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Have you heard a coach use that word around a pro sports team? Ever? But doesn’t it reflect what the Florida Panthers have built when held up against words slung by the other team leaders in town?
The last time was Jimmy Butler saying he was leaving Boot Camp Riley because he needed to get his "joy" back. Erik Spoelstra invoked steel mills with his "forge, forge, forge" obsessive mantra.
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Maurice was later asked about this joy, and he repeated how it’s not just from the players or a the byproduct of winning. It’s from the full work atmosphere inside the Panthers — the medical staff, the trainers, the communications people …
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The Heat’s top player the previous several years, Jimmy Butler, got into a nasty contract dispute that dominated this season and forced a trade. You can win with issues, as the Heat did with Butler in previous years. But to have aligned feelings inside a team like the Panthers? To have joy?Isn't that what sports should be? From owner to coach to player to water boy, to fan, shouldn't it be fun? Should it be like a boot camp or a steel mill?
It is.
This is how it looks and feels when everything aligns inside an organization from a star like Barkov to a dentist like Robins. That’s created a surprise emotion for a 58-year-old coach in his 27th NHL season:
Joy.