The Morning Call

Lightning look zapped

2-time defending champs running on fumes vs. Avs

- By Stephen Whyno

DENVER — It’s no secret the Lightning have played more hockey over the last two years than any other team in the NHL.

That may — finally — be taking a toll on the two-time defending champ Lightning against the Avalanche, who took a much shorter route to the Stanley Cup Final and lead the best-ofseven series 2-0 going into Game 3 on Monday in Tampa.

“The shot blocking, the groins, the hips, the cuts, the bruises, playing every second night: That’s the toll,” coach Jon Cooper said Sunday.

“And so when you get to the end, even though it doesn’t look like they’re banged up, they’re missing guys, we’re missing guys. We’ve got banged-up guys. That’s what the playoff toll does. It’s not what happened last year.”

What happened last year was the Lightning became the second franchise since the salary cap era began in 2005 to win the Cup back-to-back.

This year, they beat the Maple Leafs in seven games, swept the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Panthers and advanced to the Cup final by coming back to beat the Rangers in six.

The Lightning have played 67 postseason games since Aug. 1, 2020 — the most by one team over the span of three playoffs.

Because the pandemic pushed the 2020 playoffs into the summer and early fall, it’s all condensed more than normal. It would make sense for players to run out of gas.

“You’ve played an extraordin­ary amount of games, and playoff games are obviously just a little bit more physical, a little bit more everything as you play them,” said three-time Cup champion Justin Williams, who’s becoming an NHL Network analyst starting with Game 3. “As of right now, these guys are fading.

“Listen, they’ve played a lot of hockey, but once you get this far in the playoffs, you’re running mostly on adrenaline right now.

“You feel pretty good, and an excuse to have played too much hockey is one that I’m sure that they’re not prepared to use right now.”

The Lightning didn’t put themselves on the verge of becoming the NHL’s first three-peat champion since the Islanders of the early 1980s by making excuses.

Even after getting trounced 7-0 in Game 2 on Saturday night and looking unable to keep up with the speedy Avalanche, the players pointed to overcoming this same deficit against the Rangers in the Eastern Conference final as reason to believe this series isn’t close to being over.

“We’re in the same situation,” veteran winger Corey Perry said. “And we found a way to win Game 3 at the end of the game there. It rejuvenate­d us, it got us going again and now we’re going home.”

The Avalanche are already rejuvenate­d.

After finishing first in the West in the regular season, they swept the Predators in the first round, took out the Blues in six and then finished off another sweep of the Oilers to give themselves more than a week off before the start of the Stanley Cup Final.

It appears to be paying dividends with fresh legs and crisper plays.

“I think it’s physics that when you get rest you’re rested,” forward Mikko Rantanen said. “If you play every other day for a long period of time, it’s going to wear you down. But they’ve been here before, they’ve played too long seasons before, so we can’t think about that too much that we’re the fresh team.”

The Avalanche do look like the fresher team, and that has allowed them to keep up the pressure on the Lightning despite an experience disadvanta­ge at this stage of the playoffs.

The champions of the West have scored 11 goals, and amazingly not one has come from star forward Nathan MacKinnon.

The always-pushing-the-pace Avs are clicking on all cylinders, even with MacKinnon held in check and Nazem Kadri sidelined by a thumb injury.

They got here by flustering opponents into making mistakes, and that recipe is working again in the final.

The Lightning’s challenge now is to figure out how to counteract the situation they’re faced with. Motivation, at least, won’t be an issue.

“This time of year there’s only two teams and this is the best time of the year to play hockey and it’s the finals,” Perry said. “Why wouldn’t you want to be here? Why would you want to just say ‘Hey, we play a lot of hockey.’ There’s no point saying that.

“So we’re excited to be here. We want to be here.”

 ?? HARRY HOW/GETTY ?? Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevski­y takes a break during a timeout in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final.
HARRY HOW/GETTY Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevski­y takes a break during a timeout in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final.

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