Florida Panthers fall in season-opener
With goalie Tomas Vokoun not sharp and Florida's new defensive corps making untimely mistakes, the Florida Panthers lost their season-opener.
BY GEORGE RICHARDS
grichards@MiamiHerald.com
RALEIGH, N.C. -- The new-look Panthers came out flying Friday night, scoring two quick goals and limiting the host Hurricanes to only four shots in the first period. The stat sheet said the visitors from South Florida were dominating, only the scoreboard said something decidedly different.
Of those four shots, Carolina scored twice. The Panthers missed an opportunity to slam the door on a divisional rival, and it cost them.
With goalie Tomas Vokoun not sharp and Florida's new defensive corps making untimely mistakes, the Panthers wasted goals from four different forwards as Carolina won the season opener for both teams 6-4 at RBC Center.
''I have to be better than that,'' said Vokoun, who gave up five goals in last year's season opener as well. One of Carolina's goals Friday was an empty-netter.
``But it's done, it's over. That's hockey. It's too bad because we played great, had a great start. It's unfortunate we didn't win. Certainly some blame has to come to me. . . . It wasn't my best night. The result is heavily influenced by how I play. As a goalie you have to make the saves.''
New coach Pete DeBoer said after the game that ''we didn't lose because of Tomas Vokoun,'' and that ''we have a lot of things to work on.'' Truth is, the Panthers didn't look all that bad, their aggressive new system showing the Panthers can play entertaining hockey.
Winger David Booth seems to be perfect for DeBoer's system, using his speed and strength to not only take the puck away from opponents, but do something with it. Booth scored Florida's first goal of the season a little over four minutes into the game, creating his own magic by storming in on goal and deking out Cam Ward. Less than two minutes later, former Carolina winger Cory Stillman took advantage of a 5-on-3 situation, camping out in front of the net and scoring on a slick pass from Stephen Weiss to give the Panthers a 2-0.
The large crowd was stunned by Florida's sudden and initial success, the Panthers picking up where they left off. The last time the Panthers visited Tobacco Road, Florida ended a 15-game winless streak in Raleigh and knocked the Hurricanes out of the postseason picture with an upset victory.
''It was the perfect game plan because it quieted the building down,'' DeBoer said of the early lead. ``Then they came back on us.''
Yes, they did.
Carolina came back quick, scoring two in a row to close the first. Ray Whitney tied it when newly acquired defenseman Nick Boynton failed to clear the puck near the goal. Carolina worked the puck around as Florida's defense collapsed, Whitney -- a popular former Panther -- pushing the puck through. In the second, Rod Brind'Amour gave Carolina its first lead when his wrist shot slipped past Vokoun.
''We have to get this one out of our minds quick,'' Boynton said. ``We had enough chances to win. We made mistakes and they are mistakes that cost you in this league.''
The Panthers had new life in the second when Radek Dvorak scored after Booth lost the puck in traffic. But 90 seconds later, Carolina retook the lead for good when Joni Pitkanen scored. Carolina took its biggest lead of the night in the third, Dan LaCouture following up on a long rebound that Keith Ballard couldn't get to.
''We need to be a little sharper,'' Ballard said. ``We need to clean some things up in our own end. We gave them second chances, and we -- myself include -- could have cleared the puck better. They kept it in and a couple times that meant goals.''
Florida made one last run, Nathan Horton scoring on a power play with 8:29 left pulled Florida within one, but the Panthers couldn't close. In the final minute, Vokoun came out and the Panthers added a skater, yet Florida couldn't get off a shot. Carolina's Matt Cullen, however, did; the veteran center flicked the puck from the sideboards into an empty net. At least this goal wouldn't be blamed on Vokoun.
''Coming into the game, I didn't think we'd give up six goals,'' DeBoer said. `I thought our guys played right to the buzzer. We had some bad breaks around our net, but that's the way it goes. We out shot them, we out chanced them. We did a lot of good things.''
Defenseman Bryan McCabe had to be helped off the ice after he was taken down along the side boards during the second period. McCabe was down for a few minutes after his attempted check of Carolina's Dennis Seidenberg.
McCabe hurt his back and didn't return. He's expected to be replaced by Noah Welch on Saturday.
Join the discussion
Note: If this is your first time using our NEW commenting system, you will have to LOG OUT and then LOG BACK IN.
The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. In order to post comments, you must be a registered user of MiamiHerald.com. Your username will show along with the comments you post. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.
More Florida Panthers
CINESPORT VIDEO















My Yahoo
@Nyx.CommentBody@