MIAMI — Send the New York Rangers outdoors, and they become unbeatable.
Mika Zibanejad had a hat trick, Artemi Panarin scored twice and the Rangers beat the Florida Panthers 5-1 on Friday night in the Winter Classic — the first outdoor game played in the Sunshine State.
Alexis Lafrenière had three assists, and Igor Shesterkin stopped 36 shots for the Rangers, who improved to 6-0-0 in outdoor games. Zibanejad added two assists, giving him the first five-point outdoor game in NHL history.
«It’s been amazing,» Zibanejad said. «It was a great effort. Not a whole lot of shots on goal, but we got it done.»
Sam Reinhart scored for Florida, which was playing outdoors for the first time and lost for the fourth time in its past six games. The Panthers gave up goals to Zibanejad and Panarin 64 seconds apart late in the first period, giving New York a 2-0 lead, and the Rangers kept control the rest of the way.
Zibanejad’s third goal was an empty-netter with 1:28 left. Rangers fans tried throwing hats to no avail; the seats were too far from the ice for any of them to get close to the playing surface.
The roof was open, as were the huge window panels behind what typically is left field at loanDepot Park — home of Major League Baseball’s Miami Marlins. There was some artificial snow falling from the edges of the stadium, there were blasts of fire and after years of planning, there was hockey on a baseball field.
Did it work? Outdoor ice typically doesn’t hold up with temperatures in the 60s, and there were some player complaints that the surface wasn’t conducive to speedy play. But it worked well enough for the Rangers, who were 4-6-3 in their past 13 games coming into Friday.
The game-time temperature of 63 degrees Fahrenheit (17 Celsius) was the second warmest of any of the NHL’s 44 outdoor games that have counted in the standings. It was 2 degrees cooler than Feb. 27, 2016, when Detroit beat Colorado at Denver’s Coors Field, home of the Colorado Rockies.
Seth Jones made the team earlier Friday, as did injured Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk.
Tkachuk placed an American flag over Jones’ shoulders, and the crowd roared.
It was a spectacle, as expected. The Rangers showed up in all-white outfits, as if it were a beach day. The Panthers came with a «Miami Vice» theme, wearing white suits, pastel shirts and even showing up in Ferraris instead of a bus.
«If you would have asked me 25 years ago … this might be the last place that I thought it would take place,» Rangers coach Mike Sullivan said. «So, I just think it speaks volumes for technology and its advancements and the ability to put a sheet of ice down in this type of environment.»















