It's the same feeling had by the other teams remaining in the playoffs, including the Carolina Hurricanes, who have found themselves with what forward Vincent Trocheck calls a "mental hump to get over" on the road, where they have yet to win a single game in the playoffs.
Trocheck, who spent the first seven seasons of his career with the Florida Panthers, has found a welcoming and rabid fan base in Carolina, where he was traded on Feb. 24, 2020, and where he and wife, Hillary, have settled with their two children.
We get a glimpse of a child - or adult's! - wonderland in the backyard, complete with putting green. But while they manage golf and hockey with Leo and Lennon, the setup and batteries in a football passing game bedevil the couple, a scene that should ring true to any parent, whether they're playing for a chance to win the Stanley Cup or not.
"Hearing my son say how bad he wants to win the Stanley Cup and you need to win all the games to win the Stanley Cup, it puts things in perspective," Trocheck said. "It's pretty cool to have them push me a little bit more."
But first they have to close out the New York Rangers.
And though it's worth seeing how a very animated Jordan Martinook gets the Hurricanes ready for Game 6 at Madison Square Garden, it doesn't work quite well enough, however, as the Rangers win, 5-2. The two teams head back to Raleigh to try to earn the final ticket into the conference final, to join the Avalanche, Oilers and Lightning, as the Hurricanes attempt to remain perfect in all eight home games in the playoffs and the Rangers try to get their first game of the series on the road.
"We don't change our game one bit," Rangers coach Gerard Gallant tells his team before the game.
They don't, prevailing in Game 7, 6-2, to earn a trip to the Eastern Conference Final and a date with the two-time champions.
"We're just getting started," forward Chris Kreider said. "We're halfway home."