"Right now ,there's no playbook for this," Boughner said. "It's just instinct and scraping points every night."
The Panthers made a heck of a run to get into the race. They went 20-6-1 from Jan. 30 through Monday, leading the NHL in wins during that span.
The question is whether they have enough experience or energy now. They lost 4-3 at the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday and 3-2 in overtime at the Ottawa Senators on Thursday. They fell behind 3-0 in the first 13:55 at Toronto and didn't start well at Ottawa, either.
"I think for me, the No. 1 thing is, we have to commit as a group and show some maturity in our game to manage the game a little better," Boughner said. "I still think we're trying to force the puck through people instead of putting it behind them. Our puck management could be better.
"It's a young team, and they haven't been through this kind of a grind and this kind of playoff mentality that you need at this time of year. You've got to be able to take what the game gives you, and sometimes we force things and that's not how to play this time of year."
The grind appears to be taking its toll on the Panthers' top scorers, center Aleksander Barkov, who has 75 points (26 goals, 49 assists), and center Vincent Trocheck, with 70 (30 goals, 40 assists). Barkov leads NHL forwards in average ice time with 22:14. Trocheck is fifth with 21:23. They combined for one point in the past two games, an assist by Trocheck at Toronto.