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Oilers vs. Panthers score, highlights: Florida takes Game 1 of Stanley Cup Final with shutout of Edmonton

The Florida Panthers have struck first in the Stanley Cup Final. With Sergei Bobrovsky's spectacular goaltending on full display, the Panthers gritted out a 3-0 win over the Edmonton Oilers to take a 1-0 series lead.

Bobrovsky notched his second shutout of the playoffs, and it was a masterpiece. The Florida netminder made 33 saves against one of the most dangerous forward groups in the NHL, and many of those saves came on high-danger scoring chances.

In the first period, Bobrovsky turned away Adam Henrique and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins on a breakaway. In the second, Bobrovsky put on a penalty-killing clinic by making one show-stopping save after the next.

Because of Bobrovsky's excellence, the Panthers didn't need to generate much offense, but they did capitalize on the few chances they got. In the first period, Aleksander Barkov caught the Oilers a step behind in transition, and he found Carter Verhaeghe for a goal off the rush. That tally was Verhaeghe's 10th of the postseason, which leads the team.

In the second period, Sam Bennett conducted a forechecking masterclass by outmuscling Oilers defenseman Cody Ceci below the goal line. As soon as he got possession of the puck, Bennett slipped a slick pass to Evan Rodrigues, who fired a quick shot past Edmonton goaltender Stuart Skinner to double the lead.

That was more run support than Bobrovsky needed, and the Panthers went into lockdown mode in the third period. The Oilers weren't able to create many quality chances in the final 20 minutes, and Florida held on for the win as Eetu Luostarinen buried an empty-net goal with four seconds left to really ice it away

The Oilers will aim to tie the series in Game 2 on Monday night, and they'll have to hope that Bobrovsky looks somewhat mortal in that one.

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Final: Panthers 3, Oilers 0

Sergei Bobrovsky was the story of this one. His 33-save shutout allowed the Panthers to overcome an otherwise underwhelming performance. Florida only managed to get 18 shots on goal, but they were very opportunistic. Carter Verhaeghe and Evan Rodrigues had the five-on-five tallies for the Panthers, and Eetu Luostarinen capped the night off with an empty-net goal.

 
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Miami Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel has gotten the Amerant Bank Arena crowd fired up. The puck has dropped, and the Stanley Cup Final is underway. Cherish the last few NHL games we have left this season.

 
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These two teams are absolutely loaded with talent, as you'd expect from the Final matchup, but some players will prove to be more pivotal than others. Find out who that might be with our ranking of the top 10 impact players in the Stanley Cup Final. (Spoiler: Connor McDavid is on the list)

 
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The last time a Canadian team won the Stanley Cup was in 1993, when the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Los Angeles Kings. It's now been 31 yeas since a Canadian fan base has celebrated a Cup victory, but the Oilers can change that with four more wins. Edmonton was close to ending that drought in 2006, the last time it was in the Final, but the team fell to the Carolina Hurricanes in seven games.

 
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This is the furthest Stanley Cup Final matchup in NHL history with Edmonton, Alberta being 2,541 miles away from Sunrise, Florida. It's roughly a 44-hour drive from one to the other, but luckily for the players, they'll be flying. Even in a jet, it's a lengthy trip, coming in at around 7 hours and 30 minutes.

The previous record for furthest Final matchup was held by the Boston Bruins and Vancouver Canucks, which are 2,499 miles apart.

 
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