Montreal Gazette

Lightning sniper shows he’s leadership material

- STEPHEN WHYNO THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Even though Steven Stamkos knew from conversati­ons with Martin St. Louis that his friend and Tampa Bay Lightning teammate would get traded, he couldn’t come to grips with it right away.

“You kind of tell yourself that you’re not going to believe it till it actually happens,” Stamkos said.

When it actually happened hours before the trade deadline, St. Louis got his wish to leave and join the New York Rangers, and the Lightning’s season took another crazy turn with the addition of Ryan Callahan.

Tampa Bay’s first game without St. Louis and with Callahan was also the first one Stamkos played since breaking his right leg four months earlier. As the 24-year-old made his long-awaited return March 6, the captain’s ‘C’ was on his chest as coach Jon Cooper’s team began a new era, led by the face of the franchise.

“This past month’s been the changing of the guard,” Cooper said Wednesday.

“It’s been tough on him because he’s trying to get his game back in order and for a guy that has missed 50 games or whatever it was, he just jumps right into a playoff push and he’s trying to lead our team. I just can’t say enough about what he’s done to keep us all together.”

Since returning, Stamkos has had to balance rounding his game back into form after missing 45 games, along with taking on added responsibi­lities as captain and adjusting to new linemates. That’s a lot to juggle, even for one of the NHL’s most talented and mature stars.

“It’s been pretty crazy,” he said. “Coming back and getting all excited and, obviously, the trade deadline happening and being named captain and the expectatio­ns I put on myself to come back and produce right away and help this team win.”

On the ice, Stamkos knows it will take time to get everything back the way it was when he was leading the Lightning in scoring and was on pace for a 50-plus-goal season. That starts in his own head and with his body, after going through exhaustive rehab to repair the broken right tibia from crashing into the net Nov. 11 in Boston.

“When you’re out for a long time, you expect to come back and feel the same. Realistica­lly you’ve missed four months,” Stamkos said.

“With a leg injury that definitely affects your skating. I still don’t feel like it’s where I want it to be, but it’s going to take a lot more hard work and probably a summer of training to get that strength back.”

Through a half-dozen games, Stamkos feels that strength slowly coming back. Cooper sees it from the bench, too.

“His heart’s still there, he’s getting his lungs back but his timing, that’s a little bit off right now,” Cooper said.

“But I’ll be honest, he’s electrifyi­ng every time he’s on the ice. He’ll be the first one to tell you there’s still holes in his game right now, but with each one you just see him getting better, better and better. It’s coming at no better time than right now because we need him.”

Stamkos had two goals and two assists in his first six games back in the lineup, and the Lighting are 3-1-2. Along the way, he has had to adjust to new linemates in Alex Killorn and Tyler Johnson after playing with St. Louis for pretty much his entire career in Tampa.

“When you’re so used to playing with one player your whole career, tendencies and chemistry, you take that for granted a little bit,” Stamkos said.

“You have to go over video, you have to communicat­e. I think that’s the biggest thing. And we’ve done a pretty good job of that. It’s not going to happen overnight.”

 ?? MIKE CARLSON/ GETTY IMAGES ?? With Martin St. Louis’s trade to the Rangers, Steven Stamkos is the new leader of the Tampa Bay Lightning.
MIKE CARLSON/ GETTY IMAGES With Martin St. Louis’s trade to the Rangers, Steven Stamkos is the new leader of the Tampa Bay Lightning.

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