The Florida Panthers could be without one of their key players for the rest of the season. News emerged on Monday afternoon that forward Brad Marchand will be out weeks. This is due to a lower-body injury, and this ailment could shut down the veteran forward for the rest of the season.
Florida Panthers coach Paul Maurice talks about Brad Marchand and more after practice today in Fort Lauderdale on the FHN YouTube Channel…
— GeorgeRichards (@georgerichards.bsky.social) 2026-03-09T18:05:55.311Z
Florida Panthers Forward Brad Marchand Could Out for Rest of the Season
There’s no exact moment as to when the Halifax, Nova Scotia native got hurt. However, head coach Paul Maurice confirmed that Marchand has been dealing with the injury for quite some time. Florida also didn’t disclose what injury Marchand has.
Marchand has played for the Boston Bruins and the Panthers across his 17-year NHL career. The 37-year-old forward has 27 goals and 27 assists for 54 points in 52 games in his first season with the Panthers. He’s been averaging 17 minutes and 44 seconds of ice time this season. Marchand has a Corsi for of 58.4 and a relative Corsi of 8.0.
The veteran forward has 451 goals and 583 assists for 1,034 points in 1,152 career games. Boston originally drafted him in the third round 71st overall of the 2006 NHL Draft.
He’s won a pair of Stanley Cups and was part of the Team Canada squad that finished first at the 4 Nations Face-Off and second at the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics.
What It Means
Florida has been ravaged by injuries for the entire season. The two-time defending champions lost captain Aleksander Barkov in the first practice of the season. Florida also played the first 50 games of the season without Matthew Tkachuk and lost Seth Jones.
The Panthers are 12 points out of the final Stanley Cup Playoffs with 19 games to play. Getting into the postseason will take some sort of miraculous run. It’ll be even harder without Marchand, who was the team’s second-leading scorer despite all the injuries he suffered.
Main photo by: Sergei Belski-Imagn Images