logo
Florida's third and fourth lines are grinding down Edmonton in the Stanley Cup Final

Florida's third and fourth lines are grinding down Edmonton in the Stanley Cup Final

NBC Sports4 hours ago

Brad Marchand joked that when he was traded to the Florida Panthers from the Boston Bruins, he looked at the lineup and wondered if he would be playing on the fourth line again.
'Back to my roots,' Marchand said.
Sorry, Brad. There was no room there. But coach Paul Maurice figured the third line alongside young Finns Anton Lundell and Eetu Luostarinen was the perfect place for Marchand, and it has worked out swimmingly.
The Marchand-Lundell-Luostarinen trio is responsible for six goals in the Stanley Cup Final, and the gritty fourth line of A.J. Greer, Tomas Nosek and Jonah Gadjovich has been a big part of wearing down the Edmonton Oilers to take a 3-2 lead in the series going into Game 6.
'We're not here without them,' Maurice said. 'Both of those lines have a strong identity, and they shape the identity of our team.'
All three of Greer, Nosek and Gadjovich were healthy scratches for the opening two games of the second round against Toronto. Florida lost those games, Maurice brought them back and the Panthers won that series in seven and rolled over Carolina in the Eastern Conference final.
In the Cup final, the third and fourth lines have not only helped at even strength but against Edmonton's potent power play, holding it to four goals on 23 opportunities, a 17.4% conversion rate. That, combined with tilting the ice on the Oilers, has been a recipe for success, especially after Greer returned from injury in time for Game 3.
'The Lundell line is producing offense, Marchand's producing offense, these guys have good numbers but they're all penalty killers,' Marchand said. 'That's what makes them special because there's no cheat in their game.'
More travel
There was only one day between Games 4 and 5 going from Sunrise to Edmonton. There is an extra travel gap to return to Florida, but it's still a five-plus hour flight for each team.
'It's part of the NHL schedule: a lot of travel,' Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said. 'There's a lot of science behind it of the importance of sleep, nutrition, all that recovery, exercises that go into it just so that the players are feeling at their best or as close to their best as they can.'
Vanecek's recognition
Sergei Bobrovsky has been the Panthers' starting goaltender this entire playoff run. Backup Vitek Vanecek only got some attention after cameras caught him and the Oilers' Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard in a stare down during warmups prior to Game 4.
'I was just doing my routine,' Vanecek said.
In Game 5, Vanecek watched from his usual seat at the end of the bench as Bobrovsky made 19 saves to push Florida to the verge of another championship. Afterward, Gadjovich — who got the game puck for fighting in Game 3 — handed it to Vanecek.
'There's a great recognition (and) care in the room for all the hard work that goes on,' Maurice said. 'Some of those guys don't get to be on the ice for a celebration after a win, but they're critical to the group, to the personality of the group and the closeness of it.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brennan Poole to make his first NASCAR Cup start of the year at Pocono
Brennan Poole to make his first NASCAR Cup start of the year at Pocono

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Brennan Poole to make his first NASCAR Cup start of the year at Pocono

When NASCAR heads to Pocono Raceway this weekend, NY Racing Team will be there with the No. 44 Chevrolet in an open entry. The team has run six races so far this year and also attempted but failed to qualify for the Daytona 500. They have utilized both J.J. Yeley and Derek Kraus as drivers this season, never placing higher than 32nd. But this weekend, the team will enlist the help of driver Brennan Poole. The 34-year-old is a regular in the Xfinity Series where he also drives the No. 44 Chevrolet, but that is with AlphaPrime Racing (no connection to NY Racing Team). Advertisement But on Sunday, Poole will make his first Cup start since Las Vegas Motor Speedway in October, 2023. This will be his 43rd career start in the top level of NASCAR and his first with NY Racing Team. Members 1st Federal Credit Union will back the effort as the primary sponsor. Poole's best finish in the Cup Series came at Talladega in 2020, finishing ninth with Rick Ware Racing. He has two previous Cup starts at Pocono, both coming in 2020 with finishes of 29th and 27th. "We're doing the Pocono Raceway double this weekend with Members 1st FCU," said Poole in a social media post. "Super excited for this opportunity to race on Sunday again and I can't wait to get behind the NY Racing Team Chevy! You won't have any issues picking out our #44 on both Saturday and Sunday." Read Also: How Shane van Gisbergen's Mexico win completely changes the playoff picture Winners and losers from a historic NASCAR weekend in Mexico Ricky Stenhouse Jr. threatens Carson Hocevar: "I'm gonna beat your ass" To read more articles visit our website.

Why the Panthers' fast starts in Cup Final has presented them with a ‘great challenge'
Why the Panthers' fast starts in Cup Final has presented them with a ‘great challenge'

Miami Herald

timean hour ago

  • Miami Herald

Why the Panthers' fast starts in Cup Final has presented them with a ‘great challenge'

The Florida Panthers have figured out how to get off to good starts in the Stanley Cup Final. It's why the Panthers are up 3-2 in the series against the Edmonton Oilers and one win away from repeating as champions. Being able to maintain those leads, however, hasn't always been easy against an Edmonton Oilers team that has shown its ability to make wild comebacks. It's why the Oilers have been able to stick around in the series. Through the first five games of the Stanley Cup Final, Florida has outscored Edmonton 11-4, has scored multiple goals in the opening 20 minutes in each game of the series and led in four of five games going into the first intermission. 'It's huge to start well, and obviously we want to keep doing that,' center Anton Lundell said, 'but at the same time, it's a long game. We've seen during the series, we have to play good the whole 60 minutes.' The Panthers haven't done that consistently throughout the series. The two losses show just that. Florida led 2-1 after the first period of Game 1 and went up 3-1 two minutes into the second period before Edmonton rallied with a goal apiece in the second and third to force overtime, where Leon Draisaitl scored the game-winner with 31 seconds left in the extra period. The Panthers led 3-0 after the opening frame of Game 4 but quickly gave away that lead as well. Edmonton scored three goals in the second to tie it, then briefly took a 4-3 lead with 6:14 left in regulation. Sam Reinhart tied the game for the Panthers with 19.5 seconds left to force overtime, but Edmonton stole the win with another Draisaitl overtime goal. Florida won the other three games of the series 5-4 in double overtime in Game 2, 6-1 in Game 3 and 5-2 in Game 5. 'I think it's been a great challenge, actually,' Panthers coach Paul Maurice said of the first-period leads. 'We've had leads in games and we've had them evaporate. They're built to attack, and when the pressure comes off a team, their risk profile changes. That's the most dangerous team in the NHL when the risk profile changes. For us the second one would be the Tampa Bay Lightning. When they're down a goal or two, they're incredibly hard to handle and it's in the style of game they're very, very good at. So, it's just more time where we're playing them at their best, they attack.' They said it ▪ 'Every series, you learn something. Those games, they teach you a lot. Obviously, when the time comes and you have a chance to end the series or stuff like that or you have that big game, obviously, you want it so much that you're maybe trying to do a little too much, like you're trying to do something different than what you've been [doing]. For us, it's to stick with what we've been doing and that's the whole key.' - Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov on closing out series ▪ 'Our fans have given us so much love and support and momentum this year that they deserve this type of game at home. So we're excited playing for that.' - Panthers winger Matthew Tkachuk on chance to win the Stanley Cup at home in Game 6

FIFA Club World Cup: How to watch Lionel Messi and the top teams worldwide in the first tournament of its kind
FIFA Club World Cup: How to watch Lionel Messi and the top teams worldwide in the first tournament of its kind

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

FIFA Club World Cup: How to watch Lionel Messi and the top teams worldwide in the first tournament of its kind

The FIFA Club World Cup 2025 is officially underway. The first tournament of its kind in the expanded format sees the top 32 club teams worldwide competing for the prestigious soccer championship. The tournament is being hosted across 11 locations in the United States, and will run until July 13, as some of the biggest teams and names in the sport like Lionel Messi, Erling Haaland and Kylian Mbappe compete for the highly coveted trophy. A post shared by FIFA Club World Cup (@fifaclubworldcup) In the tournament's abbreviated form last season, Manchester City were crowned champions of the FIFA Club World Cup, and will look to repeat this time around as the team to beat in Group G. Lionel Messi and his team, Inter Miami CF, will have the opportunity to make some noise on the world stage, representing the MLS as the favourites out of Group A. The most recent Champions League winners, Paris Saint-Germain, will look to emulate their championship form in this tournament as one of the betting favourites to win it all. FC Bayern Munchen, who already started the tournament with a lopsided 10-0 win over New Zealand's Auckland City FC, are also one of the top contenders in this year's Cup. Real Madrid, who hold the record with the most Champions League trophies of all time in Europe, round out the top clubs in the tournament. A post shared by FIFA Club World Cup (@fifaclubworldcup) The FIFA Club World Cup is being played in 12 different venues across 11 cities in the United States: Here are the top group stage games to look out for before the knockout phase of the tournament: The next round will begin Saturday, June 28, with the top 16 teams remaining who have advanced from the group stage of the tournament. The FIFA Club World Cup final is set to be played on Sunday, July 13, at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, with a capacity of 82,500. A post shared by Gianni Infantino - FIFA President (@gianni_infantino) The FIFA Club World Cup 2025 is being streamed exclusively on sports streaming platform DAZN, which is offering free subscriptions for the duration of the tournament. With your free subscription, you will have access to every single game throughout the tournament. If you are already a paying subscriber of DAZN, you can also access each game live as part your membership.

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