Oilers Preparing For Big Bad Panthers In Stanley Cup

Photo: Edmonton Oilers

The Edmonton Oilers know what to expect from the Florida Panthers. Lots of hits. Scrums after the whistle. A mix of skill and willpower.

But the Oilers say they’re not intimidated by the physical challenges posed by the Panthers. They’ll be ready to answer the bell when the Stanley Cup final begins Saturday night in Sunrise.

“Florida plays a fast game, in-your-face, aggressive,” said Oilers captain Connor McDavid, who leads the playoffs scoring race with 31 points. “I don’t think it changes anything.

“I would expect scrums and stuff like that. But we’re a veteran team, one of the older teams in the league. I don’t think that stuff bothers guys in here.”

Florida has made beating the beasts of the East look rather easy. They beat the New York Rangers in six games the Eastern Conference final, but the Blueshirts got both of their wins in overtime. At no time were the Rangers decisively better than the Panthers.

Before that, they beat the big, bad Boston Bruins at their own game — playing a nasty, physical brand of hockey in a six-game series win. Aleksander Barkov, arguably the best two-way forward in the game, neutralized Bruins star David Pastrnak. And Sam Bennett knocked Brad Marchand out of the series with a borderline, vicious hit.

The Tampa Bay Lightning, and all of that team’s Stanley Cup experience, were the Panthers’ first victim. Florida took out its state rival in five games.

 

 

The Dallas Stars, who the Oilers beat in the Western Conference final, are not as big and mean as the Panthers. But, the Oilers believe that their second-round series win over the Vancouver Canucks prepared them well for what Florida will bring.

The Oilers were down 3-2 to Vancouver, but came back to win in seven gruelling games. The Canucks were credited with 289 hits in the series, an average of more than 40 per night.

If the Oilers do lift the Cup, Edmonton fans could actually write thank-you notes to the Canucks for helping their team prep for the Panthers.

“We played a real physical team in Vancouver, as well,” said McDavid, “It’s the playoffs, it’s the finals. I would expect physicality no matter who we’re playing.”

“We can be a physical team, too,” added Leon Draisaitl, second in the NHL playoff scoring race with 28 points. “Obviously, we like to play with the puck, but we’re certainly not intimidated by physicality. We’ve handled it well in the Vancouver series, handled it well in the L.A. series (first round). Dallas was a little bit different. But we’re a good enough team, we’ve got enough guys to know how to play that type of way as well.

“We’ll be ready to go.”

(Canadian Press)

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