Florida Panthers
Another run? Streaking Panthers hoping a 2nd straight strong 2nd half can propel them to the postseason
Florida Panthers

Another run? Streaking Panthers hoping a 2nd straight strong 2nd half can propel them to the postseason

Published Jan. 22, 2019 4:00 p.m. ET

SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — The Florida Panthers are hoping for deja vu.

Sort of.

A year ago, the Panthers shook off a disastrous start to the season and caught fire after the All-Star break — only to miss the playoffs by a single point. This year, they're heading into the break on a three-game winning streak and playing perhaps their best hockey of the season after spending the first three months of the year sputtering near the bottom of the NHL.

So here they go again, trying for another late and improbable playoff push.

"We have that confidence back, that swagger," goaltender Roberto Luongo said after a 6-2 win over San Jose on Monday night.



They'll need more than swagger.

The Panthers were 24-8-2 in the final 34 games last season, getting 50 of a possible 68 points down the stretch. This year, with 34 games left when they return to the ice on Feb. 1, they'll need a similar run. Florida is 10 points out of the final wild-card berth in the Eastern Conference, and 11 points from catching Boston for the third and final guaranteed playoff spot out of the Atlantic Division.

"I think we are starting to turn the corner," Panthers coach Bob Boughner said. "We have a long way to go."

As unlikely as it seems — especially for the Panthers, an often-woebegone franchise that hasn't won a playoff series since 1996 — there is a potential path to the postseason.

Florida (20-20-8) has 12 games between Feb. 1 and Feb. 23, and 11 of those are on home ice. That's the good news. The flip side is this: Of those 12, eight are against teams that are currently in the top half of the NHL, including matchups with Tampa Bay, Nashville, Washington, Pittsburgh and Vegas quickly after the All-Star break ends.

"It's nice to be back to feeling the way I like to feel and the confidence is there," said Luongo, who has won consecutive starts for the first time in more than a month. "The guys are playing well in front of me. It's a two-way street. When the guys play well I feel good and when I feel good the guys play well."

There is a clear urgency, and it started last week with the team on what was then a seven-game losing skid.

Florida was without Vincent Trocheck for 27 games after he broke his right ankle in November. When he returned to practice last week, the Panthers' plan was to keep him out until after the break in order to make sure he was fully ready to go.

Trocheck successfully argued otherwise. Not only did he play in three games since returning to practice — in a four-day span, no less — the Panthers went 3-0-0 in those games, clearly sparked by his comeback.

"We're having fun," said Trocheck, who has two goals and two assists since returning. "It's fun to win some hockey games. It's been tough for us this year in that department. To go into a break like this with a little bit of momentum, having some fun, it's going to make a big difference for the second half."

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