"I think if you don't remember how it
feels, then that's probably not a good thing, because it didn't feel
very good at any time or it wasn't acceptable," defenseman
Brian Campbell
said of last season's lost season. "… So I think you think
about it, but you think about, hopefully, guys have been on winning
teams too, so you think about that. We're going to rely on Huberdeau
heavily, instead of last year coming in not kind of knowing what to
expect out of him. Now we truly need him to be a force for our team.
We've got a lot of areas to improve on in a short time here at camp,"
who was a minus-22 playing all
48 games one season after being a minus-9 in all 82.
"I said it two years ago; you listen to a
lot of people and they’re laughing at our team, and they might not
think we might be able to do anything," forward Kris
Versteeg said. "But I think with the guys we've got, we
can prove a lot of people wrong this year.''
"I don't want to be a passenger, I want to
be a leader," Matthias said. "… I want to be the
best player on the team."
"The young guys that had the opportunity
last year and [came] in and played really well for us,"
Jovanovski said. "I
think for them they're going to be a lot more comfortable this year.
Whatever six or seven they go with at the start of the year, I think
everybody's capable of doing the job."
"That's steps to ensure some stability on
the blue line," Dineen said. "... Certainly somebody
like Mike
Mottau or Brett
Clark have lasted in this game because they're professionals and
they carry themselves in a certain way, but more importantly, the can
go out there and fill some serviceable minutes."
"It's been my main goal since I got here …
to be the starting goalie," Markstrom
said. "That's nothing to be shy about. I'm here to
play and I really want to play, and I really want to play good and
help the team win."
"I like Markstrom's attitude, I like what
he's been doing all offseason, and his preparation looks really
good," general manager Dale
Tallon said. "He learned a lot last year, which is
a good thing. ... Marky's a good goalie and I have high expectations
for him."
Yes, the Panthers finished last with him, but
where would they have been without Jonathan
Huberdeau last season? And where can he take them this season?
The Calder Trophy winner finished second on the Panthers with 31
points, behind Tomas
Fleischmann's 35. At 19 years old, Huberdeau did it while dealing
with a hip injury he sustained at the 2013 IIHF World Junior
Championship in January. After offseason surgery, he is being kept
from contact at the start of training camp, but Huberdeau, who turned
20 in June, is expected to be playing wing on the top line when the
season opens Oct. 3 against the Dallas
Stars. Surprisingly, on the other side could be Kris
Versteeg, whose return from a four-point, 10-game season and knee
surgery in March seemed bleak until significant improvement over the
past month. Center Shawn
Matthias, who last year scored 11 goals in March, three combined
in January and February, and none in April, told the South Florida
Sun-Sentinel he plans to be in the middle of the top line, unwilling
to concede the spot to prospects Nick
Bjugstad, Alexsander Barkov or Vincent
Trocheck. Matthias would be taking the place long held by Stephen
Weiss, who signed as a free agent with the Detroit
Red Wings.
Fleischmann would provide offense on the second
line; he's scored 96 points (39 goals) playing all 130 games in his
two seasons in Florida. Tomas
Kopecky, who led the team with a career-high 15 goals in a short
season, could man the other wing, centered either by one of the young
players or veteran Scott
Gomez, whom Dineen said would have a bigger offensive role than
he had with the San
Jose Sharks.
Bjugstad (one point in 11 NHL games last season)
is recovering from a concussion sustained during a prospects
tournament, and Barkov, the No. 2 pick in the 2013 NHL Draft, is
building up after offseason shoulder surgery. They're part of the
young guard that includes Drew
Shore (13 points in 43 games), Quinton
Howden (no points in 18 games), and Trocheck (the Ontario Hockey
League most outstanding player). Former 43-goal scorer Brad
Boyes is in camp on a tryout after a rejuvenating season with the
New York
Islanders (35 points); he can boost the power play, which among
so many negatives was sixth-most successful (20.4 percent) in the
NHL. Joey
Crabb was acquired to help the penalty kill, which was last (74.2
percent) in the League. Bobby
Butler has a new two-year contract but at 26 may have this one
more NHL chance. Veterans Marcel
Goc and Scottie
Upshall are the top two returning faceoff men, and Sean
Bergenheim is back after missing all of last season with a
lower-body injury. Not one of the 13 who played for the Panthers last
season had a plus rating.
SUMMER MOVES
IN:
Aleksader Barkov, C (draft), Bobby Butler, RW (trade, Predators);
Brad Boyes, RW (free agent, Islanders) Joey Crabb RW (free agent,
Capitals), Scott Gomez, C (free agent, Sharks); Matt Gilroy, D (free
agent, Rangers); Jon Matsumoto C (free agent, AHL); Mike Mottau, D
(free agent, AHL); Steven Pinizzotto, RW (free agent; Canucks); Jesse
Winchester, C (free agent, Jokerit, Finland)
OUT: TJ Brennan, D (trade, Predators); Filip Kuba, D (free agent); Peter Mueller, C (free agent, Kloten, Switzerland); George Parros, RW (trade, Canadiens); Jack Skille, RW (free agent, Blue Jackets); Tyson Strachan, D (free agent, Capitals); Jose Theodore, G (free agent); Stephen Weiss, C (free agent, Red Wings); Nolan Yonkman, D (free agent; Ducks)
OUT: TJ Brennan, D (trade, Predators); Filip Kuba, D (free agent); Peter Mueller, C (free agent, Kloten, Switzerland); George Parros, RW (trade, Canadiens); Jack Skille, RW (free agent, Blue Jackets); Tyson Strachan, D (free agent, Capitals); Jose Theodore, G (free agent); Stephen Weiss, C (free agent, Red Wings); Nolan Yonkman, D (free agent; Ducks)
Half of the top four, Dmitry
Kulikov and Erik
Gudbranson, each are looking to rebound, Kulikov from a second
straight injury-shortened season (knee, shoulder), and Gudbranson
from a two-season minus-41 rating that's tied for worst among NHL
defenseman in that time (Mark
Streit). No one other than Campbell played every game in 2012-13,
and Filip Kuba
(44) and Tyson
Strachan (38) have moved on. A hip injury ended Ed
Jovanovski's season in six games, and he's unlikely to be ready
to start this one after surgery in April. In his place, Colby
Robak (16 games) and Alex
Petrovic (6) got promotions from San Antonio of the American
Hockey League. Those jobs are scarce. Mike
Weaver (27 games, knee) has one, so veterans Brett
Clark, Matt
Gilroy and Mike
Mottau are probably competing for the final regular opening.
The crease has been cleared for Jacob Markstrom, the 23-year-old who was the first pick of the second round in the 2008 NHL Draft. Markstrom became the No. 1 in March, ascending to his predestined place from a three-man group that included thirty-somethings Jose Theodore and Scott Clemmensen. Markstrom helped the team to its best stretch of the season, going 5-2-0 from March 19-April 2. He finished 8-14-1 with a 3.22 goals-against average and .901 save percentage. It did not end well, Markstrom had a 4.01 GAA in 10 April games, so when asked at training camp how he prepared for this season, he replied, "Worked harder. A lot harder." Tallon expected Clemmensen to be the reliable, veteran backup, but knee surgery has him sidelined for three weeks. As a result, veteran Tim Thomas was offered and accepted a professional tryout offer from the team and will be on the ice for the first time Tuesday. The Panthers also have young Michael Houser in waiting. After overcoming a club-foot condition as a child, the 21-year-old starred for the London Knights in the OHL before playing for Cincinnati in the ECHL last season (17-10-2; 2.55).
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