Tkachuk brothers set for ‘healthy competition’ when Senators host Panthers
Tkachuk #Tkachuk
The mutual admiration society that is the Tkachuk family will be on display once again Monday.
Matthew Tkachuk and his Florida Panthers visit Brady Tkachuk and the Ottawa Senators at the Canadian Tire Centre with each Tkachuk brother and each team hungry for a victory.
The Panthers (12-7-1) have lost two in a row and are six points behind the Boston Bruins for first place in the Atlantic Division. The Senators (8-8-0) are eighth in the Atlantic and trying to keep pace in the race for a wild card in the Eastern Conference.
At this point, though, they are used to high stakes when they face each other in the NHL.
“We are each other’s biggest fan,” older brother Matthew said. “When we play against each other now, especially [being] in the same division, we have to beat each other, our teams have to win. It creates that healthy competition. It’s a very good relationship the two of us have.”
Now in their sixth season of going head-to-head in the best hockey league in the world, the brothers have learned to compartmentalize when they play each other.
They go hard against each other on the ice and it often gets heated. It is also mostly even.
They have played against one another 18 times in the NHL and each has won nine games. Each forward has scored six goals, including one on the power play. Brady has 25 penalty minutes, Matthew 23. Brady 62 shots on goal, one more than Matthew. Brady has a decided advantage in hits (64-31), but Matthew has 20 points to Brady’s 11.
Yet, it never spills over off the ice. There, they are staunch supporters of one another, displaying a bond that seems to intensify each season.
“I think he is the smartest player in the NHL,” Brady says. “How he sees the game, I don’t think anybody is up there with how he sees it. I think he is one of the best players in the NHL. I think everybody is finally starting to believe what I believed from Day One, that he has such an impact and is so good at what he does.”
Matthew, 25, is coming off a run to the Stanley Cup Final last season. He was injured in the Final against the Vegas Golden Knights and the Panthers lost in five games, but Matthew was the unquestioned star for his team in the postseason after an MVP-worthy regular season when he had an NHL career-high 109 points (40 goals, 69 assists).
Brady, 24, was around for some of that playoff run. He showed up for the bigger games and even helped his brother get to the rink for Game 4 after Matthew sustained a broken sternum in Game 3. Matthew played in Game 4 but couldn’t go in Game 5.
“Going into [Game 4], I was a little nervous. What he did in that game, trying to work around it, the pain, not many people can do that,” Brady said. “I was super proud of him sacrificing himself to get the job for his team and the city.
“Seeing how happy he made my family and how proud everyone was with what he did with that opportunity, I want that for me too. It created such a motivation. It’s an honor for him to be my brother and to learn from him.”
This season, after spending the offseason recovering from injury, Matthew has 17 points (three goals, 14 assists) in 20 games.
Brady has 15 points (10 goals, five assists) in 16 games and is giving his older sibling a run for personal bragging rights.
“On the ice, I’m probably more powerful, little better skater,” Brady says when asked for a comparison between he and his brother. “I don’t know, everything I do, I want to emulate him and emulate his game. I feel I’m starting to get there, but there’s a long way to go. He’s the perfect person to look up to on the ice.”
Matthew says that Brady already has “a way better” shot than him.
Brady is also the more physical player, each agrees.
“I don’t know if I’m much better than him at on-ice stuff anymore,” Matthew says.
They compete off the ice, too, but Matthew is ready to abdicate the crown there on almost every front except one.
“He’s probably like an overall genuinely better person than me, I’m more of a [jokester] than he is, more of an instigator,” Matthew says. “He’s probably overall just a genuinely nicer human being. I will work on that.”
Brady, meanwhile, says he can’t hold a candle to his older brother on the golf course.
“I still kick his [butt] every time we play,” Matthew said, laughing.
“I’ve got to figure that out,” Brady said.