Connect with us

Published

on

SUNRISE, Fla. — Aleksander Barkov didn’t just lift the Stanley Cup after defeating the Oilers in Game 7.

He lifted close to three decades of failures, embarrassments and frustration off the shoulders of the players, the fans and this franchise.

The Florida Panthers are Stanley Cup champions. Not a punch line. Not being mocked for meager attendance. Not wallowing in mediocrity, on and off the ice, as the team went 25 years between playoff series victories.

Oh, there could have been more embarrassment. Like, the most embarrassment. Florida nearly fumbled the bag against Edmonton, becoming just the third team in NHL history to blow a 3-0 Stanley Cup Final series lead to force a Game 7. They could have been the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI or Greg Norman in the 1996 Masters or the 1942 Detroit Red Wings, the only team in NHL history to lose the Stanley Cup Final after winning the first three games.

It would have been very “Florida Panthers” to have done that. But that’s not who this franchise is anymore. They’re not a joke. They’re Stanley Cup champions.

It’s wholly appropriate that Florida won the Stanley Cup against a Canadian team — a nation that thought of the Panthers as either relocation bait or a team situated in a warmer climate in which to watch their own teams at significantly lower ticket costs; and that they eliminated the NHL-leading New York Rangers in the conference finals, the kind of esteemed Original Six team that is handed the respect the Panthers have clawed to earn.

Those teams came close to championships. The Panthers are the ones who finished the story, becoming just the third team in the past 40 years to win the Stanley Cup after losing in the Final in the previous postseason.

But perhaps most incredibly: The Florida Panthers — the Florida Panthers! — are now a prestige franchise in the NHL.

“It’s pretty freakin’ cool,” defenseman Aaron Ekblad, who is second to Barkov in career games played as a Panther, said. “It wasn’t easy those first few years. There was a lot of learning and growing. New GMs, new coaches … that revolving door was tough, right? The fact that we’re at this point now, where the expectation is to make the playoffs, and the expectation is to challenge for a championship, that’s a really cool thing. I’m so happy to have been through it all with this franchise.”

Barkov stuck with them. Ekblad stuck with them. And more South Florida fans than you’d realize stuck with them, from the rat-tossing mid-1990s to their Stanley Cup parade this season.

WHEN FLORIDA WINGER Evan Rodrigues was growing up in Toronto, the media covered only Canadian teams and winning teams.

“So I would say I probably wasn’t focused on the Panthers too much,” the 30-year-old said.

Fellow Ontario native Ryan Lomberg, 29, remembered how the Panthers were covered on social media.

“I remember seeing pictures of the empty arena. Seeing all the red seats and seeing maybe a couple thousand fans. Being a kid from Toronto, I remember not really understanding how the contrast [with other teams] was so extreme,” he said. “It doesn’t even make sense to me how it was back then. The second I got here four years ago, the fans have been amazing. We have a strong following.”

Florida’s attendance woes were a league-wide punch line, and the franchise did nothing to discourage it.

“In 2004, while I was at college in Orlando, I met a guy who was a Lightning fan while I was watching the finals at a bar,” Panthers fan David Roth said. “I told him I was a Panthers fan, and he looked at me with a look of absolute bewilderment and just said, ‘Why?’ As if it were so foreign a concept to be a fan of a team in Florida other than the Lightning.”

In 2006, the Panthers were averaging over 4,100 free tickets handed out for each home game. In 2008, the team introduced the “First Timer” program, in which anyone with a valid Florida driver’s license could get two free tickets to a game.

In 2010, after LeBron James made his decision to take his talents to South Beach, the Panthers responded by offering season tickets in the upper deck for $6 per game, ostensibly in honor of his new uniform number with the Heat. Even that price point didn’t generate enough sales — the team announced that summer that it was going to tarp off 2,000 upper deck seats for most home games.

“When you go 25 years between playoff series wins, and then only make the playoffs a couple of times during that span, you lose a couple of generations of fans,” Florida CEO Matthew Caldwell said.

Caldwell ascended to his position in 2016, having worked with owner Vinny Viola for several years.

Viola, who purchased the team in 2013, is one of a handful of majority owners during the team’s turbulent history. They were founded as an expansion team by billionaire Wayne Huizenga, who initially wanted to name them the “Block Busters” in honor of his video rental chain.

He sold the franchise to pharmaceutical businessman Alan Cohen and former NFL quarterback Bernie Kosar in 2001. Cliff Viner became general partner in 2010, and made two moves that would set up Florida for later success: Hiring former Chicago Blackhawks GM Dale Tallon as head of hockey operations, and tasking him with rebuilding through the draft.

When Viola took over, the real work began to repair the Panthers’ reputation. It started with the way they ticketed games.

“There was a lot of comp tickets. Just all these gimmicks to get people into the arena,” Caldwell said. “That doesn’t work in the long term. It really angers your season-ticket holders when you’re giving out all these freebies and promotions to people off the streets.”

With the team’s attendance struggles came constant relocation speculation.

“There were all these rumors that we should be moved,” Caldwell said. “That this new ownership group was fixing it up and trying to relocate to Quebec at the time. Those were the headwinds we had to deal with.”

The chatter got so loud that owners Viola and Doug Cifu wrote a letter to fans in 2014 to assure them the Panthers weren’t relocating. “Our plan is to build an organization that makes South Florida proud and to win the Stanley Cup in South Florida,” they said.

But even the Panthers’ own municipality was fueling relocation speculation. Broward County did a full analysis of the Panthers franchise, and more broadly on whether or not there should be a hockey team in South Florida.

Apparently, the County found enough reasons to commit to the Panthers, agreeing to a new arena lease that put Viola’s team on solid financial footing.

“It felt like a miracle at the time,” Caldwell said. “But I think the county looked at it like, ‘Hey, this is our last shot to see if the sport works here.'”

While the team was getting its financial house in order, Caldwell’s next task was trying to energize a fan base that had sunk into malaise.

“When there’s a fan base that’s mad and angry and looking for a savior, that’s actually a little encouraging. At least you know, they’re out there and if you do the right thing, they’re going to come back,” he said. “The problem is that our fan base had become indifferent. There was still like 3,000 or so season-ticket holders that were loyal and wanted to see this happen. But a lot of the casual fans, former season-ticket holders, had given up.”

Going 24 seasons between playoff wins will do that to a franchise. But Caldwell said getting their house in order off the ice was important for what would happen on the ice over the next decade.


WHEN THE COLORADO AVALANCHE celebrated their Stanley Cup Final sweep of the Panthers in 1996, they skated through an ever-increasing pile of plastic rats.

The rat-tossing stems from a legendary moment in 1995-96 when forward Scott Mellanby used his stick to exterminate a rat in the locker room before a game. He then used the same stick to score two goals that night — accomplishing what his teammates called “a rat trick.” To this day, rubber rats are available for purchase in the official Florida team store for $5 each, with the store selling upward of 150 on game days.

The plastic rats were symbolic of what the franchise had created in its third NHL season: tradition. The Cinderella run bonded hockey fans and minted new ones. A few days after the 1996 Final, the Panthers hosted 15,000 fans at Miami Arena for a celebration of that season’s success.

The hopes were high that this was the start of something special for the franchise — then they didn’t win another playoff series until 25 seasons later.

“It was brutal. There were so many years in the wilderness,” Panthers fan Scott Kandell said. “We always seemed to have one or two good players with promise — like Nathan Horton, Stephen Weiss and Olli Jokinen — but ownership’s answer was always to bring in older players past their prime to try to create depth getting over the hump. And it was always with terrible results.”

From 1996 to 2022, the Panthers had the 25th-best regular-season points percentage (.513) and the worst playoff record (13-29) in the NHL. There were exhilarating highlights during that otherwise moribund run — Pavel Bure’s back-to-back goal-scoring titles, Roberto Luongo’s Hall of Fame goaltending — but also draft busts, young players traded too soon and a string of underwhelming teams.

“It wasn’t fun being the butt of attendance jokes (you know, when those jokes were actually legitimate), never seeing a playoff series, owners literally handing tickets out for free,” Panthers fan Max Horowitz said. “It was all a huge bummer to see considering the beginning of the franchise had such immediate results and promise going for it.”

When Viola purchased the team, Jonathan Huberdeau (No. 3 overall, 2011), and Barkov (No. 2, 2013) had been drafted. Ekblad (No. 1) would join them in 2014.

But success didn’t follow right away. There were five coaching changes. There was an internal struggle between Tallon and the “Computer Boys” — the moniker given to the data-driven front office by some members of the Canadian media — that bred an inconsistent philosophy and bad decisions, like letting Jonathan Marchessault slip away in the Vegas expansion draft.

At one point, Tallon was demoted as GM in 2016, then reinstated in 2017.

But it was Tallon’s presence in 2019 that helped the Panthers achieve an important turning point in their path to success: luring Joel Quenneville to coach the team. Tallon had previously hired him to coach the Blackhawks.

After Chicago fired Quenneville, the Panthers swooped in with a significant financial offer and the chance to work with Tallon again. He accepted.

“He was obviously a hot commodity at the time coming out of Chicago,” Caldwell said. “When we were able to land him, I think a lot of people said, ‘Wow, you know, Joel can go anywhere and he picks Florida.’ We certainly offered a good contract, but other big franchises wanted him, too. And then we signed Bob.”

Florida handed two-time Vezina Trophy winner and free agent goalie Sergei Bobrovsky of the Columbus Blue Jackets a seven-year deal, with an annual average value of $10 million, in summer 2019. In the past, the franchise struggled to attract free agents. Now, one of the top ones had chosen them.

Tallon was fired in 2020 after 10 seasons with the team.

“When we purchased the Panthers in 2013, we did so with a singular goal: to win a Stanley Cup. We have not seen our efforts come to fruition,” Viola said at the time.

Florida had 23 interviews for the general manager job. Caldwell said they “scoured the Earth” to find the right candidate. They found him in Columbus: assistant GM Bill Zito, a former agent, was brought on to run the Panthers.

The team showed improvement under Quenneville, although they still couldn’t advance past the first round.

And then, on Oct. 28, 2021, the Quenneville Era ended.

Quenneville resigned as head coach of the Panthers following a meeting with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman about his involvement in the Blackhawks’ sexual abuse case.

An investigation by the law firm Jenner & Block looked into the allegations that former video coach Brad Aldrich sexually assaulted and harassed player Kyle Beach during the team’s 2010 Stanley Cup run. The investigation revealed that Quenneville was aware of the situation and took part in at least one meeting regarding the allegations during the 2010 postseason.

Quenneville had previously said he only learned of the allegations in the summer of 2021 “through the media.”

Caldwell said the Panthers’ forward momentum as an organization could have been “100% derailed” by Quenneville’s resignation, as he had two additional seasons worth over $15 million total left on his contract.

“We had this great coach and we were blindsided by all of it. We started the season 7-0 and then the news broke,” Caldwell said.

Associate coach Andrew Brunette stepped in as interim coach, and led the Panthers to their first Presidents’ Trophy with the league’s best record. He also coached them to their first playoff series victory since 1996, over the Washington Capitals. But after the Panthers were swept out by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the second round, Brunette wasn’t retained.


ENTER PAUL MAURICE.

He had resigned as coach of the Winnipeg Jets in December 2021, suggesting the team needed a different voice. He wasn’t sure if he’d get another head-coaching job and was content with that.

Maurice was in the midst of “four phenomenal days of fishing” when Zito called him. They started talking hockey, and immediately connected.

“I was good, right? I had given all that I thought I had to give, certainly been fortunate in the game and received far more than I gave,” Maurice said. “But there’s just these strange little things that meant Florida was right, that it was where I was supposed to be next.”

The Panthers hired Maurice on June 22, 2022. By this time, Zito was deep into shaping a championship roster.

His first move as general manager was a stabilizing one: trading for Penguins forward Patric Hornqvist, a Stanley Cup champion who ended up being a culture-developer for Florida.

Then came banger after banger: signing Carter Verhaeghe as a free agent; trading for defenseman Brandon Montour and winger Sam Reinhart from Buffalo; getting center Sam Bennett from Calgary; snagging defenseman Gustav Forsling off waivers, a player who Maurice recently said is “the best in the world” in the style that he plays.

Then came the big swing, one month after hiring Maurice: trading Huberdeau and defenseman MacKenzie Weegar to Calgary for star forward Matthew Tkachuk, whom Zito called a “generational talent” after the deal.

“Our build was gradual, and then when Bill got here, it’s been like a turbo boost,” Caldwell said.

It wasn’t just that Tkachuk would be a star player for the Panthers — carrying them to the Stanley Cup Final last season and playing a vital role in their success in this run — but that he committed to the Panthers with a contract that runs through 2029-30.

“I think we are all very proud to be a part of that culture shift. It used to be that players would come and kind of fade away and end their career here,” Lomberg said. “Now it’s where the big dogs like Matt Tkachuk want to come and want to establish themselves and build that legacy. So we’re exceptionally lucky to be a part of the Florida Panthers and extremely proud to be where we’re at.”

For years, a laughingstock. Then suddenly a destination. Now, finally, a champion.

play

1:33

Tkachuk: ‘It’s not a dream, it’s reality’

Matthew Tkachuk discusses how it feels to be a Stanley Cup champion following the Florida Panthers’ 2-1 victory over the Edmonton Oilers.


ZITO REMEMBERED THE FEELING after the 2023 Stanley Cup Final.

The Panthers had a miraculous run through the Eastern Conference: shocking the Bruins, rolling through the Maple Leafs and then sweeping the Hurricanes. But injuries and ineffectiveness had them fall short to the Golden Knights, losing in five games.

“I can tell you how rotten it felt going home empty-handed. How everyone had that feeling in their stomach,” Zito said.

That dissatisfaction was reflected in training camp. “Paul’s camps are really intense and a lot of hard work. You can’t quit at any time,” Barkov said.

Tkachuk’s one-word assessment: “Brutal.”

But Maurice said that it was about the players coming to camp with an all-business attitude. It was no longer about hoping to make a Stanley Cup Final — it was expected to be there again, and just about figuring out the best path to get there.

“We have that bitter taste in our mouth still, and our mindset this year is completely different than last year, when it was a little bit ‘happy to be there and enjoy the experience,'” Bennett said. “This year, it’s all business. We have one goal in mind, and we’re not going to be satisfied until we accomplish that.”

One critical change in their mindset came because of injury: Ekblad and Montour missed the start of the season after surgery. That encouraged the team’s leadership to rededicate the Panthers defensively. They went from 21st in the league last season in goals-against average (3.32) to tied for first this season (2.41).

The work they did in the playoffs against star opponents reflected that commitment. Through Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final, the Panthers didn’t give up a 5-on-5 goal to McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins or Zach Hyman; nor did they give up one in prior playoff series to Artemi Panarin, Chris Kreider, Mika Zibanejad, David Pastrnak or Nikita Kucherov.

“For as many offensive guys we have on the team, we’re a defense-first team,” Tkachuk said.

The constant in their defensive effort was Bobrovsky.

“It’s phenomenal just to watch him work every day. He makes all these saves, and he’s always in the right position it seems like during the games, and that’s not by accident. It’s because of how dialed in he is in his preparation,” trade deadline acquisition Kyle Okposo said. “I think that’s been the most fun part for me: just watching him every day and how it’s translating to the games.”

There was a time when Bobrovsky was seen as an overhyped, overpaid netminder who was crushed by the weight of his contract. Now, he’s Playoff Bob.

Perceptions change. Just ask the Florida Panthers.

play

0:41

Sergei Bobrovsky denies Connor McDavid in front of net

Connor McDavid finds himself one-on-one with Sergei Bobrovsky, but the Panthers’ goalie snuffs out the danger with a point-blank save.


ZITO STARTED TO NOTICE the increased interest in the Panthers after last season.

“When I walked the dog the first couple years, no one said a word to me,” he said during a media availability with Maurice. “Now the neighbor sort of knows who I am.”

“They stopped calling the cops on you?” the coach asked, deadpan.

“Yeah,” Zito said, laughing. “And you’re starting to see more and more Panthers stuff. It’s wonderful. It’s really exciting for the game.”

This is the moment for which Viola, Caldwell and the Panthers’ ownership team have been aiming. This is the moment toward which Zito has been building. Florida winning the Stanley Cup is the culmination of their work to change the perception, vibe, personnel and success of this team.

“It’s really nothing short of … well, ‘thrilling’ is probably a little too much,” Zito said. “But as someone who grew up loving the game and never having played in the NHL, to see the fans and to hear from your friends — ‘Oh, I went there and I couldn’t get in because it was packed’ — is amazing.”

Barkov has waited his entire career for it.

“It’s the best time of my life right now. I’m enjoying every single day and making these playoff runs,” he said.

The Panthers were 29-45-8 in Barkov’s first season. They had two different coaches. Their leading scorer was Nick Bjugstad.

A decade later, they’re Stanley Cup champions.

“There’s a cycle in the NHL. That’s true of the great franchises, too. We used to go into Chicago and there’s 5,200 people in that building. Detroit for a while had to give away a car a game to get people to the game,” he said. “Some of these phenomenal franchises. But they have to be built, and then I guess they have to be maintained. We’re hopeful we’re building it now.”

Cup in hand, the Panthers are now faced with an equally challenging task: sustaining success.

“In sports, everything’s about consistency,” Caldwell said. “If you just have one good season, it’s great. But the market’s smart. They want to make sure that you’re going to be good for a couple of years, you know?”

Panthers fan Jeffrey Alterman agrees.

“You know South Florida’s sports reputation,” he said. “We are a winning town. If you’re winning, we are coming. So they have to keep winning.”

Rodrigues feels the franchise has turned the corner. It’s now a destination for players and will continue to be one.

“I think if you get the right people involved, and you build a place where people want to come, they’ll come,” he said. “Look at our new practice facility. It’s state-of-the-art. If you’re between a couple places and you come down here and look at our facility and then you’re in South Florida, it’s hard to say no to. I’ve really enjoyed it this year, and I won’t take away, though, that winning is probably the biggest thing.”

The Panthers have seen how fleeting success can be in the NHL, going 25 years between the rat-tossing euphoria of their 1996 Stanley Cup Final run to their next playoff victory. In between, they squandered momentum, wasted good faith and alienated generations of fans.

But they say it’ll be different this time.

“Winning it is the pinnacle of everything we’ve been talking about over the last 10 years. I think we’ve already established a lot of credibility, but winning the actual Cup the first time in franchise history is the icing on the cake on everything that we’ve been building here,” Caldwell said. “We’ve always been very clear that we won’t stop until we bring a Stanley Cup to our fans. And we’re not going to stop after that, either.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Sizing up the postseason picture, including every bowl matchup, with one week to go

Published

on

By

Sizing up the postseason picture, including every bowl matchup, with one week to go

With one week left in the regular season, the College Football Playoff and bowl pictures are coming into sharper focus — except where they aren’t.

Things are pretty settled at the top of the field, as a relatively upset-free Week 13 left a half-dozen or so teams that are virtual locks for the CFP. But the ACC in particular has numerous moving parts in terms of who will play for the conference championship and likely make the playoff, and league title-game matchups are unsettled pretty much everywhere.

Meanwhile, teams sitting at five wins are sweating things out, with one more chance to become bowl eligible.

As with last season’s inaugural 12-team CFP, the five highest-ranked conference champions, plus the next seven highest-ranked teams, will make the field. Unlike last year, the four highest-ranked teams (not necessarily conference champions) will be awarded first-round byes. The other eight teams will meet in first-round games at the campus sites of seeds Nos. 5 through 8.

From there, the quarterfinals and semifinals will be played in what had been the New Year’s Six bowls, with the national championship game scheduled for Jan. 19 at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium.

All of that is just the tip of the iceberg, though. Apart from the playoff is the 35-game slate of bowl games, beginning with the Cricket Celebration Bowl on Dec. 13.

We’re here for all of it.

ESPN bowl gurus Kyle Bonagura and Mark Schlabach are projecting every postseason matchup, including their breakdowns of how the playoff will play out, and we’ll be back every week of the season until the actual matchups are set.

Jump to a section:
Playoff picks | Quarterfinals
Semis, title game | Bowl season

College Football Playoff

First-round games (at campus sites)

Friday, Dec. 19
8 p.m., ABC, ESPN

Saturday, Dec. 20
Noon, ABC, ESPN
3:30 p.m., TNT
7:30 p.m., TNT

Bonagura: No. 12 North Texas at No. 5 Texas Tech
Schlabach: No. 12 Tulane at No. 5 Texas Tech

Bonagura: No. 11 SMU at No. 6 Ole Miss
Schlabach: No. 11 SMU at No. 6 Oregon

Bonagura: No. 10 Alabama at No. 7 Oregon
Schlabach: No. 10 Alabama at No. 7 Ole Miss

Bonagura: No. 9 Notre Dame at No. 8 Oklahoma
Schlabach: No. 9 Notre Dame at No. 8 Oklahoma

First-round breakdown

Bonagura: The ACC doomsday scenario of its conference champion being left out of the playoff in favor of a team from the American — Tulane or North Texas — and the Sun Belt’s James Madison is still alive, but it feels like a we’ll-believe-it-when-we-see-it thing.

For now, I still don’t think the ACC champ would end up behind two Group of 5 teams, regardless of who it is. That would be a lot easier to feel good about if Miami had a straightforward path to the ACC title game, but that is not the case. Instead, the Hurricanes need to beat Pitt and would need Virginia to lose to Virginia Tech and Cal to beat SMU. It’s possible. It’s not likely. The title game will be SMU and Virginia if they both win next week, which is why SMU gets the ACC nod for the time being; the Ponies have been the better team of late.

The rest of the playoff field is mostly straightforward. Six teams from the SEC and Big Ten are locks (Ohio State, Indiana, Texas A&M, Georgia, Ole Miss, Oregon). So is Texas Tech of the Big 12. Notre Dame (Stanford), Alabama (Auburn) and Oklahoma (LSU) are probably in with wins, but one of those slots would go to BYU if the Cougars beat Texas Tech in the Big 12 title game.

Schlabach: The appetizer to the final weekend of the regular season didn’t produce much drama, as every CFP contender — outside of the ACC at least — found a way to get things done, mostly against inferior competition.

With two weeks left before the CFP selection committee announces the 12-team bracket on Dec. 7, I’m betting that five teams — Ohio State, Indiana, Texas A&M, Georgia and Texas Tech — have punched their tickets, regardless of what happens in their regular-season finales and respective conference championship games (if they make it there).

Three more teams — Oregon, Ole Miss and Oklahoma — can probably do the same if they win this week. The Ducks erased any doubts about their overall strength with an impressive 42-27 win against USC. They’ll close the regular season at Washington on Saturday.

The Rebels had the weekend off, and they might have needed the time to refocus as speculation continues to heat up about whether coach Lane Kiffin will leave for LSU or Florida. Ole Miss plays at rival Mississippi State in the Egg Bowl on Friday.

The surging Sooners picked up their third straight victory against a ranked opponent, taking down Missouri 17-6 at home. Oklahoma hosts LSU in its regular-season finale Saturday.

Notre Dame and Alabama would probably be in good shape for at-large bids with wins this coming weekend; the Irish play at struggling Stanford on Saturday, while the Crimson Tide travel to Auburn in Saturday’s Iron Bowl. However, they might still be at the mercy of the selection committee, depending on what happens in other leagues.


CFP quarterfinals

Wednesday, Dec. 31

CFP Quarterfinal at the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic
AT&T Stadium (Arlington, Texas)
7:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: No. 7 Oregon vs. No. 2 Indiana
Schlabach: No. 7 Ole Miss vs. No. 2 Indiana

Thursday, Jan. 1

CFP Quarterfinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl
Hard Rock Stadium (Miami Gardens, Florida)
Noon, ESPN

Bonagura: No. 5 Texas Tech vs. No. 4 Georgia
Schlabach: No. 5 Texas Tech vs. No. 4 Georgia

CFP Quarterfinal at the Rose Bowl Game presented by Prudential
Rose Bowl (Pasadena, California)
4 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: No. 8 Oklahoma vs. No. 1 Ohio State
Schlabach: No. 9 Notre Dame vs. No. 1 Ohio State

CFP Quarterfinal at the Allstate Sugar Bowl
Caesars Superdome (New Orleans)
8 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: No. 6 Ole Miss vs. No. 3 Texas A&M
Schlabach: No. 6 Oregon vs. No. 3 Texas A&M

Quarterfinals breakdown

Bonagura: No changes for me here from last week, but it should be noted that Oregon is back on track offensively after a couple of uninspiring showings in late October and early November.

Quarterback Dante Moore looks like he is capable of leading a team to the national title, but first the Ducks have a big rivalry game with Washington to navigate this week.

Schlabach: Three of the top four seeds continued to play well this weekend, as Ohio State crushed Rutgers 42-9 at home. Next the Buckeyes travel to Michigan, where they’ll attempt to exorcise some demons in “The Game.” The Buckeyes have dropped four games in a row to the Wolverines, including a stunning 13-10 loss at home last season. The Buckeyes were ranked No. 2 in the CFP rankings and somehow fell to the 6-5 Wolverines. Emotions will surely be running high once again at the Big House.

Texas A&M walloped FCS program Samford 48-0 in its final warmup game. The Aggies will play at rival Texas for the first time in 15 years on Saturday. Texas A&M won 24-17 at Texas on Nov. 25, 2010. The Longhorns won the past two games in the series, both in College Station.

Georgia took care of business in a 35-3 win against Charlotte. The Bulldogs will play rival Georgia Tech at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Saturday. Last season, Georgia had to overcome a 17-point deficit and needed eight overtimes to put the Yellow Jackets away in a 44-42 victory.


CFP semifinals, national championship game

Thursday, Jan. 8

CFP Semifinal at the Vrbo Fiesta Bowl
State Farm Stadium (Glendale, Arizona)
7:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: No. 5 Texas Tech vs. No. 1 Ohio State
Schlabach: No. 4 Georgia vs. No. 1 Ohio State

Friday, Jan. 9

CFP Semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl
Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta)
7:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: No. 3 Texas A&M vs. No. 2 Indiana
Schlabach: No. 3 Texas A&M vs. No. 2 Indiana

Monday, Jan. 19

CFP National Championship
Hard Rock Stadium (Miami Gardens, Florida)
7:45 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: No. 2 Indiana vs. No. 1 Ohio State
Schlabach: No. 3 Texas A&M vs. No. 1 Ohio State

National championship breakdown

Bonagura: Ohio State is the deserved No. 1 seed. Its defense has been historically good, and the Buckeyes haven’t been challenged since opening the season with Texas. But they also haven’t exactly seen the best the Big Ten has to offer without Indiana, Oregon, USC or Iowa on the schedule this year.

It would be a lot easier to be more confident about Ohio State with a couple of more ranked teams on its résumé, but that’s how things work out with schedules now that conferences are so big. It makes this week’s game against Michigan more interesting and potentially sets up a fascinating Big Ten title game.

Schlabach: My quarterfinal and semifinal matchups remain unchanged from a week ago. The Cotton Bowl contest would feature two of the best transfer quarterbacks in the FBS: Ole Miss’ Trinidad Chambliss and Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza.

I have Georgia slipping past Texas Tech in the Orange Bowl, although the Red Raiders’ menacing defensive front would be quite the challenge for the Bulldogs’ much-improved offensive line. Georgia seems to be peaking at the right time, unlike last season, and few coaches know how to get things done in the postseason like Kirby Smart.

A Rose Bowl game between Notre Dame and Ohio State would be a TV ratings bonanza, and Texas A&M-Oregon in New Orleans would be another entertaining game. I have both favorites moving on to the semifinals.

Complete bowl season schedule

Saturday, Dec. 13

Cricket Celebration Bowl
Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta)
Noon, ABC

Bonagura: Jackson State vs. South Carolina State
Schlabach: Jackson State vs. South Carolina State

LA Bowl
SoFi Stadium (Inglewood, California)
9 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Arizona State vs. San Diego State
Schlabach: Washington vs. San Diego State

Tuesday, Dec. 16

IS4S Salute to Veterans Bowl
Cramton Bowl (Montgomery, Alabama)
9 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Central Michigan vs. Troy
Schlabach: Jacksonville State vs. Troy

Wednesday, Dec. 17

StaffDNA Cure Bowl
Camping World Stadium (Orlando, Florida)
5 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Jacksonville State vs. Marshall
Schlabach: Florida International vs. Old Dominion

68 Ventures Bowl
Hancock Whitney Stadium (Mobile, Alabama)
8:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Coastal Carolina vs. Louisiana Tech
Schlabach: Coastal Carolina vs. Central Michigan

Friday, Dec. 19

Myrtle Beach Bowl
Brooks Stadium (Conway, South Carolina)
Noon, ESPN

Bonagura: Southern Miss vs. UConn
Schlabach: Marshall vs. East Carolina

Union Home Mortgage Gasparilla Bowl
Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, Florida)
3:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: South Florida vs. Clemson
Schlabach: UConn vs. Florida State

Monday, Dec. 22

Famous Idaho Potato Bowl
Albertsons Stadium (Boise, Idaho)
2 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Toledo vs. UNLV
Schlabach: Ohio vs. Boise State

Tuesday, Dec. 23

Boca Raton Bowl
Flagler Credit Union Stadium (Boca Raton, Florida)
2 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Florida International vs. Louisiana
Schlabach: Miami (Ohio) vs. Louisiana

New Orleans Bowl
Caesars Superdome (New Orleans)
5:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Western Kentucky vs. Old Dominion
Schlabach: Kennesaw State vs. Southern Miss

Scooter’s Coffee Frisco Bowl
Ford Center at The Star (Frisco, Texas)
9 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Boise State vs. James Madison
Schlabach: Utah State vs. Louisiana Tech

Wednesday, Dec. 24

Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl
Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex (Honolulu)
8 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Hawai’i vs. California
Schlabach: Hawai’i vs. California

Friday, Dec. 26

GameAbove Sports Bowl
Ford Field (Detroit)
1 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Penn State vs. Ohio
Schlabach: Penn State vs. Western Michigan

Rate Bowl
Chase Field (Phoenix)
4:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Cincinnati vs. Northwestern
Schlabach: Kansas State vs. Minnesota

SERVPRO First Responder Bowl
Gerald J. Ford Stadium (Dallas)
8 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Texas State vs. Utah State
Schlabach: North Texas vs. UNLV

Saturday, Dec. 27

Go Bowling Military Bowl
Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium (Annapolis, Maryland)
11 a.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Duke vs. East Carolina
Schlabach: Wake Forest vs. Navy

Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl
Yankee Stadium (Bronx, New York)
Noon, ABC

Bonagura: Pittsburgh vs. Minnesota
Schlabach: Pittsburgh vs. Illinois

Wasabi Fenway Bowl
Fenway Park (Boston)
2:15 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: NC State vs. Army
Schlabach: Louisville vs. South Florida

Pop-Tarts Bowl
Camping World Stadium (Orlando, Florida)
3:30 p.m., ABC

Bonagura: Miami vs. Houston
Schlabach: Virginia vs. Cincinnati

Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl
Arizona Stadium (Tucson, Arizona)
4:30 p.m., CW Network

Bonagura: Miami (Ohio) vs. Fresno State
Schlabach: Toledo vs. Fresno State

Isleta New Mexico Bowl
University Stadium (Albuquerque, New Mexico)
5:45 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: New Mexico vs. Washington State
Schlabach: New Mexico vs. UTSA

TaxSlayer Gator Bowl
EverBank Stadium (Jacksonville, Florida)
7:30 p.m. ABC

Bonagura: Virginia vs. LSU
Schlabach: Miami vs. Texas

Kinder’s Texas Bowl
NRG Stadium (Houston)
9:15 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Iowa State vs. Texas
Schlabach: Houston vs. Kentucky

Monday, Dec. 29

JLab Birmingham Bowl
Protective Stadium (Birmingham, Alabama)
2 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Florida State vs. Memphis
Schlabach: NC State vs. James Madison

Tuesday, Dec. 30

Radiance Technologies Independence Bowl
Independence Stadium (Shreveport, Louisiana)
2 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: UTSA vs. Kennesaw State
Schlabach: Baylor vs. Western Kentucky

Music City Bowl
Nissan Stadium (Nashville, Tennessee)
5:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Nebraska vs. Missouri
Schlabach: Northwestern vs. LSU

Valero Alamo Bowl
Alamodome (San Antonio)
9 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: BYU vs. USC
Schlabach: BYU vs. USC

Wednesday, Dec. 31

ReliaQuest Bowl
Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, Florida)
Noon, ESPN

Bonagura: Illinois vs. Kentucky
Schlabach: Iowa vs. Tennessee

Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl
Sun Bowl Stadium (El Paso, Texas)
2 p.m., CBS

Bonagura: Wake Forest vs. Arizona
Schlabach: Clemson vs. Arizona

Cheez-It Citrus Bowl
Camping World Stadium (Orlando, Florida)
3 p.m., ABC

Bonagura: Michigan vs. Vanderbilt
Schlabach: Michigan vs. Vanderbilt

SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl
Allegiant Stadium (Las Vegas)
3:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Iowa vs. Utah
Schlabach: Nebraska vs. Utah

Friday, Jan. 2

Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl
Amon G. Carter Stadium (Fort Worth, Texas)
1 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Kansas State vs. Navy
Schlabach: TCU vs. Army

AutoZone Liberty Bowl
Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium (Memphis, Tennessee)
4:30 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: TCU vs. Tulane
Schlabach: Iowa State vs. Memphis

Duke’s Mayo Bowl
Bank of America Stadium (Charlotte, North Carolina)
8 p.m., ESPN

Bonagura: Louisville vs. Tennessee
Schlabach: Duke vs. Missouri

Holiday Bowl
Snapdragon Stadium (San Diego)
8 p.m., Fox
Bonagura: Georgia Tech vs. Washington
Schlabach: Georgia Tech vs. Arizona State

Continue Reading

Sports

Flyers honor late Parent with tribute before game

Published

on

By

Flyers honor late Parent with tribute before game

PHILADELPHIA — The Flyers celebrate the star of each victory this season by presenting him with a replica Bernie Parent goalie mask. The white mask with the Flyers logo on each side of the temples looks much like the one Parent wore as a cover boy in the 1970s on Time magazine when the Flyers truly meant something — beyond the Philly sports scene, and even the NHL — and he served as the cloaked face of the Broad Street Bullies.

The Flyers pulled out the mask Saturday night before their game against New Jersey and let it rest on top of one of the goalie nets. One more final tribute for Parent, the Hall of Fame goalie who was honored by the franchise this weekend two months after he died at age 80.

“Forever our No. 1,” said Lou Nolan, the Flyers’ public address announcer since 1972.

With that, the spotlight shone on Parent’s retired No. 1 banner that hangs in the rafters, just a row ahead of the two oversized Stanley Cup championship banners — the only ones in franchise history — that catch the eye in Flyers orange and might not even exist at all if not for the affable goalie from Montreal.

Parent anchored the net for the Flyers when the Bullies reigned under owner Ed Snider as one of the marquee teams in sports. Parent won Stanley Cup, Conn Smythe and Vezina trophies in back-to-back seasons when the Flyers captured the Stanley Cup in ’74 and ’75, the first NHL expansion team to win the championship.

Ahead of the game Saturday against New Jersey, a photo of a smiling Parent flashing his two Stanley Cup rings on the outside arena videoboard loomed large over the 9-foot bronze statue for Snider, the Flyers’ founder who died in 2016.

“‘We’ve got two Stanley Cups because of Bernie,” Hall of Famer Bobby Clarke said at a celebration of life event in front of thousands of Flyers fans.

Flyers fans poured out this weekend to remember Parent over a two-day celebration that started with Friday’s service and extended into Saturday’s tribute game. Flyers fans in droves wore No. 1 Parent jerseys during the game — and what would the goalie think even as, yes, his beloved Flyers scored three goals in 26 seconds against beleaguered Jake Allen — and they roared for every highlight from Parent’s glory years.

The loudest cheers were saved for the Stanley Cup highlights.

The Flyers beat the Boston Bruins in six games to win the Stanley Cup in 1974 and beat Buffalo in 1975. Parent had shutouts in the clinchers each season.

On the flight home from Buffalo, the Flyers plopped the Stanley Cup in the middle of the aisle. For close to 90 minutes, they couldn’t take their eyes off hockey’s ultimate prize.

“We were able to just sit back, look at the Stanley Cup and just savor it,” Parent said in 2010. “It was just a special time.”

With Parent the unstoppable force in net, “Only the Lord saves more than Bernie Parent,” became a popular bumper sticker in Philadelphia that would stick on him as a lifelong slogan — and popular autograph inscription request — through retirement and his many years as a team ambassador.

Parent also served as an ambassador for the Ed Snider Youth Hockey and Education program; a youth hockey program created in 2005 for under-resourced youth in Philadelphia.

The program announced Saturday it would honor Parent’s legacy with the Bernie Parent Goalie Development Program, aimed to prepare young people for success both on and off the ice. Flyers Charities presented a $50,000 donation which was matched by Snider’s children.

Parent, team captain Bobby Clarke and Dave “The Hammer” Schultz all became stars for the Flyers under Snider in an era when the team was known for its rugged style of play that earned the Bullies nickname. They embraced their moniker as the roughest team in the NHL and pounded their way into the hearts of Flyers fans. More than 2 million fans packed Philadelphia streets for each of their championship parades.

Most of the living members from the Cup teams attended the game Saturday and Clarke choked back tears at the memorial as he listed other Flyers from the Stanley Cup teams who have since died. Barry Ashbee. Ed Van Impe. Bill Flett. Ross Lonsberry. Rick MacLeish

“And now, God bless Bernie, because he’s going to join them,” Clarke said. “And the rest of us, until we go join them, we will talk together forever.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Blackwood makes 35 saves as Avs win 8th straight

Published

on

By

Blackwood makes 35 saves as Avs win 8th straight

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Mackenzie Blackwood made 35 saves to lead the Colorado Avalanche to a 3-0 victory over the Nashville Predators on Saturday night.

Brent Burns scored early, and Nathan MacKinnon and Jack Drury added empty-net goals for the Avalanche. Colorado has won eight straight, their longest winning streak since taking nine in a row March 4-24, 2024.

The Avalanche hold the best record in the league and are five points up from the second-place Carolina Hurricanes.

Juuse Saros made 23 saves for the Predators, losers of seven of eight. Saturday was the first game back in North America for the Predators after playing a pair of Global Series games last week against the Pittsburgh Penguins in Stockholm, Sweden. The Predators have been shutout in consecutive games.

The shutout was the first of the season and 15th of Blackwood’s career.

Burns scored the game’s first goal just 15 seconds after the opening faceoff.

After a battle in the right corner, the puck came to Burns above the right circle, where he beat Saros with a wrist shot on the first shot of the game.

The game remained 1-0 until MacKinnon scored an empty-net goal was 1:35 remaining in the third with Saros pulled for an extra attacker. Drury added another empty-netter with 51 seconds left.

MacKinnon has three goals in his last two games.

Colorado defenseman Cale Makar failed to record a point in a road game for the first time this season.

The Predators outshot the Avalanche 16-6 in the first, but couldn’t get one past Blackwood.

Saturday was just the fifth time this season that an opponent has outshot the Avalanche. Colorado is 5-0-0 in those games.

Blackwood stopped Nashville’s Michael McCarron with 5:47 remaining in the third on a backhand from the low slot to keep the Predators off the board.

Predators captain Roman Josi returned to the lineup Saturday after missing 12 games with an upper-body injury.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Continue Reading

Trending