The Lightning were swept in four games by the Columbus Blue Jackets in the Eastern Conference First Round after tying the NHL single-season record with 62 wins (1995-96 Detroit Red Wings). Now they're even with the Dallas Stars in the Stanley Cup Final after going 12-4 in the first three rounds of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, including a five-game win against Columbus in the first round.
Game 3 of the best-of-7 series is at Rogers Place in Edmonton, the hub city for the Final, on Wednesday (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVAS).
"I think experience and being humbled can help right a ship," Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. "I truly believe last year's experience, we're seeing the fruits of that awful setback. What do they say the definition of insanity is, doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result? We couldn't do that."
The Lightning are bigger, tougher, stronger and grittier than they were a season ago. Former Lightning forward Ryan Callahan, who played for them last season and was a guest on the NHL @TheRink podcast Tuesday, said they have more "sandpaper."
Tampa Bay signed forward Pat Maroon to a one-year, $900,000 contract last Aug. 24. The Lightning then bolstered their roster during the season by acquiring forwards Barclay Goodrow and Blake Coleman in trades, giving up a first-round pick in the 2020 NHL Draft in each, and signing defenseman Zach Bogosian to a one-year, $1.3 million contract after he was placed on waivers by the Buffalo Sabres.
Goodrow and Coleman play on the aggressive, attacking, fast and physical third line with center Yanni Gourde. Goodrow has become one of Cooper's go-to players late in close games; he took three face-offs in the final minute of a 3-2 win in Game 2 on Monday.
"I commend [general manager Julien BriseBois] because he stuck his neck out on the line," Cooper said. "I know he was probably questioned or criticized for the amount people perceived he gave up, but to me it doesn't matter. It's what your assets do to build your team to win. He did that. They weren't sexy trades, they weren't sexy signings, but they were gutty ones, and it was what we needed."
The third line is evidence of what is different about the Lightning: It doesn't have to score to be effective.
"We used to be a team that it wasn't good enough to beat you 3-0, we had to beat you 9-0," Cooper said. "We had to change that attitude."
For example, Tampa Bay took a 3-0 lead against Columbus in the first period of Game 1 last season, got comfortable, thought it would come easy and ended up giving it away and lost 4-3.
On Monday, the Lightning took a 3-0 lead in the first period of Game 2, stood in as the Stars tried to punch back, took a few blows but limited Dallas to two shots after Mattias Janmark scored to make it 3-2 at 5:27 of the third period.