Tampa Bay Lightning

Panthers ‘up to the challenge’ as they beat defending Stanley Cup champion Lightning

The Florida Panthers were optimistic yet cautious. They had gotten off to one of the best starts in franchise history and had been steady throughout the first 10 games of the shortened 2021 season while primarily facing teams at the bottom half of the Central Division.

But the defending Stanley Cup champions were coming to town. Thursday, their first of three games in five days against the Tampa Bay Lightning, would serve as the litmus test for where this Panthers team really stands.

“They are doing everything right,” Panthers coach Joel Quenneville said of the Lightning leading into the game, “and we have to do more than everything right.”

On Thursday, the Panthers did more than everything right.

The offense was humming and got past one of the best goaltenders in the league. The defense stymied a high-potent offense. Sergei Bobrovsky followed up his best performance of the season with another solid game in net.

The end result at the BB&T Center: Panthers 5, Lightning 2.

Frank Vatrano, Alex Wennberg, Aaron Ekblad, Carter Verhaeghe and Brett Connolly scored goals for Florida, which improved to 8-1-2 on the season. Bobrovsky stopped 19 of 21 shots on goal to improve to 5-0-1 on the season. Brayden Point scored a pair of power-play goals for the Lightning, who saw their six-game win streak snapped and dropped to 9-2-1.

“The whole team was kind of buzzing tonight,” Verhaeghe said. “... We were the better team five-on-five tonight, and it showed.”

A three-goal flurry in the span of 6:22 in the second period gave Florida the lead for good.

It started eight-and-a-half minutes into the frame when Wennberg took a cross ice pass from Huberdeau and sent a snap shot past Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy to give the Panthers a 2-0 lead. Wennberg has now scored a goal in three consecutive game. Huberdeau’s assist was the 300th of his NHL career.

Point cut Florida’s lead in half just over two minutes later with the first of his two power play goals, a wrist shot on a feed from Ondrej Palat.

But the Panthers responded with an Ekblad power-play goal (a one-timer from the left circle on a feed from Keith Yandle) and a wrist shot from Verhaeghe from the right board that went through traffic, bounced off Lightning defenseman Erik Cernak’s skate and landed in the back of the net.

“For us,” Yandle said heading into the series, “it’s a good test. We have to be willing to play — we have three games here — and it’s going to be a tough test, but I think we are up to the challenge.”

They were up to the challenge Thursday.

Round 2 is on Saturday, the final game of Florida’s six-game homestand. They will meet again at Tampa’s Amalie Arena on Monday.

Anthony Duclair goes on COVID list

Quenneville went into Thursday anticipating that he would use the same lineup he rolled out for Tuesday’s win over the Detroit Red Wings.

That changed about two hours before the puck dropped, when Anthony Duclair landed on the NHL’s daily “Unavailable Due to COVID Protocol” list.

Now, a quick reminder: Duclair landing on the COVID protocol list doesn’t necessarily mean he tested positive for COVID-19. Those who are deemed close contacts to someone who tested positive, those who are waiting for results of inconclusive tests and those who are under mandatory quarantine due to travel or other reasons are also subject to the protocol list.

Duclair, who entered Thursday ranked third on the team with six assists, is normally the right wing on the Panthers’ top forward line with Verhaeghe and Aleksander Barkov and a member of the team’s second power play unit.

With Duclair out, Brett Connolly started the game on the top line with Verhaeghe and Barkov. The middle two forward lines stayed consistent (Wennberg centering Jonathan Huberdeau and Patric Hornqvist; Eetu Luostarinen centering Vatrano and Owen Tippett). Juho Lammikko returned to the lineup to center the fourth line with Ryan Lomberg and Noel Acciari on the wings. Tippett took Duclair’s spot on the second power-play unit.

This and that

Defenseman Gustav Forsling practiced with the team Thursday for the first time since going on injured reserve on Jan. 30 with an upper-body injury. Quenneville said he’s optimistic Forsling will be able to play at some point on the team’s upcoming four-game road trip.

Lightning forward Steven Stamkos, the Lightning’s team leader with seven goals, did not play Thursday due to a lower-body injury.

This story was originally published February 11, 2021 at 9:30 PM with the headline "Panthers ‘up to the challenge’ as they beat defending Stanley Cup champion Lightning."

Jordan McPherson
Miami Herald
Jordan McPherson covers the Miami Hurricanes and Florida Panthers for the Miami Herald. He attended the University of Florida and covered the Gators athletic program for five years before joining the Herald staff in December 2017.
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