Dallas Stars center Joe Pavelski played in the Stanley Cup Final in 2016 but has never played for a Cup winner and his career is quickly winding down. LM Otero/Associated Press

Joe Pavelski and Brent Burns made the playoffs seven times together as teammates in San Jose, reaching the conference finals and getting all the way to the Stanley Cup Final in 2016 under Peter DeBoer. Zach Parise captained New Jersey to the final in 2012.

All those runs ended in defeat.

Pavelski and Ryan Suter are now teammates playing for DeBoer all over again, now with Dallas, Parise, after several years alongside Suter in Minnesota, is now with rival Colorado and Burns is the No. 1 defenseman for Carolina.

They are among the oldest and most experienced veterans in the NHL playoffs this year who have never hoisted the Stanley Cup, a group that would love to join the likes of Ray Bourque and Lanny McDonald and win a championship as retirement nears.

Pavelski has played over 1,500 regular-season and playoff games with the Sharks and Stars since making his debut in the league in 2006. He was the postseason’s leading goal-scorer eight years ago, tied for the most games played in the 2020 playoff bubble and is one of the most admired forwards of his generation.

“Joe, he’s the ultimate pro,” Dallas General Manager Jim Nill said. “He just does everything right. He’s done that his whole career.”

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Injuries have hampered the Wisconsin native along the way, including a concussion in the first-round opener last year. He turns 40 in July, when he will again be a free agent, so this may or may not be his last shot at the Cup.

“You still want it, and you still want an opportunity,” Pavelski said. “And we have a great opportunity here, and guys are playing good. They’re guys that have that understanding this is a great chance.”

No active player has played more games in this league without a championship than Ryan Suter, a dependable defenseman in Nashville, then Minnesota and now Dallas. His 40th birthday is in January. Unlike Pavelski, he is signed through next season.

Maybe the difference for Suter, who averages about 19 minutes per game, will be DeBoer, who is looking to take a third organization to the final and win it for the first time. It doesn’t hurt to have young teammates like Miro Heiskanen and Esa Lindell leading the way on the blue line, and the addition of trade deadline pickup Chris Tanev, to allow Suter to play his best when the situations arise.

A late entrant in this category after signing with the Avalanche in late January just before the All-Star break, Zach Parise could have walked away after not playing more than half the season, proud of a lengthy career that includes an Olympic silver medal in 2010.

Instead, Parise joined a contender that could again ride MVP front-runner Nathan MacKinnon and Norris Trophy candidate Cale Makar to a championship, which would be the franchise’s second in three years. The 39-year-old Parise understands how big a challenge that is 12 years after his trip to the final with the Devils.

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“There’s a deeper appreciation for how hard it is,” said Parise, whose birthday is in July. “I always look back to my first few years in Jersey, we made it to the second round, I think, three years in a row. You’re like, ‘OK, natural progression, we’ll get to third round.’ And then all of a sudden, you get bounced a couple of times the first round. You just don’t know. It’s hard.”

Larger than life with his massive beard, Brent Burns remains an imposing force at 6-foot-5 and 230 pounds with a cannon of a shot. He turned 39 last month and is in his second season with the Hurricanes, who were swept by Florida in the East final last year.

This may be his best shot at the title since 2016 with San Jose, especially after Carolina acquired Jake Guentzel and Evgeny Kuznetsov at the trade deadline to fill needs up front. Burns provides the firepower from the back and averages nearly 22 minutes a game.

The Toronto Maple Leafs have nearly a full roster of players who haven’t won the Cup. The oldest is Mark Giordano, who will turn 41 in October and is almost certainly in his final season.

Giordano won the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman in 2018-19 near the end of his time in Calgary. He was the first and (and still only) captain in Seattle’s young franchise history and, like Pavelski, is a hard-nosed competitor with great respect around the league.

PANTHERS: Bill Zito has been promoted by Florida, with the team announcing that its general manager will now also serve as the team’s president of hockey operations.

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The promotion came with a multi-year contract extension, the terms of which were not revealed by the reigning Eastern Conference champions.

Zito’s arrival four years ago sparked a massive turnaround by the Panthers, who have made the playoffs in all four of his seasons leading the front office – a streak unlike any other in club history – and have won more than half their games in all four of those seasons. In the 26 seasons before Zito, Florida had a total of three seasons where it won more than 50% of its games.

“Obviously on a personal level, I’m thrilled and honored,” Zito said. “And I’m grateful to be able to continue to try to keep building and keep pursuing the goal of making this a destination franchise.”

It’s another example of the Panthers locking up talent for years to come, with one of owner Vincent Viola’s mandates being to assure the fan base that what’s being built in Florida is being built to last for many years.

Among those in Florida with long-term deals: Matthew Tkachuk, Aleksander Barkov, Gustav Forsling, coach Paul Maurice, and now, the guy who got all those contracts done with the Panthers.

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