
NHL rescue dogs, all available for adoption, compete in the 2025 Stanley Pup
32 adorable rescue puppies representing each NHL team will compete in the 2025 Stanley Pup, airing June 6 on TruTV and Sportsnet!
The 2025 Stanley Cup Final is about as tight as it can get through the first two games.
Both of the opening two games have gone to overtime for the first time since the 2014 Stanley Cup Final. The teams have been within a goal of each other for all but 77 seconds. There have been four lead changes for just the second time in the past 42 seasons. There also have been six tying goals, just the second time that has happened.
The Edmonton Oilers won Game 1 in overtime, and the Florida Panthers won Game 2 in double overtime. The teams will try to break the tie Monday night in Game 3 as the series shifts to the Panthers’ arena in Sunrise, Florida.
USA TODAY is providing live updates for Game 3 between the Oilers and Panthers. Follow along:
The penalties and the power plays piled up in that period. Florida’s Brad Marchand opened the scoring on a delayed penalty. Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch told TNT that the constant trips to the penalty box was a “recipe for disaster.” He was right as Carter Verhaeghe scored to give the Panthers just their second home power-play goal of the playoffs. Shots were 12-10 Edmonton, which also led 11-5 in hits.
Evan Bouchard cross-checks Anton Lundell, who punches the Oilers defenseman. A scrum breaks out. Lundell will be in the penalty box for roughing when the second period begins.
Paul Maurice puts out the second power-play unit out to start. Panthers move the puck quickly and Carter Verhaeghe scores. This is just the second two-goal lead of the Stanley Cup Final.
Viktor Arvidsson knocks Sergei Bobrovsky into the net and is called for goaltender interference.
Sam Bennett is called for high-sticking. And this one is killed, too.
This time, it’s too many men on the ice (seven players, actually) for Edmonton. Panthers are getting plenty of opportunity to work on their struggling home power play. Again, it comes up short as Aaron Ekblad is called for tripping. There will be 4-on-4. During the ensuing Edmonton power, Sergei Bobrovsky makes a glove save on Evan Bouchard.
Evander Kane takes another penalty, this time for high-sticking. Edmonton kills that off, too.
Evander Kane in the box. Panthers’ power play is clicking at only 3.6% at home during the playoffs. Oilers kill it off.
Anton Lundell called for tripping. Edmonton is dangerous but can’t score. One shot goes off Sergei Bobrovsky’s mask. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins misses the net on a rebound opportunity. Power play ends early when Evander Kane is called for cross-checking.
Brad Marchand stays hot, scoring 56 seconds into the game on a delayed penalty. He had two goals in Game 2, including the double-overtime winner.
Panthers’ Aleksander Barkov line vs. the Oilers’ Connor McDavid line. Edmonton outshoots Florida 2-0 with those lines out there.
When is Stanley Cup Final Game 3? Panthers vs. Oilers game time
The Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers will face off Monday at 8 p.m. ET at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Florida.
What TV channel is Panthers vs. Oilers Game 3 on?
TNT and truTV are broadcasting Game 2 of the NHL Stanley Cup Final. Kenny Albert will provide play-by-play, while Eddie Olczyk, Brian Boucher, Darren Pang and Jackie Redmond will provide analysis and reporting.
Stream the 2025 Stanley Cup Final on Sling
How to watch Panthers vs. Oilers Game 3Date: Monday, June 9Location: Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, FloridaTime: 8 p.m. ETTV: TNT, truTVStreaming: Max, Sling TV
Not only is he playing, he’s in the starting lineup. His line, centered by Connor McDavid, will go against the Aleksander Barkov line.
Of note, the Oilers appear to be going with their Game 2 defense pairings. They had switched up the pairings during their June 8 practice.
Oilers in warmups (Ryan Nugent-Hopkins on the top line):
RNH-McDavid-Perry
Kane-Draisaitl-Kapanen
Frederic-Henrique-Brown
Podkolzin-Janmark-Arvidsson
Ekholm-Bouchard
Nurse-Klingberg
Kulak-Walman
Skinner
— Dan Rosen (@drosennhl) June 9, 2025
Panthers in warmups:
Verhaeghe-Barkov-Reinhart
Rodrigues-Bennett-Tkachuk
Luostarinen-Lundell-Marchand
Greer-Nosek-Gadjovich
Forsling-Ekblad
Mikkola-Jones
Schmidt-Kulikov
Bobrovsky
— Dan Rosen (@drosennhl) June 9, 2025
The early roster report lists Edmonton’s Jeff Skinner as a scratch, which would indicate that Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is playing. Skinner would have been his replacement.
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is on the ice, as coach Kris Knoblauch said he would be. He’s a game-time decision.
Panthers’ Sergei Bobrovsky (13-6, 2.21 goals-against average, .912 save percentage) vs. Oilers’ Stuart Skinner (7-5, 2.61, .901).
The Oilers have four of the top five scorers in the series: Connor McDavid has a league-best 31 points, followed by Leon Draisaitl (29). Evan Bouchard (21) and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (18). Draisaitl has a team-high nine goals.
McDavid has five assists in the final and has three goals and 11 assists during a seven-game point streak.
The Panthers have 11 players with double-digit points, led by Sam Bennett (19) and Brad Marchand, Aleksander Barkov, Carter Verhaeghe and Matthew Tkachuk (17 each). Bennett is the playoffs’ leading goal scorer with 13.
The 16 goals through two games are tied with 2023 for the most of a final over the past 42 seasons.
But Panthers coach Paul Maurice said despite the high number of goals, the defense and goaltending have been strong.
“Everything is contested all over the ice,” Maurice said. “So … it’s more intense. What a wonderful thing to see in the final instead of the first round. These men are going that hard. It’s awesome.”
The Oilers changed their defense pairings during practice on June 8. Per NHL.com, Darnell Nurse moved up with Evan Bouchard, Mattias Ekholm was with John Klingberg and Jake Walman was with Brett Kulak. For Game 2, their pairings were Bouchard-Ekholm, Nurse-Kulak and Walman-Klingberg.
Coach Kris Knoblauch didn’t make a big deal about the change.
“Throughout Games 1 and 2, we had some changes and throughout the rest of the series, there will be some more,” Knoblauch said.
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins missed practice June 8 with an undisclosed injury but did take part in the optional skate on the morning of June 9. Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch says he will be a game-time decision. “He’ll take warmup and we’ll decide from there,” he said.
Jeff Skinner would return to the lineup if Nugent-Hopkins can’t go. He has a goal and an assist in two playoff games.
“He’s been a true professional and when we’ve needed him, he’s been ready to play,” Knoblauch said.
He’ll return to the Panthers’ lineup in Game 3 and Jesper Boqvist will come out. Greer, who plays on the fourth line with Tomas Nosek and Jonah Gadjovich, missed Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals, was limited in Game 5 and missed the first two games of the Stanley Cup Final.
All times Eastern; (x-if necessary)
Game 1:Â Oilers 4, Panthers 3 (OT)Â |Â StoryGame 2:Â Panthers 5, Oilers 4 (2OT) | StoryGame 3:Â Monday, June 9, Edmonton at Florida | 8 p.m. | TNT, truTVGame 4:Â Thursday, June 12, Edmonton at Florida | 8 p.m. | TNT, truTVGame 5:Â Saturday, June 14, Florida at Edmonton | 8 p.m. | TNT, truTVx-Game 6:Â Tuesday, June 17, Edmonton at Florida | 8 p.m. | TNT, truTVx-Game 7:Â Friday, June 20, Florida at Edmonton | 8 p.m. | TNT, truTV
All odds via BetMGM (as of Monday, June 9, 4 p.m. ET
Spread:Â Panthers (-1.5)Moneyline:Â Panthers (-140); Oilers (+120)Over/Under:Â 6.5