The last time the Boston Bruins and St. Louis Blues met in the Stanley Cup Final, in 1970, Boston's Bobby Orr dove through the air after scoring the championship-clinching overtime goal in Game 4.
Who will be the hero this time?
RELATED: [Complete Bruins vs. Blues series coverage]
The Bruins and Blues will play for the Stanley Cup again, beginning with Game 1 at TD Garden on Monday (8 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, SN, TVAS).
Boston is in the Cup Final for the 20th time in its history and third in the past nine years (2011 and 2013). The Bruins are seeking their seventh championship and first since 2011.
St. Louis is in the Cup Final for the first time since the 1970 series against Boston and the fourth in its history (also 1968 and 1969). The Blues have never won the Stanley Cup in their 51 seasons.
The Blues, who advanced to the Cup Final with a 5-1 victory against the San Jose Sharks in Game 6 of the Western Conference Final on Tuesday, will try to become the first team to win the Stanley Cup after being in last place in the NHL standings after its 20th game of the season.
St. Louis was 15-18-4 and in last place in the NHL on Jan. 3 before going an NHL-best 30-10-5 the remainder of the regular season to finish third in the Central Division.
"Once we got going in January and February, I knew we had a good hockey team and we get in the [Stanley Cup] Playoffs and anything can happen," said Blues coach Craig Berube, who replaced Mike Yeo on Nov. 21 and became the 11th coach in NHL history to reach the Cup Final after taking over midseason. "You've got to get here, and we did. Credit to our players. They battled and they believed we were going to make the playoffs, and we made it, and now we're here."
The Bruins will have to shake off some rust in Game 1. They will have been off 10 days since completing a four-game sweep against the Carolina Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference Final with a 4-0 win May 16.
Boston (49-24-9), which finished second in the Atlantic Division, has won its past seven games by a combined 28-9.
"We've earned the right to be where we are, to go to the Stanley Cup Final," Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy said. "We've beaten three good teams. There is some unfinished business, so that's part of the emotion you want to keep in check. You want to enjoy it, but I think our guys understand there are still four more steps to take."