The Blue Jackets gave up very few odd-man rushes. I can't remember barely any after the first period of Game 1. For a team like the Lightning that thrives off that, the way they skate, support and get players up in the rush, I thought Columbus did an outstanding job tactically to stop them.
The Blue Jackets didn't sit back. They had an aggressive 1-2-2 forecheck but their ability to get back above pucks, to keep their third forward high, it was great.
They didn't have their defensemen pinching as much either. I thought their defense received the rush instead of attacking it, but they had forwards back and their five-man gap and the way they clogged up the neutral zone and had numbers back just seemed to frustrate the Lightning.
Tampa Bay couldn't seem to come up with a solution to get through it or get the puck in the offensive zone. At times it felt like the Blue Jackets had an extra skater on the ice, which is something we used to say all the time about the Lightning when playing them.
"Where can we move the puck? They're on top of us. Do they have an extra guy?"
It was like Columbus was able to flip it around and do that to Tampa Bay, and you could really see it as the series wore on and it wore on the Lightning.
They were starting to try those long cross-ice passes through the neutral zone. When teams are doing that you can tell that they're having a tough time penetrating and getting in the offensive zone. They also don't want to dump the puck because they know that's not really their game.
The good thing for the Blue Jackets is that style of play is sustainable, especially with a nice chunk of time to rest and recover. They can't rely on their power play being 50 percent against anyone like it was in this series (5-for-10), but they can rely on their structure, will and determination.
Oftentimes, you can watch a team in the regular season and they have their ups and downs, but you're thinking, 'I don't want to play that team in the playoffs because in a seven-game series, it's a war and you know you're going to have some attrition, some guys banged up'. You begin to wonder, 'I don't know if my team can handle playing against a team like that, where it's a real man's game, in your face, no easy ice, no ice available, you have to earn everything.'
That's the way the Blue Jackets play, especially at home. They're one of probably four teams, along with the Winnipeg Jets, Nashville Predators and Vegas Golden Knights, I think have a real home-ice advantage with the way they play and the way the fans feed into that game.
They play hard and their building gets going. It's a factor. It was in Games 3 and 4, when the Blue Jackets' continued to show their hunger to win, determination to doing things they have to do to have success. It's evident.
They're a very dangerous opponent. They don't have a weakness.