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In Barkov They Trust: The Panthers, led by their captain, are headed back to the Stanley Cup Final

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Florida Panthers' Aleksander Barkov (16) clears the puck past Carolina Hurricanes' Jaccob Slavin (74) during the first period of Game 5 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Eastern Conference finals in Raleigh, N.C., Wednesday, May 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Karl DeBlaker)

The entire play took eight seconds, and basically summed up why the Florida Panthers have enormous, nonstop belief in Aleksander Barkov.

Third period, Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals, game tied at 3. Barkov picks up the puck in the right corner. He skates around the end boards, as Carolina defenseman Dmitry Orlov is trying to use his entire 214-pound frame to move Barkov one direction or the other. Orlov had no chance.

Barkov stopped on a dime, turned around, ducked back toward the net and slid the puck to a place that only Florida’s Carter Verhaeghe could reach. Verhaeghe turned that pass into the winner, and with that, the Panthers were headed back to their third consecutive Stanley Cup Final.

In Barky They Trusted. Again.

“Such a great player,” Verhaeghe said. “It was such a great play by him. It was all him.”

The funny part is that Barkov would hate hearing such praise, and he surely would never say anything like that about himself. He is a most unassuming superstar, someone who doesn’t care about the spotlight, someone who was legitimately surprised when fans recognized him last year at a Florida Atlantic basketball game in Boca Raton — about 20 minutes north of where the Panthers play their home games.

But he is Florida’s best player. And he has led the defending Stanley Cup champions back to the title round for a third consecutive season.

“He’s one of the best in the world at that, if not the best,” Florida forward Sam Reinhart said. “He’s got so much strength. Big players make big plays at the biggest moments when you need them, and he’s certainly the leader of this team.”

Florida moves on to face either Edmonton or Dallas in the Stanley Cup Final. There will be intrigue either way.

If the Oilers — who lead the Stars 3-1 in the Western Conference finals — get there, it’ll be the 11th title-round rematch in the Stanley Cup era and the first since Pittsburgh and Detroit played for the trophy in 2008 and 2009.

If the Stars get there, it’ll pit Panthers coach Paul Maurice against Dallas coach Peter DeBoer, his former assistant in the Ontario Hockey League and one of his closest friends. It’ll also be the first times Florida and Dallas play each other in the U.S. this season; their two matchups this year were in Finland back in November, the Panthers winning both.

“The most important step is ahead of us,” goalie Sergei Bobrovsky said.

The Panthers are the ninth franchise in NHL history to make the Stanley Cup Final in at least three consecutive seasons. Barkov became the first Finnish captain to get the honor of having the inaugural hoist of the Cup when Florida won the title last year, and he was there through a lot of lean years for the Panthers. Forget the Cup final; the Panthers couldn’t make the playoffs for much of their history.

That seems so long ago now. No team has played more postseason games in the last four years than the Panthers, and there’s at least four more games this season left to go.

“I think it was a long time coming,” Barkov said. “Obviously, there’s been a lot of work put in by this organization to become better and reach the level where we want to win Stanley Cups, we want compete for Stanley Cups every single year. There are 31 other teams in the league and it’s hard every single year. They want to do that too, so it’s not easy. But we’ve managed to do it three years in a row, which is, I think, an incredible achievement so far.”

Aaron Ekblad is in his 11th season as a Panther — one behind Barkov — and he remembers those tough times. Florida once missed the playoffs by a point during their tenure; some years, they missed by five or six wins. They weren’t terrible. They just weren’t that good.

But he remembers why he always remained steadfast in the belief that the franchise would get to this point.

“We’ve always had Sasha Barkov,” Ekblad said. “So, there was always hope, especially in those down years. We always had Barky to lead the way.”

He led then. He led now. And another trip to the final awaits.

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AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Tim Reynolds, The Associated Press

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