Stanley Cup Final | A dream, really?

(Fort Lauderdale, Florida) It’s as if the two teams had passed the word to each other on the eve of the last game of the season.


Posted at 6:53 p.m.

Both at the Florida Panthers and at the Edmonton Oilers, after training, the players talked about the childhood dream of playing a seventh game, because they dreamed of it all their youth, in mini-hockey, in the backyard or at the neighborhood skating rink.

After all, it’s not trivial. It’s number 18e time, in over 106 years of NHL history, that the Stanley Cup will be won in a seventh game. It’s the first time in five years, the second time since the Boston Bruins and Vancouver Canucks reached the limit in 2011.

It’s so rare that only one of the 40 players in uniform Monday has ever experienced it in real life, and not in the alley. This player is Vladimir Tarasenko, winger for the Panthers, who won with the St. Louis Blues in 2019.

The Blues, like this year’s Panthers, had missed the chance to close the books, leading 3-2 after five games. “I remember there were a lot of expectations around Game 6, because we were playing at home,” recalled Tarasenko, in a corner of the locker room at the Panthers training center.

PHOTO SERGEI BELSKI, USA TODAY SPORTS ARCHIVES

Vladimir Tarasenko

“But for a Game 6, you have several options in mind. A match 7 is simply a match, and it’s certainly the last. You have to prepare yourself. »

Sleep and distractions

With the 2019 Blues, Samuel Blais was a teammate of Tarasenko. The Quebecer also sent a text message to his former colleague before the start of the final “to wish him to win another one”.

In this seventh game, Blais was blanked, but the energy player that he is had made a key play that allowed his team to open the scoring: a hard-hitting check, which allowed the puck to be maintained in the offensive zone.

Blais had achieved this performance despite the nervousness that overwhelmed him the day before the match.

“I had trouble falling asleep,” he remembers on the line. You think about all the scenarios that could happen. You’re one day away from living your dream and you don’t know if you’re going to live it again. That was stress. »

However, he had not spoken about it to his teammates at breakfast, in order to prevent “them from doubting me. But the excitement, the nervousness were there.”

“At least it slept well for my pre-match nap!” », he adds.

Pascal Rhéaume is also part of the lucky handful who participated in one of the 17 seventh matches in history in the final. It was in 2003, with New Jersey. Like the 2019 Blues, the Devils led 3-2 in the series, and the sixth game had escaped them decisively (5-2).

He also remembers sleeping problems, problems which were however common throughout the series. “A lot of us took Ambien to sleep. You want to sleep ! »

Except that in the final, as a seventh match approaches, the distractions accumulate. “You get messages from your friends, you’re missing a match, you’re going to have it. It’s not easy,” he adds.

Our two men, however, remember favorable circumstances for the fateful match, which put everyone in a good mood. The 2019 Blues arrived in Boston with a 9-3 record on opposing ice. “We played better on the road, we played a simpler game. And our leaders, Alex Pietrangelo and Ryan O’Reilly, were good at calming us down,” says Blais.

The 2003 Devils played this one-off game at home, where they had an 11-1 record. The nerves of Game 6 had been replaced by a certain confidence, inspired by “our leaders, guys like Ken Daneyko and Scott Stevens. And what’s more, when you have Martin [Brodeur] as a guardian…

The Devils scored the first goal of the game. “As soon as we took the lead, it was Devils hockey, flat hockey. We were playing trap. If you asked the world, were you having fun watching us? No. But we had the players to do it. » And they won 3-0. ” What does it do ? Twenty one years ? I still remember it like it was yesterday. This is the greatest achievement of my career. You can’t ask for better! », says Rhéaume.

Different circumstances

In theory, Panthers and Oilers players will experience these same kinds of emotions between now and Monday evening. This is why everyone emphasized that they will live a childhood dream.

Except that the dream, the real one, is to lift the Stanley Cup, and this dream, the Panthers players have just missed three opportunities in a row to achieve it. They were the 211e team in NHL history to lead a series 3-0. Only four of them ended up losing the series, and only one made it to the finals: the 1942 Detroit Red Wings.

The circumstances that led the Panthers and the Oilers to this seventh game could not be more different. While Stuart Skinner, with his 10-0 record in Games 4 through 7 this spring, met with the media after practice, Sergei Bobrovsky, and his .793 efficiency in the last three games, was excused from practice of the day. At a press briefing, Paul Maurice justified the leave with an explanation of nosebleed complexity.

PHOTO GUILLAUME LEFRANÇOIS, THE PRESS

The Panthers in training, Sunday

The fact remains that as a good communicator, Maurice had to end up conceding that his team’s situation is unusual. His admission came in response to a colleague who questioned him about his club’s ability to forget the last three defeats.

“If you understand why you found yourself in such a situation, and I’m talking about the specific details on the ice, you no longer drag the past and you move forward.

“But I understand your questions. There is a much larger context that means nothing at all to me, but means everything to you. You have stories to write and what makes them so fabulous is that context. No kid in their backyard dreams of scoring the winning goal in overtime in Game 3 of the qualifying round. It’s an exciting match, this match has a context and we will live in this context. »

To be exciting, it will be. Good game.

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