Boston Herald

Stamkos eager for Bolts return

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Steven Stamkos is back on the ice, eager to lead the Tampa Bay Lightning into the NHL playoffs.

The five-time All-Star missed the last three games of the regular season with a lower-body injury. He returned to practice this week and hopes to be ready tomorrow for the start of a first-round series against the New Jersey Devils.

“It was obviously tough,” said Stamkos, who watched the Lightning go 2-0-1 down the stretch to hold off the Bruins for the Atlantic Division title and No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference.

“You want to be in those games. But the more important games are now, and I just want to make sure I feel as good as possible heading into the playoffs,” the team’s second-leading scorer added. “Hopefully it keeps progressin­g and I can feel good.”

Stamkos, a two-time Rocket Richard Trophy winner, rebounded from missing most of last season with a knee injury to bolster the NHL’s most prolific offense with 27 goals and a career-high 59 assists for 86 points in 78 games.

The 28-year-old center anticipate­s a tough matchup against the young Devils, who won all three regular-season meetings between the teams.

“It doesn’t really matter where you finish (in the standings) any more. All these other teams are their own different animals come playoff time,” Stamkos said. “It’s a fresh start once you get into the playoffs. Regular season is regular season. We all know that.”

Stamkos’ health figures as a key to the series.

He missed 65 games after undergoing surgery to repair a lateral meniscus tear in his right knee last season, when the Lightning narrowly missed the playoffs. Two years ago, a blood clot discovered near his collarbone sidelined the center from late in the regular season until Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals, when Tampa Bay lost to eventual Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh.

The Lightning didn’t practice yesterday, but coach Jon Cooper said the team remained hopeful of having Stamkos back for Game 1 against the Devils.

Stamkos is optimistic, too, though with his history of injuries in recent seasons he has no illusions about being completely healthy when he returns.

“Listen, my body will never be 100 percent, regardless, going through the stuff I’ve been through,” the No. 1 overall pick from the 2008 draft said. “So there’s no point asking about percentage­s.”

Elsewhere in the NHL — Henrik Lundqvist played nearly all season with a bothersome left knee, the Rangers goaltender revealed on breakup day at the team’s practice facility. It is the same knee he injured last summer at the world championsh­ips while playing for Sweden.

“Physically, I’ve been dealing with a knee injury, pretty much all year,” Lundqvist said. “It’s been under control, but it’s definitely something I need to address now. I’ll meet with the doctors here, then (in the) next couple days, (have an) MRI, and make sure I do all the right things to be 100 percent when I start my training, preparatio­n for next season.”

Lundqvist, who finished 26-26-7, with a 2.98 goalsagain­st average and a .915 save percentage this season, suffered a Grade 1 sprain of the MCL in the knee in last year’s World Championsh­ip, but played through the pain and helped Sweden win the gold medal. He was fully healthy when the 201718 season began, he said, but he injured the knee early in the season and managed it from then on.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? SHOOTING FOR A CUP: Steven Stamkos hopes to be back on the ice tomorrow night when the Lightning open postseason play against the Devils.
AP PHOTO SHOOTING FOR A CUP: Steven Stamkos hopes to be back on the ice tomorrow night when the Lightning open postseason play against the Devils.

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