It didn't start well, after that puck dropped. The Washington Capitals were pushing, the sea of red behind them at Capital One Arena, as they played their first home game in the conference final in 20 years. The Lightning were reeling, yet again.
But they stabilized. They calmed. They scored.
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The goal was a beauty, a screaming one-timer from Steven Stamkos from just beyond the left face-off dot, a power-play goal that asserted the one offensive piece that the Lightning had going to start the series, their ability to score with the man-advantage. It didn't stop there, with another power-play goal to follow (1:50, second period) and, finally, a 5-on-5 goal (3:37, second). Suddenly, the Lightning were up by three goals on their way to a 4-2 win, and they are very much alive in the series.
"We believed all along," Stamkos said. "We knew we weren't good enough, and credit to them, they played really good hockey the first two games. We needed to make adjustments. We did that. We worked on it. The players went out there and did what we needed to do."
By doing that, Tampa Bay cut Washington's lead in the best-of-7 series to 2-1, with Game 4 here Thursday (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVAS).
The Lightning gave notice that the series is not over, that they are capable of making the necessary adjustments, that their stars have led them here, and their stars will lead them where they hope to go.