Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

MARCH MADNESS

South Carolina stands in way of trip to Final Four.

- By Harvey Fialkov Staff writer

SUNRISE — This was the team the Panthers were supposed to be.

In their most complete game of the season, Jonathan Marchessau­lt continued his assault on opposing goaltender­s with the first hat trick of his career to lead a 7-0 rout of the Western Conference­leading Chicago Blackhawks in a raucous, sold-out BB&T Center Saturday night.

Panthers coach Tom Rowe said earlier this week that he needed more from his young trio of Jonathan Huberdeau, Aleksander Barkov and a slumping Nick Bjugstad next season.

Why wait? Huberdeau had a goal and three assists; Barkov notched a goal and two helpers; and Bjugstad scored his sixth goal of the season. The seven goals tied a season high and it was their most lopsided victory since an 8-0 win in Toronto on Feb. 5, 2008.

The only downer on a fun-filled night was the potential loss of topline forward Jaromir Jagr, who sustained a leg injury in the second period on a hip check from Richard Panik. Jagr, 45, who has played all 74 games this season, came back briefly but didn’t return for the

third.

The Panthers weren’t supposed to be seven points out of a playoff spot with eight games remaining. They thoroughly outplayed a 102-point team that entered on a 6-0-1 roll and just two points behind Washington for the President’s Trophy, which nets home ice throughout the playoffs.

Panthers goalie James Reimer recorded 25 saves for his 16th victory and first shutout since April 5, 2016, a span of 38 appearance­s.

The Panthers, who had won three of the last 11 at home, took 2-of-3 on this modest homestand.

Leading 3-0 the Panthers poured it on in the third as Marchessau­lt scored unassisted to begin the barrage. Less than three minutes later, Huberdeau set Marchessau­lt up for a flicker through the legs of Scott Darling, who had just come in for a besieged Corey Crawford.

It was Marchessau­lt’s fifth goal in two games and Florida’s first hat trick since Colton Sceviour notched his on Oct. 16 at Detroit. Marchessau­lt padded his team lead to 28 goals.

Instead of hats, Panthers fans threw rats on the ice.

They weren’t done as Bjugstad joined the party on a deflection 40 seconds later. Reilly Smith added his 13th at 11:45.

After a scoreless, wide-open, freewheeli­ng first period, the Panthers took a 1-0 lead just 17 seconds into the second period.

Defenseman Jason Demers crisscross­ed in the neutral zone before feeding a streaking Huberdeau, who zipped it to Barkov for a blistering top-shelf wrister past Crawford. Barkov notched No. 21.

The Panthers took advantage of a double-minor by Chicago’s Ryan Hartman. The power play turned into a 5-on-3, 1:42 advantage when Marcus Kruger joined Hartman for a timeout.

Just 33 seconds later, Barkov returned the favor to Huberdeau with a set up from the right dot where he sniped a riser for a power-play goal against Chicago’s 25th-ranked PK and a 2-zip lead.

Just two seconds after the power play expired and 79 seconds following Huberdeau’s goal, the Panthers maintained possession of the puck in their zone when Barkov found Marchessau­lt for his trademark onetimer and a 3-0 cushion at 11:40.

Rowe admits mistake on Ekblad

Panthers young defenseman Aaron Ekblad will not accompany the team on the upcoming four-game, weeklong road trip so he could continue to recover from his latest concussion and neck injury.

Panthers interim coach Tom Rowe admitted he erred in playing Ekblad in Tuesday’s home loss to the Hurricanes after he missed the previous four games with his fourth head or neck-related injury in the last four years.

Ekblad, 21, sustained a neck injury that night which was first explained as being unrelated to the concussion sustained on March 11 when Lightning forward Gabriel Dumont delivered an non-penalized high hit.

“I’m not going to lie to you, I wish we didn’t [play him],” Rowe said after an optional morning skate.

“That’s on me because the doctors and medical staff cleared him. I had some reservatio­ns and wish I stayed with my gut. That’s nobody’s fault but my own. I usually give those guys 2-3 days of practice and I wish I did that.”

Luongo improving

Panthers goalie Roberto Luongo hasn’t played since March 2 with a lower-body injury that has reportedly been associated with his offseason hip surgery.

Rowe said that Luongo, 37, is looking good and will probably join the team on the road trip.

“He’s not quite ready yet,” Rowe said. “We’re going to hopefully see him get a game here on this trip. We’ll see what happens.”

 ?? JOEL AUERBACH/AP ?? Chicago Blackhawks goaltender Corey Crawford stops a shot by Florida Panthers center Aleksander Barkov during the first period Saturday.
JOEL AUERBACH/AP Chicago Blackhawks goaltender Corey Crawford stops a shot by Florida Panthers center Aleksander Barkov during the first period Saturday.
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 ?? JOEL AUERBACH/AP ?? Panthers center Aleksander Barkov, right, is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a goal during the second period of Saturday’s game against the Chicago Blackhawks at BB&T Center in Sunrise.
JOEL AUERBACH/AP Panthers center Aleksander Barkov, right, is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a goal during the second period of Saturday’s game against the Chicago Blackhawks at BB&T Center in Sunrise.

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