Florida Panthers Season Preview
SEASON IN REVIEW
Last season was a pivotal one for the Panthers franchise, and as has been the case often in the organization’s history, they fell short of the postseason.
Gone was long-time face of the franchise Olli Jokinen, dealt last summer to Phoenix for defencemen Keith Ballard and Nick Boynton, putting all eyes on stud defenceman Jay Bouwmeester and his pending decision to test free agency waters. With the push on to make the playoffs, GM Jacques Martin brought in successful junior coach Peter DeBoer to attempt to put his young team over the top.
After an inconsistent and relatively unimpressive opening three months of the season, Florida finally caught fire after the New Year, rattling off a 17-7-3 record leading up to the trade deadline and putting the Panthers sixth in the Eastern Conference. Martin gambled on keeping Bouwmeester and going for it, but his star defenceman and the surrounding cast wilted down the stretch.
Ultimately, Florida lost out on an obscure tiebreak, posting as many wins and points as eigth-place Montreal but having lost in the season series with the Canadiens.
The Panthers missed the playoffs despite once again getting stellar goaltending from Tomas Vokoun, held back by the fact that Stephen Weiss led the way with just 61 points as the team’s top scorer. Reasons for optimism came from David Booth’s 31-goal breakout, as well as Michael Frolik’s arrival as a 20-goal scorer.
OUTLOOK
The Panthers swapped out the rights to Bouwmeester for Jordan Leopold, who joins what will likely be a significantly weaker blueline minus Bouwmeester, Jassen Cullimore, Karlis Skrastins and Nick Boynton.
Adding to the exodus was the loss of GM Jacques Martin, who was wooed away to coach the Habs, and his replacement, rookie GM Clark Aitken, was not hired until late August.
Where there’s reason for optimism is in the goal-scoring department, as Florida finished 17th last season with one of the league’s worst power plays, and there’s enough burgeoning firepower here to surpass last year’s numbers. More should be expected from Nathan Horton, Frolik, Rostislav Olesz and newcomer Steve Reinprecht – all relatively unheralded players who nonetheless will be able to approach the 50-point mark.

 
		
	
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