Florida Panthers

Were the Panthers offside? Team reacts to Barkov’s overturned goal in Game 6 of Cup Final

Florida Panthers center Aleksander Barkov (16) controls the puck against Edmonton Oilers left wing Dylan Holloway (55) in the second period in game six of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final on Friday at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta.
Florida Panthers center Aleksander Barkov (16) controls the puck against Edmonton Oilers left wing Dylan Holloway (55) in the second period in game six of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final on Friday at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta. USA TODAY Sports

In the moment, the Florida Panthers didn’t see it.

Aleksander Barkov had seemingly just gotten the Panthers on the board in the opening minute of the second period of Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final on Friday, 10 seconds after the Edmonton Oilers had gone up by two goals.

Except the goal didn’t count.

Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch challenged that Sam Reinhart was offside as Carter Verhaeghe entered the offensive zone.

It was a close play, but officials ultimately agreed.

Offside.

No goal.

Coach Paul Maurice’s frustration was evident on the bench after the goal was overturned.

“The linesperson informed me that it was the last clip that they got where they made the decision that it shows it’s offside,” Maurice said after Florida’s eventual 5-1 loss to send the series to a winner-take-all Game 7. “I don’t have those. ... So I was upset after the call.”

Would Maurice have challenged the goal if he were in Knoblauch’s situation?

“Based on what I see at my feet and what my video person looks at, there was no way I would have challenged that if it was reversed,” Maurice said. “There was no way I thought you can conclusively say that was offside. I don’t know what the Oilers get. I don’t know what the league gets. I just know that, if I would have had to challenge that based on what I saw, I would not have challenged. I’m not saying it’s not offside. We’ll get still frames. We’ll bring in the CIA. We’ll figure it out, but in the 30 seconds that I would’ve made that call, I would not have challenged.”

It was a gut punch for a Panthers team that has been lifeless more often than not since going up 3-0 in the best-of-7 series. Florida has now been outscored 18-5 over the past three losses.

They were down 2-0 46 seconds into the second period on goals from Warren Foegele and Adam Henrique and were being outshot 12-2 when Barkov appeared to have put them on the board and give them some momentum.

Until he didn’t.

Edmonton ultimately went up 3-0 by the end of the second period before Barkov scored — for real this time — 1:28 into the third period.

“You’re looking for a jumpstart,” Maurice said. “The shots are 11-2 in the first period so we need something to go. I think they ended up 11-4 [shots in favor of Florida] in the second period and they scored on two of them. It would have been a spark for us for sure. His next goal was. I thought we had a little bit of juice there after that, but it was it was unfortunate it was called.”

As for how the players viewed it. Both Verhaeghe and Barkov said they did not know the play was offside in real time.

“It sucks that it didn’t go our way,” Verhaeghe said, “but that’s above my head. I’m sure it’s the right call if they’re watching a million replays.”

Barkov added: “It was offside, so it doesn’t count. We had our chances after that. We had our chances to get to one goal, but then they got to three-nothing.”

This story was originally published June 22, 2024 at 12:02 AM.

Jordan McPherson
Miami Herald
Jordan McPherson covers the Miami Hurricanes and Florida Panthers for the Miami Herald. He attended the University of Florida and covered the Gators athletic program for five years before joining the Herald staff in December 2017.
Sports Pass is your ticket to Miami sports
#ReadLocal

Get in-depth, sideline coverage of Miami area sports - only $1 a month

VIEW OFFER