"I came from the other side the first time and it didn't work out," said Bjugstad, whose winning goal came on the record-setting 40th shot of a skills competition that walked the line between epic and absurd. "I actually saw another guy do it before me so I thought it might work out."
Although everything worked out, Bjugstad wasn't initially sure that he'd get another shot.
"I asked [Panthers assistant coach John Madden] at about [Round] 10 if they end up going through it again," Bjugstad said, flashing a big grin. "I didn't think it would happen. It was kind of a hypothetical question, and it happened."
Sure, it happened. But there the was more than one occasion in which he felt like it wasn't going to. Throughout the 20-round gauntlet, the Panthers were down to their last shooter and facing a loss on five separate occasions. Yet, time and time again, they scored to keep the contest alive.
That's also part of what made this game so very special.
For 20 rounds, the crowd was on its feet, watching in awe.
From fans to players, everyone was on the same rollercoaster.
"I've never seen anything like that," Panthers goaltender Roberto Luongo said.
With everyone in the lineup getting a shot, the goals came from both players you'd expect and also a few surprises. In addition to Bjugstad, Jussi Jokinen (Round 4), Dave Bolland (Round 7), MacKenzie (Round 10), Sean Bergenheim (Round 11) and Dylan Olsen (Round 17) also lit the lamp to force another round.
Prior to the game, MacKenzie and Olsen had never scored in an NHL shootout.