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Stanley Cup Final 2024: Oilers maul Panthers, 8-1, as Connor McDavid passes Wayne Gretzky in NHL record books

There will not be a sweep in the Stanley Cup Final. After dropping the first three games, the Edmonton Oilers finally broke through on offense for an 8-1 win over the Florida Panthers in Game 4, and Connor McDavid erased one of Wayne Gretzky's NHL playoff records in the process.

Edmonton combined for just four goals in the first three games of the series, and they surpassed that total through just two periods on Saturday night. The party at Rogers Place got started early when Mattias Janmark tallied a shorthanded goal just 3:11 into the game, and the Oilers never really looked back after that.

The entire Oilers roster was terrific in Game 4, but McDavid was truly exceptional, and he needed to be with his team one loss away from elimination. Not only did McDavid pot his first goal of the series in the second period, but he also tallied three assists in the game. That gave him 32 assists in these playoffs, and that broke Gretzky's record for the most helpers in a single postseason.

The rest of Edmonton's big guns, which had been silent through the first three games, finally got rolling in this one.

Darnell Nurse's first tally of the playoffs made it 5-1. The Oilers' first power play goal of the Stanley Cup Final gave them a 6-1 lead, and that one also happened to be Ryan Nugent-Hopkins' first goal of the series, too.

Leon Draisaitl, who entered the game with zero points in this series, came up with two assists in Game 4. Zach Hyman still hasn't found the back of the net, but he found the stat sheet with a pair of assists as well.

The Panthers were unusually leaky on defense all game long, allowing more goals in this game than they had in any other throughout the season. Sergei Bobrovsky, who looked unbeatable in the first three games, was pulled after allowing five goals on 16 shots.

In all fairness, the players in front of Bobrovsky didn't give him much help. The Oilers were torching Florida off the rush all night, and they had all kinds of time and space with which to work in the offensive zone.

The result of all those defensive breakdowns was a seven-goal loss, which is tied for the second-largest margin of defeat in a Stanley Cup Final game. Only the Pittsburgh Penguins' 8-0 drubbing of the Minnesota North Stars in 1991 was worse.

This is now the second time the Panthers have suffered an 8-1 defeat in the Final with the the last instance coming against the Colorado Avalanche in Game 2 of the 1996 Stanley Cup Final.

Florida has to shake this one off because it will have another shot to clinch the Stanley Cup in Game 5, which is on Tuesday night in Amerant Bank Arena.

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Just seconds after the Panthers made it a one-goal game again, Skinner makes his best save of the series. Sam Bennett feeds Carter Verhaeghe on a 2-on-1, and Verhaeghe ripped a one-timer toward a gaping cage. That's when Skinner came flying across and threw out his arm to preserve the lead for the Oilers.

 

1st Period: Oilers 2, Panthers 1

Vladimir Tarasenko gets the Panthers back within one. Cody Ceci had the opportunity to clear the zone, but his turnover winds up on the stick of Gustav Forsling, who fired a shot toward the Edmonton net. Tarasenko was parked in front, and he deflected Forsling's shot past Stuart Skinner.

 
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1st Period: Oilers 2, Panthers 0

Mattias Janmark is having himself a first period. After scoring the game's opening goal, Janmark overpowers Niko Mikkola entering the offensive zone, and he finds Adam Henrique with a perfect pass. Henrique chips the feed over the shoulder of Bobrovsky to double Edmonton's lead.

 
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The Edmonton power play is now 0-for-11 in the series after coming up empty on the man advantage once again. The Oilers didn't even gain much momentum from that power play as the Panthers did an excellent job taking away the middle of the ice.

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Immediately after giving up the first goal, the Panthers take a too many men on the ice penalty. The Oilers are 0-for-10 on the power play, but now would be a great time to end that slump.

 

1st Period: Oilers 1, Panthers 0

Mattias Janmark gives the Oilers a lead on a shorthanded goal. The Panthers hit the post twice on the power play, and with four of them deep, Connor Brown starts a 2-on-1 the other way. Brown waits out Bobrovsky and finds Janmark out front for the first goal of the game.

 
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Darnell Nurse is called for a five-minute major for kneeing Florida's Sam Bennett. The play is under review, but it does appear to be a major penalty. While the officials are reviewing the play, Bennett has left the bench and went down the tunnel to the locker room.

After review, the officials have reduced Nurse's penalty to a two-minute minor for tripping. Wow. That is an early break for the Oilers.

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Game 4 is underway, and the Stanley Cup is in the building. Will it be presented to the Panthers in Rogers Place tonight?

 
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