Miami Herald

Verhaeghe thrived on the wing with Barkov, now Tkachuk

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com David Wilson: @DBWilson2

From almost the day he joined the Panthers until a few weeks ago, Carter Verhaeghe was Aleksander Barkov’s go-to wingman. Joel Quennevill­e took a chance in 2020 when he decided to pair his star center with Verhaeghe, who had just one season of NHL experience as a bottom-line forward for the Tampa Bay Lightning, and it worked right away.

Carter Verhaeghe scored 18 goals in his first season as a Panther, then 24 last year and now, 50 games into his third season with Florida, he already has 25 goals — a new career high and tied with Matthew Tkachuk for the most on the team.

He teamed with Barkov for more than two years and now he’s skating with Tkachuk on the second line on the opposite wing as the All-Star forward.

In Verhaeghe’s three seasons with Florida, the Panthers have found a truism: Stick Verhaeghe with a star and he’s going to produce like one, too.

“I’m playing with some great players,” he said Tuesday. “They find me on the ice in really good positions to score goals, so I’m just shooting more and they’re going in.”

In a disappoint­ing season, Verhaeghe has been a true bright spot for Florida. The 2023 NHL AllStar Game is next week in Sunrise and it’s not crazy to think Verhaeghe could be a fill-in forward if someone has to pull out for an injury or some other reason. His production is worthy and often coincides with his team’s best moments.

Look no further than

Tuesday: The Panthers (23-21-6) blew three separate leads to the Pittsburgh Penguins and twice wound up trailing in regulation, and Verhaeghe answered with the gametying goal both times. His second goal came with just 2:32 left in regulation when he intercepte­d a misplayed puck in the offensive zone, beat the defense down the ice to draw Penguins goaltender Casey DeSmith out of the net and tapped the puck around the near goal post to force overtime and get the Panthers a badly needed point is a 7-6 overtime loss on the second night of a back-to-back set.

“He’s been great,” coach Paul Maurice said Tuesday. “Tonight, especially after last night, he was skating and had a real drive to his game.”

For another example, look back to the 2022 playoffs: The Panthers’ last great moment was their first-round win against the Washington Capitals and Verhaeghe

led Florida with six goals, including the series-winning tally in Game 6. He was good when the Panthers were great and he’s still good even when they’re lagging in the playoff race — he has been a model of consistenc­y for more than two years because he has become the ideal winger to play next to stars.

It starts with his speed because the 27-year-old Canadian wouldn’t be a top-six forward without one high-end skill and his skating ability has become his signature trait. It’s something he was toiling with in the minor leagues for five years, especially in his two stints with ECHL Missouri as part of the New York Islanders organizati­on.

“I realized that skating was the biggest thing,” Verhaeghe said. “Everything everyone always told me was, work on your skating, work on your skating and then you can play.”

It was further emphasized

once he made it to the NHL with the Lightning in 2018 and got to watch Tampa Bay center Brayden Point up close during a Stanley Cup run.

Really, everything about his time in Tampa influenced the other part of why he’s now such a perfect role player.

“I was on the bottom line. Whatever, I watched all those great players and I took so much from it,” Verhaeghe said. “I realized what it took . ... I wanted to be a part of that.”

With Florida, he got a chance for a bigger role, made the most of it, helped turn the Panthers into a Cup contender last year and delivered Florida its biggest postseason moment in more than 25 years.

Since his goal-scoring binge then, Verhaeghe hasn’t slowed down. A new coaching staff urged him to lean even more into his goal-scoring ability — as the finisher, whether he’s playing with

Barkov or Tkachuk, or both — and he has.

In all of last season, Verhaeghe took 149 shots and attempted 312. Already this year, he has 149 shots on goal with 259 attempts, including six and 11 on Tuesday, and his shooting percentage has gone up.

“If you go into the game thinking you want to shoot the puck, it makes it easier to do it,” Verhaeghe said. “They wanted me to be a shooter and playing with those two guys, who are such great passers, it’s so easy. They put me in great positions to shoot.”

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR AP ?? Carter Verhaeghe scores his second goal of the game Tuesday late in the third period to tie the score and force overtime for the Panthers at Pittsburgh.
GENE J. PUSKAR AP Carter Verhaeghe scores his second goal of the game Tuesday late in the third period to tie the score and force overtime for the Panthers at Pittsburgh.

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