logo
Tampa Bay Lightning Hold Heads High Following Season Of ‘110 Percent Buy-In'

Tampa Bay Lightning Hold Heads High Following Season Of ‘110 Percent Buy-In'

Forbes05-05-2025

SUNRISE, FL - Victor Hedman congratulates goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy of the Tampa Bay Lightning ... More after the 5-1 win against the Florida Panthers after Game Three of the First Round of the 2025 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Amerant Bank Arena on April 26, 2025 in Sunrise, Florida. (Photo by)
Victor Hedman had the captain's 'C' sown on his jersey prior to the preseason. Not that serving as a leader, visually or otherwise, was anything new. After all, the towering Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman had been a pillar in the room for the first 15 years of a career that will see the two-time Stanley Cup winner enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame.
Though Hedman's first season as captain, a role he took on after Steven Stamkos left the club via free agency, concluded with an opening-round playoff defeat to the Florida Panthers for the second straight spring, Tampa Bay was unwavering in its commitment to the lightning bolt on the front of each player's jersey. The examples established by No. 77 were a large reason why.
'This group picked each other up all of the time, and Victor was a big part of that, especially in his first year as captain and taking over for an icon here,' said coach Jon Cooper, during an end-of-season media session at Amalie Arena on May 2. 'His leadership and Ryan (McDonagh), (Nikita) Kucherov and (Brandon) Hagel, you go down the line of guys that were inclusive as a team. There weren't cliques or any of stuff that went on that I have seen in years past. That was not this group. That is why we had the season we did, and I cannot say enough great things about the guys.'
Hedman, in a boot after breaking his right foot in Game 4, noted how the team's level of commitment was never in question even after a busy off-season.
'A lot happened last summer and we knew it was going to be a collective effort to replace Stammer and his voice,' said Hedman, who also captained Team Sweden in the 4 Nations Face-Off. 'I think the guys did a phenomenal job all year. The buy-in was 110 percent, which made the job easier for me. Guys stepping it up and being more of a leader themselves."
Which is why the sting from this year's early exit was particularly harsh.
'Everybody dialed in, bought in to the system and tried hard,' said Nikita Kucherov, both a Hart Trophy finalist – winner will be announced June 27 – and the league's leading scorer (121 points) for a second straight season. 'We did everything we could and we just came up short. We want to make sure we come back stronger, more experienced and eliminate the mistakes we made this year, learn from that and move forward.'
One of the guys who will make sure that happens, given he is re-signed, is Ryan McDonagh. The defenseman, reacquired last summer in a trade with Nashville, won the Cup twice during a previous four-plus season Tampa tenure. He returned to a team that retained a set of core values and a winning culture in the room even as a handful nameplates changed out.
'For our group, we had the buy-in mentality and great attitude of showing up, coming to work every day, accepting your role and doing whatever you can to help the team win,' said McDonagh, the Lightning's Masterton nominee. 'It is up to us as leaders to keep that same culture, that same mentality because that gives you a chance every year.'
Such an unwavering culture, such an unwavering attitude is a way of life at 401 Channelside Drive in downtown Tampa. As such, it is clear what is expected of free agents, those acquired in trades and rookies hoping to break through.
'That makes it easier when new guys come to the team,' said McDonagh. 'They feel part of the group. They feel valued. There are no egos in this group. We care about winning and it hurts a ton when we lose.'
Whether it is chasing individual statistics or whatever it is that may not be in the best interests of the collective, egos can get in the way and a season can go sideways at any point. Not the 2024-25 Tampa Lightning. Far from it.
'Those can be distractions,' said Cooper, of chasing awards and milestones. 'But for this group, it was all about the team. They looked after themselves, and that's what was great about the group.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oilers' Stuart Skinner has high praise for Panthers' Sergei Bobrovsky ahead of Cup Final
Oilers' Stuart Skinner has high praise for Panthers' Sergei Bobrovsky ahead of Cup Final

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Oilers' Stuart Skinner has high praise for Panthers' Sergei Bobrovsky ahead of Cup Final

Florida Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (72) shake hands with Edmonton Oilers goaltender Stuart Skinner (74) after winning Stanley Cup over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 7 of the NHL Stanley Cup Final at the Amerant Bank Arena on Monday, June 24, 2024, in Sunrise, Fla. Edmonton Oilers goaltender Stuart Skinner had two thoughts when asked about going up against an 'older goalie' in the Florida Panthers' Sergei Bobrovsky for a second consecutive Stanley Cup Final. First, Bobrovsky is 'young' at 36 years old, said Skinner, who at 26 is 10 years Bobrovsky's junior. Advertisement Second, the experience of going toe-to-toe with a surefire Hall of Famer over the course of a seven-game Cup Final series was 'amazing.' 'He's one of the best goalies in the world,' Skinner said. 'He's impressive. He skates well. Technically, I don't think there's much wrong with him in my perspective. He's exceptional.' But perhaps what stood out most to Skinner about Bobrovsky came after the series ended when the two shared a moment in the postgame handshake line following Florida's 2-1, Cup-clinching Game 7 victory. 'I remember in the lineup last year, just how kind he was to somebody who just lost,' Skinner said. 'Nothing but love to him.' Advertisement The two will be back at it at 8 p.m. Wednesday from Edmonton's Rogers Place when puck drops on Game 1 of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final. Bobrovsky has once again been his consistent self in the playoffs, posting a 2.11 goals-against average and .912 save percentage through the first three rounds of the Stanley Cup playoffs. He has three shutouts in 17 games — one in each round — and has held opponents to two goals or fewer in 11 of those 17 games. His 6.04 goals save above average according to Natural Stat Trick are the most among all goals this postseason. Skinner, meanwhile, had his share of rough outings to start the postseason. He was benched after getting shelled through the first two games of Edmonton's first-round series against the Los Angeles Kings and didn't get back in the net until Game 3 of the second round against the Vegas Golden Knights. He struggled in that game, too, before rounding into form. He posted back-to-back shutouts in Games 4 and 5 against Vegas to wrap up that series and then rebounded from a poor Game 1 in the Western Conference final against the Dallas Stars to backstop the Oilers back to the Stanley Cup Final. Now, Skinner, just like the Oilers as a whole, is looking for a chance at redemption after coming so close to winning it all last year but falling just short. Advertisement 'If I'm gonna be completely honest here, I thought I had put it away quick,' Skinner said, 'but definitely internally, there was something buried. That's kind of the easy way to do it. Instead of thinking about it, trying to process it, I kind of stuffed it down of it. It kind of bit me in the butt halfway through my summer last year, and then I was able to kind of look back at it and process it. Obviously didn't want it to eat at me more going into the season. Human nature.' Safe to say he's ready for Wednesday. 'We keep on moving forward,' Skinner said. 'We lose the Cup last year, and we're back here again being able to get that opportunity. That's nothing but just complete, complete excitement.'

Maple Leafs GM Treliving says change is coming after 2nd-round playoff loss
Maple Leafs GM Treliving says change is coming after 2nd-round playoff loss

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Maple Leafs GM Treliving says change is coming after 2nd-round playoff loss

TORONTO (AP) — Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Brad Treliving says to expect changes in the offseason after another early exit in the Stanley Cup playoffs. And not just to the roster — but 'between the ears,' too. Advertisement Using the defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers as an example, Treliving said at a season-ending news conference Thursday that there must be changes in the 'DNA' of a team that continues to struggle in big playoff moments despite regular-season success. Toronto finished the regular season in first place in the Atlantic Division and defeated the Ottawa Senators in the first round for just its second playoff series win in the past 20 seasons. The Leafs looked poised for a breakthrough when they won the first two games of a second-round series against the Panthers and went up 3-1 in Game 3, before handing the momentum back to their opponent and ultimately losing in seven games. Treliving credited Florida, which just eliminated Carolina in five games in the Eastern Conference final, with finding a way to perform in the key moments in the postseason. ___ AP NHL playoffs: and The Associated Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store