steal. The stars for both teams also take care of the defensive side of the puck. Sam Reinhart is a Selke Trophy finalist this year, and Barkov is a two-time winner and one of the best two-way centers in the NHL. Since the start of the 2024 playoffs, Barkov has only been on the ice for four even-strength goals against (excluding empty-netters) in 41 games. He never cheats the game, and when it comes to big moments like his monster assist on Carter Verhaeghe's winning goal to close out last week's Eastern Conference final, he's got the ability to come through offensively. Plus, he has 25 career playoff goals. — x – Florida Panthers (@FlaPanthers) May 29, 2025 Then you add in Verhaeghe (the Panthers' career playoff leader with 32 goals, including three series clinchers), who won a Stanley Cup with the Lightning in 2020, Reinhart (25 goals), Sam Bennett (24 goals) and Matthew Tkachuk (22), and the Panthers have shown they can stick with anybody offensively. Advertisement 'We know what's going on in Tampa with Point, Kucherov and all the changeover there, but they've always had consistent stars,' said Olczyk. 'They do it a little different way in Florida. I mean, Reinhart, all he needs is one or two chances to score a goal. Barkov is as complete a player as there is. Verhaeghe's as clutch a player as there is. Tkachuk and Bennett can score and punish you.' When Trotz was preparing the Islanders to face the Lightning in 2020 and 2021, his focus wasn't necessarily on stopping Tampa Bay's forwards. It was somehow fighting through Tampa Bay's towering blue line. There was three-time Norris Trophy finalist Victor Hedman (6-foot-7), Erik Cernak (6-4), Ryan McDonagh (6-2), Mikhail Sergachev (6-3) and Luke Schenn (6-2). 'As much as everybody talked about Point and Kucherov and all their forwards, we knew if we played solid team defense, we could limit them,' Trotz said. 'But we talked more about how the hell are we going to get through that forest of trees?' The Panthers have some size as well, with Aaron Ekblad (6-4) and trading for Seth Jones (6-4) this year. Gustav Forsling is only 6-1 but has become one of the best defensive defensemen in the NHL, while Niko Mikkola's star is rising — a well-rounded blueliner who is 6-foot-5 but can also fly. The Panthers have had to shuffle guys in and out the past three years because of the cap, losing solid defenders like Brandon Montour and Radko Gudas. This postseason, Dmitry Kulikov and Nate Schmidt have done a terrific job on the third pair. Olczyk said the Lightning and Panthers' real connection is the back end. 'When you look at the size, you look at the mobility, you look at the difference makers and the depth, it's just not one to 3 ½. It's one to six,' Olczyk said. As good of a job as Zito has done in South Florida, he credits predecessor Dale Tallon for building blocks like Barkov and Sergei Bobrovsky. Advertisement Bobrovsky had a tough start to his Florida career, but Zito knew him from Columbus — knew his commitment and unparalleled process — and felt when he got the Panthers job that goaltending would be the least of his concerns. In three postseasons, Bobrovsky is 40-19 for Florida with a 2.41 goals-against average and .911 save percentage. Andrei Vasilevskiy, meanwhile, had NHL greats already saying he was putting himself onto 'Mount Rushmore' among top goalies, and his 2021 Conn Smythe trophy was well deserved: 1.90 GAA, .937 save percentage, five shutouts. He ended five straight series with a shutout from the 2020 Cup Final through the 2021 Cup Final. Bobrovsky was a Vezina Trophy finalist last year, while Vasilevskiy, who won the Vezina in 2019, was also a finalist in 2020. The top players on the Lightning and Panthers Cup runs, by net rating: Cooper, the longest-tenured coach in the NHL, has coached around 1,000 fewer games than Paul Maurice but is considered by many to be the standard in the league. He was the third-fastest coach to 500 wins in NHL history. Both coaches are also great quotes, strong motivators and collaborative with their assistants and strong game managers. Before last year, Maurice had coached the most games in NHL history without winning a Stanley Cup. Now he's one of four coaches to have made the Stanley Cup Final in each of his first three seasons with a franchise, along with Toe Blake (five, Montreal Canadiens, 1956 to 1960), Scotty Bowman (three, St. Louis Blues, 1968 to 1970) and Tommy Ivan (three, Detroit Red Wings, 1948 to 1950). He's also one of two coaches to win 10 series in his first three seasons with a franchise (Darryl Sutter, Los Angeles Kings, 2012 to 2014). 'Paul and Coop both do a great job preparing their team and any adjustments that are made during the series,' Bowness said. 'They're both very good at that.' Advertisement Back in 2010, Lightning CEO Steve Griggs said the brand was 'dead.' The season ticket base was down to around 4,500. They had missed the playoffs for three straight years. But when Jeff Vinik bought the team that summer, it started the transformation. He hired Steve Yzerman as GM, who helped build those Cup teams before leaving for Detroit in 2019. BriseBois, Yzerman's long-time right-hand man, has been bold and decisive in continuing to build the contender — and keep it together through a COVID-19-sparked flat cap. Unstable ownership plagued the Panthers after original owner Wayne Huizenga sold the team in 2001, but that dissipated when Vinnie Viola bought the franchise 12 years ago and especially when he hired Zito as GM during the pandemic. Zito has made huge acquisitions, including Tkachuk, Bennett, Reinhart, Jones, Marchand, Forsling, Mikkola and Evan Rodrigues. He fills holes when the cap costs the Panthers a player like Montour and even had the guts to fire Andrew Brunette after winning the Presidents' Trophy in 2022. Viola spares no expense, from a state-of-the-art practice facility to off-ice perks for players to allowing Zito and his large front office to think outside the box and do their thing. 'It's empowering that we're able to conduct our business without fear and knowing we have their full support,' Zito said. Zito said one thing Tampa Bay showed him was not to be afraid of trading draft picks. BriseBois traded a first-round pick in each of his deals for Coleman and Goodrow at the 2020 deadline, for example. 'We had this decade of losing, but we have this window now, but we're also trying to continue to perform, continue to win, continue to grow, continue to get interest, continue to grow in our community,' Zito said. It's 'fantasy hockey,' as Trotz calls it, to pick who was better or would win in a seven-game series. Advertisement 'I'd say that Tampa had the advantage of forward, defense and goalie,' Rupp said. 'But the Panthers, as far as being a junkyard-dog-mentality team from every player, there's a way they play, a style they play, that makes it really even for me. The way they play, it's just different. I would give all the categories in favor of Tampa, but when you ask me who would win the series, I have no idea.' Added Zito, 'There's a lot of similarities, from up front to the back end to in goal. Behind the bench, you have very smart people. On top of being very smart hockey people, they're also kind with great senses of humor. And then you have Julien, and as we just saw with Mathieu Darche leaving Tampa for the Islanders, solid people who you can trust. 'These two teams compete against each other, and it's so much fun, because you want to beat them so bad and you know they want to beat us so bad, but when it's over, we were sincerely happy when they won their Cups and I know they're sincerely happy for us during our runs.' The fact that the Panthers, having lost to the Lightning in back-to-back postseasons in 2021 and 2022, started to change and become more like Tampa Bay wasn't necessarily a surprise. And now you can see the Lightning following suit, coming off three straight first-round exits (two to Florida), trying to figure out a way to beat the Panthers. There's a real chance the state's streak of six straight conference titles extends through next season. And they have each other to thank. 'It's very rare,' Trotz said. 'But I think that division rivalries, when your No. 1 rival is winning Cups, it's the best teacher. Those things rub off on each other when you want to beat the Joneses, and the Joneses live next door.' (Photo of Aleksander Barkov, Nikita Kucherov and Sergei Bobrovsky: Mike Carlson / Getty Images)