Sixty-four days after they landed July 26 in Toronto, the hub city for the first two rounds of the Eastern Conference Playoffs and their place of business for six weeks before moving to Edmonton for the conference final and the Cup Final, they won the Cup that eluded them in 2019 after they tied the NHL single-season record with 62 regular-season wins (1995-96 Detroit Red Wings).
The Lightning were swept in four games by the Columbus Blue Jackets in the first round last season. They blew a 3-0 lead against Columbus in Game 1, lost 4-3 and couldn't recover.
RELATED: [Complete Stanley Cup Final coverage]
But things went differently this time. The Lightning won four one-goal games against the Blue Jackets in the first round, including 3-2 in Game 1 on Aug. 11 that ended on Brayden Point's goal at 10:27 of the fifth overtime, the fourth-longest game in NHL history. They then eliminated the Presidents' Trophy-winning Boston Bruins in five games to advance to the conference final. Tampa Bay needed six games to defeat the New York Islanders.
"That might have turned the tables for us," Lightning coach Jon Cooper said of the journey beginning with the marathon win against the Blue Jackets. "Because if we don't win that game, all of a sudden, doubt creeps in. We had a pretty resilient group, but you need to see some sort of success; you need to feel it, you need to taste it.
"… If we don't win that game, who knows? Now Columbus, they might be in our head. But when we won that game, I think that was a catapult for where we are right now."
Right now, the Lightning are champions. They're champions for their resilience, evidenced by the 6-0 record they had after a loss in the playoffs, including the win Monday that came two nights after a 3-2 double-overtime loss in Game 5. Tampa Bay was 11-3 in one-goal games and 6-2 in overtime.
And the Lightning did it without captain Steven Stamkos for all but 2:47 of a 5-2 win in Game 3 of this best-of-7 series because of a lower-body injury. The forward scored on his second shift.
"After what happened last year, there was definitely a chip on our shoulder," Stamkos said. "So many people counted us out because of what happened. We kept the same core together, we added some vital pieces in the offseason, at the [NHL] Trade Deadline, and we just came together."