All of it.
And it will be incredible.
The pressure began building the moment Brayden Point scored at 18:04 of overtime in Game 6, giving the Tampa Bay Lightning a 4-3 win at Amalie Arena on Thursday, and it will keep building up to and through Game 7.
The Maple Leafs' challenge is to embrace it, to overcome it, to give the fans packed inside Scotiabank Arena and outside in Maple Leaf Square something they haven't seen in so long.
"Well, I think that's all we can do," Toronto center Auston Matthews said. "I mean, what's in the past is in the past, man. We can't change anything now. It's about this next game and going out there with a purpose and details and just competing for 60 minutes or whatever it takes. We've just got to put our guts] on the line and go for it."
***[RELATED: [Complete Maple Leafs vs. Lightning series coverage]*
The Lightning are the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions. The question isn't whether they can do it; it's how many times they can. If they lose this Game 7, there will be no shame in failing to win three championships in a row, something no team has done since the New York Islanders won four straight from 1980-83.
The Maple Leafs are different. The question isn't whether they can win the Cup; it's if they can win a series. If they lose Game 7, it will be 18 years and 17 seasons since their last series win, in seven games against the Ottawa Senators in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in 2004. It will be seven straight opening-round losses, including one in each of the past six seasons. It will be their fourth Game 7 elimination in five years, their fifth in 10.
None of the Maple Leafs have been in Toronto since 2004. But Brendan Shanahan has been president since 2014, Kyle Dubas has been general manager since 2018 and Sheldon Keefe has been coach since 2019. From the longest-tenured player, defenseman Morgan Rielly, a rookie in 2013-14, to the newest additions, everyone knows the history and what it means to the city. Everyone feels its weight, no matter what he says.
"It's up to you guys who you think the pressure's on," Rielly said, referring to reporters. "For us, it's a chance on home ice to go out there and win. I mean, I thought we played a pretty good game tonight, for the most part. But, they're [the] two-time Stanley Cup champions. They know how to handle these situations, and we're trying to break through."