Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

FORT LAUDERDALE — Roberto Luongo made a guest appearance at the Florida Panthers practice at the new War Memorial Iceplex on Thursday afternoon.

With Sergei Bobrovsky getting a day off — from practice, anyway — the Panthers called on their Hall of Fame netminder to fill in.

Luongo, 44, filled in for the Panthers for the first time last March.

After playing in a charity event with his fellow Florida alums last Saturday afternoon, Luongo looked loose and, as coach Paul Maurice said, looked like he had not lost a step.

“If you walked in off the street and had no idea who was in net, you would say that’s an NHL goalie,’’ Maurice said. “There’s a little more gray in the beard, but he looked pretty good.”

Luongo continues to wear the customized pads which were gifted to him upon his retirement, ones which capsulate the entirety of his career — from the Islanders, Panthers and Canucks to winning Gold with Team Canada.

One of the first players to score on Luongo in the practice was Will Lockwood, who followed up a rebound and popped the loose puck into the empty net.

Luongo was not exactly going to go post-to-post — and Lockwood appeared to be stifling a grin as he skated away.

“It was great,” Lockwood said afterward. “I know I caught him at the perfect time because it was early and he really was not warmed up. But it was still fun. I did get to warm him up before and that was really cool. It was just great to be out there with a Hall of Famer. That was incredible.”

Luongo, who works with the Panthers as a special advisor to GM Bill Zito and heads the team’s Goaltending Excellence Department with former goalie coach Francois Allaire, has been in net more and more since deciding to put on the pads back on last year.

Upon retirement in 2019, Luongo said he never wanted to go back in net and played center at the alumni game on All-Star Week.

But, in training for the NHL All-Star Skills Competition where he was tabbed as a celebrity goalie, Luongo appears to have caught the bug once more.

The Panthers were happy to see him out there.

“I think I scored on him at one point, but he still has it. He looked great out there,” said Oliver Ekman-Larsson.

“He has not missed a beat. It was fun having a legend on the ice out there. When you shoot on him, you see how well he reads the game. That is something he probably will never lose.”

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Nuggets teach Timberwolves it's never easy to knock out the champion
Panthers come from behind to take Game 4 vs. Bruins
Hawks win 2024 NBA Draft Lottery
Watch: Padres star passes father on all-time home runs list
Terrion Arnold honors his mother in a unique way
Brad Keselowski breaks 110-race winless streak at Darlington
Watch: Manchester United ties record, highlighting club's ineptitude
Celtics' Jrue Holiday praises overlooked aspect of Jayson Tatum's game
Arturs Silovs' 42 saves lead Canucks past Oilers in Game 3
Braves star leaves game early due to left side soreness
Pacers blow out Knicks on Mother’s Day, even series at 2-2
Hawks GM 'shocked' that his team won the NBA Draft Lottery
Prolific former Brewers, A's slugger announces retirement
Saints to sign veteran offensive lineman
Smother's Day: Pacers shut down Knicks in first half of Game 4
Flyers goaltender suspended from international play for three years
Pistons make wrong kind of history at NBA Draft Lottery
Watch: Pacers C Myles Turner makes absurd three-pointer in first quarter vs. Knicks
Giants place key outfielder on injured list
Broncos release former Super Bowl champion WR

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.