Chicago Sun-Times

THE STANLEY CAP

Lightning captain Stamkos might not be the team’s best player anymore, but he’s still the undisputed leader

- BY FRED GOODALL

TAMPA, Fla. — Steven Stamkos, at 32 and wrapping up his 14th season, is no longer one of the NHL’s most prolific scorers or even the second- or third-best player on his own team.

The six-time All-Star and two-time “Rocket” Richard Trophy winner as the league’s leading goal scorer is the undisputed leader of the Lightning, though, and one of the reasons the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions are four wins away from the first three-peat in 40 years.

Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final is Wednesday night, with the Lightning facing the Avalanche after eliminatin­g the Maple Leafs, Panthers and Rangers to reach hockey’s biggest stage for the fourth time since 2015.

Stamkos has scored a team-leading nine goals in 17 games this postseason, including two in Tampa Bay’s 2-1 series-clinching victory against the Rangers in the Eastern Conference final.

“It’s not individual­s,’’ said Stamkos, the No. 1 overall pick from the 2008 NHL Draft. ‘‘It’s great to score a couple of goals in a huge game . . . . But if I didn’t score and we won, I would have been just as happy.

“That’s the way the guys are on our team. Each guy plays a part. And [the media] can discuss if it’s a big part or if it’s a little part. We know in the room that everyone plays a huge part in our group success. That’s why we have been so successful, because the guys in that room are truly like that.”

Nikita Kucherov, Victor Hedman, Andrei Vasilevski­y, Brayden Point, Ondrej Palat, Alex Killorn and Pat Maroon have played key roles in Tampa Bay winning back-toback titles and becoming the first team to make three straight appearance­s in the Stanley Cup Final since the Oilers from 1983 to 1985.

Stamkos has carried his share of the load, too, although he missed nearly all of the team’s championsh­ip run two years ago because of an injury. There have been plenty of times in the subsequent two seasons that his contributi­ons have been overshadow­ed by the play of some of the team’s younger stars.

Through it all, Stamkos keeps playing — and producing. He’s the Lightning’s career goals leader with 481 and earlier this season moved ahead of Hall of Famer Martin St. Louis to become the franchise’s career points leader with 972.

The Lightning are trying to become the first team to three-peat since the Islanders won four consecutiv­e titles from 1980 to 1983.

“Watching Stamkos’ growth — going from the 60-goal scorer and the young guy to the leader, the captain and the guy that people are rallying around — he’s got a lot of weight on the shoulders,” coach Jon Cooper said.

“He’s got to score; he’s got to lead; he’s got to be the face of the franchise. He’s got to do all these things.”

Missing all but one game of Tampa Bay’s 2020 championsh­ip run was one of the toughest stretches of Stamkos’ career. He appeared in that one game, logging 2:42 of ice time — yet still scored a goal — in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Stars.

The captain’s next appearance came after the team’s title-clinching win in Game 6, with Stamkos slipping into his uniform and returning to the ice for the trophy presentati­on and celebratio­n.

Scoring twice to eliminate the Rangers — with the winner delivered a mere 21 seconds after New York tied the game with a powerplay goal scored with Stamkos in the penalty box for holding — thrust him into the spotlight.

Cooper, who has the Lightning in the Cup Final for the fourth time, couldn’t be happier for him.

“Our first Cup run, he misses basically the whole thing,’’ Cooper said. ‘‘So, at some point, you want the light to shine on him. And it has in so many different ways.

“But in an eliminatio­n game, to not only score the first goal but to answer back 21 seconds after they scored, you’re so proud. He’ll be the first one to push the accolades to everybody else, but he had a hell of a series.”

That’s indeed what Stamkos tried to do. “There was a quiet confidence with this group like there usually is in tight moments like that,” Stamkos said.

“Each guy is just a part of the process. And that’s what makes this team so special and tight and unique. We don’t care how it gets done. You just need to get it done.”

 ?? JULIO AGUILAR/GETTY IMAGES ?? Steven Stamkos is the Tampa Bay Lightning’s career leader in goals and points.
JULIO AGUILAR/GETTY IMAGES Steven Stamkos is the Tampa Bay Lightning’s career leader in goals and points.

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