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Champions! Panthers capture team’s first Stanley Cup with thrilling Game 7 win over Oilers

Players from the Florida Panthers pose for a photo after winning the the Stanley Cup Final at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise on Monday, June 24, 2024. (John McCall/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
Players from the Florida Panthers pose for a photo after winning the the Stanley Cup Final at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise on Monday, June 24, 2024. (John McCall/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
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SUNRISE — In 1996, the Florida Panthers introduced South Florida to the “rat trick” during their first Stanley Cup Final run. In 2023, Florida showed off a new generation of stars like Aleksander Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk and Carter Verhaeghe before losing to Vegas in the Final.

But 2024 is when the Panthers reached the summit of the hockey world, lifting the Stanley Cup for the first time in franchise history.

They needed to get past Tampa Bay, which held its three Stanley Cup titles over its rivals’ heads for years. They needed to beat Boston and New York, whose fans frequently filled the arena in Sunrise during the Panthers’ darkest doldrums of mediocrity.

Finally, they needed to beat Edmonton, the former home of the greatest player in the sport’s history and the current home of the sport’s best player. Despite losing three consecutive games to send the series to a nerve-wracking Game 7, the Panthers clinched their first title with a 2-1 win on Monday night. It’s the first title for a South Florida professional team since the Miami Heat won the NBA title in 2013.

“It’s our dream,” Barkov, Florida’s captain, said. “Now it’s reality.”

After starting slowly in the previous three games, the Panthers got off to a strong start in Game 7. Verhaeghe made Amerant Bank Arena erupt, scoring the game’s opening goal 4:27 into the first period. It was the first time Florida scored first since Game 3. It was a radical departure from how the Panthers looked for much of the three losses.

But despite the noise of potentially becoming the first team since 1942 to lose a Stanley Cup Final where they were up three games to none, Panthers coach Paul Maurice said the team did not panic.

“It’s not me,” Maurice said. “It’s not me. That leadership in that room is unbelievable. I just sort of feel if they needed a bark. They didn’t need that. I haven’t been driving this bus for two months. It’s all the players. I’m not trying to be humble. It’s why I love it here. I’ve got a small, little piece of this small job. These men are special.”

But the lead was short-lived, as Mattias Janmark — who earlier in the period had his helmet knocked off on a check by Barkov — got a breakaway shot past goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky to tie the game at one.

However, the Oilers did not beat Bobrovsky again. Edmonton star Connor McDavid, later awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy for the best performance in the playoffs, was held without a point for the second game in a row.

“He’s been our best player all year long, all playoff long,” Sam Bennett said of Bobrovsky. “When we need him most, he stood on his head again tonight.”

After defenseman Dmitry Kulikov shoved a loose puck out of Florida’s crease, Sam Reinhart — the Panthers’ leading goal-scorer and impending free agent — sniped a wrist shot from the point past Stuart Skinner, sending the arena into delirium with 4:49 remaining in a tense second period.

“It’s incredible,” Reinhart said. “That definitely hasn’t sunk in yet. It’s just incredible.”

Bobrovsky had struggled in the Panthers’ three losses in the series, even getting taken out of the blowout in Game 4. But he returned to form just in time for Game 7, saving all but one shot that came his way and helping clinch the franchise’s first title.

“To become a true champion, you have to overcome an adversity, and that was a good test for us, for all of us.” Bobrovsky said. “We overcome, and here we are.”

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