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NHL ROUNDUP

After years lost in the swamps, Florida puts together a run like few in NHL history

Matthew Tkachuk's last-second winner on Wednesday night to sweep the Carolina Hurricanes was his ninth goal of the postseason in 16 games — far more action than most expected he and the Florida Panthers would see in the playoffs.Bruce Bennett/Getty

SUNRISE, Fla. — They knocked out the Bruins. They knocked out Toronto. They knocked out Carolina.

Jamie Kompon was not knocked out, despite Paul Maurice’s best efforts.

Let’s explain: Kompon is an assistant coach for Florida under Maurice, who is in his first year as the Panthers’ head coach. Kompon made a key adjustment to Florida’s power play earlier in these playoffs, and it paid off when Matthew Tkachuk scored a power-play goal with 4.9 seconds left Wednesday night to give Florida a 4-3 win and cap a four-game sweep of the Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference finals.

Everyone celebrates going to the Stanley Cup Final in different ways. Tkachuk dropped to his knees and slid across the ice, his arms outstretched. Goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky threw his arms skyward. Maurice walked to the other end of the Florida bench and punched Kompon in the ribs. It was a celebration, a unique one, but a celebration nonetheless.

“I wanted to make sure he felt that one as much as I did,” Maurice said.

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Let that be proof: The Panthers are up for any fight.

Vegas or Dallas — probably Vegas, since it led the Western Conference finals, 3-0, entering Thursday night’s Game 4 — awaits the Panthers to decide the Stanley Cup in a series starting next week. It’ll be Florida’s second time in the title round, its first time on hockey’s biggest stage since 1996, when it was swept by Colorado.

“I still think not many people believe,” Tkachuk said. “I mean, the people in this area support and believe in us — but there’s not many people out there that do, still. And we know that we’ve played some really good teams so far in these playoffs and we know that the next team is going to be unbelievable as well. More points, more wins, more whatever. We’ll be the underdog, trying to prove people wrong again.”

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Florida has been trying to prove people wrong for a quarter-century or so. It has rarely succeeded.

Wednesday’s game was the 2,017th for the Panthers since that Stanley Cup Final in 1996. Aleksander Barkov played in 706 of them, more than anyone else. Defenseman Aaron Ekblad played in 660. Roberto Luongo — now part of the Panthers’ front office braintrust — stopped 16,298 shots for the Panthers in that span. They used 412 players, had 282 different goal-scorers, went through 37 goaltenders, changed coaches 16 times, changed arena names five times, and even changed arenas once.

Every year ended in disappointment. There were varying levels of the anguish — 25 seasons between playoff series wins, 11 consecutive seasons with no postseason appearances, 10 different years of finishing last or next-to-last in a division. There was the occasional playoff appearance or division title, mainly only providing a one-year period of false hope before the bottom fell out again.

Florida's Ryan Lomberg celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal on Carolina's Frederik Andersen in the second period of Game 4.Bruce Bennett/Getty

Not anymore.

Even without — for now, anyway — the ultimate silver prize that hockey players chase from the moment they take those first awkward wobbly steps onto the ice in hand-me-down skates and with a stick that’s probably too big, this is the golden age of Panthers hockey.

“We have people believing in this team,” owner Vincent Viola said earlier in these playoffs, and he’s not wrong.

The Panthers made the qualifying round in the pandemic-interrupted season ending in 2020, then the first round of the playoffs in 2021, the second round as the Presidents’ Trophy winners in 2022, and now have a chance to win the Stanley Cup.

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“Waiting, working to get here, to get to this opportunity,” Ekblad said. “Obviously, it’s been a long time coming. For us, for them, it’s huge, exciting.”

Making this one even better, perhaps, is this: Few could have seen this run coming.

Florida finished the regular season with 92 points, the fewest of any of the 16 playoff teams — and one fewer than Calgary, a team that didn’t even make the West playoffs. The Panthers had to play Boston in Round 1; all the Bruins did was post the best regular season in NHL history. They had to play Toronto in Round 2; the Maple Leafs tied for the fourth-most points in the league. They had to play Carolina in Round 3; the Hurricanes had the NHL’s second-best record.

Tkachuk has helped lead the Panthers to the brink of a Stanley Cup.Bruce Bennett/Getty

Since going down, 3-1, to the Bruins, the Panthers have won 11 of 12 against basically the best possible teams they could have faced. Only two other teams in NHL history have eliminated three of the league’s top four teams in the same postseason: Montreal in 1969 and the New York Islanders in 1980.

They both won the Cup in those seasons.

Florida will try to join them.

“We know what we have in there, we know how to play, the right way to play, [and] we know what makes us successful,” Tkachuk said. “Being in it with the guys and seeing the belief and just the calmness to us is really something special.”

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With that, they hope one more knockout punch awaits.