The Maui News

Bruins-Panthers set for Game 2

- By TIM REYNOLDS AP Sports Writer

SUNRISE, Fla. — The season for the Florida Panthers cannot end on Wednesday night. It’s not an eliminatio­n game, the Boston

Bruins cannot close them out and no matter what happens there’s a flight to Massachuse­tts on Thursday and another game there on Friday.

So, it’s not a must-win.

The Panthers might feel otherwise. Game 2 of Panthers-Bruins is Wednesday night, with Boston looking to go up 2-0 in the NHL second-round playoff series. Florida has trailed a playoff matchup 2-0 on five occasions in its history and hasn’t rallied to win any of them — the Panthers were swept by Colorado in the 1996 Stanley Cup Final, swept by New Jersey in the first round in 2000, lost in six games to Tampa Bay in the 2021 first round, got swept by the Lightning in the second round in 2022 and lost last year’s Final to Vegas in five games.

“Nobody’s gone 16-0 as far as I know,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said Tuesday. “So, everybody’s going to suffer ... you rebound and you learn from it.”

Florida-Boston is the first of two NHL playoff games on Wednesday’s schedule. It’ll be followed by Game 1 of Vancouver-Edmonton in a Western Conference second-round series, with the Canucks having home-ice advantage in that matchup.

Vancouver swept Edmonton in all four regular-season meetings, though three of those games were during the Oilers’ horrid 3-9-1 start that led to the firing of coach Jay Woodcroft.

“We’re going into Round 2 of the Stanley Cup playoffs,” Oilers forward Leon Draisaitl said. “We don’t care about what happened in the regular season. And I bet you that they don’t either, as much as you think. We’re a different team now. It’s going to be tight-checking, with two really good teams going at it. The team that plays better hockey will win.”

The Oilers hope their regular-season fortunes change.

The Panthers desperatel­y need the same to happen.

Boston is now 5-0-0 against the Panthers this season, the most recent — and most emphatic — of those wins coming by a 5-1 count in Game 1 on Monday night behind 38 saves from Jeremy Swayman. Only two teams have gone 6-0-0 in their first six matchups of a season against Florida, those clubs being the 2006-07 Atlanta Thrashers and the 2009-10 Washington Capitals.

“I thought our effort was good,” Bruins coach Jim Montgomery said. “I thought we were physical. I don’t think our execution was close to where it needs to be.”

Maybe so, but Swayman being in the zone solves a lot of problems.

If he starts Game 2, it’ll be his seventh consecutiv­e start — which would be the longest by any Bruins goaltender since Tuukka Rask started the last 11 games of the 2020-21 season.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States