We and our partners use cookies to understand how you use our site, improve your experience and serve you personalized content and advertising. Read about how we use cookies in our cookie policy and how you can control them by clicking Manage Settings. By continuing to use this site, you accept these cookies.

No ad available

2024 NHL Stanley Cup Final: Oilers force Game 7 after 5-1 defeat of Panthers

The Edmonton Oilers are just the third team, and the first since 1945, to force a Game 7 after falling behind 3-0 in the Stanley Cup Final. The Oilers staved off elimination once again with a 5-1 win over the Florida Panthers, and so there will be one more game in the 2023-24 NHL season.

With a frenzied Rogers Place crowd behind them, the Oilers came out with their hair on fire in Game 6 Friday night. Warren Foegele gave Edmonton a 1-0 lead at 7:27 of the first period, and the Oilers never allowed the Panthers to seize control of the momentum after that.

After recording four points in back-to-back games, Oilers captain Connor McDavid was held off the scoresheet in this one, and he didn't even register a shot on goal. That didn't matter, however, because other key players stepped up offensively.

Foegele's first-period tally was the result of absolutely filthy stickhandling and passing from Leon Draisaitl. Just 46 seconds into the second period, Adam Henrique came up huge with his fourth goal of the playoffs on an odd-man rush.

The real dagger came from an exemplary play by the duo of Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Zach Hyman. With 1:40 left in the second period, Nugent-Hopkins stood in front of a Gustav Forsling point shot, and the rebound skittered out to the neutral zone. Hyman got on his horse and chased down the loose puck, and he was rewarded with a breakaway.

Hyman, the leading playoff goal-scorer, potted his 16th of the postseason with a smooth backhand finish that gave the Oilers a 3-0 lead heading into the third period.

Well before Hyman's goal, and just 10 seconds after Henrique made it a 2-0 game, there was a major turning point in the game and series. Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov appeared to hammer home a rebound to cut Edmonton's lead to 2-1, but that goal didn't stand.

The Oilers challenged for offside, and officials overturned the goal because Sam Reinhart was offside by a fraction of an inch. Had the call gone the other way, it would have been a one-goal game, and the Panthers would have gotten a power play.

Having said that, there's no guarantee that Florida would have taken advantage of that situation. The Panthers went 0 for 3 on the man advantage, and they are now just 1 of 19 in the entire series. To make matters worse, the Florida power play has actually has a net goal differential of -1.

Barkov did wind up scoring a goal that counted in the third period, but it was too little too late, and he didn't have enough help around him. The Panthers will now limp back to Sunrise, Florida, to face what would be perhaps the biggest collapse in NHL history.

Only two teams have every come back from a 3-0 deficit in the Stanley Cup Final to force a Game 7. The 1945 Detroit Red Wings were the last team to do so, but they dropped Game 7 to the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The only team to complete a "reverse sweep" in the Final were the 1942 Maple Leafs after they came back from 3-0 down against those very same Red Wings.

If the Oilers do make history and finish their comeback, it would also end a couple of lengthy Cup droughts. Edmonton hasn't won lifted Lord Stanley since 1990, and no Canadian team has won it all in 31 years.

Game 7 will be on Monday night at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise. Buckle up, everybody.

No ad available
Live updates
 
Pinned

Final: Oilers 5, Panthers 1

The Oilers have become just the third team in NHL history to force a Game 7 after falling behind 3-0 in the Stanley Cup Final. They came out and completely dominated the Panthers from start to finish with a raucous Rogers Place behind them. Connor McDavid didn't even record a point, but it didn't matter. Edmonton got a complete team effort as it completely stifled Florida for the third straight game. At this point, the Panthers are staring down the barrel of a historic collapse because the Oilers have all the momentum now.

 

Now the Oilers will get the chance to extend their 1-0 lead on the power play. Eetu Luostarinen slashes Leon Draisaitl, and he will sit for a maximum of two minutes. The way this period has gone, Luostarinen might be released before then.

 
@NHL via Twitter
 

The Oilers have completely owned this first period. They could be up by multiple goals at this point, and the Panthers have just one shot on goal with 6:21 remaining. Edmonton couldn't have drawn up a better start in Game 6.

 
@NHL via Twitter
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 

The Panthers power play continues to look disjointed. The Oilers killed off that penalty with relative ease, and Florida is now 1-for-17 in the series.

No ad available
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 

The Panthers' struggling power play immediately gets a chance to even the score. Mattias Janmark gets called for slashing, and Florida gets the first man advantage of Game 6. Can this unit finally get going?

 
@NHL via Twitter
 

Oilers 1, Panthers 0 -- 1st Period

A neutral zone turnover by the Panthers gift wraps an odd-man rush to the Oilers, and they haven't been missing those lately. Leon Draisaitl shows exceptional patience, and hits Warren Foegele for a tap-in goal. What's even more impressive is that Foegele got tangled up with Aaron Ekblad and lost his footing right before the tally.

 
@FlaPanthers via Twitter
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 

Evan Bouchard was allowed to walk right down main street and get a clean look for Bobrovsky. Fortunately for the Panthers, Bouchard fired a shot right into the crest on Bobrosvky's jersey, and the game remains tied at 0-0.

 

Nice pace to start this game, and the energy in Rogers Place is pouring through the TV, as you'd expect. Both teams look sharp in the early going.

 
@NHL via Twitter
No ad available
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 
@NHL via Twitter
 

The stirring rendition of the Canadian anthem is complete. Rogers Place is ready to go. The puck is down on Game 6. Let's see if the Oilers have one more left in them or the Cup will be presented to the Panthers tonight.

 
@NHL via Twitter
 
@FlaPanthers via Twitter
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 
@FlaPanthers via Twitter
 
@NHL via Twitter
 
@FlaPanthers via Twitter
 
@FlaPanthers via Twitter
No ad available
 

We're just moments away from the puck dropping on Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final. The Panthers, having lost two in a row, are making a slight lineup tweak. Head coach Paul Maurice has inserted bottom-six pest Nick Cousins while taking out veteran Kyle Okposo.

Another notable change is on the Panthers' power play, which has coverted on just one of its 16 opportunities in this series. Oliver Ekman-Larsson is now quarterbacking the top unit, a spot usually reserved for Brandon Montour, whose brutal turnover led to a shorthanded goal against in Game 5.

 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
 
@EdmontonOilers via Twitter
5 of 6
No ad available