When the two-month marathon climaxes in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final, the stakes are pushed to their extremes. The Boston Bruins and St. Louis Blues dreamt of an opportunity like the one they'll have at TD Garden on Wednesday (8 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, SN, TVAS). One way or another, they'll have to live with the result.
"Winning and losing, it sticks with you forever," Bruins forward Brad Marchand said. "You don't forget everything that happens when you win, and you definitely don't forget what happens when you lose. Unfortunately, there's going to be both sides of that tomorrow, and we'll see how it plays out."
The Bruins' core has experienced each side before.
Marchand, goalie Tuukka Rask, defenseman Zdeno Chara and centers Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci helped defeat the Vancouver Canucks in 2011, the last time the Cup Final went to Game 7. Pictures of their celebration adorn the locker room to remind them of the rewards that could await.
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But they also lost to the Chicago Blackhawks in 2013. That wasn't Game 7. It was Game 6. But they were leading in the third period, 1:17 from Game 7, when the Blackhawks scored twice in 17 seconds and won 3-2. Just like that, it was over.
It took them six years to return to the Cup Final.
At Media Day before this series, Marchand said: "It was so sweet to win, but it hurts to lose. I mean, that was devastating. That still hurts to this day. I mean, I probably look back more on the loss and what I would do differently than the win. So that's something …
"You lose something like this, you're that close, you work that hard, it never leaves you."
Marchand expounded on that Tuesday. He was 23 when the Bruins won in 2011, at the end of his first full NHL season. He's 31 now.
"You realize when you get to this point how hard it actually is, especially the longer you've been around the League," he said. "You look at some guys that have been around a long time and how few opportunities you get. ...
"It's extremely tough just to get to this point here and to win is even harder than that. Once you lose, you realize how close it is. You get a taste, but you don't get that victory, you don't get to feel all the sensations of winning, it's extremely difficult."
Think of the history and the investment made on both sides.
The Bruins have won the Cup six times, but they have won it once since 1972 despite playing 420 playoff games since then, more than any other team. The Blues have never won it despite playing 390 playoff games since entering the NHL in 1967-68, fifth in the League in that timeframe behind the Bruins (470), Montreal Canadiens (456), Philadelphia Flyers (433) and Chicago Blackhawks (399).