logo
Stanley Cup Final: Panthers win Game 5 to move to verge of another title

Stanley Cup Final: Panthers win Game 5 to move to verge of another title

Los Angeles Times10 hours ago

EDMONTON, Canada — Brad Marchand scored twice, Sam Bennett had his NHL playoff-leading 15th goal and the Florida Panthers moved to the verge of a second consecutive Stanley Cup title by beating the Edmonton Oilers 5-2 in Game 5 on Saturday night.
The Panthers improved to 10-3 on the road this playoffs. They can hoist the Cup again as soon as Tuesday night if they win Game 6 on home ice in Sunrise, Fla.
Florida this time built a multigoal lead and built on it, unlike a couple of previous games in the final. Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 19 of the 21 shots he faced, making some important saves when needed, and was aided by lockdown defense that took ice away from the Oilers.
Marchand, Bennett and Sam Reinhart provided the offense. Marchand joined Mario Lemieux as the only players in the past half-century to score five-plus goals in a final multiple times, and his 13 career goals in the final are the most among active players.
Connor McDavid scored his first goal of the series after the Oilers fell behind 3-0. Reinhart's came 46 seconds later to restore the Panthers' three-goal lead, and by the time Corey Perry scored with 3:13 left, it was too late.
Eetu Luostarinen sealed it with an empty-netter with 1:19 left, silencing the once fired-up crowd for a final time.
Edmonton's power play went 0 for 3, a product of the Panthers' aggressive penalty kill knocking McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and the rest of the top unit out of their usual rhythm.
Calvin Pickard lost for the first time in eight starts this spring, allowing four goals on 18 shots. He got the nod over Stuart Skinner after entering in relief and winning Game 4 to improve to 7-0, a record that is now 7-1.
Skinner could be back in for Game 6, with the Panthers aiming to close things out following another cross-continental trip back to the other corner of North America. They are in this spot after bouncing back from blowing a three-goal lead and falling in overtime in Game 4, taking advantage of their depth to send the Oilers to the brink again.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anze Kopitar Joins Elite Company with Third Lady Byng Memorial Trophy Win
Anze Kopitar Joins Elite Company with Third Lady Byng Memorial Trophy Win

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Anze Kopitar Joins Elite Company with Third Lady Byng Memorial Trophy Win

LA Kings' captain Anze Kopitar has been awarded the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy for the third time in his career, joining Wayne Gretzky as the only other player in franchise history to win the award three times. Marcel Dionne and Butch Goring also won the award as LA Kings, giving the franchise a total of eight wins, the most of any non-Original Six franchise (Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Montreal, New York Rangers, and Toronto.) The native of Slovenia now finds himself among an elite group of three-time winners that includes Martin St. Louis, Ron Francis, and Mike Bossy. Only Frank Boucher (7), Wayne Gretzky (5) and Pavel Datsyuk (4) have won more Lady Byng trophies than Kopitar, or as it is known by his children Jakob and Neza, "The Nicest NHL Player" award. Advertisement The 19-year veteran received 50 1st place votes, edging out Tampa Bay's Brayden Point and Vegas' Jack Eichel for the 2024-25 Lady Byng Memorial Trophy, given out annually to the NHL "player adjudged to have exhibited the best type of sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct combined with a high standard of playing ability." In 81 games played this season, Kopitar registered 21 goals and 46 assists, while taking just four penalty minutes, tying a career-low in PIM set in the 2022-23 season. The two-time Stanley Cup champion has one year remaining on his current contract and is set to begin his 20th season with the Kings next year. In addition to his three Lady Byng trophies, Kopitar has two Frank J. Selke trophies (2016, 2018), given to the best defensive forward in the league, and trails franchise point leader Marcel Dionne (1,307) by just 29 points. Barring injury, next year should see Kopitar surpasse Dionne to become the franchise's all-time point leader. In 1,454 games played, Kopitar has 440 goals and 838 assists for a total of 1, 272 points, good for a points per game average of 0.88.

The Times' baseball player of the year: Seth Hernandez of Corona
The Times' baseball player of the year: Seth Hernandez of Corona

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Times' baseball player of the year: Seth Hernandez of Corona

Years from now, when Seth Hernandez is pitching in the major leagues and pro baseball commentators are debating just how good he might become, those who saw him throw during his two years of high school baseball at Corona High will gladly offer their fondest memories. The statistics are impressive enough: In 53 1/3 innings this season, he struck out 105, gave up 19 hits and three earned runs for an ERA of 0.39. The most impressive statistic was walking only seven batters while using a 99-mph fastball. It showed his pinpoint control and how much he had improved over his junior season, when he walked 15 in 56 innings. 'That was his goal,' coach Andy Wise said. 'What are we going to do to get better?" Advertisement His pitching mechanics became more consistent, generating the kind of power and accuracy to cause people to repeatedly use the word 'special' in describing him on the mound. There also was the time he hit two three-run homers in the Panthers' Southern Section Division 1 playoff victory over Los Osos. He wasn't perfect, though, losing 2-0 to St. John Bosco in the Division 1 semifinals, finishing his high school career with an 18-1 pitching record for two seasons. He didn't mope. He didn't make excuses afterward. He knew there would be more challenges ahead. "I'm still a kid," he said. For a season of excellence, Hernandez has been named The Times' baseball player of the year for the second consecutive season. He's expected to be a high pick in next month's amateur draft. He also was named the Gatorade national player of the year. Advertisement One of his strengths for years has been his ability to perform while being watched by scouts, fans and opponents. He's comfortable in his environment, used to the attention and is particularly ready to begin his pro career and keep on a path toward pitching in the big leagues. Read more: The Times' 2025 All-Star baseball and softball coverage With Southern California having produced first-round draft picks such as Paul Skenes (El Toro), Gerrit Cole (Orange Lutheran), Trevor Bauer (Hart), Max Fried (Harvard-Westlake) and Jack Flaherty (Harvard-Westlake) in recent years, it's pretty clear that Hernandez's resume fits in well and offers confidence in his abilities. He's also glad he decided to play high school baseball after being home-schooled. Advertisement 'At the end of the day, I have brothers for life and I'll never forget the memories I spent with them,' he said of his high school days. Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

What to watch for in today's NASCAR Cup race in Mexico City
What to watch for in today's NASCAR Cup race in Mexico City

NBC Sports

timean hour ago

  • NBC Sports

What to watch for in today's NASCAR Cup race in Mexico City

MEXICO CITY — With a forecast that could include rain during Sunday's race at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, the challenge for drivers will increase. 'I absolutely hate racing in the rain, but I'm good at it,' said Shane van Gisbergen, who starts on the pole for the first Cup race held outside the continental United States since 1958. 'I'd rather it didn't rain, but if it happens, we put the wets on and go.' How can van Gisbergen dislike something he's so good at? 'I just don't enjoy it,' he said. 'It's just never fun. You're always sliding around, and it just turns stuff into chaos. It's fun to watch, but I don't really enjoy driving.' Dustin Long, Michael McDowell, who starts fifth can relate. 'I like what SVG said because I feel the same way,' McDowell told NBC Sports. 'I'm good in the rain. I have a lot of experience in the rain, but I'm never super pumped for the rain because it's hard. It creates variables that are tough to overcome.' One of the challenges in wet conditions is the water spray that cars in front create. The Weather Underground forecast calls for a 38% chance of scattered thunderstorms near the start of the race, increasing to about 60% by the end of the event. Should the track be wet at the beginning of the race (3 p.m. ET on Prime), it will make a front starting spot even more important. That makes his third starting spot even more valuable to Ross Chastain. 'You'll just get gapped out just from the spray being part throttle on the straightway, not being able to have any vision if you're back in the field,' Chastain told NBC Sports. 'I've been there and it's terrifying when you can't see. It's like driving blindfolded.' Wet conditions at the start also present opportunities. 'You want to be aggressive, honestly, in the beginning if it is raining to get up front, be the first one or two cars so that you have the best vision you can,' McDowell said. The right (pit) decision? Trent Owens, crew chief for AJ Allmendinger had an interesting choice to make when it was time for him to pick his pit stall Saturday. Pit stalls are selected in order of how a team qualifies, so the pole-sitter gets the first pick and on down. Allmendinger qualified eighth, giving him the eighth pick of stalls. Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez's pit road is limited to 40 stalls. There will be 37 cars in the race. That leaves only three openings (and a small opening across the start/finish line). Teams prefer to have an opening either in front of their stall (for easy access out) or an opening before their stall (for easy access into their box). When it came time for Owens to pick his pits, he had two viable options. He could pick the second pit stall — near pit exit. That would put Allmendinger in the box behind Shane van Gisbergen and in front of Kyle Larson. Or Owens could have picked pit stall 13, which was further away from pit exit but had an opening before it for easy access into the box. Owens chose pit stall 2, meaning the first three pit stalls — van Gisbergen, Allmendinger and Larson — could have three of the top cars in the race. That could mean they could be pitting together. Add to it that the pit boxes are 26.5 feet long — the shortest in the series — and it could get tight. 'Our biggest reason is (van Gisbergen) is in stall 1 and we feel like he's the dominant car,' Owens told NBC Sports for his reasoning in picking stall 2. 'So we feel like when we pit we're not going to get blocked in. 'We could have chose (stall) 13, which has a small opening in, but it's also a narrow pit road, short pit boxes. We just feel like pit stall 2 can potentially limit our errors because (Larson), which is behind us, has a full pit stall opening behind him, so if (Larson's crew chief Cliff Daniels) plays nice, he'll stop back at his stall and give us enough room.' That is likely to happen because that would allow Larson to exit his stall without being blocked in by Allmendinger. Much goes into winning a race, but could Owens' decision to pick pit stall 2 help Allmendinger get to victory lane? Too fast on pit road? Another key area to watch with pit road is toward pit exit. There are 11 timing loops on pit road used to determine pit road speeding. Pit road speed is 40 mph and with the 5 mph allowance, drivers can go 45 mph before they are penalized. Seven of the zones are either 147-feet-7 inches long or 157-6. But the last two are significantly shorter. The next-to-last timing zone — encompassing pit stalls 1-3 near pit exit — is 73-feet-2 inches. The last timing line, which goes to pit exit — is 46-feet-7 inches. NASCAR's pit road speeding is determined based on time over distance. So if a driver enters a zone too fast, he can slow before the end of it and still make speed. With two shorter zones at the end of pit road, drivers won't have as much a a chance to do so. Get caught speeding on pit road in those two sections — or any for that matter — and the pass-through penalty will cost a driver positions on the track. 'You just can't afford to speed,' Ryan Preece, who starts second today, told NBC Sports. 'Track position is obviously a huge thing no matter where it is. For me, you want to push those lights, you don't want to give up one position, but if you overdo it, you're going to give up 36, so it's kind of a risk vs. reward type of situation.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store