A Brayden Point card. |
Each team has one NHL championship to its credit. The Stars won the Stanley Cup in 1999, and the Lightning captured their lone Stanley Cup title to date in 2004.
Since those respective championships, both teams have been far from regulars when it comes to appearing in the Stanley Cup final.
Dallas last went in 2000 falling to the New Jersey Devils.
Previous to this year, Tampa Bay had only made the Stanley Cup final once since 2004 falling to the Chicago Blackhawks in 2015. That turned out to be Chicago’s third Stanley Cup title win in six years.
The two clubs will begin a best-of-seven series for the NHL title with Game 1 on Saturday at Rogers Place in the bubble city of Edmonton (5:30 p.m. Saskatchewan time, CBC and NBC).
Going into the 2019-20 campaign, both teams weren’t sexy picks to advance to the Stanley Cup final. There might have been some lukewarm feelings out there that one of those two teams could make it that far.
A Jamie Benn card. |
When the modified NHL post-season began on August 1 in the bubble cities of Edmonton and Toronto, the Stars and Lightning were designated to be in the top four of the Western and Eastern Conferences respectively and had to play three round robin games each for conference seeding.
Dallas was given the fourth overall spot in the Western Conference over Edmonton based on winning percentage.
The Stars and Lightning were part of the group of eight teams that had byes into the round of 16 of the modified NHL post-season. Dallas took one of three round robin contests, while Tampa Bay won two out of three round robin contests.
Since the round of 16, both the Stars and Lightning have found their strides. When they battle in the Stanley Cup final, there will be lots of storylines to watch.
The Stars will have the benefit of rest. They won the best-of-seven Western Conference championship series against the Vegas Golden Knights 4-1 taking Game 5 by a 3-2 final in overtime on Monday in Edmonton thanks to a power-play goal from right-winger Denis Gurianov.
An Anthony Cirelli card. |
For the time he has put into Dallas franchise, it would be a huge reward for him, if the Stars took home the Stanley Cup.
Another feel good story on the Dallas front is netminder Anton Khudobin, who played one outstanding season in the WHL with the Saskatoon Blades in 2005-06. Since playing his first two NHL games in the 2009-10 season, Khudobin has been a journeyman goalie suiting up for the Minnesota Wild, Boston Bruins, Carolina Hurricanes and the Anaheim Ducks before arriving in Dallas.
With the Stars in the current post-season, Khudobin is realizing his potential and become the go-to guy for Dallas in net. In 19 appearances in the 2020 NHL post-season, Khudobin has a 12-6 record, a 2.62 goals against average, a .920 save percentage and one shutout.
Of course, the biggest feel good story should Dallas win would centre around 65-year-old Stars head coach Rick Bowness, who is considered one of hockey’s good guys. Bowness first worked as a coach in the NHL when he was a Winnipeg Jets assistant coach way back in 1984-85.
Bowness joined the Stars as an assistant coach on June 22, 2018. He became the Stars interim head coach on December 10, 2019 after Jim Montgomery was fired due to unprofessional conduct.
A Tyler Seguin card. |
One also wonders if skilled centre Tyler Seguin will find another gear with the Stars. He has two goals and six assists in 20 post-season games for Dallas, which are low totals for him.
The Lightning have to jump right into the Stanley Cup final with only one day of rest. They captured the best-of-seven Eastern Conference championship series over the New York Islanders 4-2 after taking Game 6 in overtime 2-1 in Edmonton on centre Anthony Cirelli’s winner.
Lightning centre Brayden Point is well remembered for his exploits staring for the WHL’s Moose Jaw Warriors from 2011 to 2016. He hasn’t disappointed over four seasons in the NHL appearing in 295 career regular season games with the Lightning piling up 116 goals and 146 assists.
Defenceman Victor Hedman was selected by the Lightning in the first round and second overall in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft. The Swedish product has been a career member of the team playing in 762 career regular season games over 11 campaigns netting 105 goals and 368 assists.
Centre Tyler Johnson is an uplifting story for the Lightning. Standing 5-foot-8 and weighing 180 pounds, he was often told his lack of size would prevent him from hitting the big time in hockey, but his skill prevailed.
A Tyler Johnson card. |
Having never been selected in the NHL Entry Draft, Johnson signed with the Lightning as a free agent. He made his first NHL appearances as a second-year professional in 2012-13 and has been a regular on the Lightning roster since the start of the 2013-14 campaign.
In 534 regular season games, he has 153 goals and 186 assists for 339 points.
The Stars and Lightning might not have the sexy appeal like the NHL’s Original Six, the Canadian franchises, the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Philadelphia Flyers or the Washington Capitals.
Still, those that tune into the Stanley Cup final between the Stars and Lightning will likely see some pretty good hockey and some cool stories play out.
For those that don’t watch, you will be missing out.
Rush get Powless and McClelland in NLL Draft, other notes
You have to
appreciate the brilliance of Saskatchewan Rush general manager Derek Keenan.The Rush veterans are getting new teammates.
Year in and year out, the Rush have been a powerhouse under Keenan’s watch, and they went into Thursday’s NLL Draft with two selections in the first round. The extra first round pick game courtesy of moves made by Keenan long before draft day arrived.
With the seventh overall selection in the first round, the Rush picked forward Marshall Powless.
In a shortened 2020 campaign, Powless notched 11 points in
two games with the Ontario based Six Nation Snipers of the Arena Lacrosse
League. In 2019 with the Six Nations Rebels Jr. B team, Powless had 54 goals
and 97 assists for 151 points and was named the Ontario Junior B League’s most
valuable player.
With the 12th
overall selection in the first round, the Rush took defenceman Connor
McClelland from Brampton, Ont. McClelland is electing to return to Marquette
University Golden Eagles in the NCAA ranks as a fifth-year senior. He had his
eligibility extended due to the lacrosse season being cut short by the COVID-19
pandemic.
He recorded
seven goals and two assists in three games in the shortened 2020 NCAA season.
In 2019, McClelland tallied 12 goals and seven assists in 13 games with the
Golden Eagles.
The Rush
picked seven players in the six rounds of the NLL Draft.
They
concluded the draft selecting transition player Wyatt Haux from the
Saskatchewan SWAT Jr. A team in the sixth round and 92nd overall.
The Estevan, Sask., product, who stands 6-foot-4 and weighs 220 pounds, won
gold with Team Canada at the 2018 and 2019 World Junior Championship.
SWAT alum
Laine Hruska from Warman, Sask., was selected in the first round and 13th
overall by the Georgia Swarm. The 19-year-old goalie is the highest drafted
ever Saskatchewan born player.
He played this
past season with the Whitby Steelhawks in Whitby, Ont., in the ALL. With the
Steelhawks, Hruska had a 5-1 record and a 7.57 goals against average. On
Thursday, he was named the ALL rookie of the year.
- On Monday, The Reseau du sport etudiant du
Quebec (RSEQ) cancelled all sports for the fall semester. As a result, there
won’t be any regular season or post-season football played in any of the
four conferences governed by U Sports.
- On Wednesday, the Canada Games Council and
the Niagara Host Society announced the 2021 Canada Summer Games slated to
be held in Niagara, Ont., have been postponed to 2022 due to the COVID-19
pandemic. The Canada Summer Games were originally slated for August 6 to
21, 2021.
- On Wednesday, the 14 universities that are
part of the NCAA’s Big Ten Conference including athletic powerhouses in
the University of Michigan, The Ohio State University and Penn State
University unanimously agreed to try to play football as soon as Oct. 23
without fans in the stands. Back on Aug. 11, the Big Ten conference had cancelled
all fall sports due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As of Wednesday, the Big Ten
conference is touting the line it felt secure about its rapid testing
protocols and believe they could address all safety concerns.
- Of course, United States President Donald
Trump had talked to Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren back on Sept. 1
about getting football back on the field. USA Today columnist Christine
Brennan wrote a scathing opinion piece about the decision that can be
found by clicking right here.
- At the time this post went live,
Worldometer, which is really accurate at tracking health related
statistics, said that 6.9-million people in the United States have dealt
with COVID-19 this year. That would account for just over two per cent of
the population in the United States or one in every 50 persons. Just over
2.5-million of those cases are currently active.
- On Wednesday, The Canadian Press reported
a proposed class-action lawsuit has been filed by 21-year-old
Lloydminster, Alta., product and former WHL left-winger Kobe Mohr against
the NHL, WHL, OHL, QMJHL, AHL, ECHL and Hockey Canada. The suit alleges
these leagues conspired to limit opportunities for young players. The allegations
haven’t been proven in court. The Canadian Press story about this proposed
class-action lawsuit can be found by clicking right here.
- On Thursday, the International Ice Hockey
Federation announced the upcoming under-20 World Junior Hockey Championships
will be held in a bubble at Rogers Place in Edmonton without fans this
coming December and January. World juniors were originally slated to be
played from Dec. 26, 2020 to Jan. 5, 2021 in Edmonton and Red Deer. Under
the current bubble format in Edmonton, the tournament is still expected to
end Jan 5. 2021, but the start date is still being determined. Edmonton
and Red Deer have been named hosts for the world juniors for the 2021-22
season. Novosibirsk, Russia is set to host world juniors in the 2022-23
campaign and Gothenburg, Sweden is slated to get world junior for the
2023-24 season.
- On Thursday, the IIHF cancelled all men’s
under-20 lower division tournament for the 2020-21 campaign and all women’s
under-18 tournaments including Under-18 Women’s World Hockey Championship
due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The men’s lower division tournaments are all
tournaments that are below the level of the top world juniors that are
slated to be held in a bubble city format in Edmonton this coming December
and January. The first round of Women’s Olympic pre-qualification
scheduled to take place from Dec. 17 to 19 in Reykjavik, Iceland have been
postponed until further notice.
If you have any comments you would like to pass along about this post, feel free to email them to stankssports@gmail.com.
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