Las Vegas Review-Journal

After Game 5 win, Stars confident

Double-ot victory gives Dallas boost of needed energy

- By Stephen Whyno

EDMONTON, Alberta — After a very uncharacte­ristic effort by the Dallas Stars in the first overtime period in which they let the Tampa Bay Lightning take it to them, players and coaches in the locker room had a very distinct message.

“We’ve got to play to win, let’s go at them, let’s get back on our toes and get skating again,” coach Rick Bowness said. “We found our legs. We found our second wind.”

And it’s their second win of the Stanley Cup Final to force a Game 6 Monday night that these teams see very differentl­y. The plucky Stars are embracing the underdog role missing several key players to injury and feel as if they’re playing with house money, while the deep, talented Lightning still feel like the favorites up 3-2 in the series and are confident based on recent experience they’ll be able to close the series out in their next opportunit­y.

Dallas was doubted against Calgary, Colorado and the Golden Knights, and the injuries still make it an uphill climb to beat Tampa Bay two more times. Shots are 175-136 in favor of the Lightning, and goaltender Anton Khudobin has had to come up big in his team’s two wins this series. But being counted out is just how the Stars like it.

“Every person really this whole time we’ve been in the bubble seeming to choose the other team we’re playing — we relish that,” said center Tyler Seguin, who has five points in the past two games after a five-game drought. “We believe in each other. We’ve got a confident group, and we don’t want to leave the bubble, so we’re having fun.”

That’s what made the first OT so troubling for the Stars, who put the Lightning on their heels to take Game 1. Suddenly, the same team that buzzed and attacked until Joe Pavelski tied it in the third period was playing not to lose.

The attacking mentality returned, leading to Corey Perry’s goal in double overtime.

“We just battle,” said Perry, who along with Pavelski has three goals in two games. “It doesn’t matter. We believe in that dressing room. We came here with 51 people, and all of those guys in that dressing room believe that we could go out and get this done. That’s all that really matters.”

All that matters to the Lightning is they’re still in control of the series. Only they can win the Cup on Monday night, and they believe playing the same way as Game 5 will be

enough to finish this off and celebrate.

“That’s what playoffs are about,” forward Yanni Gourde said Sunday. “You’re not going to win every eliminatio­n game. You just got to go out there and play our best, try to win that particular game and go from there.”

They’ll have to do it without injured captain Steven Stamkos, who’s out for the rest of the series. Coach Jon Cooper and Stamkos made that determinat­ion in a conversati­on Sunday, though it was growing obvious that his postseason would be limited to 2:37 of ice time and a memorable goal in Game 3 of the Final.

“He did everything he could to get back, and he did get back and unfortunat­ely he couldn’t go any further,” Cooper said. “Hopefully, the next time you see him on the ice is during a trophy presentati­on.”

Cooper said multiple times his team has been “pretty good at responding after losses.” Not just pretty good but perfect.

Led by goaltender Andrei Vasilevski­y’s ability to bounce back like the

Vezina Trophy finalist he is, Tampa Bay is 6-0 after a loss this postseason. Vasilevski­y has a 1.41 goals-against average and .941 save percentage in those games.

So, that’s a source of confidence along with the experience earned along the way in previous playoffs and even as recently as last round. The Lightning lost their first chance to wrap up the Eastern Conference final, to the New York Islanders in overtime of Game 5.

Facing a similar situation in the Cup Final, they’re prepared.

“We’ve been in this situation before,” defenseman Victor Hedman said. “We’re a resilient group. We know how to respond to adversity.”

Game 6 has the Stars seemingly on their last legs. Dipping now four deep into players from their taxi squad of “Black Aces” with forwards Joel Kiviranta, Nick Caamano and Justin Dowling and defenseman Joel Hanley feeds the Stars’ underdog mentality.

“I give them a lot of credit because we’re missing a lot of key guys on our hockey club,” Bowness said. “There’s no question about it.”

 ?? Jason Franson The Associated Press ?? Stars center Joe Pavelski, right, is pumped after his third-period goal that forced overtime in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final.
Jason Franson The Associated Press Stars center Joe Pavelski, right, is pumped after his third-period goal that forced overtime in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final.

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