The Mercury News

Lightning’s Vasilevski­y standing tall in Cup Final

- By Fred Goodall

For all the hype Dallas goaltender Anton Khudobin is receiving for helping the Stars reach the Stanley Cup Final, fellow Russian Andrei Vasilevski­y is reminding everyone the Tampa Bay Lightning have a strong presence in net, too.

“If you’re going to make any sort of noise in the playoffs you need somebody back there,” coach Jon Cooper said of the three-time Vezina Trophy finalist whose 15 wins this postseason are the second-most in a single year by a Lightning goalie.

“Quarterbac­k in football is a pretty big position,” Cooper added, “and I think goaltender in hockey is right up there.”

Nikolai Khabibulin won 16 playoff games for Tampa Bay in 2004, including Game 7 in the final against Calgary to become the only Russian goaltender to win a Stanley Cup title.

Vasilevski­y is back on hockey’s grandest stage for the first time since 2015, when he came off the bench to get his first career postseason victory as a backup to Ben Bishop, who is now with the Stars and sidelined by injury again.

Tampa Bay rebounded from losing Game 1 of the best-of-seven matchup against the red-hot Khudobin and Dallas, with Vasilevski­y stopping 27 shots in a 3-2 victory Monday night. Game 3 is tonight.

The Lightning improved to 6-0 following a loss this postseason. They are 11-2 in one-goal games.

“You can’t say enough about him, what he’s done for us. Just chalk up another for outstandin­g,” Cooper said.

The 26-year-old Vasilevski­y — the 19th player and first goalie selected in the 2012 draft — has played every minute of his team’s 21 postseason games, going 15-6 and allowing two or fewer goals in 14 of those starts.

Three more wins against the Stars, and the Lightning, who have transforme­d themselves from an offensive juggernaut into a team that understand­s defense is the key to winning in the playoffs, will hoist the Stanley Cup for the second time in franchise history.

While it may be easy to focus on big names such as Nikita Kucherov, Victor Hedman and Brayden Point playing in front of the goaltender, Cooper said Vasilevski­y’s contributi­on to the team’s success has been important.

Anhony Cirelli, Ryan McDonagh, Ondrej Palat, Alex Killorn, Yanni Gourde, Blake Coleman, Pat Maroon, Kevin Shattenkir­k, Barclay Goodrow and Zach Bogosian have all been key contributo­rs this postseason.

No one’s outshined Vasilevski­y, though.

“You just have guys that on every single night somebody comes to the forefront. The one difference with the goaltender is he has to be there every single night,” Cooper said. “They probably get taken for granted a little bit, especially when you have one. But he’s not overlooked in our locker room. Everybody knows the value he brings to our team.”

The view from afar is spectacula­r, too.

“Obviously, Andrei’s one of the top goalies . ... I think it’s great that a Russian goalie’s in that organizati­on,” Khabibulin said.

Evgeni Nabokov, who at age 39 started nine games for the Lightning in 201415, has the most wins of any Russian goalie in NHL history.

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