No Tanks, Eh: Panthers Beat Leafs in Game Neither Needed to Win
Screenshot In order to keep their first-round selections in the upcoming 2026 NHL Draft, both the Florida Panthers and Toronto Maple Leafs need to finish as close to the bottom of the standings as possible. Toronto really needs to finish in the basement — and it showed on Saturday night. The Maple Leafs, who lose their first-round pick to Boston if it is not in the top 5 after the lottery pull in May, gave up two quick goals and let the Panthers head home with a 6-2 win.
The Panthers, which snapped a four-game losing streak, only need their first-round pick to land in the top 10; if it’s No. 11 or lower, it goes to the Blackhawks. Florida has two home games remaining to try and maintain their top-10 (in this case) status.
A loss to the Rangers or recently eliminated Red Wings should do it. The Leafs came into the game ranked No. 6 from the bottom in the NHL standings ; the Panthers were No.
7. Both teams iced patchwork lineups with the Panthers going heavy on the Charlotte Checkers callups. With Sam Bennett and Carter Verhaeghe out, Wilmer Skoog became the seventh player to make his NHL debut with the Panthers this season.
Florida also had over $75 million in salary on the shelf — $85 if you count Sergei Bobrovsky who backed up Daniil Tarasov. Paul Maurice hoped the young players would add some juice with many getting not only their first real shot in the NHL, but to do it in Toronto on Hockey Night in Canada had to be a thrill. The Panthers took control of this one 23 seconds in when Eetu Luostarinen (Florida’s highest-paid forward Saturday with a $3 million cap hit) got to a puck off the boards and fired a shot past Joseph Woll .