Bill Zito received a simple question when the Florida Panthers general manager met with the media Tuesday.
“How?” he was asked.
“Sorry?” he responded.
“How?”
“How?”
“How did you do this?”
Zito’s answer spoke volumes not only about himself but about the culture the back-to-back Stanley Cup champions have built -- a culture that led defenseman Aaron Ekblad and forwards Sam Bennett and Brad Marchand to stay instead of testing unrestricted free agency, a culture that could lead to a dynasty.
“I didn’t,” Zito said. “It was those guys. There’s no gray area whatsoever. This was 100 percent those guys wanting to be part of something that they created. We kind of wax poetic about the team and the community that they’ve become, and I think this is a great example of what it means to them.”
Zito has every reason to be proud. He played a key role in assembling this roster and keeping it together under the NHL salary cap. Look at the core Florida has locked up now that these three have agreed to terms -- Bennett on Friday, Ekblad on Monday and Marchand on Tuesday.
Up front, the Panthers have Bennett (eight more seasons), Marchand (six), Aleksander Barkov (five), Anton Lundell (five), Sam Reinhart (seven), Matthew Tkachuk (five) and Carter Verhaeghe (eight).
On defense, they have Ekblad (eight), Gustav Forsling (seven) and Seth Jones (five).
Goalie Sergei Bobrovsky is signed for one more season, and the Panthers will have cap space to maneuver after next season.
The Panthers are the clear favorite to win the Stanley Cup next season, despite the fatigue factor after three straight trips to the Stanley Cup Final. They can become the first team to win the Cup three times in a row in the salary cap era (since 2005-06). No one has done it since the New York Islanders won four straight championships from 1980-83.
Even if the Panthers don’t win it next season, their window will remain open for the foreseeable future. They have a chance to join the Pittsburgh Penguins (2009, 2016 and 2017) and the Chicago Blackhawks (2010, 2013 and 2015) as the only teams to win the Cup three times in the cap era.
But for Zito to take credit would go against what has made the Panthers great. He sets an example, yes. He also fits in the same way Bennett, Ekblad and Marchand fit in.
“This is a special group of people,” Zito said. “It’s a special environment, and these three guys, in particular, understand and value and appreciate the opportunity. Even though they’re significant contributors to it on their own, I think that they’re aware that they make the group better and the group makes them better.”
That’s the key, not the sunshine or the lack of state taxes, as nice as those might be. The Panthers have reached the point where they have a collection of extraordinary parts, and whole is greater than the sum of the parts.
The beauty of it is this:
“The people who are in it appreciate it while they’re in it,” Zito said.
How often do you hear that, especially on the day the free agent market opens and so many dollars are out there to be grabbed?
























