The brothers were at the Tampa Bay Lightning's Riverfest viewing party at Curtis Hixon Park on Friday, their heroes
defeating the Boston Bruins 4-3 in overtime
to return home with a 3-1 lead in the best-of-7 Eastern Conference Second Round. The Lightning can eliminate the Bruins in Game 5 at Amalie Arena on Sunday (3 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, TVAS).
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With the Watters brothers was their lovingly crafted Stanley Cup "replica." It was surely not the first one made of empty beer cans, but theirs is impressive in its structure, consistency and durability, with about 200 silver Coors Light cans forming the barrel and the narrowing collar at the top, crowned with a stainless-steel mixing bowl.
It stands about 40 inches tall, about six inches taller than the genuine article because of the size of beer cans. They used every effort to keep their Cup as close to the scale of the real one as they could.
"We used maybe 200 cans," said Patrick, 23. "And maybe 600 sticks of glue to hold it all together."
Patrick said the bowl on top, which likely won't be confused with the original sterling chalice commissioned in 1892 by Canada governor general Lord Stanley of Preston, was bought at Walmart for maybe $10.
"About a buck a can, so this cost us whatever number of cans we used, the glue and the bowl," he said as Lightning fans milled around to take photos.
By night's end, the brothers, all Tampa residents, said that hundreds of fans had taken pictures of their trophy or posed for selfies with it. And It was clear that the three don't view this as an expense, but rather as a labor of love.
"We used Coors Light cans not just because they're silver, but because we're faithful to the Lightning," said Brian, 27. "There are Coors ads plastered on the boards at Amalie Arena. We're Bolts fans and have been our entire lives. We've been fans since before 2004, when they won the Cup."