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Florida Panthers travel to Carolina, face Hurricanes in first of six matchups between the two teams this season.
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The Florida Panthers spoiled the coaching debut of new Carolina Hurricanes head coach Kirk Muller. The Panthers were seeking to respond with a solid effort after getting blown out by the Tampa Bay Lightning in their last game. The Panthers were able to, with a strong road effort and great goaltending from Jose Theodore.
The Panthers came out strong to open the game, playing with a lot of energy and cycling the puck well in the Hurricane’s zone. However, it was only a matter of time before Carolina would respond, something the Panthers expected due to the coaching change after Paul Maurice was fired on Monday. The Hurricanes controlled the rest of the period taking nine shots, which were all stopped by Jose Theodore, including a great chance from the slot by Jeff Skinner.
Mike Santorelli took an early holding penalty, but the Panthers were able to kill it off using an aggressive style that they would continue to use all night. Late in the period, Kris Versteeg took a high hit (which on the replay looked like an elbow to the head) and was cut above the nose. Versteeg was clearly unhappy and could be seen barking at the officials from the bench. The Panthers would only manage two shots in the first period.
At the beginning of the second, Tim Kennedy turned the puck over, but Theodore was there to bail him out with a great save off Bryan Allen. The Panthers began to pick up their energy again after killing off a Fleischmann hooking penalty. Fleischmann redeemed himself by blasting a slapshot past Cam Ward from the top of the circle on the Panthers first power play of the night. Brian Campbell and Stephen Weiss got the assists.
About a minute later, the Hurricanes responded as super sophomore Jeff Skinner put in a rebound off his own shot to tie the game at one. The Panthers failed to put a body on Skinner even though there were three Panthers in the area. Eric Staal and Tuomo Ruutu picked up the assists The Panthers had other quality chances to score in the period, as Tomas Kopecky missed a partial breakaway shorthanded and Santorelli missed a great rebound opportunity. Late in the period, Theodore bailed out another one of his teammates. This time it was Kopecky turning the puck over in the slot, but once again, Theodore was there to shut the door.
The Panthers began the third period down to five defensemen after it appeared Dmitry Kulikov was cut by a Carolina skate near his ankle. He would not return. Nevertheless, the Panthers started the third period much like the first, playing with a great amount of energy and cycling the puck strongly. Despite their solid play, the Panthers still could not take the lead.
The momentum for the Panthers was put on hold after Ed Jovanovski took a silly interference penalty early in the period. The Cats were unusually undisciplined tonight as they took five penalties, with Erik Gudbranson taking another midway through the third period. However, the Panthers penalty kill was a key to the game as they were able to kill off all five using that aggressive style.
Around the midpoint of the period, Jack Skille drew a penalty shot after he was tackled from behind by Joni Pitkanen. Unfortunately for the Panthers, Skille was denied by Ward. It looked as if the Panthers might not have what it took to put another past Ward when Fleischmann missed a glorious chance set up by Stephen Weiss. The puck got caught up in Fleischmann’s skates and he was unable to slip it into the empty net.
However, with about three minutes left, the Panthers finally capitalized to take the lead. Kopecky made a great play on the forecheck to keep the puck in the zone and slid it down to Shawn Matthias at the goal line. Matthias was able to bank the puck in off Ward to give the Panthers a one goal lead, with Kopecky getting the assist. Although the Canes pulled Ward and pushed for the equalizer, Matthias was able to add his second goal of the night and fifth of the season as he slid the puck into an empty net with 49 seconds to play.
The Panthers played well throughout the game, especially on the penalty kill. Theodore was spectacular in net, stopping 26 of 27 shots. Although the Panthers didn’t do anything flashy, they played the type of tough road game that you need to play throughout the long NHL season if you hope to make it to the playoffs. This game was particularly important for the Panthers not only because they wanted to end their brief losing streak, but also because it was against the division rival Hurricanes. The Panthers now head to California to take on the Los Angeles Kings on Thursday night.
After a scoreless first period at the RBC Center in Raleigh, the Florida Panthers and Carolina Hurricanes both ended the shutouts about midway through the second period. Tomas Fleischmann was the first to strike, scoring his 11th goal of the season of the Florida power play. Fleischmann was assisted by Brian Campbell and Stephen Weiss, the Panthers early season star.
Jeff Skinner evened it up for the Hurricanes less than a minute later. It was Skinner's 10th goal of the season, beating Jose Theodore to even it up at one. Skinner was assisted by Carolina leader Eric Staal and Tuomo Ruutu.
It was an improvement over the first period for the Panthers, after putting only two shots on net in the first twenty minutes. Florida managed to put 12 shots on goal in the second, with only Fleischmann's power play sneaking by Cam Ward. The Panthers are looking to end a two game losing streak, after a winless weekend against cross-state rival Tampa.
The first 20 minutes of Tuesday night’s game between the Florida Panthers and Carolina Hurricanes are in the books, and through the first period, the score remains knotted at zero. Neither team has found the net in what is the 24th game of the Panthers’ 2011-2012 season.
The Hurricanes definitely had the edge in the period though, as they fired nine shots on goal compared to just three by the Panthers. Jose Theodore continues to play well for the Panthers, as he stopped all nine shots. Theodore, who has a save percentage of 92.4, is only allowing 2.37 goals per game, and has been a big reason why the Panthers have started off the season solidly.
Thanks in part to Washington’s recent skid, the Panthers currently are first in the Southeastern Division of the Eastern Conference with 28 points. For more on the Panthers, visit Litter Box Cats, and stay tuned here for more score updates and a full recap once the Panthers’ game in Charlotte concludes.
PANTHERS
Forwards:
Tomas Fleischmann – Stephen Weiss – Kris Versteeg
Marco Sturm – Mike Santorelli – Tomas Kopecky
Sean Bergenheim – Shawn Matthias – Jack Skille
Tim Kennedy – Mark Cullen – Evgeni Dadonov
Defensemen:
Brian Campbell – Jason Garrison
Erik Gudbranson – Ed Jovanovski
Dmitry Kulikov – Mike Weaver
Goalie:
Jose Theodore
Forward Mark Cullen was called up from San Antonio and will be joined by forward Mikael Samuelsson in Raleigh for tonight’s matchup against the Carolina Hurricanes.
The Panthers had previously sent goalie Jacob Markstrom and forward Michal Repik back to the San Antonio Rampage.
Goalie Scott Clemmensen is now available should starter Jose Theodore need relief. The injury status of Samuelsson is still up in the air. Forwards Marcel Goc and Matt Bradley did not make the trip to Carolina.
This series of moves leaves the Panthers with 11 healthy forwards, 12 if Samuelsson suits up. The starting lines have yet to be announced, but expect the Cats to roll with what they have, 11 forwards and seven defensemen.
Tune in for more updates as they become available.
Florida Panthers travel to Carolina, face Hurricanes in first of six matchups between the two teams this season.
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