The Lightning scored four times on the power play over their seven opportunities Saturday against Columbus, part of an eight-goal explosion and an 8-2 rout of the Blue Jackets. Point and Killorn each netted a power-play goal in their new role. Yanni Gourde got the breakthrough power-play goal at 18:37 of the opening period to give the Lightning a three-goal advantage at the first intermission, and J.T. Miller pushed home one more power-play goal with 0.2 seconds remaining in regulation for good measure.
When the Lightning returned to the practice ice Monday, Killorn and Point were again in their new roles. Well, their old new roles
Why tinker with success, right?
"I think we had a little bit more of a shooter's mentality, so that helped us," Lightning head coach Jon Cooper said. "But eventually, we were third…in the league last year for a reason. Those guys, they have a pretty good feel out there for how to play on the power play, and we felt it was just a matter of time. We probably wish we could have traded one of those in for the Vancouver game, but as you know it doesn't work that way. We've just got to build on it and keep going."
The Lightning watched a lot of video prior to the Columbus game, highlighting what worked last season so they could apply it to their game as well as what wasn't working this season so they could eliminate it.
"We saw that we didn't direct the puck at their net, and I think that's the main thing," said Bolts forward Yanni Gourde, who scored the team's first power-play goal of the season in the first period against Columbus, ending a streak of nine-straight power-play opportunities without a goal to start 2018-19. "We had success last year because we shot the puck and we had people net front. That's how we scored goals in that game. It kind of came back because we saw video and we saw what worked last year and we've got to get inside and get body position around the crease, and that's what we did."