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THE MAGNIFICENCE OF Bobby Witt Jr. manifests itself on nearly every square inch of a baseball field. His swing is short and to the point, like the man himself, and it thwacks balls from foul pole to foul pole, often past them. His glove and arm are pocket aces — individually excellent, together almost unassailable. His legs, though, offer the greatest splendor, the apex of the Bobby Witt experience, which is unlike anything in baseball.

Witt, who turned 24 Friday, is the shortstop for the Kansas City Royals, the biggest surprise in baseball. They own the eighth-best record in the game (41-32) after going 56-106 last season, and the signature win of their season came a week before Witt’s birthday. The Seattle Mariners, who occupy first place in the American League West, built an 8-0 lead. Kansas City chipped away, and up came Witt in the bottom of the eighth inning with the deficit shaved to 9-8 and a runner on second.

Before stepping into the batter’s box, he had looked on the inside of his helmet, where he had written reminders on how to summon the best version of himself. See the ball. Stay loose. Be on time. They are the sorts of things that allow him to be present, something he picked up when he realized the mental element of baseball can help mobilize the physical. On a hanging 0-2 splitter from Ryne Stanek, Witt sizzled a ball down the third-base line. And then he started to run.

Less than 11 seconds later — 10.98, to be exact, because every hundredth of a second deserves mention when you run like a sprinter — Witt’s right hand touched third base. Going from home plate to third base in under 11 seconds takes the sort of physical aptitude rarely seen in baseball, and it would’ve been even faster had Witt not launched himself into the air with a head-first slide into the bag. Two minutes later, he zoomed home and scored the winning run, securing the third-largest comeback in the Royals’ 56-year history.

On the field afterward for a postgame interview piped through Kauffman Stadium’s speakers, Witt managed to sum up the night aptly: “What do y’all think? Pretty fun?” The crowd responded by serenading Witt with one word, over and over: “Bobby, Bobby, Bobby, Bobby… “

To his family, Witt is Junior, and to his teammates just Bob. To everyone else, he’s Bobby, an earned mononym in his third season in the league.

Nobody in baseball runs as fast as Witt (as the Mariners can attest). Nobody, according to FanGraphs, has provided more defensive value this year. Only Shohei Ohtani, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Juan Soto have hit more balls 95 mph or harder. Witt has thrust himself to the forefront of best-of lists across the game. Best shortstop? Mookie Betts, Corey Seager, Gunnar Henderson and Witt. Best player, under 25? Henderson and Witt. Best player, period? All of the above, plus Aaron Judge, Soto and Ohtani.

Sound unlikely? Consider this: Since the end of July 2023, Witt has been the best player in baseball, according to FanGraphs WAR. In his past 128 games, Witt slashed .325/.372/.573 with 25 home runs, 96 RBIs, 105 runs, 41 steals and 7.9 wins. More than Judge (7.2), Soto (6.9), Betts (6.9) and Henderson (6.7), the next four over that stretch.

All the tools were there when Witt debuted two years ago, but to see them turn into skills so quickly suggests the sort of trajectory that can carry the Royals to heights unseen in nearly a decade. Since they won the World Series in 2015, the Royals haven’t had a winning season and have lost at least 103 games three times. Witt believed enough in the franchise’s offseason — in which Kansas City guaranteed more than $100 million to free agents — to sign an 11-year, $288.8 million contract extension in February.

“When I get attached to something, I love it,” Witt said. “I enjoy it and I try to make the most of it. Try to see how I can make it better in ways that I feel like other people may not be able to. Just try to make everyone the best they can possibly be.”

Before he could do that, Witt needed to make himself the best he can possibly be. And that evolution started two years ago, on a perfect Kansas City spring day.


April 7, 2022

INSIDE A SUITE down the first-base line at Kauffman Stadium, Bobby and Laurie Witt were watching the culmination of their baby boy’s hard work. It was Opening Day, and Kansas City royalty were down the hall in another suite to see Junior’s major league debut, including the just-crowned NCAA men’s basketball champion Kansas Jayhawks and the city’s mayor, Quinton Lucas. The most recognizable of all poked his head into the Witt suite in the fourth inning and asked: “Can I come in?”

Of course, they told George Brett. He was Laurie’s favorite player growing up and is still the lone Hall of Famer in Royals history. Brett has long been the prototypical Royal, and to see Witt batting second and playing third base — Brett’s position — felt positively symmetrical.

“And that’s the thing,” Brett said that day. “I don’t want to put any pressure on him. It’s hard enough to play in the big leagues. So many players get here and they don’t know what they’re doing. But he’s different. He’s a natural.”

Witt’s ascent took no one by surprise. By his sophomore year at Colleyville (Texas) Heritage High, he was his class’ No. 1-ranked player in the nation. A year later, he won the High School Home Run Derby. Six months after that, he secured a gold medal and international tournament MVP for a Team USA that included two more future major league shortstops (Anthony Volpe and CJ Abrams), three outfielders (Corbin Carroll, Riley Greene and Pete Crow-Armstrong) and a No. 2 overall pick (Dylan Crews). The only thing that kept Witt from going to Baltimore with the first pick in the 2019 draft was Adley Rutschman, who’s going to make his second All-Star team this year.

Kansas City gladly snatched Witt with the second pick, and when COVID-19 hit in 2020, the Royals invited him to their alternate site to monitor his development. Having just turned 20, Witt was the best player in the camp — 6-foot-1, 200 pounds of quick-twitch goodness with the brain of someone who grew up in baseball clubhouses. Not with his dad, a 16-year MLB veteran who retired a year after Witt was born, but with his brothers-in-law, as all three of his older sisters married big leaguers, a Sequoia of a baseball family tree.

In early August 2020, former New York Mets ace Matt Harvey went to the alt site to build up his pitch count after signing a minor league deal with the Royals and faced Witt, who battled him through an at-bat that lasted more than a dozen pitches. When he finished the inning, Harvey went into the dugout with a gobsmacked look.

“Who the hell is that kid?” he asked. “He looks like he’s 12.”

That’s Bobby Witt Jr., he was told.

“Well, whoever he is,” Harvey said, “he’s pretty good.”

He was more than pretty good. Witt won every minor league player of the year award in 2021 and was so good in spring training in 2022 that the Royals couldn’t send him down. All of that promise showed up in his first game against Cleveland. He smoked a ball 110.4 mph. He busted nearly 31 feet per second down the first-base line. He fired a ball nearly 90 mph across the diamond. And in the bottom of the eighth inning, he yanked his first hit, a go-ahead double, into the left-field corner, giving him a game-winning RBI in game No. 1.

They chanted “Bobby, Bobby, Bobby, Bobby” that day, and they did it again two days later when in the 10th inning Witt dove to snag a ball hit down the third-base line, swiveled and made a seemingly impossible, off-balance throw to nab Owen Miller at the plate. It was Witt’s 20th professional game at third, and he was making the sorts of plays reserved for Brooks Robinson and Nolan Arenado.

When asked about the play following the game, Witt demurred and deferred credit to catcher Salvador Perez (whose swipe tag was impressive, sure, but paled compared to the throw). It became a recurring theme throughout his rookie season. On the day of Witt’s first major league home run, he was asked to do the postgame interview and responded, “What about M.J.?” Fellow rookie MJ Melendez had gotten his first major league hit that day, and Witt wanted him to get his shine, too.

“This is what I’ve been working for my whole life,” Witt said in 2022, “and I’ve got to go out there, be myself, have fun, enjoy it, take it all in, and just try to be the best teammate I can be, the best person I can be on the field and off the field so my teammates respect me.”

Witt finished his first big league season with 20 home runs, 30 stolen bases and a stranglehold on the shortstop position, which he took over when Adalberto Mondesi got hurt. Witt struck out too much and didn’t walk enough, but the Royals figured he was gifted enough to make the necessary physical adjustments. More than the exit velocity or speed or arm strength or soft hands, team officials marveled at how little Bobby Witt Jr. concerned himself with Bobby Witt Jr.’s accolades. The selflessness, the deflection, the humility — that, more than anything on the field, served as the foundation of who he could become.

Or, as one Royals staffer put it, all Junior wants to do is use good manners and play baseball with his friends.


July 28, 2023

OVER THE FIRST month of the 2023 season, Witt struggled to do much of anything right. He was 9 for 60 in the last two weeks of April. The Royals were 7-22 when the calendar turned to May. Something needed to change. So on May 1, only the third off-day of the season, Witt summoned his personal hitting coach, Jeremy Isenhower, to guide him through the struggles with an impromptu session at Premier Baseball, a facility tucked away in an industrial park in suburban Kansas City.

“The more I hit, the more I feel things, the more I feel like I get better,” Witt said. “So it’s just figuring out little things — what felt right, what felt wrong, what was I doing that wasn’t right? Just try to simplify everything. That was at the time where I was struggling a little bit, but then also starting to figure some things out.”

Witt’s bugaboos were high fastballs and early-count swings. He didn’t tinker with his mechanics, though. He rarely does. Witt’s best chance at adjusting to high fastballs was cranking up a pitching machine to feed him 105-mph invisiballs. He paired them with sliders that moved more than any human arm is capable of producing.

“I try to do things in the cage that are almost harder than in the game,” Witt said. “Whether it’s more velocity just to try to get me out of my swing and to make me feel uncomfortable, if I speed up the game in the cage, then when I get out to the actual game, it’s even slower.”

The day after his session with Isenhower, Witt homered. He went deep again three games later. Consistency still eluded him in May, but by the time June rolled around Witt started to feel more comfortable with his altered approach. In July, he started punishing fastballs in the upper third of the zone, including the one on which he put one of the most magnificent swings of the 2023 season across baseball.

On July 28, with the bases loaded in the bottom of the 10th inning and a full count, Jhoan Duran, the flamethrowing Minnesota Twins closer, started a 101.8-mph four-seam fastball over the middle of the plate and in the upper third of the strike zone. It ran 10 inches, boring in on Witt, just off the inside edge of the plate. Witt swung and met the ball out front, crushing it to left field for a walk-off grand slam.

The last time a big leaguer pulled a pitch that fast for a home run had come more than a year earlier. Turning on 102 mph and squaring it well enough to send it over the fence takes a rare skill set. For all of the natural gifts, Witt’s willingness to work, to avoid settling, defines him. Whether it was his weakness with the fastball or improving his mental game — he started a daily meditation routine midseason last year in addition to the scrawlings inside his helmet — Witt’s expectations consistently exceed the sky-high external ones.

“It’s such a special persona,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. “It’s humble, but it’s confident. People respect him. When a guy like Bobby earns the respect of a guy like Sal so quickly in his career that speaks to the person he is and the reason you would want to build around him.”

From the day of the Duran enervation through the end of the 2023 season, Witt batted .323/.369/.598 with 14 home runs and 45 RBIs in 56 games. He ended the year with 5.9 wins above replacement, cut his strikeout rate in half, upped his walk rate and turned from a mediocre defender at shortstop to one of the best in Major League Baseball. What the Royals believed he would be when they drafted him, what Brett thought he saw on the day of the debut, Witt was now demonstrating. Nobody in MLB history had at least 20 home runs and 30 stolen bases in each of his first two seasons until Witt. This, the Royals believed, was simply the beginning. And they knew what they needed to do.


Feb. 6, 2024

ON THE DAY he signed one of the biggest contracts in baseball history, Witt showed up at Kauffman Stadium wearing a blue suit that matched the Royals’ City Connect uniform and powder blue shoes, an homage to the 1980s Royals that invigorated the city. It was a Kansas City outfit for a Kansas City day.

“This is a great day in Royals history,” Royals general manager J.J. Piccolo said, “and really Kansas City history.”

In September, Royals owner John Sherman asked to meet with Witt and his father, who became an agent after retiring in 2001. He wanted to understand Witt’s priorities, make clear that he intended to spend in free agency over the winter and explain that he planned to make a long-term extension offer, which the team did at the winter meetings in December. The sides traded proposals for the next two months before settling on a structure outlined by assistant general manager Scott Sharp that allowed Witt to opt out of the deal after the 2031, 2032, 2033 and 2034 seasons but still guaranteed him the second-most money for a player under 25, behind Fernando Tatis Jr.’s 14-year, $340 million deal in February 2021.

When the news of Witt’s contract broke, his phone lit up. Congratulations flooded in. At one point, he looked down and appreciated what greeted him.

“It was four texts, back-to-back,” Witt said. “[Patrick] Mahomes, Dustin Pedroia, Mike Trout and then Zack Greinke.”

The best quarterback in the world, one who jumped on the bandwagon early, seeing in Witt the sort of talent the rest of the world sees in Mahomes. A former American League MVP. A three-time AL MVP. And a future Hall of Fame pitcher who spent his final two seasons as Witt’s teammate.

“I think,” Witt said of Greinke’s text, “he said something like, ‘Yikes, I would’ve signed that contract, too. Congrats.'”

The Royals knew they needed to pay Witt closer to free agent value compared to some of the other team-friendly deals signed by his peers. As much as Witt loved the embrace of Kansas City, the losing exasperated him. Signing this deal was a gamble for Witt, even after Sherman kept his word and guaranteed more money in free agency this winter than his previous four years owning the team combined. The magnitude of the deal likewise spooked the Royals, whose revenues pale compared to bigger-market teams. Each side found comfort in their discomfort.

“You give those long-term contracts — there’s a ton of risk in that,” Quatraro said. “But the organization — rightfully so, in my opinion — feels like those risks are very minimal with a guy like Bobby because of his upbringing and the way he handles himself. He sidesteps those derailers or those landmines pretty well.”

Witt’s parents and his fiancée, Maggie Black, grinned throughout the news conference. His comfort informed theirs. It was almost as if he understood what was coming — the 9-4 start, the eight-game winning streak in May, holding their own against the best teams in baseball. While they went 5-7 in their most recent two-week stretch against four first-place teams — Seattle, Cleveland, New York and Los Angeles — the Royals held possession of the second wild-card slot in the AL and still have the seventh-best run differential in MLB at plus-61.

“We’ve just got to prove ourselves right, we don’t have to prove anyone else wrong,” Witt said. “We just got to see what we’re made of.”

It has Kansas City imagining where the team will be a few months from now. In less than four months, the MLB playoffs begin, and Witt wants nothing more than to be there. His teammates see it, and they’re beginning to hear it as well — the inner competitor in Witt coming out, everyone’s success the accelerant.

“The way he prepares himself is everything,” Perez said. “He’s super humble. But he likes to compete, play hard, run hard. He can hit a groundball to the pitcher and he’ll still bust his ass to first base. That tells you what kind of player he is. I’ve got a lot of respect for everybody here, bro. I hope they look at him and try to be like him. Players at that age have the ability to come to the ballpark and get ready in 10 minutes. He takes his time, he takes care of his body, he knows what he wants to do. I think he’s the best player I’ve ever played with in this organization.”

For Perez, a highly respected eight-time All-Star, to so deeply embrace someone who was 11 years old when Perez debuted speaks to Witt’s ability to ingratiate himself. He leads with good manners and follows up with the production — this year an AL-best .327 batting average, 96 hits and 59 runs, plus a .928 OPS, 11 home runs, 51 RBIs and 20 stolen bases.

“Now his edge is proving to himself and to everyone else that he’s got that next level,” Quatraro said, “that he can be the best at this level for years to come.”

For a city that’s home to Mahomes and Travis Kelce, Witt is surprisingly ubiquitous. One day he’ll show up at a local elementary school and the next on a new billboard. He stumped for a new Royals stadium — which failed in an April election — and almost assuredly will do it again, this time from the perch of a winner. He signs autographs every day. He does the sorts of things the centerpiece of a franchise ought and does them without complaint.

Though why would he? Life is good for Bobby Witt. He coined a phrase earlier this year — “The boys are playing some ball” — that caught on among fans and has been turned into a T-shirt. He’s getting married in mid-December. He’s smack in the middle of the AL MVP race with Judge, Soto and Henderson. He is far from the final version of himself, closer to a nascent product than a finished one.

“The first two years I’m trying to figure out where’s my place, but now I know that this is where I’m going to be and it feels great. It feels right,” Witt said. “Knowing my role, knowing my job, not trying to step on toes still, but then also knowing I’m very comfortable.

“I look at this offseason [like I] committed to two big things. I got engaged, so committing to Maggie, and then committing to the Royals. I’m going to give my all to both of them and just show up each and every day with a smile on my face, be myself and go out and have fun. Enjoy it. Enjoy it while it lasts for sure.”

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Panthers one game away from another Cup Final: Grades, biggest takeaways from Game 3

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Panthers one game away from another Cup Final: Grades, biggest takeaways from Game 3

One team is a win away from advancing to a third straight Stanley Cup Final. The other is about to once again come up short in a conference final. As drastic as that sounds, that is the reality facing the Florida Panthers and Carolina Hurricanes following the Panthers’ 6-2 win Saturday in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals.

The defending Stanley Cup champion Panthers opened the series by scoring five goals in each of the first two games and exposing the Hurricanes in a way that hadn’t been done by another team this postseason. On Saturday, it appeared that the Canes may have found a solution as they entered the third period tied at 1-1 … before the Panthers exploded for five straight goals to close out Game 3 in emphatic fashion.

How did both teams perform? Who is worth watching in Game 4? And given that there’s a sweep in play, what could Monday mean for both teams, knowing that one of them could see their season come to an end? Ryan S. Clark and Kristen Shilton answer those questions while reviewing what has been a lopsided Eastern Conference finals.

The Panthers withstood an expected early push from Carolina and settled swiftly into their own game. They failed to capitalize on their first-period power-play chance but made up for it by opening the scoring with a goal credited to Niko Mikkola (that actually went off Carolina’s Dmitry Orlov) midway through the first. It was a deflating marker for Carolina goalie Pyotr Kochetkov to cede right after a solid Hurricanes penalty kill and appeared to diminish Carolina’s confidence.

There was potential to shift Carolina’s momentum, though. Before the first period ended, Panthers forward Eetu Luostarinen finished a check sending Jackson Blake awkwardly into the boards. That earned Luostarinen a five-minute penalty and game misconduct, putting the Panthers down two of their top forwards in Luostarinen and an injured Sam Reinhart. But Florida didn’t let the lengthy man advantage hurt its momentum. The Panthers killed it off and matched Carolina’s shot total while shorthanded.

While the score was tied at 1-1 going into the third, Florida regained its lead with Jesper Boqvist undressing (to put it mildly) Orlov in shocking fashion. Boqvist entered the lineup to replace Reinhart, and it was the type of contribution Florida could only hope to see from its depth skater.

It was all Panthers from there, with goals from Mikkola, Aleksander Barkov (capitalizing on a turnover by Orlov), Evan Rodrigues and Brad Marchand giving Florida a 6-1 lead halfway through the third and putting Carolina against the ropes going into an elimination Game 4. Florida will wonder about Mikkola’s status ahead of that tilt. (He left in the third period Saturday after slamming into the end boards.) But the Cats can’t be too frustrated given their win. — Kristen Shilton

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Jesper Boqvist puts Panthers back ahead

Jesper Boqvist goes through the goaltender’s legs to restore the Panthers’ lead vs. the Hurricanes.

Unofficial Canadian poet laureate Avril Lavigne once posed one of more philosophical questions of her generation: Why’d you have to go and make things so complicated?

Everything the Hurricanes did through the first two periods of Game 3 created the belief that they could potentially stick with the Panthers. Only to then fall apart in the third period. Again.

There are numerous reasons why losing Game 3 is so damning for the Hurricanes. What might be the most prominent and prevalent is there might not be anything else they can do at this stage. We have seen the Panthers take a 3-0 series lead only to be pushed to a Game 7 in a playoff series. That was the case in last year’s Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers.

But through three games of this series? The Hurricanes have switched goaltenders, adjusted their lineups and sought out other alterations within their structure — and still lost by a large margin while once again falling prey to being on the other end of a big period. — Ryan S. Clark


Three Stars of Game 3

Mikkola has had quite a series. The defensemen has broken up plays, taken command off the rush and created quality scoring chances. He had two goals in Game 3 for his first career multigoal playoff game and the fourth multigoal playoff game in Panthers franchise history.

It was two goals and a helper for the Cats’ captain. This was Barkov’s 20th career multipoint playoff game, the most in Panthers franchise history.

3. The Panthers’ third period

The Panthers unloaded in the final frame, scoring five goals to run away with Game 3 by a final score of 6-2. Five tucks is the most in any period in a playoff game in franchise history. The Hurricanes have now lost 15 straight conference final games since they won the Stanley Cup in 2006. — Arda Öcal

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Panthers pour it on with 2 more quick goals

The Panthers net two more goals in just over a minute to pad their lead vs. the Hurricanes.


Players to watch in Game 4

There’s no question Florida’s netminder has been building a Conn Smythe case with his excellent play in this postseason. However, Bobrovsky hasn’t been at his most dominant in (initial) closeout games during the playoffs. He made 26 saves for an .897 save percentage in Florida’s Game 5 win over Tampa Bay to send the Lightning home, and made just 15 stops (.882 SV%) in Florida’s Game 6 loss to Toronto in the second round, when the Panthers had a chance to advance.

Bobrovsky was practically impenetrable in Game 7 of that series as the Leafs imploded, but it’s fair to wonder what version of Bobrovsky the Panthers will get in Game 4.

When Florida had an opportunity to close out Edmonton in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final last spring, Bobrovsky turned in his worst showing of the playoffs, with five goals allowed on 11 shots that saw him chased from the net in an 8-1 thumping. Florida has put itself in a good position to send Carolina home, but wouldn’t it be nice to do it sooner than later? Bobrovsky at his best will help Florida do just that. — Shilton

Benching Frederik Andersen was done with the belief that Kochetkov could give the Hurricanes a stronger chance to win. Through two periods, it appeared that that could be the case, as Kochetkov received the necessary support from the Hurricanes’ defensive structure, something that had been an issue in the first two games.

But the Panthers’ five consecutive goals in the third period derailed things. The Hurricanes have now allowed 16 goals over three games. It’s a stark contrast to the first two rounds, when Carolina allowed 18 total in 10 games against the Devils and Capitals.

Kochetkov’s first two periods of Game 3 provided a level of consistency the Hurricanes have struggled to find at times. Is it possible they take something from the opening two-thirds of Game 3 and parlay it into a different outcome in Game 4? Or will it be game and season over instead? — Clark


Big questions for Game 4

Is Florida ready to end this series?

The cliché that the fourth win of a playoff series is the hardest to get exists for a reason. The Panthers experienced that firsthand last season when they took a 3-0 lead over Edmonton in the Stanley Cup Final, then crisscrossed the continent over the next week as the Oilers clawed back to force a Game 7.

Did the Panthers learn their lesson on how to close an opponent out quickly? Florida did it to these very Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference finals two years ago with a tidy four-game sweep featuring many of the same elements we’ve seen from the Panthers in this round. But Florida appeared to have Edmonton well in hand 11 months ago, too.

Game 3 was arguably the Hurricanes’ best of the series. If they can channel some significant desperation into their game Monday, how will Florida handle the pressure of an urgent club trying not to be embarrassed with a 16th consecutive loss in a conference final situation? The Panthers can’t afford to look past what will be a dramatic Game 4. — Shilton

Is this it for the Hurricanes — and what comes next if it is?

That in and of itself is a rather loaded question for several reasons, with the obvious being: Will Monday be Carolina’s last game of the 2025 playoffs? If it is, what could that mean for the franchise going forward?

The way the Hurricanes have been constructed has allowed them to become a perennial playoff team with a legitimate chance of reaching the conference finals. But that comes with the caveat that the Canes might not go any further than that.

It was a dilemma the Panthers faced before making the changes that saw them not only win a Stanley Cup, but also be one win away from a third consecutive Stanley Cup Final. Maybe it doesn’t come to that point for the Hurricanes. But if they allow five or more goals for a fourth straight game while also struggling to score? It could lead to some difficult questions this offseason in Raleigh. — Clark

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Up 3-0, Panthers will not ‘start looking ahead’

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Up 3-0, Panthers will not 'start looking ahead'

SUNRISE, Fla. — The Florida Panthers are one win away from an Eastern Conference finals sweep. They’ve outscored the Carolina Hurricanes, a team that’s lost 15 straight conference final games, by a count of 16-4. Yet Panthers forward Brad Marchand is still ready for this series to go the distance.

“We’re prepared to go seven here,” he said after their 6-2 victory in Game 3 on Saturday night. “I mean, you can’t start looking ahead. That’s such a dangerous game to play.”

Contextually, that mindset might seem preposterous. The Panthers are trying to match the Tampa Bay Lightning as the only teams since the Edmonton Oilers’ 1980s dynasty to advance to the Stanley Cup Final in three straight seasons, having won the Cup last season. They’ve dominated the Hurricanes with their physicality, scoring depth and the goaltending of Sergei Bobrovsky, who now has a .947 save percentage and a 1.33 goals-against average in the conference finals.

It seems like a matter of when, not if, Florida will eliminate Carolina — and the “when” is trending to be Monday night at home in Game 4. Yet the Panthers are the last team to take a 3-0 lead for granted.

Coach Paul Maurice recalled their semifinals series against the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2023, when they went up 3-0 and dropped a Game 4 on home ice. “We wanted it so bad that we tried to win the game on every play,” he said.

Then came the ultimate lesson on how not to close out a series: The 2024 Stanley Cup Final, which saw the Panthers squander a 3-0 series lead to the Edmonton Oilers before finally winning Game 7 to hoist the Cup for the first time.

Maurice hopes his players understand the dynamics at play in Game 4.

“They have the desperation advantage. You have, potentially, the desire advantage. Both teams will fight that. Can we control the desire emotion and play the game? Can they control the desperation emotion and play the game? The common denominator is just playing the game,” he said.

Game 3 saw the Hurricanes play with more desperation than they’ve exhibited in this series. The game was tied 1-1 entering the third period after Carolina’s Logan Stankoven — who Bobrovsky robbed earlier in the second period with a lunging blocker save — managed to knock the puck past him for a power-play goal at 14:51 to even the score.

The Hurricanes were finally looking like the stingy, tight-checking team they’re known for being. Maurice wasn’t expecting a windfall of offense from the Panthers after the first 40 minutes of Game 3.

“We’re not going out to the third period saying, ‘Well, we can tell this is going to work out [for us]. I’ve got an extra piece of gum in my pocket for the second overtime. That’s how our experience with Carolina has been,” the coach said.

The gum stayed in his pocket. Florida scored five goals in the first 10:37 of the third period to put the game — and potentially the series — away.

“We knew we needed to be a little better than what we were in the second period, so we tried to keep things simple and I think we got rewarded for that,” said captain Aleksander Barkov, who had two of the goals in the onslaught.

Carolina coach Rod Brind’Amour was left dumbfounded.

“We’re playing better and then we just turn pucks over. It’s not what we do. I think everyone’s just pretty surprised, you know what I mean?” he said. “Just you can’t do that. In a preseason game it’s going to cost you. But against that team, and you turn it over for odd man rushes? Forget it.”

The key to the rally was a goal by forward Jesper Boqvist, who was put on Barkov’s line as an injury replacement for Sam Reinhart, the Panthers’ leading scorer in the regular season. He took a short pass from linemate Evan Rodrigues and then turned Carolina defenseman Dmitry Orlov (minus-4) inside out before scoring on the backhand against Pyotr Kochetkov (22 saves), who got the start over Frederik Andersen in Game 3 for Carolina.

Boqvist had just one goal and one assist in 9 playoff games this postseason, averaging 8:53 in ice time. In Game 3, he had three points (1 goal, 2 assists) and skated 15:08 for the Panthers.

“He’s an extremely gifted player. I love playing with him. He can kind of play anywhere in the lineup and he’s such an incredible skater. So strong with the puck, so smart. And that was a massive goal,” Marchand said.

The Panthers won Game 3 without Reinhart and without having forward Eetu Luostarinen for most of the game, after he was ejected for boarding Carolina forward Jackson Blake in the first period. Luostarinen was tied for the team lead with 13 points entering Game 3, with 4 goals and 9 assists.

The Panthers would kill off that 5-minute major in what Maurice called “a real inflection point in the game,” considering that Florida was missing key penalty killers in Luostarinen and Reinhart, who is day-to-day with a lower body injury. When they needed him, Bobrovsky (23 saves) was a great last line of defense.

Thanks to their third-period deluge, the Panthers are now poised to sweep the Hurricanes in the conference final for the second time in three postseasons. Yet even with Florida’s domination of the series, Marchand said his team is anything but overconfident.

“I don’t think the way the games have been played is really an indication of what the outcome’s been, score wise. They’ve been pretty tight. It just seems like we’ve gotten a couple bounces, a couple lucky breaks here and there that have given us a pretty good lead,” he said.

“But it doesn’t matter. It’s not going to change anything about next game. We’ve got to come in and prepare the same way. It’s always the toughest one to get, so we got to make sure we bring our best.”

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Panthers’ Luostarinen ejected after check in 1st

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Panthers' Luostarinen ejected after check in 1st

SUNRISE, Fla. — Florida Panthers forward Eetu Luostarinen was ejected from Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals after a boarding major against forward Jackson Blake of the Carolina Hurricanes.

With 3:01 left in the first period, Blake was chasing the puck back in his own zone with Luostarinen behind him. As Luostarinen reached out with his stick, Blake stopped short of the boards and Luostarinen hit through him. Luostarinen drove Blake’s head into the boards, bloodying the Carolina forward.

The on-ice officials gave Luostarinen a five-minute major and then reviewed the hit. They confirmed the call on the ice. Per NHL Rule 41.5, when a major penalty for boarding is called, a game misconduct is automatic. A major penalty for boarding is determined by “the degree of violence of the impact with the boards.”

Luostarinen was tied for the team lead with 13 points entering Game 3, with 4 goals and 9 assists. He scored 12 of those points on the road. Blake returned to action in the second period.

The Panthers lead the series 2-0 and had a 1-0 lead in Game 3 when the major penalty was called.

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