logo
Oilers and Panthers now more alike as teams prepare for Stanley Cup final rematch

Oilers and Panthers now more alike as teams prepare for Stanley Cup final rematch

Global News2 days ago

A year ago when the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers met in the Stanley Cup final, they were polar opposites in everything from climate, market and franchise history to deep-run experience and toughness.
Since Florida won that series in seven games for its first championship, much has changed to make these opponents much more alike.
The Panthers have added talent and skill, and the Oilers have gotten older and become harder to play against. Those changes set the stage for an compelling rematch. Game 1 is Wednesday night in Edmonton.
'These are the two nastiest teams left,' 2003 Cup winner Mike Rupp said. 'They don't seem to get rattled, they play with a lot of intensity — sometimes they cross the line. They just defend well.
'There's a lot of things that they're different than one another about, but at the core of it, they're pretty similar to each other.'
Story continues below advertisement
Comparing the two
Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl haven't gone anywhere, but they've also been through the heartbreak of forcing Game 7 against the Panthers and falling short of the goal they've been hunting over the past decade together. With Trent Frederic, Jeff Skinner, John Klingberg and Jake Walman, the Oilers are bigger and more seasoned for this.
'They're meaner,' said retired defenceman Jason Demers, who like Rupp is now an NHL Network analyst.
'They have a little bite to their game — a lot more bite than last year where they were a little bit more speedy.'
Tweet This
Click to share quote on Twitter: "They have a little bite to their game — a lot more bite than last year where they were a little bit more speedy."
Florida can be speedy, opportunistic and dangerous — and has been over the past few post-seasons — winning 10 of 11 series since coach Paul Maurice took over and winger Matthew Tkachuk arrived after a trade from Calgary.
Story continues below advertisement
The Panthers are in the final for a third consecutive year, losing to Vegas in 2023 only after Tkachuk, defenceman Aaron Ekblad and others were banged up to the point that they had nothing left in the tank. They were the underdog back then.
Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
With one successful Cup run complete and with Seth Jones and Brad Marchand added to the core led by Tkachuk and captain Aleksander Barkov, they now look unstoppable.
'They're a heck of a team,' McDavid said after beating Dallas to win the Western Conference final. 'Obviously, it's their third finals.
'They're a special group. We're a special group. It's going to be fun.'
Rough and tumble
It also could be physical. The Oilers lost hard-nosed winger Zach Hyman to a long-term injury late in the series against the Stars, but they are more prepared now to play the rough-and-tumble style Florida has won with.
The fact that it's a rematch in the final — the NHL's first since Pittsburgh beat Detroit in the second of their back-to-backs in 2009 — only spices things up. There have only been four rematches in the final since 1968.
'I don't think there'll be any weeding out or wading into that series,' Demers said.
Story continues below advertisement
'I think it's going to be gun shot, explosions right off the bat.'
Going down two games to none last year led to McDavid's profanity-laced outburst in the locker room, a moment caught on cameras that wasn't quite enough to turn around the series. The memory of going down 3-0, clawing back to cross the continent again for a Game 7 and not winning is still fresh in his mind.
The Oilers have been through that trip to the final and feel the pain now, something the Panthers endured before winning. Now it's time to see if they learn the same lesson and change the result.
'Edmonton now, I think they needed to experience last year to get to where they're at now and they're kind of unflappable,' Rupp said. 'I think that's a weapon for them.'
Story continues below advertisement
1:57
Edmonton Oilers advance to Stanley Cup Finals

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘It's Canada we want to win the Stanley Cup': Calgary hockey fans swallow pride to support Oilers cup run
‘It's Canada we want to win the Stanley Cup': Calgary hockey fans swallow pride to support Oilers cup run

CTV News

time26 minutes ago

  • CTV News

‘It's Canada we want to win the Stanley Cup': Calgary hockey fans swallow pride to support Oilers cup run

Alberta is hosting Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final and many Calgarians are supporting their main rivals the Edmonton Oilers. Around four decades worth of Battles of Alberta are being put aside for many hockey fans in the Calgary area who are supporting the Edmonton Oilers in the Stanley Cup Final. As Alberta hosts the first two games, Oiler blue and orange jerseys filled Calgary pubs and sports bars, while just west of the city, the Town of Cochrane was flying the Oilers flag -- all while a wildly popular Calgary cupcake shop did blockbuster business selling Oiler-themed sweet treats. 'I would say at least over a hundred dozen right now maybe more, just in Calgary,' said Jenna Clarke with Crave Cupcakes. 'In Edmonton they're doing lots more.' It's business and pleasure for some hockey fans. 'These weekday games for us, there isn't an empty seat in the house with all three floors open,' said Ernie Tsu, the owner of Trolley 5, which has been the epicentre of the Red Mile whenever the hometown Flames make a playoff run over the years. 'Sports brings people together,' said Tsu, who wore an Oilers jersey to work Wednesday. Ernie Tsu, June 4, 2025 Trolley 5 owner Ernie Tsu, who hosted many Red Mile parties when the Flames made playoff runs, said the Oilers' run to the Stanley Cup final in 2025 has been great for business. (Alesia Fieldberg, CTV Calgary) The Red Mile might have turned into a kilometre and a half worth of orange and blue, but Tsu said he can work with a long Oiler playoff run in 2025. 'Business-wise yeah,' he said. 'Game 7 would be great -- but I'd just love to see the cup come back to Canada.' Who to cheer for is an easy choice for some. 'It means a lot to me that the Town of Cochrane can get behind the Oilers and celebrate them getting to the cup,' said Carter Fehr, the Cochrane boy who got to raise the Oiler flag Wednesday. Being born outside Calgary often makes who you cheer for an easier decision. 'Oilers! I'm from Edmonton and they are the best team in Alberta and they're Canada's team,' said Calgarian Faizel Poonja. Even some Flames fans are temporarily switching allegiance to their rivals from the north. 'Oilers did get the best of them this year so that's why,' said Calgarian Dominic Labelle. 'They beat my favourite team, so I gotta see them win the Stanley.' But the decades of hostility between Alberta's two NHL teams makes it tougher for others. 'Oh yeah, it's a struggle,' said Mike in Kensington. Whether you revel the rivalry or are feeling patriotic.. there's someone to cheer for. Edmonton has twice as many Canadian-born players as the Panthers But Florida has three former Flames (Sam Bennet, A.J. Greer, and Matthew Tkachuk). 'I honestly am split. If the Oilers win I'll be happy for Canada but sad for Flames fans,' Mike said, perhaps echoing what thousands of hockey-mad Calgarians were feeling Wednesday. Alberta is hosting Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final and many Calgarians are supporting their main rivals the Edmonton Oilers. Alberta is hosting Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final and many Calgarians are supporting their main rivals the Edmonton Oilers. After all, it's been 35 years since the Oilers' last (and fifth) Stanley Cup victory -- and 32 years since any Canadian team took the cup. Those stark numbers -- combined with the recent aggravations of trade relationships with the United States -- have created a perfect hockey storm for Calgary hockey fans who might otherwise call themselves lifelong Oiler haters. 'You have to cheer for the Canadian team,' said Calgarian Marian Hijkoop. 'It's Canada we want to win the Stanley Cup' said Labelle. Game 2 is Friday in Edmonton, before both teams head to Florida for Games 3 and 4 on Monday and Thursday.

Canada hopes eighth time a charm as nation seeks first Stanley Cup in a generation
Canada hopes eighth time a charm as nation seeks first Stanley Cup in a generation

Winnipeg Free Press

timean hour ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Canada hopes eighth time a charm as nation seeks first Stanley Cup in a generation

EDMONTON – Here we go again. From B.C. to all points north and east, Canadian hockey fans are hoping the nation's Stanley Cup nightmare-drought ends as the Edmonton Oilers host the Florida Panthers in the NHL final. This year's Cup clash comes with a bit more patriotic fervour than usual given U.S. President Donald Trump recently launching a tariff war north of the 49 parallel while dismissing Canada as a freeloading sidekick that should gratefully trade in its Maple Leaf for the Stars and Stripes. A cross-country check of fans suggests even if the Oilers aren't everyone's first choice, they'll do for now. 'I think every Canadian should be cheering for the Oilers now,' fan Julian Bourgoin said, calling the Oilers his go-to team after the hometown Senators. 'I've always wanted a Canadian team to win, and the Oilers are the last one, so I'm hanging my Gretzky jersey high and I'm flying it till they win.' In Toronto, home of the blue-clad Maple Leafs, fan Ashley Winter said at the end of the day the red Maple Leaf trumps all. 'Canada has to win hockey. That's our game,' said Winter. Longtime transplanted westerner Bruce Jones agreed it's time to go Oiler. 'I lived out west for many years in the Calgary area and I was anti-Oiler but right now it's the Oilers,' Jones said. 'With all the turmoil that's going on right now, it adds to our national pride,' he added. 'We haven't won since '93.' It was June 9, 1993, when the Montreal Canadiens became the last Canadian team to hoist the NHL championship trophy, defeating ex-Oiler Wayne Gretzky and his Los Angeles Kings in the deciding Game 5. That year saw three prime ministers: Brian Mulroney, Kim Campbell and Jean Chrétien. The TV show 'Seinfeld' was reaching its artistic apex and the big-screen dinosaur epic 'Jurassic Park' debuted. Don't ask the current Oilers for memories of 1993. The longest-serving current player, forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, wasn't even two months old. Veteran superpest Corey Perry was eight. Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl weren't even born. In the three or so decades since, Canadian teams have won participation ribbons in seven Cup finals, starting with Vancouver in 1994, then Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Vancouver, Montreal and then Edmonton again when the Oilers lost in seven games last spring to the Panthers. Stanley, meanwhile, has travelled the continental United States from Los Angeles to Boston, from south Florida to Las Vegas, with stops in Dallas, Denver, Detroit, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Anaheim, North Carolina, New York and New Jersey. In Edmonton, at the epicentre of the Cup quest outside the Oilers' home rink of Rogers Place, crews kept busy this week readying the outdoor plaza where fans will gather on game nights to watch the play on a big screen. Longtime Oilers fan Paul Huang, in an orange and blue hoodie, said he runs an online chat group that includes hockey parents from all over Canada. 'We all cheer for Canada (and) for the Oilers at this moment,' Huang said. 'We're the only one left.' Oilers fan Jason McCarthy said he has a brother and a friend flying in from Ottawa to go to the games. McCarthy said the visitors are Montreal Canadiens fans, but said for now it's Canada first. 'Most people I talk to — even in Montreal — the Oilers are their second favourite team, and the No. 1 team left right now,' McCarthy said. 'I even know for a fact in Montreal there are signs around the city cheering on the Oilers.' Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. Farther west, in Victoria, resident Olivia Robinson, who is originally from Edmonton, said she'll be tuning in to the series, but not necessarily to see Trump's U.S.A. get humbled. 'I think hockey is Canada's game, so I'd like them to win because of that, but not in particular (because of trade tensions),' Robinson said. Robinson said the Oilers have to a 'certain extent' become Canada's team, but added, 'I think because they are winning, everybody wants them as Canada's team now.' — with files from Lisa Johnson in Edmonton, Wolfgang Depner in Victoria, Sarah Ritchie in Ottawa and Noah Trenton in Toronto This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 4, 2025.

'Home away from home': Edmonton Oilers fans flock to Trolley 5 to watch Stanley Cup Final
'Home away from home': Edmonton Oilers fans flock to Trolley 5 to watch Stanley Cup Final

Calgary Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Calgary Herald

'Home away from home': Edmonton Oilers fans flock to Trolley 5 to watch Stanley Cup Final

Article content Waitstaff hustled to find seats for their customers, but people were patient, jovial even. Dressed in orange and blue jerseys — the colours of the Edmonton Oilers — it was shaping up to be a promising night. Article content Article content It's the first game of the Stanley Cup Final and the Oilers are set to play against the Florida Panthers. For longtime fans of the Oilers, this marks an especially emotional milestone — and the best place in town to celebrate? Trolley 5 Brewpub. Article content Article content 'It makes you feel like you're home,' Heather Johnstone said. Article content Article content Having grown up in Edmonton, Johnstone said she has always been an Oilers fan and brought her friends Dominique Mellafont and Jordan Aravena into the fold recently. The three sat in a corner on the first floor of the pub, all wearing Oilers colours, snacking on wings and beers. Article content It was Aravena's idea to watch the game at the pub, having watched the playoffs there a month ago. 'It was just full of energy,' she said. 'Like nothing you've ever seen before in a bar. Everyone's cheering, everyone's friends with each other. Just unbelievable energy.' Article content For Johnstone, the idea of watching the game at a bar surrounded by other Oilers lends a nostalgic comfort to the experience. 'It gives Oilers fans confidence to come out,' she said. 'I don't usually wear my jersey out there, unless I'm surrounded by other Oilers. Article content Article content 'We're like a family.' Article content Article content Trolley 5 has in recent years become an unofficial haven for Oilers fans in a city renowned for its loyalty towards the Calgary Flames, the Oilers' longtime rival. With reservations made more than two weeks out, the pub is often packed on nights when the games are on, with goers boldly dressed in their jerseys, cheering the team on on televisions hanging from every corner. Article content Walking into the pub Wednesday would find waitstaff wearing the jerseys and blue pom poms placed on the tables for customers on the upper floor. Article content Pub owner Ernie Tsu wore his own jersey and cap. He's a fan of both the Oilers and the Flames, he said. 'I was born and raised in (Calgary), but I love my province, it's as simple as that.'

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