Orlando Sentinel

Bellemare hopes to make most of return to Final

- By Mari Faiello

TAMPA — Forward PierreEdou­ard Bellemare had his choice of teams when it came time to decide where he wanted to continue his NHL career this past offseason.

Coming off a second-round ouster following a Presidents’ Trophy-winning season with the Colorado Avalanche, the veteran heard from at least eight playoff teams as he entered free agency.

Though the Lightning weren’t initially in the mix, Bellemare didn’t have to give the idea of playing with the back-to-back Stanley Cup champions much thought.

“I was shocked when they decided to come,” Bellemare said. “It was kind of like, ‘OK, you know what? Maybe that’s a sign. Maybe we should just get a change.’ ”

So far, the change has paid off. Bellemare left Colorado after two seasons and signed a two-year deal with Tampa Bay at an average annual value of $1 million at the start of free agency in July.

Now he’s facing his former team in the Stanley Cup Final starting Wednesday night in Denver.

“I’m obviously excited,” said Bellemare, 37. “You work so hard. When we [Vegas] went there [to the Final in 2018], ... you try to make a point of understand­ing that this is not something that happens every day, and it took a long time before I even got the honor to be able to compete for it. So I’m going to do the same: try to take it all in and just get the body ready for the biggest war.”

When Bellemare learned the Lightning were interested in him, he didn’t feel he needed to have a conversati­on with general manager Julien BriseBois to comprehend the organizati­on’s mentality.

“I understood that the team just won twice, and there is no chance that they’re going to

back down,” Bellemare said. “So if I can have the privilege to go play for that team, why not try it, right?

“At the end of the day, I am paid to do the best thing I know ... and now I’m here. And on top of that, I can choose to go to a team that wants to win the Cup. So I made a decision. And we’re really proud of it.”

In 2017-18, Bellemare was part of a Golden Knights team that advanced to the

Stanley Cup Final in its inaugural season. They made it past the Kings, Sharks and Jets before the run came to an end with a five-game loss to the Capitals.

The missed opportunit­y weighed on Bellemare for two weeks after he and his teammates went through the post-series handshake line. Now he uses the memory as motivation.

“When you don’t achieve something that you work so hard for and you’d never thought in your entire life that you could even get a chance to play for it, then

you get in there ... and then you don’t win it, then you have to go through a phase where you’re pissed and stuff mentally,” Bellemare said.

“And at that point, the emotion between regrets and being mad and all of it is kind of a big bowl of negativity. So you kind of have to go and swallow it and use that as an anger to be able to move on and to be better, right?”

Bellemare, one of five players on the Lightning roster who have yet to hoist the Cup (along with Riley Nash, Brian Elliott, Nick Paul and Brandon Hagel), wants to make the most of every shift, knowing the opportunit­y may never come again.

“What I experience­d in [the 2018 final] was not fun,” Bellemare said, “because it felt like at times you did the right thing but you didn’t get rewarded . ...

“So you understand that every shift could be the deciding factor, pretty much, and enjoy every single moment because it took me a long time to be able to get the opportunit­y to go back into the Stanley Cup Final. And this is the holy grail for all of us.”

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA/AP ?? Lightning left wing PierreEdou­ard Bellemare (41) defends against Rangers center Mika Zibanejad (93) during the Eastern Conference finals that the Lightning won in 6 games.
CHRIS O’MEARA/AP Lightning left wing PierreEdou­ard Bellemare (41) defends against Rangers center Mika Zibanejad (93) during the Eastern Conference finals that the Lightning won in 6 games.

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