Yardbarker
x
Ranking the 10 best players in Panthers-Oilers Stanley Cup Final
Florida Panthers defenseman Gustav Forsling (left) and Edmonton Oilers center Connor McDavid battle for the puck. Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Ranking the 10 best players in Panthers-Oilers Stanley Cup Final

For the second season in a row, the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers will meet in the Stanley Cup Final. Florida won the Cup last season in seven games.

Ahead of Game 1 Wednesday in Edmonton (8 p.m. ET; SN, CBC, TVAS, TNT, truTV, Max), we combined the teams and ranked the best 10 players in inverse order. 

10. Niko Mikkola, D, Florida Panthers
Season: 76 games, six goals, 16 assists | Playoffs: 16 games, three goals, two assists

It's a testament to how much talent is in this series that you could select six or seven other players for this spot, but Mikkola upping his game during the playoffs and playing a critical role on Florida's second pair and penalty kill lands him in the top 10. He is an impressive plus-7 at 5-on-5 in the postseason, and Florida has allowed only three goals in 35 minutes of penalty-killing time with him on the ice. 

9. Sergei Bobrovsky, G, Florida Panthers

Season: 33-19-2, .905 save percentage, 2.44 GAA, five shutouts | Playoffs: 12-5-0, .912 save percentage, 2.11 GAA, three shutouts

"Bob" hasn't quite had the same level of flash during this playoff run for Florida, but he's still dependable. At 36, he is the oldest goalie to start a game this postseason. 

8. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, C/W, Edmonton Oilers

Season: 78 games, 20 goals, 29 assists | Playoffs: 16 games, five goals, 13 assists

His offensive numbers withered during the regular season, but Nugent-Hopkins spent much of the Western Conference Final reminding the league that he's still a dangerous player only two years removed from his only 100-point regular season. 

7. Matthew Tkachuk, W, Florida Panthers

Season: 52 games, 22 goals, 35 assists | Playoffs: 17 games, five goals, 11 assists, 16 points

Under normal circumstances, Tkachuk probably would be higher on this list. He has been quiet for stretches during these playoffs, perhaps because he is battling injuries. Still, Tkachuk has found ways to be impactful in spurts in his trademark fashion and still has provided nearly a point per game in the postseason.

6. Evan Bouchard, defenseman, Edmonton Oilers

Season: 82 games, 14 goals, 53 assists | Playoffs: 16 games, six goals, 11 assists

Few players draw the same level of debate as Bouchard, a highly gifted offensive player with an occasional penchant for defensive lapses. His colossal shot, "The Bouch Bomb," has probably changed the course of these playoffs.

5. Gustav Forsling, defenseman, Florida Panthers

Season: 80 games, 11 goals, 20 assists | Playoffs: 17 games, one goal, three assists

Spots five and six on this list might be interchangeable. Bouchard's explosiveness was matched last season by Forsling's unyielding defensive play. He can contribute offensively, but his best work will always come in slowing the opposition. Forsling and Alexsander Barkov (more on him later) teamed for 35 minutes of ice time in last year's Cup Final against Connor McDavid but did not allow a goal to the best player on the planet.

4. Sam Bennett, center, Florida Panthers

Season: 76 games, 25 goals, 26 assists | Playoffs: 17 games, 10 goals, six assists

He's a unicorn. There are few players in the league capable of playing like Bennett. He's regularly at or near the top of the leaderboard in goals and hits. 

3. Leon Draisaitl, C/W, Edmonton Oilers

Season: 71 games, 52 goals, 54 assists | Playoffs: 16 games, seven goals, 18 assists

Draisaitl has developed a reputation as the man who can score from almost anywhere. He's a superweapon unmatched by most other goal scorers in the league. Having two of the top five players in the world on the same Oilers squad creates matchup problems every game. 

2. Alexsander Barkov, C, Florida Panthers

Season: 67 games, 20 goals, 51 assists | Playoffs: 17 games, six goals, 11 assists

It's poetic that one of the greatest offensive duos in the history of the league (Draisaitl and McDavid) will go head-to-head most games with maybe the best defensive forward of his generation. Barkov recently secured his third Selke Trophy Award as the league's top defensive forward. He's gifted offensively, but Barkov will be asked first and foremost to slow the explosive Oilers.

1. Connor McDavid, C, Edmonton Oilers

Season: 67 games, 26 goals, 74 assists | Playoffs: 16 games, six goals, 20 assists 

McDavid leads all players in postseason points, has led multiple multi-goal comebacks and is four wins from accomplishing everything he could possibly want to achieve in a career that still has so many chapters left to write. 

Alex Wiederspiel

Alex Wiederspiel is a digital reporter, play-by-play broadcaster, radio show host and podcast host in West Virginia covering high school athletics, Division II college athletics, and some West Virginia University athletics. He's an avid follower of all things hockey and football with a soft spot for prospects -- the future stars of the league. When not consuming sports, Alex is usually doing something related to Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, or watching movies for his movie podcast, The Movie Spiel

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

Yardbarker +

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!