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Jon Cooper could sense the New York Rangers were tired after Game 4 of the Eastern Conference Final.

The Tampa Bay Lightning coach knew his team had to just stay relentless going into Game 5 and beyond, and they'd push the Rangers right out of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
"You're the big brother and you're flexing now," Cooper told his team after a 4-1 win in Game 4 at Amalie Arena in Tampa. "But this is just the start of it. Now, we can say whatever we want about the layoff and maybe a little rust and that stuff, but I am going to tell you, they are starting to drop.
" … We're the rested team. We just have to use this [points to head]. That's what you do and you've just got to keep depositing, keep depositing, keep depositing and it'll come back to us. That's what it is now. They're just gassed."
Tampa Bay's determined comeback in the conference final to win it in six games and advance to its third straight Stanley Cup Final is detailed in the fourth episode of the seventh season of "Quest For The Stanley Cup."
The episode, which is available on ESPN+ in the United States and YouTube/NHL in Canada, showcases how the Lightning were able to exert their will on the Rangers with several of Cooper's motivational dressing room speeches.
"The team that stayed with it took it," Cooper said after a 3-1 win in Game 5 at Madison Square Garden that gave Tampa Bay a 3-2 lead in the best-of-7 series. "That's where swag comes into play and you guys have it. The ultimate compliment is, so I'm going off the ice, I leave first, it's all these New York fans, and all I heard is them say, 'That's why they're the champs.'"

Quest for the Stanley Cup: Steven Stamkos

Rangers coach Gerard Gallant eventually did admit after a 2-1 loss in Game 6 that his team was tired because it had to play 20 playoff games in 40 days. But he wasn't going to use that as an excuse during the series.
In fact, Gallant's anger with how his team was playing was on display after the second period of Game 5, when it was tied 1-1 but didn't feel like it.
"How many 2-on-1s in the last five periods have we got?" Gallant said in the dressing room, surrounded by his players. "Anybody remember any? Huh? Nobody? I don't remember any in the last game and two periods tonight, but I remember seven or eight for those guys and that's just opening the door wide open. I talked about attitude before the game. I told you how they're going to play. They're not going to give you a whole lot. You're going to have to compete and battle. I haven't seen that yet. I haven't seen our compete and battle. I haven't seen a good attitude. I see guys coming back to the bench sulking like we're losing 5-1. That's what it feels like."
Cooper kept pushing the "Rangers are tired" narrative prior to Game 6.
"Their will is on a tight rope, they're ready to fall off," Cooper said. "In these situations, we just have to play our game and do what we've done for the last three and they'll just fall right off."
Cooper echoed that from the bench midway through Game 6, when it was still 0-0.
"They want an excuse to quit," he said.
Tampa Bay won 2-1 on Steven Stamkos' goal at 13:28 of the third period, 21 seconds after forward Frank Vatrano tied it for New York with a power-play goal.
Cooper and Gallant, who are close friends, met in the handshake line following the game.
"You know what? Your team is money, and you're so young," Cooper told Gallant.
Gallant replied, "You know what it's like, keep going. It's hard. Good luck, buddy."
The episode also briefly shifts to Denver, where the Colorado Avalanche were practicing and waiting patiently to find out who they would play in the Stanley Cup Final after sweeping the Edmonton Oilers in the Western Conference Final.
There are also a few light-hearted moments in the episode. You see Stamkos and his son, Carter, playing golf in his backyard before Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman comes over to play too. The cameras go inside Cooper's house prior to Game 6, where he's holding his family dog, Champ, and hugging his wife and kids before heading out into the rain to drive to the arena.
The episode also tells the story of Rangers equipment manager Acacio Marques, who missed time earlier this season because he was getting treatment for colon cancer that spread to his left lung.
"As of right now, the last test, they found like no cancer," Marques said. "Everything is looking pretty good and just knowing that people are thinking about you and you're not alone, that's the biggest thing."