"We want to make this a really hard place to play," Panthers interim head coach Andrew Brunette said of the team's budding home-ice advantage. "We don't want to just be good at home, we want to be great. Tonight was just another step. This is a big homestand for us."
With the Panthers coming out hot and dictating play against the Wild in the first period, Owen Tippett opened the scoring when he gathered an incredibly impressive one-handed pass from Aaron Ekblad in the slot and lifted a backhand shot past Cam Talbot to make it 1-0 at 17:45.
After 20 minutes of action, Florida was leading Minnesota 15-5 in shots.
"I think it's just the atmosphere at the rink," Tippett said of the team's early jump "The guys build off that. When you have crowds like we do, it's easy to get energy and get up on the bench."
Doubling the lead in the second period, Frank Vatrano, opting to keep the puck himself on a 2-on-1 rush with Tippett, rifled a shot past Talbot and into the twine to make it 2-0 at 8:23. With an assist on the goal, Joe Thornton tied Paul Coffey for the 13th-most points in NHL history (1,531).
On the power play later in the period, the Wild finally got on the board when Joel Eriksson Ek re-directed a centering feed from Mats Zuccarello past Sergei Bobrovsky, who lost his stick before the score, from right on top of the blue paint to slice Florida's advantage down to 2-1 at 11:46.
Getting that goal back for the Panthers soon after, Vatrano found the back of the net once again when he pounced on a juicy rebound after a shot from Gustav Forsling to make it 3-1 at 14:50.
"They were huge for us, scoring those three goals," Brunette said of the team's third line of Tippett, Vatrano and Thornton. "We had some different looks, and they were able to finish. Really happy for that whole line. … Giving us three [goals] in 10 minutes is pretty impressive."
Helping the Panthers maintain that lead late in the middle frame, Bobrovsky brought fans to their feet and kept them there for more than 30 seconds when he made multiple highlight-reel saves in rapid succession. Almost blowing the roof off the building, the cheers grew louder and louder with each save until they finally peaked with an uproar after the sequence finally ended.
If you want to get your blood flowing, just take a look at the clip in the below tweet.