National Hockey League
Florida 7, Toronto 2
When: 7:30 PM ET, Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Where: BB&T Center, Sunrise, Florida
Referees: Steve Kozari, Ian Walsh
Linesmen: Tony Sericolo, Mark Shewchyk
Attendance: 17552

SUNRISE, Fla. -- The last time the Florida Panthers scored seven goals, it started a five-game win streak.

The Panthers, who routed the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-2 on Tuesday night at the BB&T Center, are hoping the same thing happens now as they fight for their playoff lives.

Jonathan Marchessault scored two goals and Thomas Vanek added a career-high four assists as Florida posted its largest margin of victory of the season and snapped a five-game losing streak.

"Our chances went in, and we capitalized," Vanek said. "It didn't feel like we're playing that bad (during the five-game skid). When good teams struggle, sometimes they try too hard, and it goes backward."

The Panthers also got goals from Aleksander Barkov, Colton Sceviour (short-handed), Reilly Smith, Jussi Jokinen (power play) and Keith Yandle.

It was the most goals for Florida since a 7-4 overtime victory at Nashville on Feb. 11, a game that started a five-game Panthers win streak.

"You can't expect to score seven goals every night," Yandle said. "But we know we have the offense in here to be able to score some goals when we are playing simple and smart."

Florida (30-27-11) started Tuesday seven points behind the Leafs for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. But complicating things for the Panthers is the fact that they also trail two other teams in the race, and Florida only has 14 games remaining.

The loss was damaging for Toronto (31-23-14), which fell a point behind the New York Islanders and Tampa Bay Lightning, who both won in overtime on Tuesday.

"We've got a lot of time," Toronto center Nazem Kadri said. "All we need to do is string a few wins together and maybe get a little bit of help. We just have to bounce back."

Florida goalie James Reimer, who is the main man with starter Roberto Luongo out at least another week due to a hip injury, snapped a seven-game skid (0-6-1). Reimer made 28 saves.

"You always want to beat your old team," Reimer said. "But it was more about winning the game and picking up two points."

Toronto goalie Frederik Andersen was pulled after a first period in which he allowed three goals on eight shots. Curtis McElhinney finished for the Leafs, allowing four goals on 24 shots.

The Panthers led 3-1 after the first period as Barkov scored the first goal at 18 seconds, redirecting a pass from Jonathan Huberdeau off the left post and into the net.

The Panthers made it 2-0 on a short-handed goal. Derek MacKenzie's pass from his own end sent Sceviour off to the races, and he beat Andersen glove side after outskating the flat-footed Leafs.

After a holding penalty on Jaromir Jagr, Toronto cashed in with a power-play goal by Leo Komarov, who beat Reimer high to the glove side. The assist went to William Nylander, who provided a nice setup pass.

Marchessault made it 3-1 with 5:39 left in the first period, chasing Andersen. But Marchessault kept it going for Florida, scoring again with 4:38 elapsed in the second. Smith rebounded his own shot to give Florida a 5-1 lead.

The teams traded goals in the final two minutes of the second period -- Nikita Soshnikov for Toronto and Jokinen for Florida -- putting the Panthers up 6-2.

Yandle's goal with 2:17 elapsed in the third period gave Florida a 7-2 lead and Toronto showed very little life in terms of a comeback attempt.

"We had a tough start and we couldn't recover," Kadri said. "We had a couple of defensive breakdowns and some bad line changes. It's unacceptable."

Added Komarov: "Tonight was a very dark game for us."

NOTES: Panthers D Aaron Ekblad and C Denis Malgin missed their first games since sustaining concussions Saturday in a loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning. This is the third head-related injury in the past 14 months for the 21-year-old Ekblad, named the NHL Rookie of the Year in 2015. ... D Jakub Kindl, who has only played 29 games this season, replaced Ekblad. ... Florida recalled rookie D MacKenzie Weegar, 23, who was a healthy scratch along with C Michael Sgarbossa. ... Toronto scratched RW Ben Smith, C Eric Fehr, LW Josh Leivo and D Alexey Marchenko. ... Toronto has missed the playoffs 10 times in the past 11 years, including the past three seasons consecutively. ... The Leafs' average age is 26.0 -- far less than the league average of 27.9 or the Panthers' average of 28.6.
Top Game Performances
 
Toronto   Florida
Leo Komarov 1 Points Thomas Vanek 4
Leo Komarov 1 Goals Jonathan Marchessault 2
Brian Boyle 1 Assists Thomas Vanek 4
Leo Komarov 1 Power Play Goals Jussi Jokinen 1
N/A Short Handed Goals Colton Sceviour 1
Curtis McElhinney .833 Save Percentage James Reimer .933
Curtis McElhinney 20 Saves James Reimer 28
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Shots Goals Power Play Penalty Kill Penalty Mins Face Offs Won
Toronto 30 2 1-4 4-5 14 34
Florida 32 7 1-5 3-4 12 40
Upcoming Games
  • Florida will play their next game on the road against Columbus. The Panthers have a W/L % of .400 after a win and .474 after a loss.
  • Toronto will play their next game on the road against Tampa Bay. The Maple Leafs have a W/L % of .452 after a win and .459 after a loss.