Although Elliott signed on for one more year in Philadelphia last season with the understanding he would be the backup to the young up-and-comer Hart, he ended up leading the Flyers for starts - 26 to Hart's 25 - after Hart struggled early in the season. Elliott finished 2020-21 with a 15-9-2 record and two shutouts.
There's no ambiguity about his role in Tampa Bay. He's here to spell the perennial Vezina candidate Vasilevskiy. That might mean going upwards of two weeks without a start. Or getting the final game of a lengthy road trip. Or the second half of a back-to-back set, situations where he might have to steal a game because the skaters in front of him aren't as fresh as say the beginning of a road trip or the opening game of a back-to-back.
"I always say that every time you get an opportunity to start, you take advantage of it," Elliott said. "That's going to be no different here. You want to do what you can for the team, stop as many pucks as you can and get those wins. Playing with Vasy before camp and in camp here, it's awesome to watch him kind of do his work. You try to elevate your game to where his level is."
Vasilevskiy has played a tremendous number of games over the past two seasons as the backbone of Tampa Bay's back-to-back Cup championships. Since the beginning of 2019-20, Vasilevskiy started 94 of a possible 126 regular season games, or 75 percent of the Bolts' contests. He's played every minute of every game over the last two playoff runs. In a little less than two years, that's 142 starts for Vasilevskiy.
Lightning head coach Jon Cooper is well aware of the strain that many games in a compressed amount of time can have on a goaltender. If it were up to Vasilevskiy, he'd play every minute of every game. That's the kind of competitor he is.
But, it's also not sustainable.
"We're aware that we're not going to burn him out and we'll play him like we normally do," Cooper said. "You get in that 60-game range (of an 82-game regular season), I don't think that's an excessive amount. But, I'm not sitting here saying he's going to play 60 games. He may play less than that, he may play more than that. It just will dictate on how the schedule plays out, regarding how back-to-backs come into play and stuff like that. You've seen the way we've played him in the past, we've left him home on trips when it's coming down the stretch.
"Trust me, the last thing we're going to do is burn him out."
Finding a backup that could shoulder some of Vasilevskiy's load like Curtis McElhinney has the last two seasons - and was also cost effective for a team severely constrained by the salary cap -- was paramount for the Lightning this offseason. They feel they've found that guy in Elliott.