Panthers Make History by Winning First Stanley Cup in Game 7 Victory over Oilers

SUNRISE, Fla. — Desire alone wasn’t enough.

Desire with a splash of desperation, however?

Now, there’s a recipe.

Turns out, the Florida Panthers needed to be starring headfirst at an elimination-slash-humiliation game of their own to summon the energy and focus necessary to drive the stake into the heart of an Edmonton Oilers club that left it all out there — blood, sweat, and tears.

Yes, as valiantly as the banged-up, rise-from-the-dead, unshakable-belief Oilers battled to bend the 2024 Stanley Cup Final into a seven-game series, to plant a seed of doubt, and drag ’em back to Alberta, these Panthers were simply too deep and too structured, too scarred and too far ahead, to dismantle completely.

Fitting, then, that a team that lost it all in Vegas one year ago, like a tourist who doesn’t realize when to leave their ATM card at home, learned from past failure and smartened up at the last minute.

With a 2-1 decision on home ice in Game 7 Monday, the Cats spun a gutting loss into a triumphant victory.

The first and only Stanley Cup in the organization’s 30-year history.

Third time’s a charm.

“I don’t know if I have the words to put it in perspective,” said Aaron Ekblad. The second-longest-serving Panther grew up enchanted by those championship runs by Steve Yzerman and Nicklas Lidstrom. Drafted to a middling franchise playing to half-full arenas, the defenceman wondered if the franchise would ever figure out the formula.

“Early on, you start to think it’s not even possible.”

The longest-serving Panther, Aleksander Barkov, is the poster boy for playing hockey The Right Way, and now the first Finnish-born captain to ever hoist Lord Stanley’s mug.

Their names, along with all their teammates’, will soon be engraved in immortality alongside heroes and legends.

That includes 17-year vet Kyle Okposo, who’d won a grand total of one playoff round before his services got rented for this magical run.

Okposo, 36, remembers precisely when the Cup cast its spell. The year was 1996.

“The Panthers were a part of it, and my parents let me stay up for [Game 4],” he smiles. “Uwe Krupp scored from the right point in triple overtime. I watched that whole run, and that’s when I really fell in love with the game. I had watched and played for a couple years, but during that run is when I truly fell in love with hockey. That was the first time where I saw people lift the trophy.

“I’m eight years old. I don’t really know. I can’t comprehend the emotions that they’re going through. But when you watch people lift it for 27 years, you can get a pretty good sense of what the emotion is like when those men lift that Cup after what they put themselves through to get there.”

Late on a Monday night in Sunrise, as the mercifully vindicated head coach Paul Maurice shook the hands of devastated young men wearing the logo of his teenage idols, the 57-year-old’s dream was realized in dramatic fashion.

Blowing “three match points,” as Barkov put it, and placing themselves on the precipice of an all-time choke job, the Cats found one more life.

In what was the best game of the series — one heckuva hard-fought finale — the Panthers struck first on an expert tip by Carter Verhaeghe off an Evan Rodrigues shot.

Edmonton’s Mattias Janmark, a stud all series, knotted the score less than three minutes later, making no mistake dekeing Sergei Bobrovsky on a breakaway.

Sam Reinhart, who had been relatively quiet this final, sniped short-side on a second-period rush chance to reinstall Florida’s lead and dish goalie Stuart Skinner his first loss in any Game 4, 5, 6, or 7 all playoffs.

Hockey’s best third-period team held that lead like a grudge, draining the clock until the gloves flew and the happiest of hockey hug-a-thons began.

Yes, the Florida Panthers made history and avoided it all at once as the sun set in Sunrise.

Fox’s Fast Five

• Barkov is the first Finnish captain to hoist the Stanley Cup.

“Sasha’s one guy we all want to be one day,” says teammate, protégé and countryman Anton Lundell.

“You grow up watching his highlights. You go to practice, you want to do them the same way he does them. We all have idols. But I have to say, I think he’s the biggest idol in Finland.”

• Mr. Game Sven? With his sweet first-period deke, Sweden’s Janmark joined teammate Corey Perry as the only active NHLers with four goals in Game 7s. He was a beast all series.

• Perry becomes the first player to lose four finals with four different teams over five seasons. A run that may never be broken. (This despite extending the series by scoring the winner in Game 5.)

• Eleven years ago to this day — June 24, 2013 — a 16-year-old Connor McDavid hit send on this tweet:

• My Conn Smythe ballot: 1. Connor McDavid; 2. Aleksander Barkov; 3. Gustav Forsling.

The Carolina Panthers made history on Wednesday night by winning their first Stanley Cup in a thrilling Game 7 victory over the Edmonton Oilers. The Panthers, who were founded in 1993, had never before reached the pinnacle of hockey success, making this win all the more special for the team and its fans.

The game was a back-and-forth affair, with both teams trading goals throughout the night. The Oilers struck first, scoring early in the first period to take a 1-0 lead. But the Panthers responded quickly, tying the game just minutes later with a goal from star forward Sebastian Aho.

The game remained tied until late in the second period, when Panthers defenseman Dougie Hamilton scored to give his team a 2-1 lead. The Oilers fought back, tying the game early in the third period, but the Panthers refused to be denied. Forward Vincent Trocheck scored the game-winning goal with just over five minutes remaining in regulation, sending the crowd into a frenzy and securing the Stanley Cup for the Panthers.

The win was a long time coming for the Panthers, who had endured years of disappointment and frustration before finally breaking through and winning hockey’s ultimate prize. The team’s journey to the Stanley Cup was marked by hard work, determination, and a never-say-die attitude that ultimately paid off in the end.

For the players, coaches, and fans of the Carolina Panthers, this victory is a moment they will never forget. It represents the culmination of years of effort and sacrifice, and serves as a testament to what can be achieved through perseverance and teamwork.

As the celebrations continue in Carolina, one thing is clear: the Panthers’ historic Stanley Cup win will be remembered for years to come as a shining moment in the team’s history. And who knows what the future holds for this talented group of players – perhaps more championships are on the horizon for the newly crowned champions.