Flames End Panthers Points Streak With 6-0 Route

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CALGARY (CBSMiami/AP) — The red-hot Florida Panthers saw their 13-game points streak come to an end thanks in part to a player who caught fire for the host Flames.

Sam Bennett saw it as a step in the right direction. It was also a step into history.

The 19-year-old Bennett had a first-period hat trick and became the third youngest player in NHL history to score four goals in a game and the Calgary Flames beat the Panthers 6-0 on Wednesday night to give Florida its first regulation loss in 14 games.

"It's a great feeling," said Bennett, who has 10 goals this season. "It's big for my confidence. I knew I felt confident playing in this league and now I think I took another step in the right direction."

Jack Hamilton (Toronto, 1943-44) and Bobby Carpenter (Washington, 1981-82) are the only two players to score four times in a game at age 18, Elias Sports told The Canadian Press.

"Wow," exclaimed Flames coach Bob Hartley. "Right from the start of the game, he was flying out there. Very happy for him, a great performance, he played well. Here's a young kid that was working so hard, it's nice to see that he's getting rewarded."

Bennett is the first Flames player to score four goals in a game since Jarome Iginla on Feb. 23, 2003, according to the NHL. At 19 years and six months, he's the youngest Flame to get a hat trick.

Bennett had not had a goal in 47 days when he scored Monday against San Jose. Immediately after the goal, his first in 19 games, he made a gesture of removing a monkey off his back.

He wasted little time scoring in this one, one-timing a set-up from Jiri Hudler past Roberto Luongo just 56 seconds in.

Mikael Backlund centered the line between Bennett and Hudler and was impressed by how Bennett stayed positive during his goal-less stretch.

"He still played really well during his slump. For a young player, it's easy to just fade away. but he was being physical, was still making plays and was trying to score and it just didn't come," Backlund said.

Johnny Gaudreau and Mason Raymond also scored, and Jonas Hiller made 15 saves.

Florida had been the NHL's hottest team, going 12-0-1 since losing in regulation to Boston on Dec. 12. Playing their fifth game in nine days, the Panthers ran out of gas and were outshot 36-15.

"It's embarrassing," Panthers center Jonathan Huberdeau said. "Coming up here after a pretty good streak and being beat 6-0? It's not what we were hoping for. We didn't have a good start at all, we weren't ready, and they took advantage of us."

This was Hiller's first appearance since Dec. 12. He entered the night with an ugly .862 save percentage.

Gaudreau scored his 19th goal 5:52 into the game after his attempted centering pass deflected off a Panthers defender.

Bennett got his second with 7:59 left in the first when the puck slid under Luongo following Bennett's failed deke attempt.

Bennett completed his first NHL hat trick with 2:59 left when he backhanded the rebound from Deryk Engelland's shot under the crossbar to make it 4-0.

Roberto Luongo, replaced by Al Montoya to start the second period, yielded four goals on 15 shots.

Raymond steered a pass from David Jones past Montoya with 6:40 left in the second period.

For his final score, Bennett deked the puck between his own legs to work around a defender, then poked a backhand past Montoya with 25 seconds left in the game.

Notes: Florida coach Gerard Gallant missed the game after his mother died. Assistant coach Mike Kelly filled in. ... Panthers D Aaron Ekblad (concussion) missed his second game. ... Hudler (groin) returned after missing three games while Calgary C Joe Colborne was a healthy scratch. ... Florida's Jaromir Jagr and Aleksander Barkov both had five-game point streaks snapped.

(TM and © Copyright 2016 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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