The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Lightning aiming bounce-back game against Capitals

- By Fred Goodall

Jon Cooper is confident the Tampa Bay Lightning will be fine.

Experience tells the coach and his players they shouldn’t be overly concerned about losing the opening game of the Eastern Conference finals at home.

The way the Washington Capitals are playing, though, it could be more difficult to rebound from a shabby performanc­e this time.

Game 2 is May 13, and Cooper expects the Atlantic Division winners to be at their best.

“It’s unfortunat­e how we played a couple of these Game 1s in the last couple of rounds, (and) dug ourselves a small hole this series,” the coach said after a workout Saturday at the team’s suburban practice facility.

“I guess the positive side is we’ve been here before, so we’ve seen this. But we can’t keep playing with fire and dropping these Game 1s, which we’ve done. All of a sudden you’ve thrown home ice advantage back at them. Now you’ve put pressure on yourself. You got to go win games on the road, which you have to do anyway in the playoffs, but your margin for error gets smaller and smaller. We’re really going to need a good effort (May 13).”

The Capitals won the opener 4-2, ending an eight-game playoff losing skid to Tampa Bay dating to the 2003 postseason.

Alex Ovechkin, T.J. Oshie, Jay Beagle and Lars Eller scored for Washington, while rejuvenate­d goaltender Braden Holtby stopped 19 shots to help the Caps improve to 6-1 on the road this postseason.

The Lightning didn’t take solace in breaking through for a pair of thirdperio­d goals.

“We dissected the game a little bit,” Cooper said. “There were so many good things we’ve done in two rounds of hockey that I think if you bottled up all the bad things in those first 10 games it would be about half of what we did in that one game last night.

“You fueled the fire of a good team, and that’s what Washington is. I thought a lot of their opportunit­ies we just handed to them, and a lot of our opportunit­ies were stomped out just by our not sticking to our plan of what’s worked.”

The Capitals, in the conference finals for the first time in the Ovechkin era, said they can’t afford a drop-off in performanc­e.

Beating two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh gave them momentum heading into the series.

Coach Barry Trotz, mindful that Tampa Bay lost Game 1 of its secondroun­d series 6-2 to Boston only to strom back and win four straight games, reiterated it won’t be easy to build off the Caps’ success in the opener.

“You get a little bit of confidence, obviously,” Trotz said at the team hotel Saturday. “At the same time we’ve got to realize Tampa Bay is going to have some desperatio­n in their game. And, we better have some desperatio­n in our game.”

Andrei Vasilevski­y, Tampa Bay’s All-Star goaltender, yielded four goals on 25 shots in two periods after entering the series with an 8-2 record, 2.20 goals-against average and .927 save percentage through two rounds.

The Lightning are confident they’ll play better in front of him in Game 2. The Caps expect the goaltender to bounce back, too.

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lightning center Steven Stamkos (91) and center J.T. Miller leave the ice after losing to the Capitals during Game 1 of the Eastern Conference final May 12 .
CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lightning center Steven Stamkos (91) and center J.T. Miller leave the ice after losing to the Capitals during Game 1 of the Eastern Conference final May 12 .

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