Boucha joked that the Cup had been in Warroad before, getting in a dig against the neighboring town of Roseau, 20 miles to the west. Dustin Byfuglien, who won the Cup with the Chicago Blackhawks in 2010, is from Roseau.
"It's actually the second time it's been here because when Byfuglien brought it over to Roseau, they couldn't land there so they had to land in Warroad," he said. "So that's going to be a teasing point for the Roseau Rams over there."
Among the Warroad youth teams that had their picture taken with Oshie and the Cup was Landon Haggen, 14, of the Warroad Bantams. He said he still was in disbelief after his dad, Steve, snapped several pictures with Oshie and the Cup.
"I didn't think it would really happen, didn't think the Cup would really come here," Landon said.
Landon said he was cheering hard for Oshie and the Capitals, but not at the start of the 2018 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
"I was for the [Minnesota] Wild," he said.
When they arrived at Warroad International Memorial Airport, Oshie, his wife, Lauren, and their daughters Lyla and Leni were paraded into town in a 1933 Lincoln convertible. When the ceremony was finished at The Gardens, the motorcade toured the town with stops for photos and autographs in front of Warroad's iconic water tower, at Point Park near the shore of Lake of the Woods, at Main Street Bar and Grill and at Izzy's, another restaurant/bar.