USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Lightning’s turn?

- Kevin Allen

Tampa Bay was one win from the Stanley Cup Final. Why it could win it all this season.

The Tampa Bay Lightning hope they completed their study of the psychology of winning the Stanley Cup when they suffered through more misery in the 2018 Eastern Conference final.

“We ran into a Washington team last year and it felt like once they got over that hump of beating Pittsburgh last year that they could feel that it was their time,” Lightning captain Steven Stamkos said. “We saw that in Game 6 and Game 7 in the way they responded.”

The Lightning were one win from reaching the Stanley Cup Final, but the Capitals won Game 6 at home and won Game 7 in Tampa to take a giant step toward winning their first Stanley Cup in franchise history.

“With the expectatio­ns so high for our group, we came into this season thinking this is our year,” Stamkos said. “It’s our turn.”

Could their solution be as simple as developing a more pronounced swagger?

It can be when a team has the Lightning’s talent. At 39-11-2 entering the week, the Lightning had a 15-point lead in the Atlantic Division. They led the league in offense, averaging 3.87 goals per game.

Nikita Kucherov led the NHL with 80 points, and Brayden Point (currently day to day) was tied for fourth in goals with 30. Stamkos had 59 points in 52 games. It’s easy to see why this team was leading the NHL with a 29.4 percent power-play efficiency.

“For a team to have as much success in the playoffs, but not winning it all, we have a bit of chip on our shoulder,” Stamkos said.

In one of Jon Cooper’s first talks to his Lightning players in 2013 when he was hired as coach, he talked about his hope that the team would play with a swagger. This season, they seem to be fully embracing that ask.

Their NHL-leading +59 goal differential speaks to their dominance. The Toronto Maple Leafs (+34) were the only other Eastern Conference team within 25 of them.

“There is still unfinished business for us to start talking about what the difference is this season,” Stamkos said.

The caution is understand­able, but there is no denying that the Lightning are more polished and formidable than they were in the past. They’re certainly more confident than they were when they reached the Stanley Cup Final in 2015 and lost to the Chicago Blackhawks.

Stamkos said everyone has grown on the job, even Cooper, who is one of the league’s most personable coaches. It’s a profession where gruffness is expected, but players find it easy to talk to Cooper.

“He’s not a yeller or screamer; he gains respect in different ways,” Stamkos said.

He gains respect because his teams are well-prepared and competitiv­e. He is an excellent motivator.

“He has a lawyer background,” Stamkos said, “so he knows how to work a crowd.”

The big question surroundin­g the Lightning is whether general manager Julien BriseBois will make a move to strengthen their chances. The Maple Leafs have already added a top four defenseman, and the Penguins made a trade for Nick Bjugstad.

“Everyone thinks you have to add someone to put yourself over the top,” Cooper said. “I don’t think necessaril­y that’s true. In all of these years we have been together, we really haven’t made big deals at the deadline, except last year.”

The Lightning added Ryan McDonagh and J.T. Miller from the New York Rangers last February, and that deal continues to help the team this season.

Another thought is the Lightning are going too strong to risk disrupting their chemistry.

“There is something to chemistry,” Cooper said, “I think if nothing at all happens (at the Feb. 25 trade deadline), I don’t think anyone would lose an ounce of sleep.”

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “We came into this season thinking this is our year,” Lightning captain Steven Stamkos says.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS “We came into this season thinking this is our year,” Lightning captain Steven Stamkos says.

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