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Florida Panthers will be patient with approach to finding a center
The Florida Panthers will be patient with their approach to finding a center. You can't replace Aleksander Barkov. Evgeni Malkin could be a fit down the road. Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin (71) moves the puck against Florida Panthers center Aleksander Barkov (16) during the second period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Florida Panthers will start off internally, but will likely need to go externally to fill Aleksander Barkov’s slot

Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic: The Florida Panthers obviously won’t be to replace center Aleksander Barkov, who is lost for seven to nine months. Internally, they might be able to shift someone from the wing to center, as many of their wingers were drafted as centermen.

Sam Reinhart could move, or maybe they’ll promote Anton Lundell, who centered their third line. GM Bill Zito doesn’t think it’s Lundell’s or anyone’s job to replace Barkov. He’ll be going over potential external options.

“You’re going through other rosters. You’re going through who might be available. You’re fielding phone calls. You’re making phone calls. You’re seeing on a pretty regular basis what’s available and what the cost is.

“You do your projections, and so that just continues. And if there’s something that we think makes us better as a team, we’ll do it. And if not, we don’t. It’s really no different.”

The Panthers will have some regular season cap flexibility, but they’ll need to keep in mind the playoff cap ceiling if Barkov is able to return at some point during the playoffs. Seven months is April, nine months is late June. It’s expected that Zito won’t rush things.

Would Evgeni Malkin be interested in the Florida Panthers, and do they have enough to land him?

Dan Kingerski of Pittsburgh Hockey Now: Evgeni Malkin wasn’t implying at the start of training camp that he would consider a trade like Brad Marchand did at the trade deadline last year to the Florida Panthers. Malkin was using Marchand as an example of what can happen when your team isn’t doing well, and they may not want you. It turned out perfectly for Marchand by winning the Cup, but it usually doesn’t end up like that.

After seeing the way things went down with Marc-Andre Fleury, it may give Malkin something to think about, as you can leave and come back a hero.

Back to the Florida Panthers, as a perfect fit for Malkin, after Aleksander Barkov went down with a knee injury. Would Malkin waive his no-movement clause for the Panthers? The Panthers are a little thin in the prospect pool, though.

One spitballing potential trade ask could be forward Mackie Samoskevich. He was a 2021 first-round pick. He’s on a one-year, $775,000 deal.

This article first appeared on NHL Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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