Los Angeles Kings – The Kings Ice

Throughout the year, the Sip Advisor will alphabetically travel the National Hockey League (NHL), discovering the best and worst each team has to offer in a variety of subjects. We will also feature a drink based off the franchise. Today, we hit the bright lights of Hollywood… or Hockeywood as it has come to be known, with a look at the Los Angeles Kings:

Establishment Story: The Kings joined the NHL in the 1967 expansion from six to 12 teams. Along with the Oakland Golden Seals, they became the first west coast teams in the league. A fan contest was held to name the team, with the winning entry being Kings, thanks to owner Jack Kent Cooke wanting the franchise to have “an air of royalty”. This is also why the team’s original colour scheme was purple and gold.

Stanley Cups: The Kings have won two Stanley Cups, in 2012 and 2014, defeating the New Jersey Devils and New York Rangers, respectively. Prior to that, they had only appeared in one Stanley Cup Final, losing to the Montreal Canadiens in 1993. The Wayne Gretzky years were supposed to bring more success, but the 1993 Finals appearance was preceded by playoff struggles and followed by not making the post-season at all.

Celebrity Fan: With the arrival of Wayne Gretzky in 1988, the Great Western Forum in Inglewood was the place to be, drawing many Hollywood celebrities to games. Actors such as John Candy and Alan Thicke (both transplanted Canadians) could regularly be seen at games, while Tom Cruise and Julia Roberts were spotted on occasion. Today, the likes of Will Ferrell and Snoop Dogg are supporters of the Kings.

Will Ferrell

Super Fan: Original fans who greeted the team at the airport as they arrived to move into their new Los Angeles home dubbed themselves the Kings Court. Supporters groups are still part of the Kings fan experience today, with an official club known as the Royal Army. Royal Army membership perks include a gift from the Kings, access to exclusive events and various discounts.

Mascot: Bailey is a lion, who debuted for the Kings in 2007. He wears jersey number 72, a reference to Los Angeles’ average temperature and was named after Garnet ‘Ace’ Bailey, who was the Kings Director of Pro Scouting, when he was aboard one of the flights crashed into the World Trade Center on 9/11. Previously, the Kings mascot was a snow leopard named Kingston, but it was introduced and retired within the same year in 1990.

Tradition: For a team that has existed since the 1967 expansion, I had a surprisingly tough time finding content to fill this section. The Kings current goal song is called Hey Hey by Twilight Trio, while a former track used to celebrate scores was Randy Newman’s I Love LA. For a time, each player on the Kings had their own goal song, with a mix of rap, country, pop and rock songs comprising the list.

Appearances in Media: The Kings have appeared in a couple of movies, including Tooth Fairy and The Love Guru, making Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson and Justin Timberlake fictional members of the team, as Derek ‘Tooth Fairy’ Thompson and Jacques ‘Le Coq’ Grande, respectively. Wayne Gretzky also rocked Kings paraphernalia in a couple skits as part of his Saturday Night Live hosting gig in May 1989.

Bailey

Events/Scandals: On October 20, 2014, defenseman Slava Voynov was arrested for domestic violence against his wife. He was immediately suspended by the NHL and later charged with a felony count for “corporal injury to a spouse”. In July 2015, Voynov plead guilty to a lesser misdemeanor charge and was sentenced to 90 days in jail and three years probation. In order to avoid deportation, Voynov voluntarily returned to Russia. His six-year, $25 million contract signed in June 2013 was terminated.

Rivalry: The Kings two biggest rivals are their fellow California clubs. First, there’s the Anaheim Ducks, as both teams play within the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Their feud is known as the Freeway Face-Off, as Interstate 5 separates the two locales. Next, is the San Jose Sharks, with the team’s rivalry being part of a Northern vs. Southern California comparison. The Kings beat both teams en route to the 2014 Stanley Cup.

Tragedy: During the 1978-79 season, forward Scott Garland played six games for the Kings, along with 45 contests for their American Hockey League affiliate, the Springfield Indians. That off-season, Garland was killed while driving in Montreal, Quebec, when he blew a tire and crashed into a retaining wall. Garland was only 27 years old. He had previously played for the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Player Nicknames: There are some pretty good nicknames from the Kings history. For example, Luc Robitaille was dubbed Lucky, while Bernie Nicholls – a personal favourite of mine from childhood, after he winked at me while watching the Kings warm up for a game against the Vancouver Canucks – was called Pumper, a reference to pumpernickel bread. More recent memorable monikers include The Colonel for Kyle Clifford and Mr. Game 7 for Justin Williams.

LA Rivals

Line: One of the most prolific lines in NHL history was the Triple Crown Line, comprised of Dave Taylor, Charlie Simmer and Marcel Dionne. The trio played together from 1979 to 1984, with the 1980-81 season being their most successful, as the unit combined for 328 points. They became the first line in NHL history with each player recording a 100-plus point season.

Captain: Dustin Brown played his entire 18-season career with the Kings, after being drafted 13th overall by the team in 2003. Brown was named captain in of the Kings in 2008 and held the mantle for both of their Stanley Cup championships. In 2016, the captaincy was passed to Anze Kopitar. In April 2022, Brown announced plans to retire following the playoffs and was named captain for his final regular season contest. He was honoured with a statue outside Crypto.com Arena on the night of his jersey retirement.

Enforcer: When Wayne Gretzky was traded to the Kings, he requested Marty McSorley be part of the deal, ensuring he had someone to watch his back coming along with him to Los Angeles. McSorley knew his role well, piling up a franchise single-season record 399 penalty minutes in 1992-93. McSorley also holds the Kings all-time penalty minute record with 1,846 over two stints with the club.

Family Values: From 1996 to 1998, brothers Jan and Roman Vopat were members of the Kings organization together. Similarly, brothers Mario and Adrian Kempe were both signed with the Kings in 2019, although Mario only played 16 games in the minors, before having his contract mutually terminated, while Adrian has been an NHL mainstay since 2017-18.

triple-crown-line

Returning Players: Luc Robitaille had three stints with the Kings. Drafted by the team in 1984, he spent the first decade of his career with the franchise. After stints with the Pittsburgh Penguins and New York Rangers, Robitaille returned to Los Angeles for four more seasons. Robitaille would then move to the Detroit Red Wings for two years, before retiring with the Kings in 2006, wearing the captain’s ‘C’ in his final game.

Short Stint: Jarome Iginla wrapped up his celebrated career with a 19-game stint with the Kings, after being traded to Los Angeles on March 1, 2017. Although he produced six goals and three assists in those contests, Iginla was not re-signed following the season. He announced his retirement on July 30, 2018. The run with the Kings allowed him a final appearance against the Calgary Flames, allowing fans to cheer for the former face of the franchise one more time.

Undrafted: Steve Duchesne was signed by the Kings in October 1984, debuting for the team for the 1986-87 season, where he would be named to the NHL All-Rookie Team. Duchesne played five seasons with Los Angeles, before bouncing around the league for a number of years. He played another 60 games with the Kings in 1998-99. Duchesne’s final three campaigns were spent with the Detroit Red Wings, where he would retire after winning the 2002 Stanley Cup.

Trade: Well, the deal that brought Wayne Gretzky to Los Angeles not only shook the NHL’s foundation, it also changed the entire North American sports landscape. So, I think that has to go here. Gretzky was acquired, along with Marty McSorley and Mike Krushelnyski, in exchange for Jimmy Carson, Martin Gelinas, $15 million and three first-round draft picks. The deal is cited as the reason the NHL was able to expand into much of the U.S. over the next decade.

Gretzky Trade

Signing: The Kings best free agent signing was Willie Mitchell, who they landed in 2010. Mitchell’s rugged defensive play greatly helped Los Angeles on their road to both the 2012 and 2014 Stanley Cups. Among the team’s worst signings were Simon Gagne and Ilya Kovalchuk. Gagne was signed to a two-year, $7 million deal, but only managed to appear in 45 games over those two seasons. Kovalchuk returned from Russia to join the Kings, before a messy contract termination in the second season of his three-year pact.

Draft Pick: The Kings have only selected first overall once in franchise history, when they picked Rick Pagnutti in 1967. Pagnutti never played in the NHL. The team has done well with the second overall pick, selecting Jimmy Carson (1986), Drew Doughty (2008) and Quinton Byfield (2020). Carson was used as part of the package to bring Wayne Gretzky to Los Angeles, while Doughty was a leader for the team’s two Stanley Cup championships. Byfield comes to the Kings as a highly-touted prospect.

Holdouts: Speaking of Drew Doughty, prior to the 2011-12 season, the star defenseman needed a new contract. A sticking point in the negotiations was the team not wanting to pay Doughty more than Anze Kopitar’s $6.8 million per year. With the regular season fast approaching – Doughty missed most of the Kings pre-season – the sides finally settled on an eight-year, $56 million deal ($7 million per year), going on to win the 2012 Stanley Cup.

Buyouts: After two seasons with the Kings, defenseman Dion Phaneuf was bought out of the final two seasons of his seven-year, $49 million contract, signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs on December 31, 2013. The buyout was split between Los Angeles and the Ottawa Senators, who had retained 25 per cent of Phaneuf’s salary, when they traded him to Los Angeles. The Kings paid Phaneuf $4.25 million over four years.

Drew Doughty

Unique Game: On September 27, 1991, the NHL staged an outdoor pre-season game in Las Vegas, Nevada. The contest took place between the Kings and the New York Rangers, played on a rink constructed on the parking lot of the Caesars Palace resort. This was the NHL’s first outdoor game and it saw the Kings win 5-2. Temperatures reached as high as 95 °F (35 °C). A rematch between the teams was scheduled for two days later in Charlotte, North Carolina, but was cancelled due to unsafe ice conditions.

Goal: A number of Wayne Gretzky goals remain highlights for the franchise. These include breaking Gordie Howe’s all-time points (1989 – assisting on a Bernie Nicholls marker) and all-time goals (1994) records. There’s also Alec Martinez’s double overtime winner, clinching the 2014 Stanley Cup for the Kings and Daryl Evans OT tally, completing the 1982 Miracle on Manchester triumph, the largest comeback victory in NHL playoff history.

Fight/Brawl: During Game 2 of the Kings 1981 playoffs series against the New York Rangers, a bench-clearing brawl broke out at the end of the first period. The resulting chaos included players not dressed for the game getting involved, such as Nick Fotiu of the Rangers coming down from the stands in a suit to join the fray. Fotiu wasn’t in the lineup because he was serving an eight-game suspension for previously going into the stands to fight fans. The Kings won the game, but the Rangers won the series.

Injury: Tony Granato’s career was almost ended in January 1996, when following a game against the Hartford Whalers, bleeding was discovered on his brain. It did mark the end of Granato’s time with the Kings, but the winger was able to return with the San Jose Sharks the following season. Sadly, head injuries did prematurely end the career of Adam Deadmarsh during the 2002-03 campaign.

Caesars Palace Game

Penalty: During Game 2 of the 1993 Stanley Cup Finals, the Kings were up 2-1 in the game and 1-0 in the series. All was going well until Montreal Canadiens coach Jacques Demers asked for a check of Marty McSorley’s stick. McSorely’s stick had an illegal curve and he was given a minor penalty. Montreal scored the tying goal on that power play and won the game in overtime, going on to win Game 3-5 and clinch the Stanley Cup.

Wildest Story: The Kings went through some serious turmoil in the mid 1990s, when owner Bruce McNall was levied with conspiracy and fraud charges after he swindled six banks of $236 million over 10 years. McNall was sentenced to 70 months in prison, with the Kings ultimately forced to declare bankruptcy in 1995. In the end, you can’t the guy too much, given he was partly responsible for bringing the movie Weekend at Bernie’s to the world as a producer.

Blooper: Although Jonathan Quick is arguably the greatest goalie the Kings have ever had, we all make mistakes. On October 7, 2013, against the New York Rangers, Quick came out of his net to play a puck dumped in from his own zone by Ryan McDonagh of the Rangers. As Quick lost his stick, the puck ricocheted off his blocker and into the net, making for an easy goal. Quick was understandably upset at the gaffe, which became the insurance tally in a Rangers 3-1 win.

Miscellaneous: In September, the Kings will take part in the first ever NHL games to take place in the Southern Hemisphere, when they play two pre-season contests against the Arizona Coyotes in Melbourne, Australia, as part of the 2023 NHL Global Series. Los Angeles has also played international games – mostly exhibition matches – in Austria, the United Kingdom, Germany, Sweden, and China.

Los Angeles Kings: The Kings Ice

The Kings Ice

  • Rim glass with Sugar
  • Sage Leaves
  • 1.5 oz Vodka
  • 0.5 oz Elderflower Liqueur
  • Splash of Lime Juice
  • Dash of Simple Syrup
  • Garnish with a Sage Leaf

This cocktail comes from the Tipsy Diaries blog. I haven’t worked a whole lot with sage as an ingredient, but I liked the earthiness it brought to this cocktail. The drink can be served either on the rocks or martini style.

Florida Panthers – Florida Panther

Throughout the year, the Sip Advisor will alphabetically travel the National Hockey League (NHL), discovering the best and worst each team has to offer in a variety of subjects. We will also feature a drink based off the franchise. Today, we make our way to the Sunshine State to learn about the Florida Panthers and their ratty history:

Establishment Story: The Panthers joined the NHL as an expansion team in 1993, along with the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. The franchise’s original owner was Wayne Huizenga of Blockbuster Video, who also founded Major League Baseball’s Florida Marlins and owned a share of the National Football League’s Miami Dolphins. Panthers was chosen as the team’s nickname because the big cat is an endangered species of the Florida Everglades area.

Stanley Cups: The Panthers have no Stanley Cups to their name. Twice in their history, they have made Cinderella runs to the Stanley Cup Finals, only to be swept by the Colorado Avalanche in 1996 and defeated in five games by the Vegas Golden Knights in 2023. Florida won their first Presidents’ Trophy in 2022, given to the team who finishes the regular season with the best overall record.

Celebrity Fan: Musician Ariana Grande has been a fan of the Panthers since childhood, when she attended games with her father. Grande even sang the U.S. National Anthem prior to a Florida game when she was only eight years old. Apparently, Grande was twice hit with pucks at Panthers games as a kid. She was also photographed by a newspaper riding the Zamboni at a game when she was five.

Ariana Grande

Super Fan: Matt Fagan, known as x-Superfan on Twitter, has been a Panthers supporter since the earliest days of the franchise and a season ticket holder since 2000, where he can be easily recognized by the red cape he wears to games. When the team is on the road, he watches from his viewing room, dubbed the Panther Den. Fagan was named the Panthers first 7th Man honouree in 2003.

Mascot: The Panthers have a rare pair of costumed crowd pleasers with Stanley C. Panther and Viktor E. Rat. Stanley C. is named as a reference to the Stanley Cup and debuted with the rest of the team in 1993. Victor E. is a play on the word victory, with the rodent joining the franchise in 2014. While the two mascots differ on most subjects, one thing they agree on is their affection for the movie Slapshot.

Tradition: Prior to the Panthers opening game of the 1995-96 season, a rat scurried across the team’s dressing room, before it was killed by forward Scott Mellanby. That night, Mellanby scored two goals in a winning effort. Goalie John Vanbiesbrouck called the performance a Rat Trick, playing off the hat trick hockey feat. That season, the team’s run to the Stanley Cup Finals featured thousands of toy rats rained onto the ice after each goal.

Appearances in Media: It ain’t much, but in the 2010 film Tooth Fairy, starring Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson, the Panthers are the opposing team when Johnson’s character finally makes the NHL as a member of the Los Angeles Kings. Not only that, but Johnson scores a goal against the Panthers. Other than that, I can’t find any other popular culture appearances for the franchise.

Panthers Mascots

Events/Scandals: While the Chicago Blackhawks sex assault scandal was emerging in 2021, Joel Quenneville was coach of the Panthers. He was the coach of the Blackhawks at the time of the 2010 assault and was cited as being vocal about keeping the incident quiet. Quenneville, who had led the Panthers to a perfect 7-0-0 record to start the season, was forced to resign from his post and has remained outside the NHL since.

Rivalry: The Battle of Florida, between the Panthers and Tampa Bay Lightning, has always existed, but it’s heated up in the last couple seasons, as the Lightning made three straight Stanley Cup Finals from 2020-2022, winning two championships in that time, while the Panthers have risen to the top of the league and become top contenders. At times, the team that wins the season series has received a trophy with varying names.

Tragedy: The 2018 mass school shooting in Parkland, Florida didn’t directly affect members of the Panthers, but it shook the entire community. Members of the organization lived in Parkland and the team’s practice facility is located nearby. At the Panthers next home contest, a pre-game memorial was held for the 17 victims, capped by goalie Roberto Luongo delivering an emotional speech.

Player Nicknames: When center Noel Acciari joined the Panthers for the 2019-20 season, he was dismayed to learn there were no cookies offered as part of the team’s pre-game meal catering. The nickname ‘Cookie’ was then bestowed upon him by teammate Keith Yandle. Acciari got in on the new moniker, dressing as the Cookie Monster for the team’s Halloween party, while his wife went as a cookie.

Panthers Season

Line: One of the Panthers greatest lines in franchise history was dubbed the Russian Line. The unit saw Canadian Ray Whitney (who had been nicknamed Ray Whitney-ov during his time playing with Igor Larionov and Sergei Makarov with the San Jose Sharks) along with Russians Viktor Kozlov and Pavel Bure. The trio was formed for the 1999-2000 campaign, with each player enjoying their best offensive outputs with the Panthers. Bure even earned a Hart Trophy nomination for his season.

Captain: Aleksander Barkov was named captain of the Panthers prior to the 2018-19 season, leading them through the most successful stretch in the franchise’s history. The Panthers have made the playoffs in four of Barkov’s five campaign’s at the helm and won their only Presidents’ Trophy during his reign. Barkov is signed to the Panthers through the 2029-30 season, so he should lead the club for some time to come.

Enforcer: Paul Laus came to Florida in the 1993 Expansion Draft, making his NHL debut that season. Laus would play the rest of his career with the Panthers, racking up a franchise record 1,702 penalty minutes. The cult favourite even co-captained the team for a season. In 1996-97, Laus set an NHL record with 39 fighting majors in 77 games. He was also the last original member of the Panthers, before retiring in 2002.

Family Values: For what would be Pavel Bure’s final season (2001-02) with the Panthers, the team brought in his younger brother Valeri. Unfortunately, both siblings suffered various injuries, limiting how much they got to play together. During the same season, brothers Jeff and Brad Norton also played parts of the year with the Panthers. For the 2022-23 campaign, brothers Eric and Marc Staal played for Florida.

Aleksander Barkov

Returning Players: Perhaps the greatest player in franchise history, Roberto Luongo returned to the Panthers after his stint with the Vancouver Canucks. Luongo first joined the Panthers in 2000-01, a mere 24 games into his NHL career. He would play the next five seasons with the team, growing into one of the best goalies in the league. Luongo would return at the 2014 trade deadline, before retiring as a member of the Panthers in 2019.

Short Stint: Two of the three pieces dealt to Florida from Vancouver, in exchange for Roberto Luongo, lasted only one season with the team. Todd Bertuzzi played a mere seven games with the Panthers, following surgery on a herniated disc, before being dealt to the Detroit Red Wings at the 2007 trade deadline. Meanwhile, Alex Auld was supposed to replace Luongo as Florida’s starting goalie, but lost the job to Ed Belfour and left the club following 27 games.

Undrafted: Defenseman Dan Boyle signed with the Panthers in March 1998, following four years of college hockey. After working his way through Florida’s developmental system, Boyle was traded to the Tampa Bay Lightning, where he would be a key component of their 2004 Stanley Cup championship. Boyle finished his career with 1,093 games played and an Olympic gold medal with Canada in 2010.

Trade: The best and worst trades in Panthers history all revolve around goaltender Roberto Luongo. Both times the team icon was brought to Florida (2000 and 2014) are among the best swaps the organization ever made, while his 2006 exit from the Panthers did little to improve the team’s fortunes. Other notable deals include the acquisition of franchise players such as Pavel Bure and Matthew Tkachuk.

Roberto Luongo

Signing: The Panthers 2023 Stanley Cup Finals run did much to repair goalie Sergei Bobrovsky’s popularity in Florida, but prior to this, the seven-year, $70 million contract he signed in 2019 was much derided, as the highest paid active NHL netminder had lost the top job to other goalies. Another bad signing was Dave Bolland at $27.5 million over five years. Bolland played two injury-plagued seasons before being forced to retire.

Draft Pick: Over a four-year span, the Panthers built a team core that propelled them to their early 2020s success, selecting Jonathan Huberdeau (3rd overall in 2011), Aleksander Barkov (2nd overall in 2013) and Aaron Ekblad (1st overall in 2014). Another first overall pick for the franchise was Ed Jovanovski in 1994. Jovanovski would later be used as part of the package to bring Pavel Bure to Florida, returning to the franchise for the final three seasons of his career.

Holdouts: Upon being acquired from the Calgary Flames in the 2001 off-season, Valeri Bure was in need of a new contract. He was coming off a season of 27 goals and 55 points and had tallied career highs of 35 goals and 75 points the year before that. The team and player couldn’t agree on a new deal, causing Bure to sit out the start of Florida’s training camp, before finally signing a pact.

Buyouts: The biggest buyout in Panthers history was the $4.96 million payment to Keith Yandle, to get out of the final two seasons of the seven-year, $44.45 deal he signed with the team in 2016. Yandle was chasing the NHL iron man record at the time of his release, only 42 games behind Doug Jarvis, who had held the streak record since 1986. Yandle signed with the Philadelphia Flyers for the 2021-22 campaign, passing Jarvis on January 25, 2022, and retiring at the end of that season.

Bobrovsky

Unique Game: On September 23, 2006, the NHL presented a pre-season game in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The contest – the first ever NHL tilt played in the Caribbean – pitted the Panthers against the New York Rangers, with the Rangers winning 3-2. Tickets to the game sold poorly, with only about 5,000 people (many of them children bused in from housing projects to fill seats) turning out to the 18,500-seat Jose Miguel Agrelot Coliseum.

Goal: Matthew Tkachuk scored a number of clutch goals during the Panthers 2023 playoff run. Perhaps most notable was his winner in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, in the fourth overtime period, the sixth longest game in NHL history. Tkachuk would also score the winning goal in Game 4 of that series with mere second remaining in regulation, sending Florida to the finals.

Fight/Brawl: With fighting increasingly disappearing from the NHL, it was a throwback of sorts to see Alex Petrovic of the Panthers and Evander Kane of the Buffalo Sabres battle three times during one February 2016 game. The combatants dropped the gloves twice in the second period and once more in the third. Following that final tilt, both players were ejected from the game, which Florida won 7-4.

Injury: On February 10, 2008, Panthers captain Olli Jokinen lost his balance behind the Buffalo Sabres net. This resulted in his skate coming up and cutting the common carotid artery of teammate Richard Zednik. Zednik quickly left the ice and was treated by paramedics and the Sabres team doctor, before being transported to hospital. Zednik missed the rest of the season recovering, but returned for the following campaign.

Matthew Tkachuk

Penalty: The Rat Trick tradition has stood the test of time, still being utilized by Panthers fans to this day. However, when fans celebrated the 20th anniversary of the event in 2016, littering the ice with rubber rats when the home team scored, Florida was twice assessed delay of game penalties. The Panthers still managed to win the contest 3-2, but players were frustrated that fan behaviour could cost them.

Wildest Story: The Panthers have endured a fair bit of dysfunction during their 30-year history. Imagine how much crazier things would have been if Donald Trump were the team’s owner. This almost happened in the late 1990s, when Wayne Huizenga looked to sell the franchise and the Trump Organization made inquiries. In the end, team president Bill Torrey was tasked with finding local ownership for any deal.

Blooper: After being scored on during a November 2009 game, defenseman Keith Ballard looked to take his frustration out on the goal post. Except when Ballard swung his stick, he accidentally hit his own goalie Tomas Vokoun in the head instead. Vokoun had to be taken off the ice on a stretcher and a cut on his ear required stitches to repair. Ballard apologized profusely and Vokoun later laughed off the incident.

Miscellaneous: Disgraced actor Kevin Spacey was once associated with the Panthers. During the 2015-16 season, the MVP of the game for Florida was given a hoodie that featured Spacey’s head floating in space. The team also sold the shirts at home games, donating the proceeds to charity. Spacey acknowledged the tradition and appeared at a game donning the hoodie. This all took place before Spacey was accused of sexual misconduct in October 2017.

Florida Panthers: Florida Panther

Florida Panther

  • 1 oz Tequila
  • 1 oz Orange Vodka
  • 1 oz Melon Liqueur
  • Top with Lemon-Lime Soda
  • Dash of Grenadine
  • Garnish with a Maraschino Cherry

While this cocktail is more for the animal than the hockey team, I thought I’d give it a try. Another cocktail that caught my eye was the Rumberto. Named after Roberto Luongo, the drink is a basic rum and cola recipe, which was served at all FLA Live Arena bars for Luongo’s jersey retirement in March 2020.