Those aren’t the same Florida Panthers that won the last two Stanley Cups. Badly banged up and often lacking the mojo that carried them to hockey’s highest pedestal the last two years, the Panthers have sunk to last place in the hotly contested Atlantic Division.
But… entering this game, the Seattle Kraken and Florida Panthers—two teams with opposite outlooks about making the postseason this year thanks to a massive disparity in divisional makeup—were even in standings points at 69 (nice… we still make that joke, right?).
With that in mind, this game didn’t matter much for the highly injured Panthers, but it meant the world to the Kraken, who came in one point behind the San Jose Sharks for the last playoff spot in the Western Conference.
Seattle had its ‘A’ game in the second of back-to-backs and rolled to a 6-2 win. Here are Three Takeaways.
Takeaway 1: Everyone producing, suddenly
We should have taken the win Saturday at the Vancouver Canucks with a grain of salt, because the Canucks are… well… terrible. So there was probably a little something in the minds of fans going into Sunday’s game that the Kraken could return home to take on a better team and lay an egg similar to the several eggs they had laid in the four games prior to the Vancouver win.
Credit the players, though, because they came out flying in this one and dominated long swaths of the game.
With Bobby McMann inserted into the lineup on Saturday, coach Lane Lambert has made some tweaks to the forward lines, and suddenly the entire team has gone from “can’t buy a goal” mode to asking, “How many goals should I score tonight?”
After the top line of Matty Beniers, Jordan Eberle, and McMann each had three points in Vancouver, it was the third line of Kaapo Kakko, Shane Wright, and Berkly Catton and the fourth line of Ben Meyers, Freddy Gaudreau, and Ryan Winterton that carried the mail in this one.
“We were just talking about it,” Winterton said. “After the break, we weren’t playing the way we wanted to. I think frustration set in, and I think everyone wanted it. So it’s just a full-team effort, and this time of year, that’s what you’ve got to do.”
Kakko led the way against Florida with a goal and two assists.
🎶 HEYYYYY KAAPO KAKKO! 🚨
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) March 16, 2026
4-1 #SeaKraken. Dunn works it low, Kakko uses his long reach and waits out Tarasov.
Kraken are up to four players with two points tonight: Meyers, Winterton, Catton, and Kakko. pic.twitter.com/gZDNaRyyrz
His goal to put the game mostly out of reach at 4-1 was nice, taking a pass from Vince Dunn down low, then walking out to the front and using his long reach to wait out Daniil Tarasov and sweep it around the sprawling goaltender. But his play to set up Berkly Catton’s goal was even better.
Jamie Oleksiak had just made a spectacular play to steal the puck at the top of the left circle, stickhandle around two Panthers, and slide it to Kakko slicing down the slot. Kakko dangled through two defenders, then deked to his backhand and got rejected by Tarasov twice before Catton followed it up and scored.
“[Oleksiak and Kakko] made two great plays, and I just shoveled it in, basically,” Catton said. “That was a really great play by Kaapo, and luckily enough, it just popped out in the right spot.”
“[Kakko has] shown a lot more confidence,” Lambert added. “He’s owning pucks, doing things down low. He’s been really, really good, and it’s good to see those guys get rewarded tonight.”
And how about Oleksiak? Aside from that outstanding assist, he also jumped up in the play late in the game and scored for the second night in a row, bringing Seattle to an all-time record of 16-3-2 in games where the Big Rig scores.
Oleksiak joined a group of five players—along with Catton, Winterton, Meyers, and McMann—to have a goal and an assist in the game.
McMann has had plenty of shine lately on Sound Of Hockey, so we won’t focus on him here, but it is worth noting that his two points now put him at five points since joining the team in earnest. That’s quite the impressive start.
Takeaway 2: What a night for the PK
With McMann’s power-play goal late in the game to make it 5-1, and the penalty kill going 4-for-4, the Kraken officially won the special teams battle in this game.
But what’s not immediately obvious in that stat line is what the PK did in the middle of the second period. Chandler Stephenson and Eeli Tolvanen got called for back-to-back high-sticking penalties, giving Florida 57 seconds of 5-on-3 time and three straight minutes of power-play time.
The trio of Gaudreau, Adam Larsson, and Ryan Lindgren came up huge, using a face-off win to get an immediate clear, then maintaining a tight triangular formation to limit the Panthers to just two real looks in the 5-on-3. Joey Daccord made a great save on one of those two, and Anton Lundell missed wide on the other.
“It was really good,” Lindgren said. “It seemed like we did a really good job of being connected, we pressured when we could, and obviously Joe made some huge saves when he had to. So yeah, it was a critical point in the game, and we did a good job.”
Seattle was up 4-1 at the time, but who knows how much momentum could have swung if Florida had scored a goal or two in that stretch?
Takeaway 3: Good vibes are back
It’s just crazy what a difference a couple of days can make in the NHL. The Kraken went from riding high heading into the Olympic break to feeling like the sky was falling after losing six of eight after the break and dropping out of the playoff bubble.
Now, suddenly, after two good days, they’re right back in the picture and looking like they can play with anybody.
So… bring on the high-flying Tampa Bay Lightning on Tuesday.



Go Kraken!!!
Was there any word on Tolvanen after the game?
Didn’t ask. Didn’t notice he had left, so thanks for calling that out. I just watched his last “shift” with three minutes left in the third. He skated a loop around the offensive zone, then went right back to the bench and went down the tunnel.
His head looked like it may have smacked the ice a few moments earlier after a hard hit. Maybe we will find out today if he’s under a concussion protocol.
Ah thanks, Darren. The KHN broadcast noticed and pointed it out (the quick loop on the last shift, then down the tunnel). I would never have noticed otherwise. It came soon after a blind-side hit as he was trying to get off for a change.
I feel like he had a whiplash type fall to the ice. I’ll bet he’s being evaluated for concussion.
Let’s hope they take the Nashville loss plus these two games as the reminder to keep their foot on the gas.
These aren’t pee-wee games where you’re supposed to let your opponent feel good. Keep piling on the goals.
Impressive game, offensively they were clicking and we’ve been getting the better goaltending the last few games.
I personally cannot rate a teams performance based on beating last place teams. I am happy that they won and happy on how McMann is helping the team score. But, I will put enthusiasm on hold until they perform like that against top tier teams.
We only beat one last place team and one team solidly in the middle. You seem to already have forgotten the Carolina game. This right here is proof some people will never be happy.
we had the same number of points going into that game. the playoff push is way different in each conversation and how we talk about each team.
Kakko’s hands were amazing last night and Oleksiak doing his best to channel his inner Montour in back to back games. Catton also made some good plays and was aggressively going to the net – Wright continues to make plays without getting points. That line also looked good on the 2nd PP unit. Getting them going would be huge for the team.
I do wonder how McMann felt about the fan reactions for him. He definitely got some extra loud pops. So he got to see what it’s like to play in front of Kraken fans who can be great and get loud without the off ice scrutiny of Toronto and other hockey hot beds.
First home game for McMann.
These last two games are the proof that positive energy can turn around an entire team. I don’t care that the other teams are bottom dwellers. This is what they needed to get going. Now they need to lesson learn that shit and remember it.
Bring Melly back! Put him with Bobby-Mac
We’ve got a few years before we’ll be the jaded armchair coaches at the Leafs level. Lol
Kraken obviously play better when the guys settle down and just focus on the task in front of them. More of that, please!
I know we aren’t talking about McMann here, but it is interesting. I am a strong believer that one player (the right one or the wrong one) can change the dynamics of a team, not just because of how they personally play, but how their presence affects line combinations, etc. And it’s not always the one everyone thinks it should be. For example, it’s no secret I’m not a big Oleksiak fan (as a player…nothing personal of course) but it’s also very possible that removing him would have an over-weight negative impact on the performance of the team. So then I just need him to play well more consistently.
We play better when we try to score goals rather then try and sit back and play chess. That’s the biggest difference.
I don’t understand your take on Oleksiak, how can you assume that removing him would have a negative effect on the team? That’s seems just totally made up, yes possible but couldn’t you say that about any player on the team? Removing xxxxx could have a negative effect on the team…. I mean maybe we should just lock down the roster and ride everyone into retirement to play it safe?