Orlando Sentinel

Glendening doesn’t take opportunit­y for granted

- By Eduardo A. Encina

SUNRISE — No hockey player feels 100% healthy going into the postseason. The grind of the 82– game schedule — all the minutes, all the hits, the blocked shots and the tired legs — adds up.

Players rely on the adrenaline the playoff atmosphere provides, and the realizatio­n that it's tough to even get an opportunit­y to win a Stanley Cup.

You don't want to look back and think you didn't give it your all. Just ask Lightning center Luke Glendening.

Though this is his first season in a Lightning uniform, Glendening is the oldest player on the team. He turns 35 on Sunday.

As the team's fourth-line center, Glendening takes punishment every game. He received a hard hit into the boards during the Lightning's second-to-last regular-season game. He had played in every game until missing the finale against Toronto, and it was uncertain whether he would play in the playoff opener against the Panthers.

But for Glendening, the only question was being certain he could still help his team.

“For five years, I've missed the playoffs and the excitement of it, and it's never given that you're going to get another chance at it,” Glendening said. ‘The biggest thing is, if you can play in the playoffs, you never know when it's your last time. There's a lot of things that go into it, but if I can do my role and help the team, I want to be a part of it.

“You're going to get beat up in the series, so everything you can do to help the team, you know you're going to get some bruises along the way,” added Glendening, who played 9:40 in Game 1 and logged two hits.

Glendening made the playoffs his first three seasons in the NHL playing for the Red Wings, but they didn't get out of the first round. In 2015, Detroit had a 3-2 series lead on the Lightning, but Tampa Bay won the last two games on its way to the Stanley Cup final.

Glendening then missed the playoffs the next five seasons in Detroit — and in many of those years, bad starts had them out of contention by Thanksgivi­ng. He went to Dallas two seasons ago, making the playoffs both years, including a trip to the Western Conference final last year before the Stars lost to the eventual Cup champion Golden Knights.

“I spent five years in Detroit where we didn't have a sniff of making the playoffs,” Glendening said. “So it means so much to have an opportunit­y to play in the playoffs. It's a culminatio­n of a lot of things, but it's what you grew up as a kid dreaming about, playing in the NHL playoffs, and so I think that in itself adds to it.”

Glendening is a role player.

He'll be the first to say that he's not the most skilled or most talented. He's been able to stick in the NHL because he's found ways to do things that other players can't.

“You talk about guys that have an effect on your locker room,” Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. “Luke Glendening has come in here and you'd think he's played here for 10 years instead of 10 months. … He's kind of fought his way in [to the league] and now all of a sudden he's played 700 games.”

Glendening said after playing against the Lightning for so many years in Detroit, he now sees where that winning mentality comes from being inside the room.

“It's funny after being on the other side of it, it was always frustratin­g because I always felt like they think they are going to win and they find a way to,” he said. “Being in here, seeing the leadership, the guys that have been here, their will and resolve to win, the way they go about it, has just been so impressive. … I think I'm the oldest guy on the team, but it's still been a great learning experience for me.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Lightning center Luke Glendening warms up before the start of Game 1 vs. the Panthers in Sunrise. Game 2 was Tuesday night.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Lightning center Luke Glendening warms up before the start of Game 1 vs. the Panthers in Sunrise. Game 2 was Tuesday night.

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