Winning the Stanley Cup the first time in 2020 for this group of Lightning players was the culmination of coming oh-so close in seasons prior. The Lightning were a Cup finalist in 2015, went to the Eastern Conference Final in three of four seasons from 2015 through 2018 and were the odds-on favorite to win it all as the runaway Presidents' Trophy winner in 2019 but couldn't quite get over the hump. Lifting the Cup in 2020 was about exorcising the demons of all those near misses.
The mantra to win the Cup in back-to-back seasons in 2021 was: Do you want to be good or do you want to be great? Lots of teams have won the Stanley Cup. Few have done it in back-to-back seasons.
The Lightning cemented their status as one of the greats in NHL history after defeating Montreal in the championship round in five games and raising the Stanley Cup on home ice, just 10 months after doing so in the Edmonton bubble.
By winning the Stanley Cup for a third-straight season, the Lightning have the opportunity for immortality, to be thought of not just as one of the greats, but maybe the greatest, to be in the same conversation as the Montreal juggernaut that won the Cup in four-straight seasons (1976-79), the New York Islanders franchise that followed the Canadiens by winning four in a row (1980-83) and the Edmonton team that won four out of five Cups from 1984-88.
"One was pretty cool, but to do it twice is special," Killorn said. "Imagine doing it three times how special that would be. Not a lot of teams do it twice, but to do it three times would be crazy. But it's a process. We're not thinking about the Stanley Cup Final right now. It's really about, we've lost some guys, we're going to have fill some holes in the lineup. We've made some good pickups. There's plenty of guys that are able to step in. We look forward to it. And whenever you have (Andrei Vasilevskiy) in net, you always have a chance."
The Lightning have plenty of new faces to work into the lineup and their system and their way of doing things if they wish to win the Cup again. The entire third line of Yanni Gourde, Barclay Goodrow and Blake Coleman is gone, Gourde heading to Seattle in the expansion draft and Goodrow and Coleman casualties of Tampa Bay's limited cap space. That line was a major reason the Lightning lifted the Cup in back-to-back seasons. Tyler Johnson was traded to Chicago in a necessary cap move. David Savard earned a hefty raise after signing with the Canadiens as an unrestricted free agent in the offseason. Luke Schenn signed in Vancouver in hopes of earning a bigger role. Curtis McElhinney wasn't extended a new contract.