June 30, 2025 - BY Admin

Sam Bennett discusses signing extension with Panthers: 'Being in South Florida has completely changed my life'

The Sam Bennett free agency saga wasn’t quite the spectacle that some thought, and hoped, it would be.


Any potential drama and intrigue hit its peak when Bennett was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy after helping the Florida Panthers win their second straight Stanley Cup.


The then-pending unrestricted free agent was going to have stacks of money thrown at him when July 1 arrived.


Teams were being named as the best potential destinations for the former fourth overall pick as Bennett, since arriving in Florida after a Trade Deadline deal in 2021, had reached his potential as a game-changing NHL star.


“As soon as I got here, I think I exploded into this player that I always knew that I could be one day,” Bennett said. “I didn't really know how much success we would have, but I knew that I loved the opportunity I was getting. I think year by year, my game just improved more and more, and then once we got to (Paul Maurice) and that coaching staff, my game just…it didn't change, but I changed the way I looked at the game and played it a little bit different style. I think it just it helped me so much, just playing a little bit harder hockey, more defensive-minded, and it really just helped my overall game and really turned me into the player that I am now.”


It had taken longer than some had thought, but Bennett has become exactly what he was projected to be as a former top pick.


The combination of Bennett’s speedy, skilled and physical style of play with Maurice’s five-man defensive systems has led to his game reaching their current heights.


Entering free agency, the situation couldn’t have been set up better for Bennett to cash in with a massive contract.


But after winning the Stanley Cup for a second straight season, Bennett couldn’t seem to keep to himself how badly he wanted to remain with the Panthers.


During a celebration party at popular Downtown Miami nightclub E11EVEN, Bennett famously proclaimed “I ain’t f---ing leaving,” while channeling his inner Wolf of Wall Street.


“My agent wasn't too happy with me after that, but I knew that I wanted to be here, and I was pretty confident that it was going to get done,” Bennett said. “Obviously, you never know, things can change, and it had to be the right fit for both me and the team. We obviously came to that solution, so I couldn't be happier.”


That solution Bennett mentioned was the eight-year, $64 million deal he signed to stay with the Panthers.


The deal was finalized on Friday, less than two weeks after Florida beat the Edmonton Oilers in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final.


“Being in South Florida has completely changed my life,” Bennett said. “I love playing hockey there, I love living there, I love the team, the staff, the owners, just everything about it, it's really the dream situation. So I couldn't pass up the chance to be back here for another eight years.”


Bennett’s decision to remain with the Panthers despite likely getting more money elsewhere is testament to the team that has been built in South Florida.


Like many of his teammates, Bennett wanted to keep the band together without trying to milk every last penny out of the Panthers. That way, the team could reinvest those funds in the rest of the roster, keeping Florida as one of the deepest teams in the league.


“It's certainly a balance,” said Bennett. “You’ve got to weigh a bunch of things, and I think how much we enjoy our life here is a huge factor. Obviously you’ve got to get the number that you feel comfortable with, but really, just how much we enjoy our life, how much we enjoy coming to the rink every day. There's been times, you know, earlier in my career where I didn't enjoy it as much, and I certainly don't take it for granted now, coming to the rink every day with the with a smile and just being happy to be here and happy to play for this team.”


Bennett now joins Sasha Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Reinhart, Seth Jones, Carter Verhaeghe, Gus Forsling and Anton Lundell as players who are signed through at least the end of the decade.


That’s a pretty solid core.


Stanley Cup-worthy, some might say.


“This is the core that's been here for the last three, four years, and we've had so much success, I don't see why we can't continue it,” said Bennett. “I think we're all so committed to the same goal of winning and doing whatever it takes and putting in the hard hours to do what it takes to win. So, yeah, this is the core that I want to be with.”