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Will the real Florida Panthers please stand up

The South Florida NHL team, winners of four in a row, is playing at Atlanta tonight.

The Panthers, who have won four straight and lost only once in their past 10 games, were a modest but confident bunch Monday as they wrapped up a 45-minute workout at the BankAtlantic Center and headed out on a two-game trip that concludes Thursday in Philadelphia.

The modesty is understandable. Despite closing the gap on a bunch of teams for the final spot in the Eastern Conference playoff race, Florida remains at the bottom of that pack, 13th overall and six points behind eighth-place Carolina.

“We’re still not in the playoff picture,” Jokinen admitted. “Probably nobody even knows we’re six points out with two games in hand, because there’s so many teams between us. But sooner or later they’ll find out.”

Breaking through against Atlanta, which has won all five meetings against Florida this season, might persuade some doubters. The Panthers are 0-6-1 at Philips Arena over the past two seasons and have been outscored 20-6, including two shutouts.

However, since Dec. 2, the last time the teams met, Florida is 19-11-8, and Atlanta is 17-17-6.

Tonight is a big game as they try to make the playoffs. They were very impressive in a 6-2 thrashing of The Tampa Bay Lightning last Saturday night. There was other notable facts about that game.

SUNRISE — Wayne Gretzky, who at one point pursued Jacques Martin for the Phoenix coaching job that he ultimately filled himself, led off the video tribute marking Martin’s 1,000th NHL coaching appearance Saturday night.

Panthers owner Alan Cohen has said that both Phoenix and the New York Rangers were pursuing Martin before Cohen hired him to coach the Panthers in May 2004. After the lockout ultimately canceled the 2004-05 season, Gretzky, a part-owner of the Coyotes, took the Phoenix job.

Also featured in the tribute was Panthers broadcaster Denis Potvin, who played youth hockey with Martin when both were growing up in Ottawa. A team picture featuring both was displayed on the scoreboard at the BankAtlantic Center.

The 12th coach to reach the milestone, Martin tied his longtime mentor, Roger Neilson, on the all-time list.

Coach Martin joins Goalie Ed Belfour in hitting milestones this year.

There was also this odd fact about Saturday’s game.

Ville Peltonen squelched any hope of a Lightning comeback, stretching the lead to 5-1 with the team’s first-ever successful penalty shot at home with 12:06 left in the third period.

“It was about time, I guess,” Peltonen joked of the milestone.

Isn’t it weird they never accomplished this in team home history. I hadn’t seen a successful penalty shot in 20 years either. Then I almost entirely stopped watching Hockey. So at least I have an excuse.

At present the Panthers are trailing by six points for the last playoff spot.

It’s March, and the Panthers are streaking. If that sounds familiar, it should.

It was only last March that this team put together a six-game win streak, went 10-4-1 and raised its fans’ hopes before losing five of its last nine games and finishing seven points behind eighth-place Tampa Bay.

Saturday’s 6-2 romp over Tampa Bay stretched the current winning streak to a season-best four straight and produced positive vibes in the post-game locker room.

But it was with the understanding a daunting task looms.

“We put ourselves in a big hole,” captain Olli Jokinen said.

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While Florida remains 13th in the East and must climb over five teams in their final 16 games, there are reasons to believe this quest can succeed where last year’s failed:

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When Martin set 90 points as this year’s goal in mid-February, it seemed unreachable. Now, if the Panthers can duplicate their 7-1-2 run during their past 10 games, they would need only seven points in their final six games of the season to get there.

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The task begins Tuesday in Atlanta, where the Panthers are 0-6-1 during the past two seasons, including 0-3 this season.

“We’ve given them 10 points already. That’s enough,” Jokinen said, referring to the Panthers’ 0-5 mark against the Thrashers, whom they last played Nov. 30.

I’m not convinced the Panthers are ready to be a playoff team. A win against Atlanta tonight may change my opinion.

 

Mike Keenan out as Florida Panthers’ GM; Jacques Martin assumes role

From AP.

Miami- Mike Keenan resigned Sunday as general manager of the Florida Panthers, stepping down after a little more than two years running the team’s day-to-day operations.

Panthers coach Jacques Martin will assume the GM duties, effective immediately, team officials said. The move comes less than two weeks before the club opens training camp.

“Mike has done a tremendous job over the past two years in positioning this franchise for immediate and future success. … He has assembled the most talented team in our franchises history,” Panthers owner Alan Cohen said.

In a statement, the team said Keenan was leaving “to pursue other career opportunities.”

Keenan — who led the New York Rangers to the Stanley Cup as coach in 1994 and has coached six other NHL teams, including the Panthers — was not immediately available for comment.

The Panthers first hired Keenan as coach in December 2001, then fired him 23 months later after Florida won only 45 of 153 games played with him behind the bench. Keenan returned to the organization in May 2004, part of a two-pronged move that also brought Martin in as coach.

Keenan made some stirring moves in the past year, in which the Panthers — who haven’t won a single playoff series since making the Stanley Cup finals in 1996 — failed yet again to qualify for the postseason.

Most notably, Keenan opted to trade All-Star goaltender Roberto Luongo to the Vancouver Canucks in June, a move that stunned Luongo — who thought he was on the cusp of agreeing to a long-term deal with the club.

Instead, Keenan made the swap to acquire forward Todd Bertuzzi, defenseman Bryan Allen and goalie Alex Auld from the Canucks, and insisted afterward that it was the best direction for the franchise.

I blogged before about the Luongo trade, it was a bad move. You don’t trade who may be the best goaltender in hockey. The Panthers are still a mediocre offensive team and their goaltending is going to be worse. How that helped the team from anything but a financial point of view is beyond me.

Keenan’s departure fits in with his previous job history He’s like the Lou Saban, Billy Martin or Larry Brown of the NHL, a person who moves(voluntarily or involuntarily) to a new job every few years. Keenan coached 7 teams from 1984-2004. My guess is he will find employment again within a year.

 
 


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