
Marchand, Bennett push Panthers past Oilers to take 3-2 lead in Stanley Cup final
Connor McDavid and Corey Perry scored in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Florida Panthers as Edmonton lost 5-2.
EDMONTON — The Oilers are in a familiar spot — facing elimination in the Stanley Cup final.
Brad Marchand scored twice to give him a series-leading six goals and Sam Bennett buried his NHL playoff-leading 15th as the Florida Panthers defeated Edmonton 5-2 to take a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven matchup Saturday.
Sam Reinhart and Eetu Luostarinen, into the empty net, had the other goals for the defending champs. Sergei Bobrovsky made 19 saves. Luostarinen added an assist for a two-point night.
Bennett and Marchand are the first players since 1981 with at least five goals each in the same final, and the first teammates to do so since 1973. Marchand is also the first player to score six goals in a final since 1988.
Connor McDavid and Corey Perry replied for the Oilers, who will look to stave off elimination when Game 6 goes Tuesday in Sunrise, Fla. Calvin Pickard stopped 14 shots.
Edmonton trailed Florida 3-0 in last year's final only to battle back with three straight victories to force a winner-take-all finale the club lost 2-1.
McDavid had a couple of early chances inside an electric Rogers Place — the raucous, well-lubricated weekend crowd hit 113.4 decibels when the home side hit the ice ahead of puck drop — before the Panthers pounced.
Marchand was quickest off a faceoff at centre and then blew past Edmonton defenceman Mattias Ekholm before firing his ninth of the playoffs off the post and in at 9:12.
The 37-year-old has now has 12 goals in his four appearances in the final to become the seventh player in the post-expansion era to reach that number. He's also the second player since 1967-68 to have at least five goals in multiple finals after scoring that many in 2011 with the Boston Bruins to join Mario Lemieux (1991 and 1992).
The Oilers went to the power play later in the period, but a disjointed and timid sequence resulted in little zone time and no shots on Bobrovsky.
Florida doubled its lead moments later when Bennett fired past Pickard, who got the start ahead of Stuart Skinner following his 23-save performance off the bench in Edmonton's dramatic 5-4 overtime victory in Game 4, after Matthew Tkachuk's initial shot was blocked at 18:06.
Bennett is the fourth active player to have at least 15 goals in a single playoff, joining Alex Ovechkin and Sidney Crosby and injured Oilers forward Zach Hyman.
Edmonton went back to the man advantage in the second period and got some good looks. Bobrovsky denied both Perry and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins before McDavid hit the post.
Marchand made it 3-0 at 5:12 of the third when he undressed Edmonton blueliner Jack Walman and slid home his 10th past Pickard.
McDavid gave the home side some life at 7:24 with a shake-and-back move on Bobrovsky for his seventh — and first of the series — but Reinhart put things to bed 46 seconds later when he snapped home his seventh.
Perry scored a consolation goal with 3:13 left in regulation and Pickard on the bench for an extra attacker in an Edmonton push that came far too late before Luostarinen iced it into the empty net.
PICKARD REFLECTS
The Oilers goaltender got into just 30 NHL games between 2018 and last season — a stretch that included lots of time in the minors and a brief stint in Austria — before getting a shot in the Alberta capital.
'It's been a great journey, I've been a lot of good places,' Pickard said. 'Grateful that I had the chance to come to Edmonton.'
TAKING STOCK
Marchand was asked following Saturday's morning skate where this final ranks after winning in 2011 with the Bruins before falling just short in 2013 and 2019.
'This has been a pretty incredible one,' he said. 'This is one of the tightest series anyone will ever see. Just the talent level and how close these two teams are, how back and forth the games have been. It's been very exciting, a little nerve-racking at times.
'It makes you realize why you love the game so much. But also why this trophy is the hardest to win.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 14, 2025.
Joshua Clipperton, The Canadian Press
Hashtags

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


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
Ratings are down as Pacers and Thunder slug it out in NBA finals
The ratings are down for these NBA Finals, as was expected. Oklahoma City vs. Indiana is a small-market series and the numbers reflect that, with viewership down about 20 per cent from last season and on pace for the poorest TV turnout since the pandemic 'bubble' finals in 2020. Don't blame the Thunder and Pacers for that. It's been a back-and-forth over the first four games — and now, a best-of-three will decide the NBA title. Game 5 is in Oklahoma City on Monday night, with the Thunder trying to take their first lead of the series and the Pacers trying to head back home one win away from a championship. 'I do not care, to be honest with you,' Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton said when asked what he'd say to those who, for whatever reason, haven't tuned into the series. 'This is high-level basketball and I'm excited to be a part of it.' Game 1 had a frantic Indiana comeback and a Haliburton buzzer-beater. Game 2 saw Oklahoma City do what it has done in the majority of games all season: take full control early and roll to a win. Game 3 in Indiana had the Pacers' bench fueling a win. And Game 4 saw the MVP do MVP things, with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scoring 15 points in the final five minutes to carry the Thunder to a comeback win. Add it up, and it's Thunder 2, Pacers 2. The Thunder are outscoring the Pacers by 3.3 points per game; the Pacers are outshooting the Thunder by 1.4 per cent. It's only the third time in the last 15 years that the finals have had all that through four games — 2-2 tie, 3.3-point differential or less, shooting within 1.4 per cent of each other. Golden State-Boston had it in 2022, and Dallas-Miami had it in 2011. It all seems pretty even, and the looks aren't deceiving. 'It's good for y'all,' Thunder guard Alex Caruso said. 'Good for me, we'd be getting ready for a parade right now.' Parades in Indianapolis or Oklahoma City are going to have to wait at least until this coming weekend. This series seems like it could have debunked some of the tired complaints about the game in recent years: the nobody-plays-defence, too-much-isolation, too-many-threes arguments that have been out there. 'I think from an outside perspective it's great for the league,' Caruso said. 'It's great for basketball. I think these two teams play stylistically the best versions of basketball right now as far as pressure and being influencing and aggressive on defence — causing turnovers, making stuff hard and then offensively free-flowing, shot making, passing the ball. ... A great brand of basketball.' And that means it could end up as a great finals, whether more people start watching or not. 'We appreciate the opportunity to play this deep into the season,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'If you're playing this deep into the season, your opponent is going to be really good. They have won 12 games to get to this point just like we have. You just know it's going to be an unbelievable level. There are definitely times in it where (you're saying), 'Man, this is a high, high level.'' This marks the 32nd time that a finals has been 2-2 going into Game 5. The winner of Game 5 has gone on to ultimately prevail in 23 of the 31 previous occasions. 'We are both two games away,' Haliburton said. 'Anything can happen here.'


Ottawa Citizen
an hour ago
- Ottawa Citizen
Some things to worry about before the Edmonton Oilers play Game 6
This comeback team needs another one. The biggest of their lives, in fact. Article content Trailing 3-2 in the Stanley Cup Final after their second dismal outing in three games, the Edmonton Oilers will have to summon every ounce of fight they have left, get up off the deck, and force a Game 7. Article content Will they? The Panthers were first to every puck and won every battle Saturday against an Oilers team that seemed overwhelmed, unable to find an answer for wave after wave of Florida attack. Article content Article content Letting the Oilers come back from 3-0 down on the road in Game 4 should have broken the Panthers. It should have signalled a shift in momentum. Playoff defeats don't get more devastating than that. Instead, it's starting to look like that was Edmonton's last gasp, a once-in-a-century comeback sandwiched in between 6-1 and 5-2 losses. Article content Article content It doesn't look good. Article content But the Oilers have 14 wins in the playoffs, eight of which have been comebacks. It's a team that rebounded from 0-2 down in the Los Angeles series and became the first road team in 106 years to win a Stanley Cup Final game after trailing 3-0. Article content You're out of your mind if you don't think they can't come back and win it all. Article content Playing a stinker, giving everyone very good reason to believe they're done, and then coming back to silence the doubters is what they do. Article content Whether they can do it against one of the best teams of the last 30 years is the question. Article content Article content Some other things to worry about before Game 6: Article content Article content • At no other point in the series did it look like the Oilers were going to lose, but the way they withered and wilted in Game 5, on the heels of a 6-1 defeat in Game 3 and falling behind 3-0 in the first period of Game 4, suggests the Panthers are pulling away. Article content Is Florida just the better team? You can't go there yet. There is still a Game 6 to be played, but things are trending in the wrong direction. Article content • The slow start thing is inexcusable. This is the Stanley Cup Final, you have to be ready to go, and at the first intermission of the last three games Edmonton trailed 2-0, 3-0 and 2-0. Anyone can play with urgency when the situation is desperate, but champions manufacture that urgency at the opening faceoff.


Toronto Star
an hour ago
- Toronto Star
Oilers seek more early goals to avoid Game 6 elimination in Stanley Cup final
EDMONTON - The Edmonton Oilers' quest for a Stanley Cup would be less uphill if they could strike first in a game in the series, says their coach. The Florida Panthers have outscored the Oilers 7-0 in the first period in three straight games of the Cup final, and 11-4 in first periods overall in the series.