The Tampa Bay Lightning can win the first two games of a Stanley Cup Final for the first time in four series when they play Game 2 against the Montreal Canadiens at Amalie Arena on Wednesday.
The Lightning won Game 1 5-1 on Monday, their fourth straight home victory. They split the first two games in each of their three previous Stanley Cup Finals (2004, 2015, 2020).
"I don't think we played our best game either," Lightning forward Tyler Johnson said. "I think both teams are going to keep getting better as the series progresses. I think we have another gear as well, so that's all we're really focusing on."
The Lightning will play without forward Alex Killorn, who sustained an undisclosed injury in Game 1. He was visibly in pain after blocking a shot by Canadiens defenseman Jeff Petry with his left leg at 13:32 of the second period. Killorn played three shifts after that and was out for the final 19:04 of the third period.
Lightning coach Jon Cooper did not say who would take Killorn's place in the lineup.
"Key part to our team, but it's the playoffs, guys are in and out," Cooper said. "You lose guys all the time. It's part of it and for tonight we're going to have to play without him."
The Canadiens could have forward Joel Armia after he was replaced by forward Jake Evans in Game 1. Armia was placed on the NHL COVID-19 protocol list Sunday but was removed Monday and skated during warmups.
Montreal assistant Luke Richardson said Armia and Evans each is a game-time decision. Richardson, who is coach while Dominique Ducharme remains in COVID-19 quarantine, said the Canadiens have to play their systems better in Game 2.
"Managing that puck, playing 200 feet, and our battle level and compete level just has to rise," he said. "I'm sure it will. I think it has in every series. I know the guys are eager to get back and play a better game tonight. Those three things alone are going to give us a better chance in this game tonight and in this series."
Teams that take a 2-0 lead in a best-of-7 Cup Final are 46-5 (.902) winning the series. Each of the past three Stanley Cup champions lost Game 1 before winning the series.
Here are 3 keys to Game 2: