CLEVELAND — Milwaukee Brewers manager Craig Counsell is meeting with the Cleveland Guardians about their managerial opening, according to multiple reports.
Counsell, who has led the Brewers to the postseason five times in the past six years, is at Progressive Field for his interview with the Guardians, according to the Associated Press.
Counsell’s contract with Milwaukee is set to expire this week, but the Brewers are allowing him to look elsewhere while also hoping they can re-sign the coveted 53-year-old. The New York Mets are also reportedly interested in Counsell and have far more money to offer him than either the Brewers or Guardians.
Cleveland is searching for a manager for the first time since 2012 after Terry Francona, the winningest manager in club history, stepped down after this season.
Counsell has an interesting connection to Cleveland. As a light-hitting infielder with Florida, he hit a game-tying sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth inning in Game 7 of the 1997 World Series as the Marlins rallied to beat Cleveland and win a title.
Counsell played 16 seasons in the majors.
The Guardians have interviewed several candidates to replace Francona. Mariners bullpen coach Stephen Vogt was in Cleveland last week for his second interview with the club and is considered one of the leading candidates.
Counsell took over as Milwaukee’s manager during the 2015 season after Ron Roenicke was fired. The Brewers had made a total of four playoff appearances before Counsell took over.
The longest-tenured manage in the National League, Counsell is 707-625 with the Brewers, giving him the club record for wins and games managed.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
We tried to tell you after Game 1. Unless one of these teams pulls ahead by a large margin early in the game, it’s likely that every contest between the Edmonton Oilers and the Florida Panthers in the 2025 Stanley Cup Final is going to be decided in the last 10 minutes — or at least one overtime period.
That’s what happened in Game 1 with the Oilers winning in overtime. It happened again Friday with the venerable Corey Perry scoring the game-tying goal with 18 seconds left to send it to OT. But it would take double overtime before another veteran, Brad Marchand, scored the game-winning goal to give the Panthers a 5-4 win. That draws the series level as the games head to South Florida, starting with Game 3 on Monday.
By now, you know how this works. How did both teams perform in another dramatic overtime contest? Who were the standout players for each side? And, as always, what are the major questions facing the Oilers and Panthers before Game 3?
The Oilers scored three first-period goals, only to give up two in the frame before giving up two more in the next period as they struggled to gain control.
Even with all of that, they found a way to score the game-tying goal late in the third period and force overtime for a consecutive game against the defending Stanley Cup champions.
There was so much up and down in Game 2, and yet the Oilers still had a chance to win — only to watch Marchand score the game-winner in double OT.
For as strong as the Oilers are at coming back, Game 2 reinforced the importance of taking advantage of their opportunities. They controlled possession in the third period with a 63.6% shot share and four high-danger scoring chances; they had a 51.2% shot share in the first OT, but still produced five high-danger scoring chances.
Heading to South Florida tied at 1-1 is still better than the alternative of trailing 0-2 in a series as they did a year ago. But given their OT chances, this was a missed opportunity to have a 2-0 lead heading into Game 3.
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Corey Perry ties game for Oilers with 18 seconds left
Corey Perry scores a miraculous goal for the Oilers with under 20 seconds left to send Game 2 to overtime.
How much risk is too much risk against a team that never really dies, but lives in a perpetual stasis knowing they could attack at any time?
This was arguably the most prominent question facing the Panthers in a first overtime during which they generated multiple scoring chances. There was the loose puck that slid underneath Stuart Skinner‘s pads that John Klingberg cleared out of the crease. There was the rebound that Skinner snared in mid-air, while Sam Reinhart‘s breakaway attempt went wide when it could have ended the game.
It began to appear as if the Panthers could be left to ruminate over another set of missed opportunities — only to have Marchand get his second breakaway of the evening to score the game-winning goal and tie the series at 1-1.
Marchand’s goal did more than just bring his team even against the Oilers. It was the difference between the Panthers gaining a sense of control after two games, or facing a 2-0 series hole after blowing third-period leads in both contests.
Arda Öcal’s Three Stars of Game 2
Aside from the fact that “The Rat King” already has two traditions in his short stint with the Panthers — another visit to Dairy Queen which occurred after yesterday’s team dinner, according Emily Kaplan, in addition to the team shooting plastic rats at him after wins — he scored a shorthanded, go-ahead goal in the middle frame. It was Marchand’s second shorthanded goal against a Canadian team on June 6 in history — he also against the Vancouver Canucks in 2011.
Then he scored the game winner in double overtime, also on a breakaway, capping an incredible game.
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Brad Marchand wins it in 2OT for Panthers
Brad Marchand’s second goal of the night wins it in Game 2 for the Panthers in double overtime in Edmonton.
McDavid finished with three assists, including one that would have been the best career assist for many NHL players — and the best in the postseason in many instances — except for the fact that McDavid seems to be doing things like this every single game.
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McDavid wizardry sets up Draisaitl for Oilers goal
The Oilers take the lead for the second time after Connor McDavid’s sensational assist to Leon Draisaitl.
3. The first period
What a way to start Game 2! The Panthers struck first thanks to Sam Bennett on the power play, then the Oilers scored two goals in under two minutes thanks to Evander Kane and Evan Bouchard. Seth Jones tied it up, but then a minute later, Connor McDavid made another McMagic kind of play, blowing by Aleksander Barkov and making Aaron Ekblad look silly before making a sublime pass to Leon Draisaitl. Just a reminder, this was all in the first period!
There were also 11 total penalties in the opening 20 minutes, but it didn’t feel like it ruined the flow at all … if anything, the power plays and 4-on-4 hockey it added it!
Players to watch in Game 3
Bouchard’s Game 2 performance adds to a tricky conversation facing the Oilers once they reach the offseason. But there’ll be more on that shortly. Game 2 was his seventh multi-point performance, and was also the second time this postseason he finished with three points in a single game.
Here’s where the nuance comes into play. Bouchard was involved in all but one of the Oilers’ goals. If not for Connor McDavid, he would have led them with 34:29 in ice time, which is slightly more than three Spongebob episodes. Receiving that much ice time further cements the trust he’s gained from Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch. However, he was on the ice for three goals against, including both of Marchand’s breakaways, while also being assessed for a pair of cross-checking penalties.
There’s still more to be said about how this postseason ends for the Oilers and Bouchard. But when it does? The two sides will need to agree on a new contract for the standout blueliner. Already on a bridge deal, he’s a pending restricted free agent who appears in line to earn a significant raise from the $4.3 million annual salary he’s earned the last two seasons. How will his play in the rest of the series influence those conversations?
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Oilers take lead on Evan Bouchard deflection
Evan Bouchard scores on a second-chance opportunity after getting the puck back off of a deflection.
What’s a more bizarre realization? The fact that Tkachuk hadn’t recorded a shot on goal until late in the third period — only to then have that shot registered for someone else? Or is it be the notion that this was the sixth time during these playoffs that he didn’t finish with a shot on goal?
Or is it the fact that the Panthers have lost only one of those games in which Tkachuk didn’t get a shot on goal?
Although the Panthers found the necessary offensive contributions to win Game 2, there’s no denying that Tkachuk will be central to their plans should they ultimately win this series. This postseason has seen Tkachuk respond by having a point in all but one of those games after he finished with no shots on goal (two of those shotless games were consecutive). Goals, while crucial, are only just part of the equation for Tkachuk, who had only one of the Panthers’ 60 hits. More is needed from Florida’s superstar.
Big questions for Game 3
Can the Oilers find more consistency early and not rely on their late-game heroics to win?
Two games of a series might be enough of a sample size to state that the Oilers must improve their play right off the hop, instead of trying to consistently rely on their late-game abilities which has been the case in both games thus far.
Look no further than the first period of Game 2. Although giving up two goals didn’t help their cause, they found ways to regain control. They had a 55% shot share overall while logging 14 shots on goal, which led to them scoring three goals, including Leon Draisaitl’s power-play goal that gave them a 3-2 lead heading into the second.
But that’s what made the second such a jarring one compared to how they started. They were limited to just nine shots, gave up two goals and were largely playing without the puck as they had a shot share below 30% before they rallied to tie the game late in the third to force what became a double-overtime contest.
Even though they lost by the closest of margins, how they played in the second could have been the difference between a 2-0 lead versus that of their current series split.
What must the Panthers do to put the Oilers away in the third period?
In Game 1, the Oilers ended the Panthers’ 31-game streak of winning when they had a lead after two periods. It nearly happened again Friday, with Perry’s late third-period goal that would force double overtime — only for Marchand’s second of the night to win the game.
After allowing three goals in the first period, the Panthers had a 70.45% shot share in the second. They had eight high-danger scoring chances in that frame, and made it count with two goals for a 4-3 lead entering the third.
Everything looked as if they were going to win Game 2 until, well, the Oilers came back to tie the game in the final frame … again.
Once the game was in OT, Florida had numerous chances to score the game-winning goal in both periods before Marchand tallied the game-winner.
There’s no need to fully delve into how much the Panthers know about the Oilers’ ability to come back, given what happened last season when Edmonton came back from down 3-0 tie force Game 7. But it is worth noting that Edmonton came into Game 2 scoring 15 goals in the final five minutes of regulation this postseason, while also being 4-0 in overtime, which just reinforces how nothing is really safe against the Oilers.
In a way, the Panthers survived in a way most haven’t this postseason. They might not be so lucky the next time.
EDMONTON, Alberta — After allowing the latest tying goal in Stanley Cup Final history, the Florida Panthers kept the chatter going at intermission before overtime. Some guys exchanged predictions on who was going to score the winner.
It turned out to be Brad Marchand in double overtime to give the defending champions a 5-4 victory over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 2 on Friday night to even the series.
“To be honest, I blacked out,” Marchand said. “I don’t even know where it went. It was a fortuitous bounce. We’ll take it.”
For Marchand, it’s the second time this postseason that he has scored a winning goal in overtime with the Panthers trailing a series. Florida was down 2-0 in the second round to the Toronto Maple Leafs when Marchand scored the overtime winner in Game 3.
Marchand’s second goal Friday night, which came 8:04 into the second OT, allowed Florida to escape with a split after Corey Perry tied it with 17.8 seconds left in the third period and Stuart Skinner pulled for an extra attacker. Each of the first two games this final has gone to overtime, the first time that has happened since 2014 and just the sixth in NHL history.
“Obviously a long game,” said defenseman Seth Jones, who led the Panthers in ice time at 34:15. “We came here for a split and got it and just going to recover now.”
Much like last year and the playoff run to this point, Sergei Bobrovsky was dialed in when he was needed the most, making some unreal saves while stopping 42 of the 46 shots he faced — including 14 in the overtimes.
“He gives us a chance every night,” winger Evan Rodrigues said. “That’s all you can ask for. Some big saves, key saves at key moments, and we’re not taking him for granted, that’s for sure.”
His teammates provided the necessary goal support.
Along with Marchand, Sam Bennett scored his postseason-leading 13th goal and NHL-record 12th on the road. Jones scored into a wide-open net after some spectacular tic-tac-toe passing, and fellow defenseman Dmitry Kulikov tied it with a shot through traffic that Skinner almost certainly did not see.
Kulikov’s goal came after Florida controlled play for several minutes in the second, hemming Edmonton in its zone shift after shift and piling up a 34-13 advantage in shot attempts during the period. Marchand’s OT goal was his 10th career goal in the final to lead all active players.
Game 3 is Monday night as the teams traverse the continent and play shifts to Sunrise.
“Each game could’ve went either way,” Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said. “Obviously when you win the first one, you’re disappointed not to win the second.”
The Panthers wrested home-ice advantage away from the Oilers by splitting the first two, rebounding from a Game 1 overtime loss and asserting they won’t go quietly against Draisaitl and Connor McDavid looking like they’ll do everything in their power to hoist the Cup for the first time.
Of course, those stars had their moments. They assisted on Evan Bouchard’s goal when Knoblauch put them on the ice together, and McDavid stickhandled through multiple defenders in highlight-reel fashion to set up Draisaitl scoring on the power play.
There were a lot of those — 10 in total — after officials whistled 14 penalties, including three in the first four minutes. Each team had a few calls it was not happy with, though most of that evened out over the course of the game.
EDMONTON, Alberta — As the Edmonton Oilers celebrated their overtime win in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final, Tomas Nosek made the long skate from the penalty box back to his locker room knowing that their power play was his fault.
“Yeah, it was tough for sure. You don’t want to be the one guy who costs us the game,” Nosek said Friday, speaking for the first time after his delay of game penalty in overtime led to Leon Draisaitl‘s game-winning goal.
“Obviously everybody can make a mistake. It happened at a bad time, in overtime, and cost us a game. But it’s in the past and I’m now looking forward to just keep doing my job and focusing on tonight’s game,” said Nosek, who will center the Panthers’ fourth line in Game 2 on Friday night.
Nosek sailed the puck over the glass at 18:17 of overtime to earn a delay of game penalty. Draisaitl ended the game at 19:29. Making a difficult moment worse, cameras caught Edmonton defenseman Jake Walman mocking Nosek on the way to the penalty box.
“No comments on that,” Nosek said.
Nosek, 32, is a 10-year NHL veteran who signed with Florida last summer as a free agent, the fifth team he’s played for in the league. He had 1 goal and 8 assists in 59 games in the regular season and 3 assists in 11 games in the playoffs. After Game 1, coach Paul Maurice said he expected the team will rally around Nosek.
“We’re not here without Tomas Nosek. It’s a tough break,” Maurice said. “So we’ll just make sure he doesn’t eat alone tonight. He’s got lots of people sitting at his table and reminding him how good he’s been to us.”
Panthers forward Jonah Gadjovich, Nosek’s linemate, one of the players who supported him.
“It happens. Tough bounce. But he does so many good things for us. No one’s mad at him, no one’s anything. It’s just stuff like that happens in a game and obviously we’ve regrouped yesterday and we’re ready to play tonight. It’s a new day, new game,” he said.
Nosek valued that encouragement from his teammates.
“They’ve been really helpful for sure. Most of the guys came to me and said, ‘Don’t worry about it,'” he said.
Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final is Friday night at 8 p.m. ET.