Panthers' Carter Verhaeghe Is A Clutch Scorer With A Difference-Maker's Mindset
That Carter Verhaeghe has been an integral part of the Florida Panthers' run to three straight Stanley Cup finals (and one championship to date) is not a matter of debate.
The gifted left winger has consistently made an impact for the Panthers and has gained a reputation for being one of the most clutch goal-scorers in the game today, having scored seven game-winning goals between the regular season and playoffs this year. He has also scored three series-winning goals and 12 playoff game-winners since 2022, according to NHL.com.
Advertisement
The fact is, Verhaeghe is always thinking about being a difference-maker.
"I always see him talking to himself on the bench," said teammate Aaron Ekblad. "It's in his DNA. It's something he thinks about morning, noon and night, is scoring goals. He's got the iPad in between shifts, seeing what he can do differently."
Verhaeghe's road to NHL glory is fairly well-known at this point. Originally selected by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the third round of the 2013 draft, he played a couple of games for the AHL's Marlies but was dealt to the New York Islanders before going any further. He never put on a New York jersey in a game either, as he was later dealt to Tampa Bay, where he won a Stanley Cup as a bit player in his first NHL season.
The Lightning infamously didn't qualify him as an RFA, and the cross-state Panthers pounced. All of a sudden, then-coach Joel Quenneville was putting him on a line with Aleksander Barkov.
Advertisement
"I have to credit management and Bill (Zito) for finding me from Tampa," Verhaeghe said. "I thought I was going back, and it didn't work out, so Bill gave me an opportunity. 'Q' put me with 'Barky' almost right away, we developed some good chemistry, and it took off from there. My mindset was to keep on building every day and run with the opportunity that I wanted to get for so long. I wasn't going to let it slip."
Carter Verhaeghe and Aleksander Barkov (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)
But before all that, Verhaeghe had made another interesting stop in his pro career: the ECHL. During his Islanders tenure, Verhaeghe played for AHL Bridgeport, but he also suited up for parts of two seasons with the Missouri Mavericks. It wasn't part of his master plan, but it turned out to be good for the burgeoning young forward.
"My first time there, I wasn't very happy," Verhaeghe said. "But after I got down there and settled down, my mindset was really good. I wasn't focused on making the NHL right away, like tomorrow – it was a process. Trying to get better every day and picking up things from coaches or watching games."
Advertisement
Verhaeghe put up great numbers for Missouri, putting up 57 points in 36 games over the course of two seasons. Two years later, while part of Tampa Bay's system, he led the AHL's Syracuse Crunch in scoring, and the rest is history.
Verhaeghe may not have wanted to go to suburban Kansas City en route to his NHL career, but his time with Missouri ended up being a stepping stone. And being in Kansas City, at least the barbecue was good.
"Yeah," he said. "They have great barbecue."
Promo image credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images
Get the latest news and trending stories by following The Hockey News on Google News and by subscribing to The Hockey News newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

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

Miami Herald
37 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Reinhart's first goal of Stanley Cup Final a big one in Panthers' Game 3 rout of Oilers
Forget what the game log says. Monday night was the true return of Florida Panthers star Sam Reinhart. Reinhart scored a goal – his first in six games — and set up another with a filthy pass to Aaron Ekblad in Monday's 6-1 Panthers win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final. For the Panthers' regular-season leader in goals, it was his best game since suffering an apparent knee injury early in the Eastern Conference Finals. Reinhart went top shelf three minutes into the second period to beat Stuart Skinner – the same netminder he victimized in Game 7 nearly a year ago — to jumpstart a dominant closing half of an overwhelming Panthers performance. 'The Sam Reinhart goal was the inflection point,' said Panthers coach Paul Maurice, who won his 1,000th NHL game (combining the regular season and postseason) Monday. '2-1, especially with what both teams had been through in the first two, there was no [safe] lead at that point, and Sam's goal was very important to us.' In the micro sense, Maurice of course is correct. Reinhart's goal gave the Panthers much-needed breathing room in the second period, and the Oilers didn't respond well. Oilers coach Kris Knoblach said his team 'unraveled' Monday, and the stat sheet backed that up. Edmonton racked up a staggering 85 penalty minutes and a suspension for Evander Kane isn't out of the question after his inexcusable and dangerous stick found Carter Verhaeghe's neck when the Panthers forward was defenseless on the ice. But from a wider lens, Reinhart's breakout game is even worse news for Edmonton. After two overtime games in Alberta, the Panthers looked like far and away the better team Monday. 'We're a very deep team,' said forward Brad Marchand, who scored for the third time in as many SCF games Monday. 'Not just offensively. A lot of guys play a 200-foot game. That's one of our strengths.' Florida is strongest when Reinhart is at his best. And Monday's performance was huge given his uncharacteristic couple of weeks. Reinhart has been largely a non-factor since the dirty hit laid on him by Hurricanes forward Sebastian Aho in the Eastern Conference Finals. Reinhart missed two games after Aho's hip check to his knee and struggled to find his form upon his return. He was minus-3 in the first two games of this series with zero points in nearly 60 minutes of ice time. Monday was the ultimate reversal. His goal – set up by Verhaeghe just 80 seconds after Corey Perry cut a two-goal Florida lead in half – was great. His assist on Aaron Ekblad's third-period power play goal was even better. Reinhart went no-look behind his back, a move that fooled Skinner so utterly that Ekblad couldn't have missed the net if he tried. But it wasn't just offense for Reinhart, the two-way star who finished second in the Selke Trophy voting behind teammate Aleskander Barkov. Reinhart led all Panthers with three blocked shots Monday. 'I think you guys have seen it enough,' Reinhart said of Florida's style of play. 'We try to play the same very night and keep it as simple as possible. 'We're trying to take away some time and space.' Time and space? Luxuries Edmonton no longer can afford after a second straight loss.

Miami Herald
38 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Was a real, bloody rat thrown on the ice after the Panthers Game 3 win?
The customary rain of plastic rats on the Amerant Bank Arena ice after a Panthers win featured a deep cut poke at Edmonton superstar center Connor McDavid. One plastic rat that hit the ice in the defensive zone nearest the Edmonton skidded across the ice, leaving a bright red trail describing its route to the boards. From the upper rows and press box, this looked like someone slashed open an actual rat and hurled it onto the ice. But, a still from the Sportsnet broadcast showed it to be a broken bottle of ketchup hitched to a plastic rat. Why would someone do that? Same reason someone from the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Palm Beach County metro area might throw a dead bloody chicken on the ice — to vex McDavid. See, it's become well known that the Oilers captain doesn't like ketchup. OK, that's wallowing in understatement. He uses words such as 'fear' and 'phobia' to describe his aversion such as during an interview with former NHL defenseman P.K. Subban. In fact, Heinz made sport of McDavid's fear of ketchup in an Instagram post last October.


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Panthers and Oilers engage in all-out brawl as Florida takes control of Stanley Cup Final in Game 3 victory
While fighting is a regularity in the NHL, there's a low percentage of it happening in Stanley Cup Playoff games. Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final, though, saw an all-out brawl in the Florida Panthers' lopsided victory over the Edmonton Oilers to take a 2-1 lead in the series. In their first home game of the best-of-seven series, the Panthers took full advantage, and the Oilers tried to get even in a physical way instead of on the scoreboard. The game was already 5-1 in favor of Florida when things were getting more chippy on the ice. It reached a different level when Edmonton forward Trent Federic started to pick on Sam Bennett to the point where he cross-checked him down to the ice, and Bennett retaliated with some punches as he got on top of Federic. That initial fight led every player on the ice to find a partner to duel with, and the referees simply let the brawl play itself out. The Oilers' Darnell Nurse and the Panthers' Jonah Gadjovich clutched each other's sweaters and were throwing haymakers, while Florida's A.J. Greer dueled with Edmonton's Mattias Ekholm. After the fights fizzled out, Nurse, Godjovich, Bennett, Federic, Greer and Ekholm were all called for game misconducts and sent off the ice for the remainder of the game. But, with nearly half of the third period still to play, the tension between these two teams vying for Lord Stanley's Cup didn't stop. It mainly came from the Oilers, as Evander Kane was sent off the ice for the night after slashing Carter Verhaeghe in the face while he was down on the ice. More penalties would be had as the clock kept ticking down, and at that point, both teams were just hoping no one would get hurt with much of this series left to play. Even at the final buzzer, Oilers star Corey Perry started jousting with multiple Panthers players, as fans started throwing debris onto the ice. In the end, the Panthers responded to all the over-physical play by the Oilers with a power-play goal to cap their 6-1 victory, as Evan Rodrigues hammered home a shot. Other than the fights, some tremendous offensive hockey was on display by Florida from the get-go, as Brad Marchand potted one past Oilers goaltender Stuart Skinner just under one minute into the game. Marchand became the oldest player in NHL history to score in each of the first three Stanley Cup Finals games. But he isn't the only player to do so on his team in this series. Sam Bennett joined him in the second period after finding himself on a breakaway to the net thanks to Eetu Luostarinen intercepting an Edmonton pass at the blue line. Bennett went backhand forehand on Skinner, and buried his wrister top shelf to take a commanding 4-1 lead. Amerant Bank Arena went berserk as Bennett's goal led to an eruption of cheering on and off the ice for the Panthers. Verhaeghe also got into the goal column with a power-play goal assisted by Rodrigues and Nate Schmidt to go into the locker room up 2-0. Perry was able to get the Oilers a much-needed response with a power-play goal of his own at the beginning of the second period, but Florida's physicality, which was deemed legal by referees on the ice, ultimately led to Bennett's goal and Sam Reinhart's before that. Things came off the rails for Edmonton when Florida went back on the power play, and their top unit put together a beautiful display of passing ending with Aaron Ekblad's wide-open net to wrist home the team's fifth goal of the contest. It was truly a statement win for Florida, who have all types of momentum heading into Game 4 on Thursday night. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.