"An excellent first half," Panthers coach Joel Quenneville said after the team rallied to earn its fourth straight win. "A lot of positives. Almost all positives when we evaluate the competitiveness of our team, playing the right way and staying composed from start to finish in these games.
"We're getting balance in our four lines, we're getting deep in our back end, the goaltending's been outstanding. You couldn't say enough good things, but at the same time we want to get better as we go along here. It's a pretty high standard to start with, but let's look to achieve that."
Clawing back to claim victory once again, that composure was on full display against Chicago.
Although the Panthers were clearly the aggressors early on, the Blackhawks ended up striking first when Patrick Kane took advantage of a giveaway in the offensive zone and ripped a shot past Sergei Bobrovsky for his 12th goal of the season to make it 1-0 at 10:38 of the first period.
Pulling the Panthers even as the period started to wind down, Owen Tippett managed to beat Kevin Lankinen on the power play after his one-timer bounced off not one, but two Blackhawks before flying past the rookie goalie and into the cage to make it 1-1 with 1:45 left on the clock.
Bobrovsky finished with 26 saves, while Lankinen stopped 30 of 34 shots.
In the second period, Chicago regained the lead when Philipp Kurashev took a centering feed from Mattias Janmark and beat Bobrovsky with a one-timer from the low slot to make it 2-1 at 10:19. Soon after, Brandon Hagel added to that lead when he scored at 13:02 to make it 3-1.
Then, as we've already seen time and time again this season, the Panthers made their push.
Back on the power play, Aaron Ekblad trimmed the deficit down to one goal when he rifled a shot over Lankinen's glove from the center of the left circle to make it 3-2 at 14:58. Netting his first goal with the Cats, Gustav Forsling then buried a long shot to make it 3-3 just 1:02 later.
"It's not something we want to do, for sure," Ekblad chuckled when asked about the team's ability to erase deficits. "We've all been saying it lately how crazy it is that we can come back like that. We don't want to find ourselves in those positions, but sometimes it does happen."
Forced to kill off a pair of power plays late in the third period, the Panthers instead went on the attack while on the penalty kill. Following a shot from MacKenzie Weegar, Aleksander Barkov poked in the ensuing rebound for a shorthanded goal to make it 4-3 with 6:34 left in regulation.
Icing the game away, Carter Verhaeghe and Alex Wennberg then each cashed in on an empty net to lock in the 6-3 win for the Cats, who are now 12-4-3 when falling behind 1-0 this season.
"I think we're just a different team this year," Weegar said. "We've got a veteran presence in the room. We've matured a lot. We've had some tough years here not making the playoffs or just barely making it or whatever. We've taken a big, big step as a team. Not losing two in a row, keeping things positive, keeping it rolling, keeping it light around the room. I think we're just a different team this year, and the league's starting to notice that… It's fun to be in South Florida."
It certainly is, Weegs.
Here are five takeaways from Monday's win in Sunrise…