Against the Canucks, the Lightning outshot their opponent 17-5 in the opening period and finished with 34 shots on the evening. But other than a Brayden Point rebound goal off a scramble in front of the net in the first period, the Bolts were unable to solve Canucks goaltender Anders Nilsson.
The key, they say, to getting more offense, is a commitment to doing the little things necessary to score: going to the net, battling in front, crashing the goal for rebounds. Not all goals are going to be spectacular. More often than not, it's the ugly ones that end up looking pretty on the scoreboard.
"I thought last game we started the game really well," Tampa Bay captain Steven Stamkos said. "It wasn't a bad game by any means in terms of our effort level and our compete and skating. We'd like to see guys get more involved in front of the net when pucks aren't going in. Everyone has a tendency to try to cheat the game a little bit, hope for a bounce here or there instead of let the play happen. When you don't score like we have in the first couple games, it's tough sometimes to just get back to the basics but it really is as simple as that. So we'll look to just get in front of the net, go to those areas tonight and just direct some pucks at the net."
That's easier said than done, though. Tonight's opponent is Columbus, and world-class goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky will be starting in net for the Blue Jackets, setting up a heavyweight goalie matchup between Bobrovsky and the Bolts' Andrei Vasilevskiy. Goals on both sides will be at a premium.
Of course, having written that, tonight's game will probably end up a 6-5 shootout. That's hockey sometimes.
"These guys are a good team, obviously a very elite goaltender in Bobrovsky and some very good skilled forwards," Stamkos said. "They had a big win [at Florida] last game. We've always had tight games. These guys are well coached. They have a structure that's set in place and they work extremely hard. We know their guys are going to sacrifice their bodies in terms of blocking shots. They have a very aggressive penalty kill, and elite forwards on their power play. For us, I think more so tonight, is hopefully get our power play back on track and go from there."