Panthers:58-18-6, 122 points
Capitals:44-26-12, 100 points
Season series: FLA 2-1-0; WSH 1-1-1
Game 1:Tuesday (7:30 p.m. ET; ESPN2, BSFL, NBCSWA, SN360, TVAS)
All eyes will be on the Florida Panthers as they start the Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Washington Capitals.
The Panthers won the Presidents' Trophy as the NHL's regular-season points leader for the first time in their history after rolling to team records in wins (58) and points (122). Now they'll try to become the first No. 1 overall seed to also win the Stanley Cup since the Chicago Blackhawks in 2013. But first, the Panthers must start by winning a playoff series for the first time since their run to the 1996 Stanley Cup Final.
"We still have our eyes on a bigger prize and this group has been really good at just kind of keeping it day to day," Panthers coach Andrew Brunette said. "We're going to need that going in because we'll be a target. Our group has got some veteran guys who have been there ... and they understand that it's a new season starting Tuesday]*
This will be the first playoff series between the Panthers and the Capitals, and they haven't played each other since Florida rallied for a 5-4 victory on Nov. 30.
But Washington is aware of the test it faces against Florida, which scored a League-high 337 goals and features four players who scored at least 30 goals in forwards Aleksander Barkov (39), Sam Reinhart (33), Anthony Duclair (31) and Jonathan Huberdeau (30). Sam Bennett finished was close behind with 28 goals.
"Extremely fast team, a lot of power up front, a lot of scoring capability, so it's going to be fun," Capitals forward Lars Eller said. "They were the best team in the League this year, so a huge challenge for us. But I think our team can play a lot of (different) games. Whatever game is presented, we can adjust, and we can be successful."
The Panthers are confident they can handle whatever style the Capitals want to play too.
"We've been prepared for anybody and everybody, so we know that it's not going to be easy," forward Ryan Lomberg said. "We're going to have to go through the best teams in the League. So we're worried about ourselves. We're worried about playing our best hockey."